After nearly 300 performances at Liverpool’s Cavern Club, The Beatles’ final show at the venue took place on 3 August 1963.
It was well known that The Beatles had outgrown the Cavern by this time, and their regular fans were grudgingly aware that their popularity could only be served by bigger venues.
The crowds outside were going mad. By the time John Lennon had got through the cordon of girls, his mohair jacket had lost a sleeve. I grabbed it to stop a girl getting away with a souvenir. John stitched it back on. They may have altered their style elsewhere, but they didn’t do it at the Cavern. They were the same old Beatles, with John saying, “Okay, tatty-head, we’re going to play a number for you.’ There was never anything elaborate about his introductions.
The Cavern, Spencer Leigh
Tickets for the final show had gone on sale at 21 July at 1.30pm, and sold out within 30 minutes.
That August appearance only came about because Brian Epstein couldn’t pull them out of an appearance at the Grafton the night before. Les Ackerley [actually Albert Kinder] said ‘I’ve got them under contract,’ and Epstein was furious because, by then, he had other things in mind for them. He was calling Ackerley all sorts of names, but he didn’t use four-letter words as he never did that. Ackerley had a barring clause preventing The Beatles appearing in Liverpool before but not after that appearance, so Brian asked us to take The Beatles for the Cavern on the following night, which was a Saturday. I resented this as he was only doing it to get at Ackerley, and anyway, I had booked all the groups for Saturday 3 August. If I’d said no, he would have gone to Ray McFall, who would have said, ‘Of course we’ll take them.’The Beatles were paid £300, which was quite a bit of money then, and Brian restricted the audience to 500. I can’t blame Brian as he had seen how crowded the Cavern got and he had to think of The Beatles’ safety. The admission price was 10 shillings and so that meant that we collected only £250 on the door. All the staff had to be paid, and the other groups on the bill too, so we made no profit that night.
It was more Mercenary Beat than Mersey Beat that night. The Escorts and The Merseybeats still wanted paying for the night: the kudos of being on with The Beatles wasn’t enough for them. When I told them that we would be starting the evening an hour earlier, the first thing they said was, ‘We’re still getting paid, aren’t we, Bob?’
The Cavern, Spencer Leigh
Although Brian Epstein promised the club’s compère Bob Wooler that The Beatles would return, they never did.
The Beatles were very professional: there was no larking around and they got on with it. We all felt it was their swan song and that we would never have them at the Cavern again. Brian Epstein still owes the Cavern six dates for The Beatles as he kept pulling them out of bookings by saying, ‘You wouldn’t stand in the boys’ way, would you, Bob?’
The Cavern, Spencer Leigh
The show lasted from 6-11.30pm. Also on the bill were The Escorts, The Merseybeats, The Road Runners, Johnny Ringo and the Colts, and Faron’s Flamingos.
I was on the bill for the last show that The Beatles did at the Cavern. I was performing in a pool of water and it was so crowded that two members of my band collapsed and had to be carried outside.
The Cavern, Spencer Leigh
During The Beatles’ set a power cut silenced their instruments and plunged the Cavern into temporary darkness. Lennon and McCartney performed an acoustic version of ‘When I’m Sixty-Four’ – a song they wouldn’t release until 1967 – while waiting for the electricity to return. Lennon, however, was particularly displeased by the Cavern’s primitive concert facilities.
We were on just before The Beatles and we were delighted with our reception as everybody was cheering and going mad. The Beatles all had long faces and John Lennon was saying, ‘We never should have come back here.’ Everything was sweaty and wet and we told them to make sure that they didn’t slip on stage. Once the walls got wet, all that condensation came down onto the stage and it was dangerous. This was proved as they fused the electrics and the lights went out. Normally, John Lennon would have cracked jokes while somebody got it right but he was in such a bad mood that he came off stage.
The Cavern, Spencer Leigh
Originally a jazz venue, The Quarrymen had first played their brand of skiffle at the Mathew Street venue on 7 August 1957. The Beatles made their début there on 9 February 1961.
This show was officially declared by the club’s management to have been The Beatles’ 292nd there, although the accuracy of that number has been disputed. There are 280 known appearances, consisting of 155 lunchtime and 125 evening shows.
Also on this day...
- 2019: Ringo Starr and his All-Starr Band live: Ravinia Festival
- 2010: Ringo Starr and his All-Starr Band live: Mountain Winery, Saratoga
- 2003: Ringo Starr and his All-Starr Band live: PNC Bank Arts Center, Holmdel
- 1998: UK album release: Vertical Man by Ringo Starr
- 1995: Ringo Starr and his All-Starr Band live: Orlando Arena, Orlando
- 1992: Ringo Starr and his All-Starr Band live: Harveys Outdoor Amphitheater, Stateline
- 1973: Recording: You Are Here, Meat City, Only People by John Lennon
- 1967: George Harrison and Ravi Shankar hold a press conference
- 1967: Pattie Harrison reads about Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
- 1962: The Beatles live: Grafton Rooms, Liverpool
- 1961: The Beatles live: St John’s Hall, Liverpool
Want more? Visit the Beatles history section.
Your article says that tickets for the final show had gone on sale at 21 July at 1.30pm, and sold out within 30 minutes.
But I travelled up from Norfolk on the day of their appearance,the 3rd of August on the off chance that I could get in, I joined the queue in the early evening, and got talking to a girl name of Joyce Ferrie (Ferry Cross The Mersey ?) she asked if I had a ticket, I said I hadn’t, and she told me “You won’t get in without one”
I remained in the queue talking to her, and a large Jaguar saloon came slowly down Mathew street, Joyce ran up to the car and banged on the window, and had a chat with the occupant who it turned out was Ray McFall, and she came back holding a precious ticket for me, for which I paid (I think) 10 shillings (50p)
Needless to say it was a night to remember.
Wow, that’s a fabulous story Pete. You’re a very lucky man to have been there 🙂
You wouldn’t be Pete Best, would you?
Do you still have the ticket stub or what about the cavern book
Aside rom Granada TV recording Some Other Guy at The Cavern was anything else known to have been recorded either on film or tape? I guess if it was acceptable quality it would have seen the light of day by now, but with nearly 300 shows the possibility of a domestic recording might be there?
Granada TVs recordings of Some other guy (3 versions, i.e. 3 different introductions & endings) and Kansas City are available in various shapes and forms. See entries for Aug 22 and Sept 5 1962 for detailed info. Parts of all the film clips in circulation show them singing other songs.
A reel-to-reel recording, announced as being recorded at The Cavern, probably July 1962, was purchased for Paul McCartney at a Sotheby´s auction some years ago. Not one second of it has been circulated. I guess the sound is awful.
No recording of tracks 1, 2 or 7 exist by The Beatles.
1.Hey baby
2.If you gotta make a fool of somebody (James Ray song)
3.Hippy hippy shake
4.Please mr. postman
5.Roll over Beethoven
6.Ask me why
7.Sharing you (possibly the Bobby Vee tune)
8.Your feets too big
9.Words of love
10.Till there was you
11.Dizzy Miss Lizzie
12.I forgot to remember to forget
13.Matchbox (vocal at this time was by Pete Best)
14.Shimmy shake
15.Youngblood
16.Dream baby
Would love a list of every song they played at cavern club.Please please Me album was 14 songs from there set list but I’m sure there are many more. The one song filmed at cavern some other guy We hear at live on the BBC
I was in the audience for that gig…..recall a very exciting time as it was announced that this would be the last performance at the Cavern……..the last song was “Twist and Shout” …then they were gone…..seem to recall a feeling of loss at the time…….we knew they were great and the wider world needed to know….but in some ways reluctant to share them with anyone else…….We, the fans, thought of them as ours
Hi, Pete back again after nearly 6 years ( see above ) below is info for David.
A tape recorded at the Cavern in the spring/summer of ’62 sold at Sotherby’s in 1985 for £2,310.
Tracks listed as: –
Words of love
What’s your name (unknown)….actually by ‘Don and Juan’ lovely doo wop number…..Pete.
Roll over Beethoven
Ask me why
Hippy hippy shake
Till there was you
Hey! baby
if you gotta make a fool of somebody
Please Mr postman
Sharing you
Your feet’s too big
I forgot to remember to forget
Shimmy like Kate
Memphis Tennessee
Young blood
Dream baby
It was bought by Macca, but others are rumoured to exist.
Apparently there are many rehearsals of The Beatles, they were recorded by brother Paul McCartney with his tape recorder and are somewhere in the archives.
I guess it’s like the recording from 1st October 1962 the beatles
Hey, my grandads band was Johnny Ringo and the colts who supported the Beatles on there last cavern performance. If anyone knows any more about them I’d love to hear it. My grandad passed away a few years ago, so it’s searchs like this that help me piece the puzzle back together. His name was Les Holt (aka William Holt)