Let me take you down…

Last updated on March 25th, 2024 at 06:23 pm

Strawberry Fields, Liverpool, Lennon, Beatles


‘Cause I’m going to Strawberry Fields, nothing is real and there’s nothing to get hung about.

On 1st June (or 26th May, depending on your source) 1967, The Beatles released Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, a groundbreaking recording and one of the most famous and discussed albums ever.  It is said that one in five of British households owns a vinyl copy of it – though, presumably, if true, that figure will be steadily decreasing.

Penny Lane, Beatles, McCartney, Liverpool


Two tracks originally intended for it, but missing, were John Lennon’s Strawberry Fields Forever and Paul McCartney’s Penny Lane. They were among the first tracks recorded for the album in November 1966, but there was pressure to release a new single and both tracks were pulled.  Producer George Martin later suggested that this was the biggest mistake of his professional life and that the single would have sold more if, say, When I’m Sixty-Four, had been on it. For the double A-side of Strawberry Fields with Penny Lane, released in February 1967, was the first Beatles’ single since Please Please Me in 1963 not to reach No 1 in the UK – famously kept off the coveted top-slot by Engelbert Humperdinck’s saccharine ballad, Please Release Me.

John Lennon was often a more introspective writer than Paul McCartney.  Strawberry Field (no ‘s’) was a Salvation Army children’s home close to where he grew up in the Liverpool suburb of Woolton with his Aunt Mimi and Uncle George.  One of his childhood treats was the annual summer garden party that took place in the grounds.  Aunt Mimi remembered that as soon as they heard the Salvation Army band strike up, John would jump up and down shouting “Mimi, come on. We’re going to be late.”  It was also a place of childhood adventure behind a wall that could be illicitly climbed with his friends Pete Shotton, Ivan Vaughan and Nigel Whalley. Paul McCartney described Strawberry Field as a rather wild place, “a secret garden, like in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.” It was John’s get-away, an escape.

So Strawberry Fields Forever was a piece of nostalgia – as was Penny Lane, though the former was more whimsical, a dreamier, almost ethereal, meander – what author Philip Norman called “a stream of semi-consciousness”.

I think I know I mean, ah yes, but it’s all wrong…

Penny Lane, Beatles, McCartney


John Lennon was apparently both amused and appalled when he heard about people trying to analyse his work.  The irony of academics dissecting the words of someone who largely couldn’t be bothered with formal education cannot have escaped him.  At the end of the day, if a piece of art doesn’t grab you, no amount of pretentious probing and theorising is going to make it better, is it?

Though the song was obviously conceived earlier, Strawberry Fields Forever began life in Almeria, Spain, where John was filming How I Won the War with Richard Lester. The melody is quite simple but, according to pop lore, at least two versions were recorded, one hard and edgy, the other softer with trumpets and cellos. Because John couldn’t decide which he preferred, the genius that was George Martin found a way of splicing the beginning of one version onto the end of the other.  Strawberry Fields Forever features all sorts of other innovations, including backward cymbals, and multiple instruments including the Mellotron – apparently introduced to John and Paul by Mike Pinder of The Moody Blues.

Penny Lane, shelter in the middle of a roundabout, Sgt Pepper


Penny Lane was a bus stop where Paul and John would often meet.  In Paul’s words: “There was a barber shop called Bioletti’s with head shots of the haircuts you can have in the window and I just took it all and arted it up a little bit to make it sound like he was having a picture exhibition in his window.  It was all based on real things; there was a bank on the corner so I imagined the banker, it was not a real person, and his slightly dubious habits and the little children laughing at him, and the pouring rain.  The fire station was a bit of poetic licence; there’s a fire station about half a mile down the road, not actually in Penny Lane, but we needed a third verse so we took that and I was very pleased with the line, ‘It’s a clean machine’.”

Penny Lane Hotel, Liverpool


Penny Lane is a brilliant and vivid piece of McCartney word painting, a cheerful semi-factual sensory tour through childhood with its blue suburban skies and cast of characters, including a pretty nurse (perhaps like Paul’s mother) selling poppies from a tray.  In a four of fish and finger pies there’s a pun for his Liverpool mates and a nod to days before fame, when a ‘four of fish’ meant four-pennyworth from the chippie and ‘finger pie’ was a euphemism for adolescent sexual fumblings – possibly even behind the shelter in the middle of a roundabout, who knows?!  Well, Paul McCartney, obviously.

St Barnabas' Church, Penny Lane, Paul McCartney, choirboy

Both Strawberry Fields Forever and Penny Lane broke new ground, involved more studio time and expense than most LPs (albums) to that point and are arguably among the best popular songs ever written.  Alongside the songs came a pair of contrived promotional films.  Strawberry Fields Forever’s was filmed, not in Liverpool, but in Knole Park near Sevenoaks in Kent; Penny Lane’s was filmed in London’s East End with footage from the real Penny Lane cutting in.  And so, some believe, the pop video was born (even if domestic videos weren’t available until the 1970s).

The shelter in the middle of a roundabout, where Church Road, Allerton Road, Smithdown Road and Penny Lane converge in Liverpool 18 is still there.  In 2015, it was a themed bistro with what seemed like an ongoing programme of promise and refurbishment.  Opposite is the bank from the song, at that time a TSB, in the 1950s a branch of Martins Bank (which merged into Barclays in 1969).  On the corner of Smithdown and Church Street was another bank, now the Penny Lane Hotel – which was on the market for £950k in January 2017. It doesn’t look very appealing to me.  The barber was on Smithdown Road and is now Tony Slavin hairdressers – though I notice there was another one on Penny Lane itself with the amusing tagline, ‘above us only hair’.  At the end of Penny Lane is St Barnabas church, where Paul was a choirboy. It was a neighbourhood he knew well; no wonder it was in his ears and eyes.

Penny Lane Community Hub, Liverpool


Indeed, Penny Lane struck me, an outsider, as a familiar kind of place. Fans used to steal the street signs, apparently, resulting in the need to paint them onto walls, but they all seemed to be in situ, if a little battered, when A Bit About Britain took its whistle-stop DIY Beatle Tour. And of course, it is very ordinary-looking; that’s the point.  It wouldn’t take much to peel away the uneven veneer of the 21st century from the whole area, to reveal the 1950s underneath; or perhaps even further, to when the houses were built in the late-Victorian-Edwardian era.

Strawberry Fields Forever, Lennon, Beatles


Just down the road is Dovedale Primary School and, a little further, Calderstones School (which used to be Quarry Bank High), both of which John Lennon attended.  It was John Lennon’s band, The Quarrymen, that Paul McCartney went to see one July day in 1957 and which morphed into The Beatles (more about that in due course).  Just across the road from Calderstones Park is Beaconsfield Road, where the entrance to Strawberry Field can be found and just beyond that is Mendips, where John Lennon lived as a boy, and St Peter’s Church Hall, where John and Paul first met.  If you’re feeling really fit, you could hike on to Paul’s old house in Forthlin Road, Allerton. Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields Forever really were about childhood memories.

Strawberry Field closed in 2005 and, for their own protection, the 100-year old gates were replaced with replicas in 2011.  We watched the cars, buses and taxis pull up as we approached. People took their photographs, some without bothering to get out, and moved on.  Nothing to get hung about.  We stood outside, for a short while the only people there. Behind the gates was a tangle of overgrown vegetation – Lennon’s secret place.  Then a car pulled up opposite.  The driver got out and patiently waited while we finished our photos.  I offered to take one of him in front of the gates with his camera – “No, that’s OK, mate, he chuckled in broad Scouse.  “I’m takin’ these for a friend in the car who can’t get out.”  Then a taxi-load pulled up and the circus began again.

Imagine mosaic, Strawberry Fields in Central Park, New York


On 21st March 1984, a 2½ acre teardrop-shaped section of New York’s Central Park called Strawberry Fields in John’s honour was opened by the then Mayor, Ed Koch.

As of 1st June 2017, the original gates from Strawberry Field were displayed at The Beatles Story museum in Liverpool’s Albert Dock, on loan from the Salvation Army.  The Salvation Army has developed Strawberry Field as a hub for young people with learning difficulties and as a visitor attraction.

And, surely not finally, the tracks Strawberry Fields Forever along with Penny Lane are included in the deluxe re-release of Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, issued to mark its 50th anniversary on 1st June 2017.

22 thoughts on “Let me take you down…”

  1. I’ve never visited these sites, although I used to be a huge fan of John Lennon and love the songs you’ve included here. I know Liverpool well, having been to uni there, as did our eldest daughter. My mother was a Liverpudlian, so we spent a lot of time there with relatives. Interesting post! I’ll be sure to make a point of visiting these places in the near future.

  2. alexandra s.m.

    Thanks for a great post Mike!
    I learnt English thanks to the Beatles, well, thanks to Sir Paul more specifically.
    I treasure my memories of Liverpool and all these familiar places.
    My only regret is to have been there by myself.

  3. Blue Sky Scotland

    Good set of photos. Enjoyed Nowhere Boy and Good ol’ Freda about the fan club secretary, both excellent insights. Just watched the making of St Pepper’s the other night which explains each song structure in detail and reveals how complex they are. If you haven’t seen it Mike its well worth a look.
    By another strange coincidence I’ve just finished re-reading the Manson book Coming Down Fast about The Family and the Beatles music features heavily in that as well :o).

  4. Meanwhile back……… in the late 90s when I was a mature student at Liverpool Uni I was in the Penny Lane area quite often because I had friends in Smithdown (Smithie) Road. You just can’t stop yourself from singing ………….

  5. The Beatles sure changed our lives when they appeared on the Ed Sullivan show here in the US. I have every album and love the songs you highlighted here. Never knew the history of the songs. Excellent post.

  6. Mike, just last night I watched a fascinating documentary about Sgt. Pepper, its music and all. I missed the beginning and don’t know if they mentioned these in the detail of the other pieces but I’m going to see it from end to end again so will be curious and also have a great visual image of the area.

    This is fascinating and just a wonderful post. I loved every word, every photo. This is my era and so that music is familiar to me but the background, not so much. Thank you.

    And sending wishes for healing and strength in your beautiful country in the wake of yet another terror attack. I watched BBC news into the wee hours. I hope all you know and love were safe.

  7. Hi Mike – I’ve never been to Liverpool … I want to go to the Walker Art Gallery, though I see there are rather a lot of other museums in the city … but of course (I guess!) I’d do the Beatles tour. We are having lots of remembrances on this the 50th anniversary of Lonely Hearts Club band … thanks for your insight – cheers Hilary

  8. Really enjoyed your post ! I was also impressed by the natural and unfeigned manner of the group in the videos – how different it is today.
    Thank you for sharing.

  9. I loved this post. But one thing leads to another, and after reading, ‘Scouse accent,’ I had to watch a YouTube clip to hear it (of course!), and on the way there, the trailer for ‘Victoria & Abdul’ loaded. Another movie to see this fall besides ‘Murder on the Orient Express.’ I love it that you give us the back story to the songs we’re all familiar with. I imagine Paul being like the little boy in ‘A Taste For Death.’ Enjoyed the videos too! Although Liverpool was never ever picked up on my travel radar, it seems to be creeping closer. Not close, mind you, but…

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