Love Me Do: Difference between revisions

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The [[Second Doctor]] played it on [[the Doctor's recorder|his recorder]] on the streets of [[San Francisco]] in [[1967]].  ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Wonderland]]'')  
The [[Second Doctor]] played it on [[the Doctor's recorder|his recorder]] on the streets of [[San Francisco]] in [[1967]].  ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Wonderland]]'')  


== Behind the scenes ==
It's actually very plausible that the song would be so popular at that time, and "Bobby's Girl" reached #3 on the {{w|UK Singles Chart}} just months before.
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Revision as of 09:52, 4 February 2014

"Love Me Do" was a song by the Beatles in the early 1960s, at the very least one of their first. Susan Foreman considered the song to be the most important of the five years before 1963 and said that listeners at the time would later be proud to have been alive at the birth of the Beatles. John Brent, however, called it "just a bunch of yobs making a noise."

When Games class was called off on 29 March 1963 due to frozen pipes disabling the showers, the female fourth year students of Coal Hill School listened and danced to it. (PROSE: Time and Relative)

The Second Doctor played it on his recorder on the streets of San Francisco in 1967. (PROSE: Wonderland)


Love Me Do