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Andy White (drummer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Scottish drummer (1930–2015)

Andy White
White at Skidmore College in 2006
White atSkidmore College in 2006
Background information
Born
Andrew McLuckie White

(1930-07-27)27 July 1930
Stranraer, Scotland
Died9 November 2015(2015-11-09) (aged 85)
GenresPop/rock,rock and roll,swing
OccupationMusician
Instrument(s)Drums, percussion
Years active1950s–1970s
Musical artist

Andrew McLuckie White (27 July 1930 – 9 November 2015) was a Scottish drummer, primarily a session musician. He is best known for temporarily replacingRingo Starr on drums forthe Beatles' first single, "Love Me Do".[1] White was featured on the American7" single release of the song, which also appeared on the band's debut British album,Please Please Me. He also played on "P.S. I Love You", which was theB-side of "Love Me Do".[2][3]

White played with other prominent musicians and groups both in the United Kingdom and the United States, includingChuck Berry,Billy Fury,Herman's Hermits andTom Jones.AllMusic called White "one of the busier drummers in England from the late 1950s through the mid-1970s".[1]

Early life and early career

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Andrew McLuckie White[4] was born inStranraer[4] on 27 July 1930, the son of a baker. At the age of 12, he started playing drums in apipe band, and became a professionalsession musician at the age of 17. In the 1950s and early 1960s, White played drums with a number ofswing and traditional jazz groups and musicians.[1][5] In 1958 he formed a big band jazz outfit and took it to theAmerican Northeast where he backedrockers likeChuck Berry,the Platters andBill Haley & His Comets.

White said, "We used some big band arrangements and put a back beat to it to fit in with the rock 'n' roll thing. I got the chance to hear rock 'n' roll in the flesh. That was where I got a good idea about what it was supposed to happen, drumwise."[5] In 1960 in London White recorded withBilly Fury on Fury's first album,The Sound of Fury, which is generally regarded as Britain's firstrock and roll album.[1]

In the early 1960s White lived inThames Ditton and was married to the BritishDecca artistLyn Cornell, who later became a member ofthe Vernons Girls,the Pearls, and alsothe Carefrees, who had the biggest selling Beatles novelty single ever with "We Love You Beatles," peaking in the U.S. at No. 39 and staying on theBillboard charts for five weeks.[6][7]

The Beatles

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In September 1962, White received a call from producerRon Richards asking him to attend aBeatles recording session at theEMI Studios at Abbey Road in London. Richards was record producerGeorge Martin's assistant at the time and had used White in the past. The Beatles had recorded "Love Me Do" twice already: at an EMI session on 6 June 1962 withPete Best on drums when he was still a member of the group; and again on 4 September 1962, now withRingo Starr on drums, having replaced Best the previous month.[8]

Martin had disapproved of Best's drumming and was still unhappy with newcomer Starr's drumming.[9] On 11 September 1962, Richards, who was in charge of recording that day, wanted the song recorded again, and the Beatles played "Love Me Do" a third time, this time with White replacing Starr on drums and Starr relegated to playing tambourine.[1][6] "P.S. I Love You" was also recorded during this session with White playing a "lightweightcha-cha-chá beat"[10] onbongos rather than drums[11][page needed] and Starr playingmaracas.[12] White says he was paid£5 for the session and 10shillings for bringing his drum kit,[13][14] and did not earn anyroyalties from the sale of the records.[6][15]

The version of "Love Me Do" with Starr playing drums was used on the early British pressings of the single in 1962. The version with White on drums was used on the first American pressings of the single in 1964, all later releases of the single, on the Beatles' debut British album,Please Please Me, in 1963, and most subsequent albums that included the song.[2][3] The version with Starr on drums has also been reissued on occasion; it appears on theRarities (1980) compilation, which was released in North America, and received worldwide release on thePast Masters compilation in 1988.[2][16]

A 1992 single includes both the Starr and White versions. An easy way to distinguish between the two versions is that White's version features Starr on tambourine; Starr's version does not include a tambourine.[12] The Pete Best version of the song, initially thought to be lost, was released for the first time onAnthology 1 (1995). "P.S. I Love You", with White drumming, was released on the "B" side of the "Love Me Do" single, and on thePlease Please Me album.[2]

In a 2012 BBC interview, White claimed that during the 11 September session he also played on a recording of "Please Please Me", and that this performance was used on the hit single: "From the drum sound I can tell that I was on it, because it was a vastly different sound to Ringo's drumset at that time. This was before he got theLudwig kit. Each drummer gets an individual sound, first of all by the way they tune the drums and then by the way they play the drums."[13][14] In any case, he did not participate in the final recording on 26 November, and was only hired for the 11 September session.

This was the only time White played with the Beatles, but it was enough to get him "into the history books",[1] and the distinction of being one of the so-called "fifth Beatles".[5] White said that on that day in the studio the only members of the Beatles he worked with werePaul McCartney andJohn Lennon, because they were the songwriters. "They didn't use any written music, and what I had to do was play the routines with them to get an idea what they wanted before we could even start recording."[5]

Other projects

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Later, White played on hit records byHerman's Hermits, onTom Jones's hit song "It's Not Unusual" and on "Shout" byLulu.[17] He also worked with many other musicians and groups, includingRod Stewart,Anthony Newley,Bert Weedon and theBBC Scottish Radio Orchestra in Glasgow. In the mid-1960s White toured the United States withMarlene Dietrich and performed in hercabaret shows, under the musical direction of the then-unknown composerBurt Bacharach,[1][3][5] and, from 1965 until he retired in 1975, the British pianist and composerWilliam Blezard.

White played drums on "P.S. I Love You" again in 2008, this time on a version by a New Jersey–based rock band,the Smithereens. In 2007 the band had recordedMeet the Smithereens!, a tribute to the Beatles, covering their entireMeet the Beatles! album. After Beatles expert Tom Frangione[5] introduced White to the band, they asked White to record with them on their next Beatlestribute album atThe Grip Weeds' House of Vibes recording studio inHighland Park. White's drumming on "P.S. I Love You" was released late in 2008 onB-Sides The Beatles, an album of Beatles B-side covers from 1962 to 1965.[18] A Smithereens version of "Love Me Do" with White was also recorded during the session, but was left unreleased until a 2020 single release. White also played drums with the Smithereens in May 2008 at aWe Get By with a Little Help from Our Friends charity health-care fundraiser at thePaper Mill Playhouse inMillburn.[5]

In the late 1980s White moved to United States and lived inCaldwell, New Jersey, where he taught Scottish pipe band drumming.[19] He was also a judge for the Eastern United States Pipe Band Association (EUSPBA), and drum instructor for the New York City Department of Corrections Emerald Pipe Band. He was married toThea White, a librarian who supplied the voice of Muriel on theCartoon Network showCourage the Cowardly Dog. White had a bumper sticker on his car that read "5THBEATLE". He said that "One of my students gave that to me."[5]

Death

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White died after astroke at his home inCaldwell, New Jersey, on 9 November 2015 at the age of 85.[17][20]

References

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  1. ^abcdefgEder, Bruce."Andy White".AllMusic. Retrieved7 January 2010.
  2. ^abcdIngham 2003, p. 18.
  3. ^abcMarck, John T."Love Me Do".I Am The Beatles.Archived from the original on 19 December 2009. Retrieved8 January 2010.
  4. ^ab"Obituary of Andrew McLuckie White | Codey & Jones Funeral Home".codeyjonesfh.com. Retrieved7 February 2021.
  5. ^abcdefghJordan, Chris (23 May 2008). "IN TUNE: Beat of a different drummer".Courier News.Bridgewater, New Jersey.ProQuest 378253750.
  6. ^abc"Who backed The Beatles?".Something Books. Archived fromthe original on 26 October 2017. Retrieved8 January 2010.
  7. ^Harry, Bill,Bigger than the Beatles, p.195–196
  8. ^Dunn, Brad (2006).When They Were 22: 100 Famous People at the Turning Point in Their Lives. Andrews McMeel Publishing. p. 143.ISBN 0-7407-5810-1.
  9. ^Thompson, Gordon (2008).Please Please Me: Sixties British Pop, Inside Out (Illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 63.ISBN 978-0-19-533318-3.
  10. ^MacDonald, Ian (2005).Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties (Second Revised ed.). London: Pimlico (Rand).ISBN 1-84413-828-3.
  11. ^Margotin & Guesdon 2014.
  12. ^abCross, Craig (2005).The Beatles: Day-by-day, Song-by-song, Record-by-record. iUniverse. p. 399.ISBN 0-595-34663-4.
  13. ^ab"Love Me Do: The Beatles '62".BBC Four. 7 October 2012.
  14. ^ab"Love Me Do: The Beatles '62 (excerpt)".YouTube. 9 October 2012. Archived fromthe original on 11 October 2012.
  15. ^Harry, Bill (2000).The Ultimate Beatles Encyclopedia. MJF Books.ISBN 1-56731-403-1.
  16. ^Ingham 2003, p. 88.
  17. ^ab"Andy White, early Beatles drummer, dies aged 85".BBC News. 11 November 2015. Retrieved12 November 2015.
  18. ^Borack, John M (2 January 2009)."B-Sides the Beatles".BNet. Retrieved8 January 2010.
  19. ^Racioppi, Joseph."Caldwell resident has big Beatles connection",The Progress, 17 September 2009. Accessed 31 January 2011.
  20. ^"Andy White, a Beatle for less than 5 minutes, dies at 85".Los Angeles Times. 12 November 2015. Retrieved24 December 2016.

Works cited

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