June 1966: Germany went wild over The Beatles' blitz tour
Silke Wünsch / ad June 22, 2016
Before The Beatles set out on their blitz tour of Germany in June 1966, "Beatlemania" hadn't yet infected Germany. They swooped in for six short shows - and the hype surrounding the English musicians proved contagious.
Image: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
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June 1966: Beatlemania in Germany
Beatlemania broke out as soon as the "Fab Four" arrived in Germany in June 1966 and launched their tour around the country, drawing countless screaming fans.
Image: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
Three days of Beatlemania
Founded in 1960, the Beatles' career took off in 1962 in Hamburg's Star-Club, a rock club which served as a steppingstone for many bands. Just a short while later, the foursome become superstars, triggering hysteria wherever they went. In 1966, they came back to Germany - to the joy of their many fans. During their three-day tour, the German media hardly talked about anything else.
Image: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
Dramatic arrival
When their plane landed at the Munich airport at 12:56 on June 23, 1966, chaos broke out with 200 police officers desperately trying to get control over the fans. Journalists stormed the stairs, and Paul smiled at them while manager Brian Epstein tried to calm down the situation. John fought his way through the crowds, while the remaining Beatles disappeared into the crowd.
Image: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
A hotel mishap
Fans are pictured waiting in front of the Bayerischer Hof hotel in Munich where the band stayed. The crowds screamed while the hotel management feverishly worked out the quartet's booking. Much to the disliking of the four gentlemen, double rooms had been booked by mistake. After that got worked out, the famous foursome greeted their cheering fans from their windows.
Image: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
Local flair: Lederhosen
John, Paul, George and Ringo received some very special local gifts - Lederhosen, the traditional Bavarian leather pants. A press conference took place at 4:00 pm in the hotel, with reporters asking rather silly questions. When the tabloid "Bild" asked Ringo whether his Lederhosen were too big for him, he said maybe they were, but he'd just wait until the baby grew.
Image: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
Fabulous, but not perfect
While Germany's youth went nuts, the older generation was annoyed by the musicians. The media was amazed at their success, with the daily "Münchener Merkur" focusing on the band members' shortcomings rather than their talents: "Short-sighted John Lennon, left-handed Paul McCartney, George Harrison with his huge ears, and Ringo Starr with his very long nose."
Image: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
First shows in a circus tent
The Beatles gave two concerts in Munich's largest circus tent on June 24, playing to shrieking fans for a half hour in the afternoon and again in the evening. The daily "Süddeutsche Zeitung" expressed concern for the stability of the tent's roof . "When the guitars start playing their hard rhythms, it is advisable for medical reasons to leave the area."
Image: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
The fan phenomenon
The UK was experienced, but now Germany was also dealing with phenomenon of fan hysteria. A reporter for the "Main-Echo" observed at the concert: "18:56. A 16-year old girl jumps up, runs the few steps towards the stage, crashes onto the floor, and screams. Paramedics grab her and carry her outside."
Image: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
Beatles wanted smaller crowds
After two performances in Munich, the Beatles traveled on to Essen. Why did they choose this comparatively unimportant town in the Ruhr region? Berlin had been negotiating with the management, but the Beatles refused to play in mass venues like the Olympic stadium or Waldbühne, which hold and 69,000 and 22,000, respectively. Instead, they performed for 8,000 fans at a smaller hall in Essen.
Image: picture-alliance/Bildarchiv/Hemann
Hype in Hamburg
"Hamburg's teenagers raced around in Beatles hysteria for 25 minutes. Especially the girls were moaning and screaming themselves hoarse to the rhythm of their Idols. It was the biggest mass hysteria ever witnessed in this hall," wrote the "Hamburger Morgenpost" about the Beatles' two concerts for 5,700 people in Hamburg. Tabloid "Bild" kept it short: "They screamed. They cried. They fell over."
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/H. Ducklau
From Germany to Japan
After their six short concerts in just three days, it was all over. On Monday June 27, 1966, thousands of fans came to Hamburg's airport to say "Auf Wiedersehen" and send them off on their Asia tour. The four flew directly to Tokyio, and the German media breathed a sigh of relief. "We survived the Beatles," commented the "Sonne" of Baden-Baden.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/H. Lohmann
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The Fab Four arrived in Germany in June 1966, brought to the country by the German youth magazine "Bravo." it was their first visit since 1962 and this time, Beatlemania infected not only the fans, but also the media which had long been covering the ascention of the "four choirboys from Liverpool" with more suspicion than curiosity. Still, there was a bit of fascination. And exactly that mix determined the way in which the band's three-day visit to Germany was received: with mass hysteria throughout the country. Beatlemania had arrived in Germany.
It was no longer possible to simply ignore the masses of long-haired teenagers that had emerged from fusty post-war Germany and were considered crazy. Newspapers interviewed psychologists to help explain the bizarre behavior of these youngsters, reassuring readers that they shouldn't really be seen as a danger to society.
Fears of riots proved to unfounded. But in the eyes of many people, the conglomerations of screaming teenagers - most of them girls wearing miniskirts - were scary enough. They were awating The Beatles at Munich airport, screaming. They were besieging their hotel, screaming. They were going to concerts, screaming.
'Everything about the Beatles' blitz tour' - a special edition of 'Bravo' magazineImage: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
Every detail was noteworthy
The media were closely watching every step the Fab Four took. The sensationalist daily "Münchener Abendzeitung" claimed to have observed how the four gentlemen withdrew to their hotel suites upon their arrival, listening to music and drinking tea with milk and lemon. Later in the evening, a pool party took place on the hotel roof especially for them. While Paul swam in the pool, the others preferred to drink whisky.
Also, The Beatles' breakfast was described in minute detail: "The Beatles sleep a lot, they eat rather simple meals, and they drink heavily," noted the "Mittag," a daily from the Ruhr region. "Their breakfast consisted of tea with milk and cornflakes. Paul and Ringo had bacon and fried eggs, whereas George and John insisted on having steak filets and salads. The waiter served them no less than six bottles of Coca Cola, three bottles of whisky, two bottles of wine, and 36 bottles of Seven-up." The fans were so voraciously absorbing every detail, it can well be presumed that the media were quite inventive in adding a few more juicy details.
Noise, uproar and yelling
After giving two concerts in Munich, the Fab Four traveled on to Essen to give yet another two concerts before taking the night train to Hamburg. According to rumours, they didn't get any sleep there, as they preferred to party.
The fans, making a lot of noise and collapsing here and there, continued to attract a lot of attention. But things were about to get worse. During The Beatles' second concert in Hamburg, "Rowdies" gathered outside, roaming through the streets, smashing windows, knocking over cars. The newspapers obviously had a problem distinguishing between the fans and the rowdies, as to most of them, the events inside the concert halls could only have been the work of the devil.
Girls were reported to have torn off their clothes, and others were said to be in dire need of psychologcial treatment for their screaming fits. The Cologne-based daily "Kölnische Rundschau" even reported on two boys who had to be carried away after having lost consciousness in a fit of ecstasy.
Tickets cost about 15 DM (7 euros), which was expensive at the timeImage: Rockmuseum München, Foto: Rainer Schwanke/Archiv Herbert Hauke
And so much noise! After The Beatles had upgraded their old 100-watt amplifiers to 150-watts, observers feared that concertgoers could suffer permanent ear damage; others expressed concern over the safety of the roof construction in the concert halls. At this point, nobody could probably imagine that only ten years later, Deep Purple would be using 10,000 watt amplifiers.
Let the kids have fun
After three days, The Beatles left for Japan abd German media sighed in relief. Beatlemania had waned, the collective hysteria was over. The hotels happily noted that no furniture had been demolished with the sole exception of nine broken chairs in Hamburg. Some clear-headed journalists exhorted their readers to calm down. Actor Harald Leipnitz, back then very popular, wrote in a column: "Their hair may be too long, but it is well-kempt. Their shirts may be extravagant, but they are clean. I like The Beatles."
Leipnitz ended his editorial by reminding the older Germans of their past: "We adults who have lived through an era of fatal political hysteria should be a bit more tolerant towards young people who are enthusiastic about rather harmless things."