Robert Crampton
2 for 1 tickets to Casablanca, this coming Monday
The death of Neil Aspinall, the Beatles erstwhile roadie, assistant and confidant, raises a perennial question for fans of the Fab Four: who really was the Fifth Beatle? I have seen the soubriquet attached to no fewer than 13 people, and I was only six years old when the band split up.
Of the pretenders, the most outrageous has to be Jimmy Tarbuck. Tarby once told me during an interview on a golf course in the Algarve that he was the Fifth Beatle, on the basis, it seemed, that he was about the same age and also came from Liverpool. Tarby was wearing a Pringle sweater at the time.
George Best was often referred to as the fifth Beatle, but surely not only purists would demand at least some connection to the business of making music as opposed to simply having long hair and drinking a lot?
Moving closer to the band's orbit, we come to Mal Evans, a roadie, shot dead after a misunderstanding with the LAPD in 1976. Like Aspinall, Evans has a decent claim. We can put them both in the outer-outer circle of contenders, a group in which we might, if we were being charitable, also place Yoko Ono and Linda McCartney.
Arriving at four musicians who actually shared stage or studio time with the classic line-up: Billy Preston played keyboards at the fag end of things, notably during the rooftop appearance in London. Good effort, Billy, but on balance, too little, too late. Similarly, at the other end of the band's life came three drummers: Pete Best, notoriously the unluckiest man in showbiz, binned on the skins in favour of Ringo shortly before the 1962 lift-off; Jimmy Nichols, sit-in for Ringo when the latter was in hospital; and Andy White, session man on Love Me Do and reportedly the owner of New Jersey licence plate 5THBEATLE.
We're now down to the Big Three. Lowest on the podium is Stu Sutcliffe, who looked great and was a huge influence on the band's early style but couldn't play bass very well. In silver medal position comes Brian Epstein, who discovered the combo and kept the lads on the straight and narrow as best he could until, like Sutcliffe, dying tragically young.
(Indeed, with around half the people on this list, not to mention half the actual band, expiring before their time, the curse of the Fifth Beatle bears investigation.)
And the winner? Well, when I saw the headline on Tuesday “Macca weeps for Fifth Beatle” I assumed, with all due respect to Neil Aspinall, that it was the producer George Martin who had bought the farm. Indeed, never mind fifth, you could make a case for Martin being promoted to Third Beatle, behind Paul and John, obviously, yet ahead of George in fourth, and thus meaning that the surprise Fifth Beatle is actually Ringo Starr.
Not that this would make it any less of an outrage, as per this newspaper's settled and solemn editorial policy, that Ringo is yet to be knighted.
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You missed Tony Sheridan. And if Billy Preston get a nomination, why not Eric Clapton, Klaus Voorman, and Alan White?
Chris Green, Toronto, Canada
The substitute for Ringo was Jimmy Nicol. I remember Murray the 'K' also as the fifth Beatle.
Rupert Lloyd Thomas, Toronto, Canada
Forget the 5th Beatle - who was the Walrus ?
Andrew Ruddle, Weybridge, UK
I've always assumed that Ringo was the sixth Beatle, after Stu Sutcliffe and Pete Best
I agree, of course, that Rigo deserves a knighthood but only after George is made a posthumous, hereditary duke
volov, Auckland, New Zealand
I remember an article written in the late 60s that claimed that the guitarist Klaus Voorman was considered to be the 5th Beatle, even by the band themselves.
Jeff Bellamy, Peterborough, Uk
Didn't George Harrison once call New York DJ Murray "The K" Kaufman the 5th Beatle?
Mike, Johannesburg, South Africa
It's very kind what you're saying, but there were only four Beatles- George, my dad wasn't in them, nor did he envy what they endured being Beatles. What they went through was unique to the four of them.
Giles Martin (179th Beatle)
GILES MARTIN, London,
Aren't we all the Fifth Beatle?
T. J. Cassidy, Arlington, Virginia, U.S.A.
There are several more contenders. Murray the K a New York DJ who worked closely with the Beatles on their early America tours and who was the first person to coin the term Fifth Beatle. Then there is our own cuddly DJ Kenny Everett who was from Liverpool and toured with the Beatles in the States where he would update the UK fans of there progress via his radio show. During the sixties Kenny would have several exclusive interviews with the Beatles and he produced one of their Christmas fan club records. Next could be Donavan who helped on several lyrics and while in India taught them a different style of playing the guitar which can be heard on the white album. Actually on the white album there is another contender, Eric Clapton who was asked by George to play on While My Guitar Gently Weeps. Derek Taylor would be very close to being the Fifth Beatle he was their press agent and was part of their inner circle of friends. However my choice for the Fifth Beatle would go to Brian Epstein because he believed in them right from the start. He saw the raw power and excitement they brought he was of course their manager a friend and a fan.
6th Beatle, Stockton on Tees, UK
Do we need one?
Graham, Littlehampton,
The Beatles- three genii and a drummer.
Tony, Liverpool, UK
Number 5 ... number 5 ... number 5 ...
Mark Bourne, Seattle, WA, USA
Number 5 ... number 5 ... number 5 ...
Mark Bourne, Seattle, WA, USA
I am the 59th Beatle
Alan Scott, Sydney, Australia
Im the fifth Beatle actually... and so is my wife.
Paul Sullivan, Chester,
Thank you, I am the Fifth Beatle.
Colin Coghlan, Ramsey, New Jersey
brilliant article - thoroughly enjoyable
Robert, St Helier, United Kingdom