Steve M.
03-08-2012, 11:56 AM
Every one of these groups drew comparisons to the Beatles, either as a potential rival to the Fab Four, as a group to take the torch from the Beatles after their 1970 breakup, as a "Beatles" of their time, as a "Beatles" of their genre, or as a "Beatles" of their country. And some groups - vocal groups trhat sang other people's songs - were compared to the Beatles because twelve-year-old girls like them! puke:
They include but are not limited to:
the Rolling Stones (called ersatz Beatles by writer Philip Norman for their early affectations and their recording of a Lennon-McCartney song - "I Wanna Be Your Man")
the Dave Clark Five ("when their single "Glad All Over" replaced "I Want To Hold Your Hand" at the top of the British charts, it was said that the Tottenham sound crushed the Mersey sound)
the Animals (for being the first group after the Beatles to have a number one hit in America - their cover of "House Of the Rising Sun")
the Byrds (George Harrison called them an "American Beatles,' and Roger McGuinn and David Crosby took all of their cues from the Beatles in forming the group, right down to their misspelled name and McGuinn's Rickenbacker twelve-string guitar)
the Monkees (obvious copycats)
Kenny Rogers and the First Edition (for their Sgt. Pepper-like "Just Dropped In to See What Condition My Condition Was In")
the Temptations (Daryl Hall called them the Beatles of Philadelphia)
the Buckinghams (the Beatles of Chicago)
the Bee Gees (Beatlesque ballads, most successful '70s group)
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young (called an American Beatles, even though Graham Nash was British and Neil Young was Canadian)
Lindisfarne (called a seventies Beatles in the British rock press)
T. Rex (T. Rexstasy was once called a 1970s substitute for Beatlemaina)
the Eagles (called a seventies Beatles and an American Beatles for their hit singles and multiplatinum record sales)
Steely Dan (called the most strategically innovative group to follow the Beatles by writer Tim Riley)
the Allman Brothers Band (the Beatles of the South)
Led Zeppelin (the Beatles of heavy metal)
Pink Floyd (the Beatles of prog, or "art rock")
Kiss (at one time the biggest group in America, with a Beatlesque following and a Beatlesque lineup - the leaders were the rhythm guitarist and the bassist, the junior partners were the lead guitarist and the drummer; fans were called the "Kiss Army"; the only mainstream band in the late seventies whose members were all celebrities in their own right, even though they were always masked in public)
the Sex Pistols (the Beatles of punk)
Squeeze (the Beatles of New Wave)
XTC (ditto)
the Knack (promoted as a new Beatles by Capitol - yeah, right!)
the Go-Go's (the female Beatles)
Daryl Hall and John Oates ("I think we're the eighties Beatles," Daryl Hall told Rolling Stone in 1985. "If we were born twenty years earlier, maybe the world would have seen that." :) )
Split Enz, Crowded House (called "Beatlesque")
New Kids On the Block (because the girls liked them)
N' Sync (ditto)
the Backstreet Boys (megaditto)
Menudo (superditto, also called the Beatles of Puerto Rico)
Run-DMC (the Beatles of rap and hip-hop)
Oasis (the Beatles of the nineties, or at least nineties Britpop)
the Arctic Monkeys (one of their albums was overhyped as one of the greatest albums ever)
They include but are not limited to:
the Rolling Stones (called ersatz Beatles by writer Philip Norman for their early affectations and their recording of a Lennon-McCartney song - "I Wanna Be Your Man")
the Dave Clark Five ("when their single "Glad All Over" replaced "I Want To Hold Your Hand" at the top of the British charts, it was said that the Tottenham sound crushed the Mersey sound)
the Animals (for being the first group after the Beatles to have a number one hit in America - their cover of "House Of the Rising Sun")
the Byrds (George Harrison called them an "American Beatles,' and Roger McGuinn and David Crosby took all of their cues from the Beatles in forming the group, right down to their misspelled name and McGuinn's Rickenbacker twelve-string guitar)
the Monkees (obvious copycats)
Kenny Rogers and the First Edition (for their Sgt. Pepper-like "Just Dropped In to See What Condition My Condition Was In")
the Temptations (Daryl Hall called them the Beatles of Philadelphia)
the Buckinghams (the Beatles of Chicago)
the Bee Gees (Beatlesque ballads, most successful '70s group)
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young (called an American Beatles, even though Graham Nash was British and Neil Young was Canadian)
Lindisfarne (called a seventies Beatles in the British rock press)
T. Rex (T. Rexstasy was once called a 1970s substitute for Beatlemaina)
the Eagles (called a seventies Beatles and an American Beatles for their hit singles and multiplatinum record sales)
Steely Dan (called the most strategically innovative group to follow the Beatles by writer Tim Riley)
the Allman Brothers Band (the Beatles of the South)
Led Zeppelin (the Beatles of heavy metal)
Pink Floyd (the Beatles of prog, or "art rock")
Kiss (at one time the biggest group in America, with a Beatlesque following and a Beatlesque lineup - the leaders were the rhythm guitarist and the bassist, the junior partners were the lead guitarist and the drummer; fans were called the "Kiss Army"; the only mainstream band in the late seventies whose members were all celebrities in their own right, even though they were always masked in public)
the Sex Pistols (the Beatles of punk)
Squeeze (the Beatles of New Wave)
XTC (ditto)
the Knack (promoted as a new Beatles by Capitol - yeah, right!)
the Go-Go's (the female Beatles)
Daryl Hall and John Oates ("I think we're the eighties Beatles," Daryl Hall told Rolling Stone in 1985. "If we were born twenty years earlier, maybe the world would have seen that." :) )
Split Enz, Crowded House (called "Beatlesque")
New Kids On the Block (because the girls liked them)
N' Sync (ditto)
the Backstreet Boys (megaditto)
Menudo (superditto, also called the Beatles of Puerto Rico)
Run-DMC (the Beatles of rap and hip-hop)
Oasis (the Beatles of the nineties, or at least nineties Britpop)
the Arctic Monkeys (one of their albums was overhyped as one of the greatest albums ever)