Paul, John, Jimmy and George
James George Nicol, known as Jimmie
Nicol or Jimmy Nicol, is an English drummer born 3 August 1939, and best known
for being a temporary member of The Beatles.
When Ringo Starr collapsed and was
hospitalised on 3
June 1964
with tonsillitis
on the eve of The Beatles' 1964 Australasian tour, manager Brian
Epstein and producer George Martin discussed the
possibility of using a stand-in. Martin suggested Nicol, as he had
recently recorded a Tommy Quickly session with him. Nicol
had also drummed on a budget label album called "Beatlemania"
and knew the songs. The whole thing happened very quickly, from a phone
call to attend a run-through at Abbey
Road Studios to packing his bags all in the same day.
Nicol wore Ringo's suit on stage, and apparently had to use
clothes pegs to make the jacket fit. His first show with The Beatles
took place on 4
June in Copenhagen, Denmark. He played a
further nine shows, until Starr returned to the group in Melbourne,
Australia, on 14
June. Nicol said he was "praying he [Starr] would get well at the same
time I was hoping he would not want to come back." He was not able to
say goodbye to The Beatles as they were still asleep when he left, and
Nicol did not want to disturb them. At the airport, Brian Epstein
presented him with a cheque for £500 and a gold Eternamatic wrist watch inscribed: "From
The Beatles and Brian Epstein to Jimmy - with appreciation and
gratitude."
After his time with The Beatles, Nicol and his band, The
Shubdubs, released the single "Husky"/"Don't Come Back", followed by
"Humpty Dumpty"/"Night Train", neither of which was a commercial
success. Nicol was reunited with The Beatles when his band was set down
on a bill with The Beatles and The Fourmost. They performed
on 12
July 1964 at
the Hippodrome Theatre in Brighton.
During Nicol's stay with The Beatles, John
Lennon and Paul McCartney were
constantly questioning him about how he was coming along, and his
answer would always be, "It's getting better." A couple years later,
McCartney was walking his dog, Martha, with Hunter
Davies, when the sun came out and Paul commented that the weather was
"getting better," and began to laugh, remembering Nicol. This event
inspired the song "Getting Better" on 1967's Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band.
On Let It Be
tapes from 2 January 1969, Paul comments, "I think you'll find we're
not going abroad. 'Cause Ringo just said he doesn't want to go abroad.
You know, he put his foot down. Although Jimmy Nicol might go abroad."
Later career/life
After his brief time with The Beatles, Nicol declared
bankruptcy in 1965. That year, he joined numerous bands including
Swedish group The Spotnicks, which he left in 1967.
In 1975 he returned to England after setting up a button factory in Mexico. Other work
in this time included housing renovations and carpentry.
Later in his life, it was rumoured that Nicol had died in 1988,
but a report in 2005 by the Daily Mail
confirmed that he was still alive and living as a recluse in London.
Nicol's son, Howie, is a BAFTA-winning sound recordist.
History / Discography
1950s Choir boy at Honeywell Road School,
Wandsworth, in London. The Boys Brigade (percussion). Army Cadet
Military Band (percussion and xylophone). For a short time, Nicol also
worked as a drum repairer for (UK) musical instrument distributor Boosey
& Hawkes
1957/1958 Colin Hicks & The Cabin Boys
(Colin Hicks is the younger brother of British rock 'n' roll star Tommy
Steele). Singles:
- Pye 7N15114 Wild Eyes And Tender Lips / Empty Arms Blues -
- Pye 7N15125 La Dee Dah / Wasteland -
- Pye 7N15163 Little Boy Blue / Jamabalaya
1959/60 Vince Eager and the Quite Three.
Jimmy on drums. Kenny Packwood/Colin Green, guitarists. Tex Makins,
bass.
1960: Oscar
Rabin Band. 1961: Cyril Stapleton Big
Band. 1961-1963: session work (including jobs with
musicians from the orchestras of Ted Heath and Johnny
Dankworth).
1964: The Shubdubs Singles:
- Pye 7N15623 2/1964 Humpty Dumpty / Night Train
- Mar-Mar 313 1964 Humpty Dumpty / Night Train (US)
- Pye 7N15666 6/1964 Husky / Please Come Back
- Pye 7N15699 10/1964 Baby Please Don't Go / Shubdubery
1964 April / May: Georgie
Fame and The Blue Flames.
June: The Beatles (temporary stand in for
Ringo Starr)
- June 04 1964: KB Hallen, Tivoli Gardens, Copenhagen,
Denmark.
- June 05 1964: Treslong, Hilversum, Holland, (recording TV
show, VARA).
- June 06 1964: Auction Hall (Veilinghal), Blokker, Holland.
- June 09 1964: Princess Theatre, Kowloon, Hong Kong.
- June 12 1964: Centennial Hall, Adelaide, Australia.
- June 13 1964: Centennial Hall, Adelaide, Australia.
1964/1965: Jimmy Nicol & The
Shubdubs (touring). Solo single as The Sound of Jimmy Nicol - Decca
F12017
1965 (Sept) - 1967
(Feb) : The Spotnicks. In September 1965
joined the well-known Swedish guitar group The Spotnicks. He was also
offered the drumming job for the musical West
Side Story on the same day which he turned down. The Spotnicks
rush-released a single, The Spotnicks Introducing Jimmy Nicol, titled
Husky and Drum Diddley.
In 1967, Nicol lived in Mexico working
with samba
& bossa-nova groups. He
married and had a son, Howard, who in the 1990s was to win an award as
sound engineer for his work on a BBC collection of Beatles recordings.
In 1969, he recorded "Jumpin' Jack Flash"
(sung in Spanish) with his own band, "Jimmie
Nicol Show". 1969 Discos Orfeon LP-E-12-623 (Mexico) (LP) Era
Psicodelica Del A Go Go Jimmie Nicol Show: Jumpin' Jack Flash (Spanish)
References
-
[1]
-
Harris,
Paul. "Amazing story of drummer who replaced Ringo
(For ten days)", Daily Mail, 2005-10-01.
|
The Beatles |
| Members |
John Lennon • Paul McCartney •
George
Harrison • Ringo
Starr
Pete
Best • Stuart
Sutcliffe |
| Management |
Allan
Williams • Brian
Epstein • Allen
Klein • Lee
Eastman • Neil
Aspinall • Mal Evans • Alistair
Taylor • Apple
Records |
| Production |
George
Martin • Geoff
Emerick • Norman
Smith • Ken Scott • Phil
Spector • Jeff
Lynne • Abbey
Road Studios |
|
Official studio albums
|
Please
Please Me (1963) • With
The Beatles (1963) • A Hard Day's Night
(1964) • Beatles
for Sale (1964) • Help!
(1965) • Rubber
Soul (1965) • Revolver
(1966) • Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) • Magical Mystery Tour
(U.S., 1967 / U.K., 1976) • The
Beatles (The White Album) (1968) •
Yellow Submarine
(1969) • Abbey
Road (1969) • Let
It Be (1970) |
|
Official post-
breakup albums
|
Live at the BBC
(1994) • Anthology
1–3 (1994–1996) • Let
It Be... Naked (2003) • Love
(2006) |
|
Official compilations
|
1962–1966
(1973) • 1967–1970
(1973) • Past Masters, Volume One
(1988) • Past Masters, Volume Two
(1988) • 1
(2000) |
| Filmography |
A Hard Day's Night
(1964) • Help!
(1965) • Magical Mystery Tour
(1967) • Yellow Submarine
(1968) • Let
It Be (1970) |
|
Related articles
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Line-ups
• Bootlegs
• Discography •
Love (Cirque du Soleil) •
Lennon/McCartney
• Influence •
Beatle
boots • The
Quarrymen • The Beatles' breakup •
London
• Beatlemania
• Fifth
Beatle • Paul
is dead • The Beatles (TV series) •
British
Invasion • Apple
Corps • Northern
Songs • Yoko Ono • Linda
McCartney • Cynthia
Lennon • Billy
Preston • Tony
Sheridan • Chas Newby
• Andy
White • Jimmy
Nicol • Astrid
Kirchherr • Klaus
Voormann |