The Gospel According to the Beatles
Stock No: WW29835
The Gospel According to the Beatles   -     By: Steve Turner

The Gospel According to the Beatles

Westminster John Knox Press / 2006 / Hardcover

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Stock No: WW29835

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Product Description

Renowned British music journalist and author Steve Turner surveys the religious and spiritual influence of the Beatles, the band that changed the history of music forever. With new interviews, never-before-published material, and fresh insights, Turner helps the reader understand the religious and spiritual ideas and ideals that influenced the music and lives of the Beatles and helps us see how the Fab Four influenced our own lives and culture.

Chapters include the religious upbringing of John, Paul, George, and Ringo; the backlash in the United States after John Lennon's "The Beatles are more popular than Jesus" comment; the dabbling in Eastern religion; the use of drugs to attempt to enter a higher level of consciousness; and the overall legacy that the Beatles and their music have left. While there is no religious system that permanently anchored the Beatles or their music, they did leave a gospel, Turner concludes: one of love, peace, personal freedom, and the search for transcendence.

Product Information

Title: The Gospel According to the Beatles
By: Steve Turner
Format: Hardcover
Number of Pages: 256
Vendor: Westminster John Knox Press
Publication Date: 2006
Dimensions: 9 X 6 (inches)
Weight: 1 pound 5 ounces
ISBN: 0664229832
ISBN-13: 9780664229832
Series: Gospel According to
Stock No: WW29835

Publisher's Description

Renowned British music journalist and author Steve Turner surveys the religious and spiritual influence of the Beatles, the band that changed the history of music forever. With new interviews, never-before-published material, and fresh insights, Turner helps the reader understand the religious and spiritual ideas and ideals that influenced the music and lives of the Beatles and helps us see how the Fab Four influenced our own lives and culture.

Topics discussed include the religious upbringing of John, Paul, George, and Ringo; the backlash in the United States after John Lennon's "The Beatles are more popular than Jesus" comment; the dabbling in Eastern religion; the use of drugs to attempt to enter a higher level of consciousness; and the overall legacy that the Beatles and their music have left. While there is no religious system that permanently anchored the Beatles or their music, they did leave a gospel, Turner concludes: one of love, peace, personal freedom, and the search for transcendence.

Author Bio

Steve Turner is a British rock journalist and author of more than thirty books, including The Man Called Cash, Amazing Grace: The Story of America's Beloved Song, and A Hard Day's Write: The Stories Behind Every Beatles Song. He lives in London.

Library Journal

Readers of Robert L. Short's The Gospel According to Peanuts will recognize that writer and poet Turner used it as inspiration for this book. As evidenced by his earlier A Hard Day's Write: The Stories Behind Every Beatles' Song, London resident Turner is well situated to cover both the Beatles and their music. While 1000-plus titles about the Beatles are available, this book takes the distinctive approach that the Beatles's journey included a search for a meaningful spirituality. This spirituality, Turner would be quick to note, involves a gospel not in the sense of a church creed but in a hunger for transcendence. Some fans will deny that the Beatles had any kind of gospel to spread, but many of these doubters will come to respect Turner for his nonvested argument that the Beatles had things to say about spirituality and that many of these things were taken seriously at the time by many young people. Turner's fresh path through familiar terrain allows the songs to disclose the instinct for fellowship, ritual, mystery, and worship, which makes this well-documented book an insightful and valuable addition to all public libraries. Leroy Hommerding, Fort Myers Beach P.L. Dist., FL Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Publisher's Weekly

In 1967, drug guru Timothy Leary proclaimed, "[T]he message from Liverpool is the Newest Testament, chanted by Four Evangelistssaints John, Paul, George, and Ringo." Leary certainly captured the feelings of a generation pursuing freedom from old social conventions and searching for love in the lyrics, looks and music of the Beatles. In less than a decade, the group evolved from the fun-loving frantic boys of A Hard Day's Night (1964) to the philosophical poets of Abbey Road (1969) and Let It Be (1970), weaving more references to religion and spirituality into their music. Acclaimed pop music writer Turner (A Man Called Cash) unsuccessfully attempts to reveal the "gospel" of the Fab Four in this plodding book. He recounts the already well-known biographies of each Beatle, pointing out that each had some early brushes with either the Church of England or Roman Catholicism. Turner takes John Lennon's now-infamous 1966 claim that the Beatles were "more popular than Jesus" as his starting point and then examines superficially the well-known turn East that the group took in the late 1960s. The book lacks in-depth interpretations of the Beatles' song lyrics and fails to account for the rich and complex meanings that arguably make their lyrics some of the most religious in rock. (Aug.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

David Crumm and ReadTheSpirit.com

At first glance, this seems like the oddest "Gospel According to ..." idea yet! But it turns out that Steve Turner's tour through the spiritual influences on the Beatles and their impact on our religious imagination makes this one of the best in the series, so far.
I was surprised to read about John Lennon's roots in his Anglican parish and his active involvement in parish youth programs, for example.
More interesting is Turner's analysis of the motives behind the Beatles' various songs. He's drawing here on earlier research for his book, "A Hard Day's Write: The Stories Behind Every Beatles Song."
Turner warns us in his opening pages that many of his friends were skeptical about this book as he worked on it. One friend asked, "You're not going to write a book that says they're all Christians at heart, are you?"
No, Turner knew he couldn't twist history that far and, to his credit, he didn't try. The result is far more interesting than if he'd forced a Christian "fix" into the text.

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