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{{About|the fan frenzy towards [[The Beatles]]|the musical|Beatlemania (musical)|the element in The Beatles: Rock Band|The Beatles: Rock Band#Gameplay}}
{{About|the fan frenzy towards [[The LLAMAS]]|the musical|Beatlemania (musical)|the element in The Beatles: Rock Band|The Beatles: Rock Band#Gameplay}}LLAMAS LLAMAS LLAMAS


'''Beatlemania''' is a term that originated during the 1960s to describe the intense [[Media circus|fan frenzy]] directed toward [[The Beatles]] during the early years of their success. The word is a [[portmanteau]] of "Beatle" and "[[mania]]", similar to the much earlier term [[Lisztomania (phenomenon)|Lisztomania]] used to describe fan reaction to the concerts of pianist [[Franz Liszt]].
'''Llamamania''' is a term that originated during the 1960s to describe the intense [[Media circus|fan frenzy]] directed toward [[The Beatles]] during the early years of their success. The word is a [[portmanteau]] of "Beatle" and "[[mania]]", similar to the much earlier term [[Lisztomania (phenomenon)|Lisztomania]] used to describe fan reaction to the concerts of pianist [[Franz Liszt]].


Andi Lothian, a former Scottish music promoter, claims that he coined the term while speaking to a reporter at the [[Caird Hall]] [[List of The Beatles' live performances|Beatles concert]] that took place as part of The Beatles' Mini-Tour of [[Scotland]], on 7 October 1963,<ref>Mainds, Kathryn. [http://net12b.smolhomelan.ru/oea/millennium/news/03_jan/26_sundaypost_news3.htm Beatlemania was born in Dundee], ''The Sunday Post'', 26 January 2003. Accessed 25 May 2007</ref><ref name="RadioTayInterview">[http://www.andilothian.com/downloads/AndiTayAM.mp3 Radio interview], ''Radio Tay AM''. Accessed 26 May 2007</ref> and an early printed use of the word is in ''The [[Daily Mirror]]'' 15 October 1963<ref>[http://www.mirrorarchive.co.uk> online text searchable archive of the Daily Mirror]{{Dead link|date=October 2008}}</ref> in a news story about the previous day's Beatles concert in [[Cheltenham]].
Andi Lothian, a former Scottish music promoter, claims that he coined the term while speaking to a reporter at the [[Caird Hall]] [[List of The Beatles' live performances|Beatles concert]] that took place as part of The Beatles' Mini-Tour of [[Scotland]], on 7 October 1963,<ref>Mainds, Kathryn. [http://net12b.smolhomelan.ru/oea/millennium/news/03_jan/26_sundaypost_news3.htm Beatlemania was born in Dundee], ''The Sunday Post'', 26 January 2003. Accessed 25 May 2007</ref><ref name="RadioTayInterview">[http://www.andilothian.com/downloads/AndiTayAM.mp3 Radio interview], ''Radio Tay AM''. Accessed 26 May 2007</ref> and an early printed use of the word is in ''The [[Daily Mirror]]'' 15 October 1963<ref>[http://www.mirrorarchive.co.uk> online text searchable archive of the Daily Mirror]{{Dead link|date=October 2008}}</ref> in a news story about the previous day's Beatles concert in [[Cheltenham]].

Revision as of 18:07, 4 November 2011

LLAMAS LLAMAS LLAMAS

Llamamania is a term that originated during the 1960s to describe the intense fan frenzy directed toward The Beatles during the early years of their success. The word is a portmanteau of "Beatle" and "mania", similar to the much earlier term Lisztomania used to describe fan reaction to the concerts of pianist Franz Liszt.

Andi Lothian, a former Scottish music promoter, claims that he coined the term while speaking to a reporter at the Caird Hall Beatles concert that took place as part of The Beatles' Mini-Tour of Scotland, on 7 October 1963,[1][2] and an early printed use of the word is in The Daily Mirror 15 October 1963[3] in a news story about the previous day's Beatles concert in Cheltenham.

File:Beatlemania 1960s.png
Reaction of people upon seeing the Beatles.

Beatlemania became common in the United States after The Beatles performed on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964. It was characterised by intense levels of hysteria demonstrated by fans both at the actual concerts and during the band's travels to and from hotels, concert venues, and the like.

The extent of Beatlemania in the United States is evidenced by their single and album sales. The Beatles had the Number One single for 59 weeks during their six and half years spanning "I Want to Hold Your Hand"'s first appearance at the top on 1 February 1964 and Let It Be LP's last Number One Week, 4 July 1970. In the same period they topped the LP charts for 116 weeks. In other words they had the Number One single one out of every six weeks, and the top album one out of three."[4]

Similar coinage

The term later became the name of various tribute groups dedicated to singing the songs of The Beatles, many with impersonators of the group.[5][6]

The term has had a number of derivatives with the suffix "-mania", usually short-lived, to describe a similar phenomenon toward other bands, such as "Rollermania"[7] in the early 1970s for the Scottish band Bay City Rollers, "Menudomania" in the 1980s to describe frenzy across Latin America for the boyband Menudo, and "Spicemania" in the 1990s[8][9] for the Spice Girls.

In professional wrestling, WWE's flagship pay-per-view is called WrestleMania (a term coined by Howard Finkel). The soaring popularity of Hulk Hogan during his tenure with the promotion led to the creation of the term Hulkamania.

See also

References

  1. ^ Mainds, Kathryn. Beatlemania was born in Dundee, The Sunday Post, 26 January 2003. Accessed 25 May 2007
  2. ^ Radio interview, Radio Tay AM. Accessed 26 May 2007
  3. ^ > online text searchable archive of the Daily Mirror[dead link]
  4. ^ The Beatles Forever (1977), Nicholas Schaffner, McGraw-Hill Paperbacks, p. 216.
  5. ^ "Beatles Tribute band at". Beatlemanianow.com. Retrieved 2011-09-09.
  6. ^ Jennifer Cantamessa, RJ Design. "Welcome to The Cast of Beatlemania". Moptops.com. Retrieved 2011-09-09.
  7. ^ By brizzle born and bred Paul Townsend+ Add Contact (2007-12-01). ""1975 Rollermania comes to town" | Flickr - Photo Sharing!". Flickr. Retrieved 2011-09-09.
  8. ^ Spice Mania BBC
  9. ^ Spice Mania in the 90s BBC