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This week in 1967: The Beatles released Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
This week in 1967: The Beatles released Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

Extra.ie​

time28-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Extra.ie​

This week in 1967: The Beatles released Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

Although their previous studio album, Revolver, is now the more acclaimed, Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is arguably The Beatles' most famous work and the one that had the most influence on the music and society of its time. It had no track breaks, a message in the run-off groove and was developed loosely from Paul McCartney's concept of an album by a fictitious band. The lyrics were printed on a lavish gatefold sleeve, with its famous front cover by Peter Blake, reflecting the tenor of the time and opening doors of both perception and excess. Having retired from touring, the band was free to use the recording studio to the ultimate, with no time or financial restrictions and limited only by their own creativity. From the suite-like 'A Day In The Life', with that long thunderous chord coaxed from a bewildered orchestra, to the alleged-and-denied drug references in 'Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds', the beautiful 'She's Leaving Home', the sentimentality of 'When I'm Sixty Four' and George Harrison's mystical wig-out 'Within You Without You', it sparked argument and amazement in equal measure. Originally, the album was to include 'Penny Lane' and 'Strawberry Fields Forever', but that didn't stop it from becoming a benchmark; the term 'their Sgt Pepper' later applied across the board to any band's supreme lifetime achievement.

English football will never be the same after Everton's Goodison Park move
English football will never be the same after Everton's Goodison Park move

Daily Mirror

time17-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Daily Mirror

English football will never be the same after Everton's Goodison Park move

For a good while now, there has been a rumour on Merseyside that Sir Paul McCartney will be part of a Goodison Park encore. It is unlikely but it would be nice. One Merseyside institution saying farewell to another. For those of you who know your Beatles, perhaps he could play 'She's Leaving Home'. Only Everton - well, the men's first team, at least - is leaving its Grand Old Lady. And the club is not just losing a bit of its soul, football is losing a bit of its soul, the city of Liverpool is losing a bit of its soul. I have always thought that part of what makes Anfield special is Goodison Park and part of what makes Goodison Park special is Anfield. Two giant pillars of one community within a roar of each other. Neighbours who fight, neighbours who unite. The new stadium at Bramley Moore Dock is only a couple of miles away but even though the club is relocating its women's team to Goodison and the place will remain operational, the area of L4 will never be the same. The move, of course, was inevitable and needed. Goodison Park has many firsts to its name, not least of which is that it was the country's first purpose-built football stadium. The only problem is that it hasn't changed much since … and the first recorded game at Goodison was in 1892. But joking apart, it is a stadium that has come to represent a dying principle in the elite professional game. That the people who really matter are the common fans. And by common, I mean the men, women and children of a local community, whether working-class or not. I mean the fans being kicked out of their regular seats behind a dug-out so clubs can sell them to wealthy tourists. For four matches of the World Cup in 1966, those fans reminded a broader audience that Goodison Park was a special place. Watching Eusebio score four goals to help Portugal overcome a 3-0 deficit against North Korea and win 5-3 in the quarter-final remains one of my father's fondest footballing memories. But guess what? The fifth Goodison game of the '66 World Cup was scheduled to be the England-Portugal semi-final but, at the eleventh hour, that was switched to Wembley. Instead, Goodison hosted West Germany's win over the Soviet Union and amongst the banners in an incensed crowd was one that read: 'England Snubs Liverpool'. No wonder the area can sometimes have a siege mentality. In that '66 World Cup semi-final, the Germans fought their way to an uninspiring 2-1 victory and the crowd made their feelings known. Goodison Park has always housed a tough audience, make no mistake. But when given something to get behind, few arenas have been as brilliantly febrile as Goodison Park. The place can shake. I remember Duncan Ferguson scoring a towering header against Manchester United, taking his shirt off and whirring it above his head. Seriously, it felt like the place would vibrate until the end of the game. The fact that it can shake - and that there are still seats with restricted views and there are still turnstiles you have to turn sideways to get through - is probably one of the reasons why it is no longer seen as fit for Premier League purpose. So, McCartney or no McCartney, it is the end of a long and winding road for Goodison Park as an elite stadium in English football. And English football will be that little bit more soulless without it.

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