The Beatles RARE promo Please Please Me sleeve & Record on VeeJay + items
  $   1,935

 


$ 1935 Sold For
Jul 7, 2014 Sold Date
Jun 30, 2014 Start Date
49   Number Of Bids
  USA Country Of Seller
eBay Auctioned at
 
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Description

I obtained these from a DJ's  son in NY. 
P Cox has these listed in his 2007 book for  $5000.00 for a nm sleeve,$850.00 for a nm 45. I cannot stress on how rare two of these items are. You are bidding on the following.
1) Original Newsweek magazine in VG+ condition.
2) Original Vee Jay mailer that was used to send out these promo 45's to radio and TV media personal only .In NM- condition.
3) Original Vee Jay promo Please Please Me sleeve in VG+ condition (see below for description of promotion)
4) Original promotional Vee jay 45 vinyl for the above sleeve. The dj signed his logo oon both the sleeve and 45.In NM- condition. 




We can meet at a safe location for the transaction .Shadow box is a 100.00 option.
Serious inquires only!



On Friday evening, January 3, 1964, Americans watching The Jack Parr Show heard the announcer read the guest list for the program, which included “from London, a special film appearance of the sensational rock ’n’ rollers, the Beatles.” After completing his monolog, Paar began his introduction of the Beatles. Paar told viewers that he had never had a rock ’n’ roll act on his show, but that he was “interested in the Beatles as a psychological, sociological phenomenon.” Paar showed film of girls screaming with From Me To You barely audible in the background. During the film, he gave a running commentary, which was often interrupted by laughter from the studio audience. Paar remained silent during the filmed performance of She Loves You, which ended with shots of screaming girls. After his studio audience politely applauded, Paar deadpanned, “It’s nice to know that England has finally risen to our cultural level.” After laughs from the studio audience, Paar informed his viewers that “Ed Sullivan’s going to have the Beatles on live in February.” Apparently feeling the need to justify his broadcast of the Beatles to his sophisticated followers, Paar explained that “our interest was just showing a more adult audience that usually follows my work, what’s going on in England.”

 Jack Gould wrote a review of The Jack Paar Program performance for The New York Times. Gould reported that the group “offered a number apparently titled ‘With a Love Like That, You Know You Should Be Bad.’ Also appended were ‘yeah, yeah, yeah’ in a steady beat and then a ‘whooooooo,’ the standard international cue to which all young women in a studio audience mechanically respond with ecstatic approval.” He went on to predict that although the group’s sound might “find favor among indigenous teenagers, it would not seem quite so likely that the accompanying fever known as Beatlemania will also be successfully exported. On this side of the Atlantic it is dated stuff. Hysterical squeals emanating from developing femininity really went out coincidental with the payola scandal and Presley’s military service.”

On Jul-03-14 at 10:49:52 PDT, seller added the following information:

LISTEN!! This is side one of this 45 you are hearing! clean!




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