I enjoyed this book immensely. It’s almost like a fantasy book. You are a fan and suddenly you get thrown into the world with The Beatles as friends and co-workers. You move from the Beatles to the Stones, CSNY, Bob Dylan and the list kept growing.
I will say this… as a Beatle fan, this book gave me insight that I never had before. Chris O’Dell happened to meet Derek Taylor (press officer of the Beatles) in Los Angeles in 1968…she worked for him for a few weeks in LA as a PA. He told her she should come over to London to check out the new company that The Beatles were starting called Apple. He didn’t promise her a job but she took a chance and sold her records and borrowed from her parents to go to London. She was like Alice down the rabbit hole, O’Dell stumbled upon a life even she could not have dreamed of.
She took a chance and went over and that started her career working at The Beatles record company Apple. It took her a few months to get hired full time but after the Beatle’s inner circle knew she could be trusted she was there. She met Paul on her very first day. She said all of them were extremely nice and made her feel welcome. She spent the first few months showing up at the office and making herself useful and securing her place. She was especially close to George as a friend and later Ringo as a little more.
After all was said and done…she had 3 songs written about her. Two by Leon Russell called Hummingbird, Pieces Apple Lady, and George Harrison’s Miss O’Dell. She was also the “Mystery Woman” on the Rolling Stones Exile on Main Street cover. She was in the Joni Mitchell song “Coyote” with the line He’s got another woman down the hall…the song about Sam Shepard who Chris O’Dell and Joni Mitchell were seeing. She ended up singing on the Hey Jude recording in the final Na Na chorus.
She was one of the first if not the first female tour manager in rock. The tours she worked on were The Rolling Stones, CSNY, Santana, Bob Dylan, Earth Wind and Fire, Jennifer Warnes, Fleetwood Mac, Linda Ronstadt, Eric Clapton, George Harrison, Led Zeppelin, Phil Collins, Echo and the Bunnymen, ELO, and more.
We also get a glimpse into the personalities of Bob Dylan, Jagger and Richards, CSNY (and the disfunction), Eric Clapton, and more.
Like all of us through life…she made some cringe-worthy decisions. I’m not trying to play it down but most of the time everything worked out in the end. She was in the right place at the right time and took advantage of that. She remains close friends with Pattie Harrison, Ringo Starr (her son’s Godfather), and many of her old famous acquaintances.
This is not a kiss-and-tell book and she doesn’t trash people which made me happy. The only person to come out of this book bad at all is Eric Clapton who was admittedly jealous of Pattie and Chris’s friendship. After the Stones tour, she got into drugs really bad but managed to quit them only to start up again. She, later on, became a drug counselor and helped people.
This book is for more than just Beatle fans…it gives you what life was like on the road in the 1970s. Some of the highlights in the book for me were:
- How the Apple Office worked including the Hell’s Angels visitors
- How even the biggest stars had deep insecurities
- Bob Dylan forgot his harmonicas before the Isle of Wight concert and Chris O’Dell arrived by helicopter to give them to him.
- Keith Richards sending her to pick up a “package” in LA in the middle of a tour
- Reading about David Crosby’s complaints of no “cross ventilation in his hotel room”
- When Roger Taylor of Queen realized that she was Miss O’Dell from George’s song.
- Insight into Pattie Boyd and Maureen Starkey who is hardly covered in Beatles books
- Reading about how Bangledesh started and how George got his musician friends to participate.
- Being on the roof during Get Back brief concert
Chris O’Dell: I think being a Beatle became very difficult for them. They had a different set of problems than the Stones and CSN&Y. They didn’t tour that much, they couldn’t go out of their hotel rooms, and they lived in a bubble. I think breaking up for them, and I can only guess, was a relief and very difficult at the same time.
Chris O’Dell: It was like being let go in Disneyland. That’s what it felt like. It’s like here are the keys to Disneyland, go and enjoy yourself. And I was constantly aware that I was watching history in the making and that was exciting. So every day had some, or certainly every week, had something, a twist to it that made it really exciting
Chris O’Dell now: I am happily remarried to a wonderful man who supports me and accepts me as I am. My twenty-three-year-old son is amazing and gives me some credibility as a parent! I have a private practice in Tucson, specializing in addiction and mental health counseling. My two dogs are happy and life is just better than I would have expected.
Excerpt from the book: On being in a room with Mick and Keith before the 72 tour.
“Listen to this fucking article in Rolling Stone about Harrison’s Bangladesh concert,” Keith said. He started reading from the article.
“The Concert for Bangladesh is rock reaching for its manhood.” Keith raised an eyebrow. “Under the leadership of George Harrison, a group of rock musicians recognized, in a deliberate, self-conscious, and professional way, that they have responsibilities, and went about dealing with them seriously.”
Keith looked at Mick and then at me. “Do you believe this shit? But wait, it gets better. Harrison is “a man with a sense of his own worth, his own role in the place of things… with a few parallels among his peers.”
“Bollocks.” Keith laughed, tossing the magazine on the coffee table. “What a fucking load of shit.”
I knew that Keith wasn’t really amused. He could be terribly insecure.
What a paradox Keith was- a sweet sensitive soul who wrote songs about needing love to be happy and yet he lived his life as if he couldn’t give a shit about anything.
But at that moment I wasn’t too interested in Keith’s feelings. I sat at the far end of the sofa, my legs and arms crossed, smoking a cigarette and drinking my Scotch and Coke as if it were straight Coke. I was pissed. Sure, I knew they were just being competitive, but I couldn’t stand listening to them make fun of George. I wanted to jump into the conversation and tell them to leave him alone. But what could I do? I worked for the Stones now, not the Beatles. This is weird, I know, and particularly strange in the context of the Stone’s remarkable longevity, but at that moment I had a sinking feeling that I was beginning my climb down the ladder. I’d started at the very top with the Beatles and now I was on the rung below. I found myself thinking at that moment that the Stones were sometimes a little too raw, too raunchy, too negative. I liked their music, and I liked each of them individually, but if I had to choose, the Beatles would win.
“You know,” I said, trying to smile but having a hard time of it,
“George is my friend.”
Mick looked over at me as if he had forgotten I was there. “Oh yeah, Chris, you’re a Beatle person, aren’t you? Sorry about that”
We let it go, then, but after I dropped Mick at his house and headed home through the dark canyons, I felt a sudden, intense longing to see Pattie and George. Mick was right. When it came right down to it, I was a Beatle person.”
Miss O’Dell
I’m the only one down here
Who’s got nothing to say
About the war
Or the rice
That keeps going astray on its way to Bombay.
That smog that keeps polluting up our shores
Is boring me to tears.
Why don’t you call me, Miss O’Dell?
I’m the only one down here
Who’s got nothing to fear
From the waves
Or the rice
That keeps rolling on right up to my front porch.
The record player’s broken on the floor,
And Ben, he can’t restore it.
Miss O’Dell.
I can tell you
Nothing new
Has happened since I last saw you.
I’m the only one down here
Who’s got nothing to say
About the hip
Or the dope
Or the cat with most hope to fill the Fillmore.
That pushing, shoving, ringing on my bell
Is not for me tonight.
Why don’t you call me, Miss O’Dell?
Why don’t you call me, Miss O’Dell?
If I had to choose between the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, I would say that I am also a Beatles person.
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Well there is not much guessing about me lol. It was a good book…it would have been like if the Grateful Dead asked you to work for them in 1975 or whenever.
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Man, I’ve got to read this book. I am also a Beatle person, but I did see the Stones in concert with my son a few years back. There must have been twenty other musicians on stage. Also, AT&T Stadium ( Cowboy Stadium) has the worst acoustics on the planet.
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I can well imagine – I mean, what’s the capacity of that place – 100 000?
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I believe the way the stage was set up you could only get 80k. We were way up but still had good seats.
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Phil it’s worth the read…it really is. You want to throttle her at times because of some of the things she does…but I guess we all do those things at times.
I saw them at Church Hill Downs…which is not configured for music but yea….the stage was covered with musicians.
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that does sound like a worthwhile read . I admire your reading volume too btw – you’ve gone through a lot of books this fall! Being an employee of the Stones would be pretty great if you were a music fan…but she’s right, a step down from the Beatles still.
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Well remember Dave. Some of these books are audio books which I have around a two hour trip every day back and forth to work…so it’s perfect. Some are 10 to 20 hours which I can finish in two weeks easy.
What I do is later on get the physical book if I really like it. I’ve got this book ordered so I can re-read if I want.
She worked with everyone…I mean everyone back then. It is worth a read.
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Automobile and audiobook make the gridlocked journey (almost) worth it.
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Yes it does Obbverse. It almost makes me look forward to the drive
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Keef sending her to pick up a package! lol… “She’s my Little Rock n Roll’
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Great post, Max. She sounds like a pretty fascinating lady, so I imagine that book must be a great read.
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It really is and I learned a lot about George in particular….a wonderful book. I really would push this one to people.
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Max, you’ve almost tempted me to step out of my safe zone.
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It’s a fun book Bruce!
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Max when did this book come out? I would like to read it at some point. She must have been a talented lady to have songs written about her by the greats.
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2010…you know…I should start stating that when I review these books. I’m glad you brought that up.
It gave me a better understanding of George and for that matter Pattie and Maureen…no one ever talks about her.
It would be like one of us start working for The Beatles…just an incredible journey. I like George’s song also…it was going to be an A side.
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Ah ok, just wondered. Yes, I want to know about all of what you say is in that book. I really don’t hold it against Mick and Keith for dissing Geo under those circumstances. The press turned Geo into a god and that was a setup for resentment by anyone else.
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No I don’t hold that against them…there was always a complex there also between the two bands. In a recent interview Keith named George in his top 6 guitarists.
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I didn’t think you did but it sounds like Miss O’Dell did. Keith da man. Goofy drug fiend of old but still a good egg.
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Oh yea…her and Keith got along great afterward…they let it pass after that. She realized the complex feelings there.
Their tour manager wanted a lot of people off that tour….and she was one of them….but Mick, Keith, and Bill said screw you and paid her way.
She started to do tour managing after that tour.
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But…I can understand her being upset at the moment.
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I located this book in our library, and will be picking it up this afternoon. Thanks for the recommendation, and your balanced review. It looks well worth reading.
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Oh good…I hope you like it. You will be baffled at times with her decisions but at least she was honest about it…its incredible on how many people she met and worked with.
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I assume she was just like the rest of her peers in that world — where everyone was making things up as they went along. As you said, they were making history, as opposed to repeating it. There wasn’t a playbook to follow. Many decisions were bound to be bad, or even disastrous in hindsight. She seems to have navigated it and survived admirably.
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Please tell me what you think after you finish with it. More things worked out than didn’t…which is a great thing.
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I will.
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