Description
Price: $35.00 - $25.25
(as of Mar 16, 2025 13:03:33 UTC – Details)
Larry Marion’s The Lost Beatles Photographs is a milestone for rock and roll collecting: the largest trove of never-before-seen rock photographs ever uncovered reveals the Fab Four on their earliest American tours during the 1960s. Selected from a cache of intimate, behind-the-scenes snapshots taken by Bob Bonis–the US tour manager for the boys from Liverpool as well as the Rolling Stones and other British Invasion bands–The Lost Beatles Photographs reveals the casual, human side of a young John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr. Presented by Larry Marion, owner of New York’s Not Fade Away Gallery and curator of the acclaimed exhibit “The British Are Coming: The Beatles and The Rolling Stones 1964-66,” this one-of-a-kind book gives a priceless window into the off-stage personalities of the world’s greatest rock band.
Publisher : Dey Street Books; Illustrated edition (November 6, 2018)
Language : English
Hardcover : 169 pages
ISBN-10 : 0061960780
ISBN-13 : 978-0061960789
Item Weight : 2.2 pounds
Dimensions : 10.35 x 9.31 x 0.79 inches
Customers say
Customers find the book’s photos great and fun. They appreciate the insightful, personal, candid, and interesting photos with back stories. The book is described as a treasure for Beatles fans and a collector’s delight. However, opinions differ on the photo quality – some find them never seen or published before, while others consider them redundant and boring.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
G. Kirby –
A Beatles Scrapbook Without the Work
Although I have not read the entire book yet, it is a joy just to look at the fabulous and fun photographs that were taken of the Beatles while they were in America in the early 1960’s. I was only 12 when they burst on the music scene. My friends and I loved them, picked our favorites,listened to their records constantly, screamed while watching their movies, etc. but I was not old enough to follow where their tours were (except to know it was not any place near enough to actually go to a concert). This book has not only pictures of the Beatles themselves at play and in concert but pictures of ticket stubs and other memoralbilia of different concert dates…like a collector got together all of this neat Beatle collectables and put them in an album for you. There is very good informative writing to go along with the pictures. It is a book that you can just pick up, look at some photos, read a page or two, be entertained and enlightened and then put it down till next time if you would like. Of course, you could start on page 1 and read it all the way through, but you don’t have to read it like a traditional book to be able to enjoy it.
R. Rodriguez –
My favorite Beatles book I own.
This is probably my favorite Beatles book that I own. How many other books have live photographs of the Beatles taken on stage or in the front row? Bob Bonis had access to the band that almost no other photographer had at the time and the pictures are amazing! I would recommend this book to all Beatles fans but especially to the hardcore Beatles fan like myself. I loved this book and wish I could print some of these live pictures in a bigger format and frame them, they’re that good.
Kathleen Jones –
ESSENTIAL FOR ANY BEATLES OR 60s ROCK TOUR PHOTO COLLECTOR!!!
This original Beatles fan – yep, one of the Ancient Ones – has been collecting rock photos & books for decades. So many photo collections contain rehashes of many of the same photos that it seems nothing new will ever be discovered. Not so!!! With this and its sister volume on The Beatles, the estate of late US tour manager Bob Bonis has indeed provided scores of genuinely never-before-seen images of the classic 60’s bands, taken of the boys onstage, backstage & in private tour moments by Mr. Bonis, who had virtually unrestricted access. Bob kept almost all of these photos stashed at his home, seen by VERY few people, even his family. His son & the estate decided it was time to share it all with the world, resulting in a rare, totally fresh, often candid, remarkably immediate, occasionally cheeky assembly of images absolutely essential for any serious rock photo collector. Even if you’re not into the Stones or Beatles, these books provide a scarce first-hand inside glimpse of what a mid-60’s US rock tour was like. INDISPENSABLE!!!!!
MsUp –
Thumbs Up for The Lost Beatles Photographs
I received The Lost Beatles Photographs, last week (pre-ordered from Amazon) and it really takes me back to their touring ‘hay days’. I remember seeing a few of the pictures, in the teen magazines (’64’ ’65 ’66) but this book is chock full of unseen photographs and wonderful memories of The Fab Four. I highly recommend this beautiful, hard cover, collector’s delight.Larry Marion did a fine job putting this book together, a real tribute to the talented photographer, Bob Bonis, and to The Beatles.
Carol Leonelli –
A Must for Serious Beatlephiles
Bob Bonis’s excellent photographs take you behind the scenes at the three U.S. tours The Beatles undertook in ’64, ’65, & ’66. How often I have wished I could have been a fly on the wall during those remarkable times! Now, it’s as though a dream has come true. The images are fresh, crisp, and bursting with the energy & cheekiness for which the Fab Four were famous. If you still get goosebumps when you hear “I Saw Her Standing There,” this book is a must for you!
Daniel Mantey –
Mostly REALLY good.
These photos were never lost, so why the title? Nearly every page claims these are the ‘lost photos;’ they were just in s box or closet all these years, sitting around, never lost. Makes it seem more mysterious than they really are. And some VERY UNCOMFORTABLE photos of the Beatles and Mel Evans playing around stupidly with a gun, that should NOT have been put in the book (let alone ever taken in the first place!) that get the book off to a very uncomfortable start…but then some mostly cool glimpses of the Beatles on their USA tours! Maybe only a good handful are really super, and a few too many look like typical ‘trip photos’ that show up in everybody’s piles of old photos, but generally a very good collection. The intro mentions that Bob (the photographer) had one of George always hanging in his office, but doesn’t mentions which one, where the photos of George show up from that date. And Bob says things about the Beatles that DO NOT agree with the same topics in other books; was he being honest or ‘quiet’ about the boys questionable tour behavior? So the book just adds to the never ending mystery and uncertainty of who the Beatles might have been, and what they ACTUALLY might have done.Actually, what I find most interesting about the book is Mr Bob Boris! In all my Beatles readings (I am rather well read) I just do not remember him at all (I have always forgotten names easily; need to check back in my books!); he had quite a job to do, seemed to have done it very well, and very interesting that he had the great chance to take all these photos (was not professional photographer), and never published them or made himself into a ‘Beatles expert’ which he both could have easily done. Cool dude! But yes, I like the book, and some day might cut out those gun photos. This might not be a MUST HAVE book though it is very refreshing to have NEW photos after all these years of the same ones being re-cycled so many times.And he took thousands of photos? How about a Web site of some or all of the rest?
kregnier –
Livre arrivé en parfait état. Très bel ouvrage que tout fan des Beatles devrait posséder dans sa bibliothèque. De nombreuses photos inédites.
Chankos –
Another wonderful collection of previously unpublished photographs by the late Bob Bonis finally receives its long-overdue release. This Beatles volume documents the same time period of ’64-’66 as covered in his recently published Stones book.Bonis was The Beatles’ US Tour Manager, which afforded him exclusive backstage access and the opportunity to snap away pretty much as he wished with his Leica M3. Bonis kept these shots for his own pleasure and never published them during his lifetime, so many of these images will be new to even the most die-hard Beatles fans.Copious amounts of fantastic live shots are featured here alongside wonderfully intimate backstage moments. My new favourite picture of John and Paul is on page 77, where they’re intently tuning up backstage on the ’66 tour. Atmospheric colour shots from Memphis, Tennessee on the same tour are also highlights. If any further evidence was needed, these confirm that The Beatles were indeed the coolest-looking guys on earth in 1966. We are also treated to rare glimpses of the late Mal Evans and Derek Taylor on the ’64 tour, and fantastic colour studies of Ringo from the same period.Looking at these pictures, it’s hard not to feel sorry that Bonis’ association with The Beatles ended once they’d stopped touring. Do yourself a favour and buy this lovely collection whilst it’s in hardback. Amidst the constant deluge of “new” Beatles books, this is a genuinely worthy addition to the canon and an indispensible purchase for any self-respecting fan of The Fabs.RIP, Bob.
joão carlos correa marques –
SOU BEATLEMANIACO E ESTA Ã RAZÃO SUFICIENTE PARA INCORPORAR O LIVRO ‘A MINHA COLEÃÃO PARTICULAR
Miguel A.B.V. –
Si eres coleccionista de los Beatles está muy bien, pero si no, uno más de tantos libros de gran calidad con fotos. En este caso inéditas, pero que al final están todas en algún sitio, y si no, las hay muy parecidas.
siegel, michaela –
wie o.g.