Randolph Peter Best (born November 24, 1941 in Madras, India) was the original drummer for The Beatles.
Best was told of the dismissal by The Beatles' manager, Brian Epstein. The reason given was that George Martin, who was to become The Beatles' producer, had been dissatisfied with Best's drumming (which was solid, but lacking in flair, as evidenced by surviving tapes) and intended to replace him on their recordings. (Indeed, Martin did use a studio drummer, Andy White, on their first single session for "Love Me Do", having no chance to audition Starr beforehand.) The decision appears to have been a 'last straw' with the group, who felt Best had never completely fit in as a member. While Lennon, McCartney and Harrison usually spent their offstage time together, practicing their music or socialising, Best mostly went off alone. He therefore wasn't privy to many of the group's experiences, references, in-jokes and developing sense of style; when the band adopted the mop-top-style Beatle haircut, Best didn't follow suit.
Starr, on the other hand, had an appealing, unique playing style (which impressed Harrison, in particular), and he was already quite popular in the Mersey scene and readily joined in all The Beatles' activities. It has been speculated that another reason for dismissing Best (and hiring Ringo) was to draw fans from one of their primary local rivals (The Hurricanes). Aside from that, there has also always been the assumption that the other Beatles were jealous of Best's appeal with the female fans, since he was more conventionally handsome than the other members, a problem that certainly wouldn't exist with Ringo in his place. It has also been reported that Epstein first offered the job not to Starr, but to Johnny Hutchinson of The Big Three, who turned it down. Ringo's old band is said to have invited Best to make the switch reciprocal by becoming The Hurricanes' drummer, but he refused. Oddly, Ringo had always worn a beard during the period that The Beatles had known him, and didn't shave it off until after he had joined the band.
When word of Best's replacement broke in Liverpool (through outlets like Mersey Beat), many Beatles fans were upset, and one gave George Harrison a black eye. Quite a few female fans considered Best to be the band's best-looking member – at many early shows, Best had had his own group of female fans present in the audience.
In an appearance on the American game show I've Got a Secret, roughly two years later, Best seemed to deny that he was dismissed. Asked why 'he left the band', the still-ducktailed Best replied that he '...didn't think they would go as far as they did.'
In later years, Best himself has admitted to being a Beatles fan and owning their records.
After his split from The Beatles, Best joined Lee Curtis & The All Stars, which then broke off from Curtis and became Pete Best & The All Stars. They signed to Decca Records - who had previously rejected The Beatles, and signed The Tremeloes instead - and released the single "I'm Gonna Knock On Your Door", which failed to gain an audience.
Best then relocated to the U.S. - along with two songwriting musicians from The Remo Four, Wayne Bickerton and Tony Waddington - as The Pete Best Four, and did some recording for small labels. Personnel changes in early 1965 increased the group's size to five, with the new name The Pete Best Combo. They toured the U.S. with their combination of 1950s songs and originals but had little success, hurt by having no hit records in England or major label promotion in the U.S. Finally, they released an album on Cameo Records. titled Best Of The Beatles (a dubious play on Peter's name, leading to disappointment for record buyers who expected a Beatles compilation), but disbanded not long after. (Bickerton and Waddington were to find much greater success as songwriters in the 1970s for a series of hits by The Rubettes.)
Best apparently tried to commit suicide in 1965 by locking himself in a room and inhaling fumes from a gas fire. Best filed a libel suit against The Beatles in October of that year, because Starr implied in an interview with Playboy magazine that Best had been fired because he was a drug user. The suit was settled out of court for an undisclosed sum. Best decided to leave show business, and in Hunter Davies' 1968 authorised Beatles biography, he was portrayed as both somewhat bitter but also unwilling to further talk about or otherwise cash in on his Beatles association.
After a series of jobs outside music, including work as a baker and a civil servant, Best began giving interviews to the media, writing about his time with The Beatles, and serving as a technical advisor for the television movie Birth of the Beatles in the late 1970s. Thus, Best eventually found a modicum of independent fame, and toured as leader of The Pete Best Band. In this public role, Best is uniquely positioned to gratify the many fans who are fascinated with The Beatles' early days.
When the surviving Beatles released their Anthology in 1995, which featured a number of tracks with Best as drummer, Best received a substantial windfall – apparently between £1 million and £4 million – from the sales. He also appeared later in a television special, also titled Best Of The Beatles, telling his life story.
1941 births | Living people | English drummers | Music from Liverpool | Natives of Merseyside | The Beatles
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