With some of the no mark ballbags that do get it (two of which are detailed in that blog) - and those overlooked who should possibly get it - such as Bob Paisley and Ringo Starr - I question its credibility anyway.
With some of the no mark ballbags that do get it (two of which are detailed in that blog) - and those overlooked who should possibly get it - such as Bob Paisley and Ringo Starr - I question its credibility anyway.
I remember George Harrison talking about his MBE. "A bit of leather and string, not much for putting the swing in the 60s". He was right.
Ringo showed what he is from his comments - a no-mark.
Paul has always been above those things and lets his musical talent talk. Paul, you are always welcome. Loved the concert.
Wouldn't it be nice for Paul (in sunglasses and beard) to be given a stage on the Matthew St festival.
redjed1, If you were lucky enough to have a house in Monaco and one in California would you live in Liverpool?.
I didn't find anything offensive in what he said. The audience laughing at the question was offensive.
You can always count on Americans to do the right thing - after they've tried everything else.
Winston Churchill
No, I'm not Ringo in disguise. I know exactly what Liverpool is like, I lived there for the first 43 years of my life. I am now retired in the beautiful Ozark mountains and love it here. You refer to "we" being happy without him, I am sure you don't speak for everyone. Don't think because people move away that they are some kind of traitor, that is a very narrow minded view.
P.S. I think California is over rated too, that is why I live here.
You can always count on Americans to do the right thing - after they've tried everything else.
Winston Churchill
Hi shytalk. Not quite sure what you mean by "I know exactly what Liverpool is like".
I'm happy for you living where you like.
Pretty sure I speak for most Liverpudlians where Ringo is concerned.
Don't mind people moving away, but get a bit annoyed when they bad-mouth us, while pretending to be part of us.
July 6, 2008
Final drum roll for Ringo Starr’s birthplace
The former Beatle and Liverpool have fallen out. Now his old home has been deemed unworthy of saving, writes Richard Brooks
At the height of Beatlemania, Ringo Starr’s role was famously written off by John Lennon. He wasn’t even the best drummer in the band, let alone the world, joked Lennon.
Now Starr faces a further indignity. The house at No 9 Madryn Street, Liverpool, where he was born Richard Starkey, 68 years ago tomorrow, is almost certain to be demolished after a decision by English Heritage not to list it.
Applications had been made to save the house, which is in an area of mid-Victorian buildings singled out as important by the architectural writer Sir Nicholas Pevsner, but it is doomed.
In contrast, Sir Paul McCartney’s childhood home was bought by the National Trust in 1997 after John Birt, then the director-general of the BBC and a Liverpudlian, argued for its purchase. John Lennon’s home, where he lived with his aunt Mimi, was given to the trust by his widow Yoko Ono in 2002 after she had bought it. Both houses are now seen by thousands of visitors a year. George Harrison’s childhood house, which is lived in by a family, is not under threat.
To add insult to injury for Starr, the home of Pete Best, the drummer the Beatles dumped in 1962, was listed by English Heritage in 2006. The conservation body says the building, once a Conservative Club before it was bought by Mona Best, Pete’s mother, is significant because it became the Casbah Club where the group played some of their early performances.
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Starr recently referred to his birthplace in a song, Liverpool 8, released to commemorate the city’s year as European Capital of Culture:
Liverpool I left you, said goodbye to Madryn Street
I always followed my heart, and I never missed a beat
Destiny was calling, I just could not stick around
Liverpool I left you, but I never let you down.
The song was panned. The lyrics are hardly as evocative as Lennon and McCartney’s Penny Lane or Strawberry Fields, the former children’s home whose gates have now been preserved.
The city turned against Starr when he made dismissive comments about Liverpool on Jonathan Ross’s BBC1 show in January, saying there was “nothing” he missed about the place. A shrubbery sculpture of the drummer was later beheaded.
Starr lived in Madryn Street for the first four years of his life before he and his mother moved around the corner to Admiral Grove. English Heritage’s main reason for rejecting the listing request, therefore, is that Madryn Street has no real links with the Beatles.
Yet many Liverpudlians, despite Starr’s remarks about the city, want the street preserved. They include the former Liberal Democrat MP, David (now Lord) Alton, who, along with the Merseyside Civic Society, argues that the Victorian houses of the area, known as New Heartlands, should be refurbished rather than demolished, although their real concern is more about keeping a community together than preserving Starr’s house.
“There are those who believe Ringo’s birthplace alone is worth keeping,” said Jerry Goldman, director of the Beatles Story attraction in Liverpool. “He was born there, after all, while John and Paul [were] not born in the homes now owned by the National Trust.”
Goldman suggests an alternative plan: “No 9 could be taken down brick by brick and rebuilt in the new Liverpool Museum. This has a double advantage. It will mean displaying a mid-Victorian terrace house, and it was Ringo’s birthplace.” The Liverpool Museum, now being built, is due to open by 2011.
Starr’s home in Admiral Grove, where he lived from the age of four to 22, is open to the public – albeit in an unofficial way. Margaret Grose, who has lived there for more than 30 years, shows people around without any charge. They usually arrive in one of the taxis that specialise in ferrying fans around Beatles landmarks in the city.
“I get hundreds a year,” said Grose. “I knew him as a young boy. He was nice and polite. What I like to see are the smiles on their faces.”
Yet even she has a criticism: “His name is mud now because of what he said earlier this year about the city.”
Source: The Sunday Times
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