Royal Albert Hall was ‘furious’ over Beatles lyric, newly discovered documents reveal
Papers newly discovered deep under the Royal Albert Hall have revealed that the iconic London venue wrote to the Beatles in 1967 to object “in the strongest conceivable terms” to being named in the Fab Four’s song A Day in the Life.
The discovery came when correspondence was unearthed whilst clearing an old archive room as part of the Hall’s ongoing steam heating refurbishment project.
The verse of the famous 1967 song which mentions the Hall reads:
I read the news today oh boy
Four thousand holes in Blackburn, Lancashire
And though the holes were rather small
They had to count them all
Now they know how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall
I’d love to turn you on
In a letter to Beatles manager Brian Epstein, the Hall’s then chief executive, Mr Ernest O’Follipar told the band that the “wrong-headed assumption that there are four thousand holes in our auditorium” threatened to destroy its business overnight.
Writing back cheekily to “Prince Albert and friends”, John Lennon refused to apologise for the lyric, an action which resulted in a ban on the song ever being performed at the Hall.