Beatlemania is a term that was used during the 1960s to describe fan frenzy (particularly by young teenaged girls) toward The Beatles. Many fans across the world were known to have Beatlemania, which hit the United States hard after The Beatles performed on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1964. It later became the name of various tribute groups dedicated to singing the songs of The Beatles. These groups have had John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr look-alikes.
The term has had a number of derivatives, usually shortlived, such as Rollermania in the early 1970s to describe a similar phenomenon directed at the Scottish boy band Bay City Rollers, and in the early 1980s, Menudomania to describe frenzy across Latin America for another world famous boy band, Menudo.
One can envision the dimensions of the original Beatlemania during its peak year in 1964 by looking at the unprecedented sales figures caused by it. During 1964, The Beatles sold over 30 million records in America alone:
Released by Capitol records
Total: over 10 million (4 million RIAA-certified)
Released by other companies (such as Swan, Tollie, Vee Jay, Polydor)
Total: over 7.4 million (non RIAA-certified)
Released by Capitol records
Total: over 10 million (13 million RIAA-certified)
Released by United Artists records
Released by other companies
Total: over 1.7 million (non RIAA-certified)
These sales represent a total of 17.4 million singles and 14.7 million albums giving a grand total of 32.1 million records sold in just 12 months (of which 21 million are certified by the RIAA). Never before or since has a musical act approached sales figures on such a scale in such short a period of time.
Sources:
Beatlemania | Le phénomène Beatles | Beatlemania | ビートルマニア | Beatlemania
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"Beatlemania".
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