The Liverpool Shuffle plays on the balcony of the Long Island Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame. Photo by Steven Zaitz
Joe Refano on lead guitar high above the crowd at Stony Brook village. Photo by Steven Zaitz
Beatles fans enjoy the first outdoor concert at LIMEHOF. Photo by Steven Zaitz
The Liverpool Shuffle plays on the balcony of the Long Island Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame. Photo by Steven Ziatz
By Steven Zaitz
Stony Brook village became Strawberry Fields for a few magical, musical hours on Sunday, July 28, as four lads who call themselves The Liverpool Shuffle pleased the crowd of Beatlemaniacs.
A ticket to ride was unnecessary for this show, as the boys played for free on the balcony of the Long Island Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame (LIMEHOF).
Formed in 2003 by singer, bassist and guitarist Joe Refano, who played with Herman’s Hermits as well as with Micky Dolenz of the Monkees, the band delighted the crowd for close to two hours with hits such as “All My Loving,” “In My Life,” “Day Tripper” and “Back In The U.S.S.R.”
The concert was a nod to the famous Beatles on the rooftop concert in January of 1969 on top of their Apple Corps headquarters in central London. That was the last time they performed together in front of a live audience. After playing “Get Back” for the third time that rainy afternoon, John Lennon famously and playfully asked the crowd if the most influential band in the history of music had “passed the audition.”
Refano, who lives in Centerport, saw the Beatles live at Shea Stadium in 1966, and like pretty much everyone else, was hooked.
“We are very excited to play on the balcony and pay tribute to the Beatles for the people of Stony Brook,” said Refano as he tuned his guitar at sound check.
Jamie Bateman, a distant cousin to Ringo Starr and is originally from Liverpool, sings and plays the guitar and harmonica; Andrew Lubman plays bass, guitar, keyboard and sings many of Paul McCartney’s parts; and Brian James is behind the drum kit.
Ernie Canadeo, chairman of LIMEHOF, introduced the band and was thrilled to showcase the museum and facility in its first-ever outdoor concert.
“We decided to do the first outdoor concert as a ‘Beatles on the Balcony’ tribute, as the Beatles mean so much to everyone and they have a lot of connection to Long Island,” Canadeo said. “They played Shea Stadium and Forest Hills. Paul McCartney lives here, Ringo still plays out here and John spent a few summers here so we thought this would be a great idea.”
After “Hey Jude” and the encore of “I Saw Her Standing There,” the show was over and there was no doubt that The Liverpool Shuffle had passed the audition.
The cover of the Beatles’ iconic ‘Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band’ album
By Kevin Redding
It was 50 years ago today … on June 1, 1967, that the Beatles released “Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band” in the United States and completely changed everything: music, culture, themselves, how people viewed and analyzed rock ’n’ roll.
The incredibly ambitious and experimental 13-track album — on which John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr abandoned their traditional mop-top image and sound in favor of a more conceptual, weird, wholly new product with a scope and style that hadn’t been attempted before by them or anybody else — helped usher in the Summer of Love and set the tone for the rest of the decade.
While many older albums, especially when they fall on younger ears, tend to lose their might over time, “Sgt. Pepper” still stands strong, and sounds just as vibrant and fresh as ever. To this day, it’s argued to be the greatest, if not most influential, album of all time.
Peter Winkler Favorite Beatles song: ‘A Day in the Life’
“It was just absolutely groundbreaking,” Peter Winkler, a retired Stony Brook University professor of composition and theory and popular music, said, recalling the first time he listened to the record.
Winkler, who taught one of the very first rock music classes at the university in 1971, said he’ll never forget the week it came out and how stunned he was upon hearing the album’s epic finale “A Day in the Life” — “I had never heard anything like that before,” he said, “with that big orchestral roar — that had never happened on a pop record before.”
“Everybody was listening to the album, everybody was talking about; that doesn’t happen these days where one particular record is having that impact on everyone,” Winkler continued. “It was incredibly innovative and made this enormous splash around the world. It expanded the vocabulary of pop music in such a dramatic way. It was just a game changer. Everything that followed — Genesis, Yes, Pink Floyd — came straight from ‘Sgt. Pepper.’”
Pete Kennedy Favorite Beatles song: ‘A Day in the Life’
Pete Kennedy, a New York-based singer-songwriter who regularly performs at The Long Island Museum in Stony Brook, echoed Winkler’s excitement over the innovation of the album, comparing it to the release of Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Canterbury Tales,” a grandiose, cohesive novel, amid decades of mere folktales in the Middle Ages. “That’s kind of what the Beatles did with this. They put rock music together in a much more serious way than anybody had before. It marked the beginning of the rock world that still exists now … they were already so well known and could’ve coasted along doing what they’d been doing but they took this step instead,” Kennedy said.
The album’s release coincided with, and legitimized, an emergence of rock journalists and professional critics who recognized the genre as something to be taken seriously, a notion that would’ve been inconceivable beforehand. A month before, renowned classical composer Leonard Bernstein even hosted an hour-long CBS special called “Inside Pop: The Rock Revolution” referring to the Fab Four as a group whose songs were “more adventurous than anything else written in serious music today.”
Just before the album came out, Kennedy explained, he and a lot of other people thought the Beatles were a done deal. In August 1966, the group performed their final live concert, having had enough of the screaming girls and a hectic atmosphere wherein people were burning their records after Lennon referred to the band as being “bigger than Jesus,” choosing to work exclusively from the studio from then on.
Norman Prusslin Favorite Beatles song: ‘Getting Better’
One June afternoon the following year, Kennedy walked into a record shop and saw an unrecognizable band, dressed in colorful military costumes and surrounded by a slew of famous faces and flower-power imagery.
“Just seeing that pop-art album cover, with no advanced warning and them with mustaches, it might not seem like a big deal, but it really was because their appearance was such a big part of them,” he said. “The Beatles hairstyle and matching suit … now they looked like hippies, and it was sort of shocking.”
Norman Prusslin, the first station manager of WUSB and director of the media minor at Stony Brook, said of the infamous cover, “it was almost like their alter ego, a way for them to step out of being the Beatles … it was also one of the first times pop records had lyrics printed on the back.”
“It was a very different record, musically, it wasn’t your typical Beatles record up to that point,” Prusslin, who saw the group live in 1964, said. “It felt continuous,
Charles Backfish Favorite Beatles song: ‘Within You Without You’
like one long thing … I think the concept of the album, rather than being just a collection of songs, became a pallet for an entire creative journey that became influential to other bands that came later. It maximized studio equipment to its fullest potential at the time and contained exploratory, autobiographical lyrics that encouraged other bands to free themselves and try different things and not be set in the two minutes and 50 seconds standard pop hit duration.”
Charles Backfish, the host of WUSB’s “Sunday Street” program, highlighted the album’s coinciding impact with the rise of FM radio. While AM was the dominant form of radio in the ’60s, with FM merely broadcasting whatever AM played, an FCC regulation went into effect in January 1967 declaring each dial needed to have different programming.
“So it opened up the option for FM stations to do something different,” Backfish said. “While AM played classic top 40 songs, FM started to explore different music and some things happening in the rock scene at the time lent themselves to being played on there … and ‘Sgt. Pepper’s’ is a perfect example. There were no singles released from the album, each song segued into another, and so it’s an album that found a real home on FM radio and helped drive the popularity of FM radio.”
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) introduces Strawberry Fields, a free Beatles tribute concert, at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
North Shore residents danced the night away as Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Hundred flocked to Rocky Point to see Strawberry Fields perform a free Beatles tribute concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
Strawberry Fields, a Beatles tribute band, performed a free concert at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Photo by Greg Catalano
On Aug. 23, and despite Suffolk County Legislator Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai) being unable to attend, Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) introduced Beatles cover band Strawberry Fields as the second-to-last free concert as part of a four-part series this summer at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Rocky Point. Hundreds flocked to see the band perform early and later songs in the Beatles’ career and danced the night away as band members rocked the stage. Mike DelGuidice and Big Shot, a Billy Joel tribute band with roots in Miller Place, will perform the last concert of the series on Aug. 30 at 7 p.m.