Tony Sheridan was an excellent guitarist and had a good rock voice. The Beat Brothers were The Beatles and they punch this old standard up of My Bonnie Lies Over The Ocean. This record is probably the most important record they made …even as just a backing group.

They were thrilled to be on a record. “I didn’t stop playing it for days,” George told the NME two years later. Teenager Jimmy Campbell would remember Paul running up the stairs at Aintree Institute shouting “This is our record!” He made the DJ Bob Wooler put it on and he was bouncing all over the place just listening to himself coming out of the speakers. He was really made up. “Listen to that!”
Brian Epstein ran NEMS record store and one of his policies was to get any song that he might not have in stock. Around mid-afternoon on Saturday, October 28, 1962, a young man from Knotty Ash, Raymond Jones, walked into the NEMS shop on Whitechapel and tried to buy the record.
What happened next is the subject of conflicting accounts, though they end the same way. Jones remembers that Brian Epstein, unable to find “My Bonnie” in any release lists, asked him questions about it, which concluded with Jones saying the Beatles were locals and “the most fantastic group you will ever hear.” Brian himself, in his autobiography, suggested this additional information only came to him over the following days, and in the raw interview transcript for that book, he said one of his shop-girls noted Jones’ order.
That led Brian Epstein to the Cavern Club where the Beatles played. That is somewhere that he would probably have never gone. Raymond Jones’s simple request would go down in history. Soon after, Brian was managing the Beatles and within a year they got George Martin’s attention and the rest is history.
While the Beatles were in Hamburg they were signed to a record contract by Bert Kaempfert. He recorded many cuts with The Beatles backing Sheridan and also a few by themselves. One original was the Lennon-Harrison instrumental Cry For A Shadow. The rest were standards like Ain’t She Sweet and When the Saints Come Marching In. The Beatles were fortunate with Bert Kaempfert. He wasn’t a shark…he signed them and when they had a chance to sign with EMI…he only asked that they record a couple of more songs and he let them go.
My Bonnie was released in October of 1961 in Germany and peaked at #32 in the German charts. It didn’t do much in the UK but fans knew about it and wanted it. The Beatles were very popular in Liverpool at the time and it sold well there after Brian got it in his store. Later on when they released Love Me Do it sold over 10,000 copies in Liverpool alone.
Record executives thought Epstein bought that many to put it in the charts but no….they really sold. Most people outside of Liverpool couldn’t understand how a “new” band would sell that many but they had been popular there since coming back from Hamburg in 1961. The Beatles started their own fan club in 1962 before Brian met them.
Their old bass player, Stuart Sutcliffe was there, but Paul played bass during the sessions.
My Bonnie
My Bonnie lies over the ocean
My Bonnie lies over the sea
My Bonnie lies over the ocean
Oh bring back my Bonnie to me
My Bonnie lies over the ocean
My Bonnie lies over the sea
Well my Bonnie lies over the ocean
Yeah bring back my Bonnie to me
Yeah bring back, ah bring back
Oh bring back my Bonnie to me to me
Oh bring back, oh bring back
Oh bring back my Bonnie to me
Well my Bonnie lies over the ocean
My Bonnie lies over the sea
Yeah my Bonnie lies over the ocean
Oh I said bring back my Bonnie to me
Yeah bring back, ah bring back
Oh bring back my Bonnie to me to me
Oh bring back, ah bring back
Oh bring back my Bonnie to me

While I’ve known “My Bonnie” for decades, I never quite looked at this recording the way you describe it here. I think you’re right. This may have been the most important record The Beatles made. Otherwise they may not have met Brain Epstein or George Martin.
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Totally agree
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It did set off a chain of events to that guy coming in the store to Brian finding them…who knows what would have happened if not for that. He didn’t know them as The Beatles but he did see them in NEMS hanging out in the record department chatting up the sales girls.
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It’s an intriguing background story!
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While I’ve mentioned this in a blog post before, being a cover song and all, it certainly takes on much greater significance.
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Really nice music, as I enjoyed both of these songs.
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Thanks Jim
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Interesting stuff Max. Sheridan should have formed a band with Pete Best and called it “The Other Guys” lol
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LOL…no he said Pete couldn’t drum worth sh*t.
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Well that settles that then!
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We used to sing this song at school- we had to stand up or sit down every time there was a word beginning with b.
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That is cool…more cool than us… I remember us singing “By The Light of the Silvery Moon”
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I would argue that bobbing up and down while singing “my bonnie” is deeply uncool….
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Well…ok…the bobbing no…but The Light of the Silvery Moon?
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A great post! So neat to hear how excited they were hearing themselves on record and I had no idea this is what led Brian Epstein to them.
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Thanks Dave! I thought this was the most interesting one of the 3 that posted today…the last post was a scheduling mistake…I rarely post 3 in a day…I wasn’t paying attention.
That song was really important.
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We got a new console stereo, probably around 1960. It came with a bunch of albums included. Most were Easy Listening or soundtracks from musicals. One was “Wonderland by Night” by Bert Kaempfert. Interesting to know that he signed The Beatles.
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Oh yes…he did have a hit over here. They were lucky he was a decent producer or he would have held them for ransom to EMI
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