Friday, August 4, 2006



The Beatles, The Bible, And Bodega Bay

Book Review: The Beatles, The Bible, And Bodega Bay: My Long And Winding Road By Ken Mansfield

A couple of weeks ago, I happened across an interesting advertisement in my community newspaper, The West Seattle Herald. The ad was for a presentation being given at a local Calvary Chapel church about the Beatles.

What caught my eye, was the name of the speaker, a guy named Ken Mansfield.

Having been a pretty hardcore Beatles fan for most of my life, I knew that name from somewhere. I just wasn't sure exactly where the recall came from. With my curiosity appropriately piqued, and with the church in question a very convenient two block walk from my house, I decided to check it out.

Now, if your experience has been anything like mine, you already know that at least part of me expected the worst. When Christian churches or organizations do any sort of special presentation having to do with rock music, it is most often going to be to expose it as the evil scourge it surely is, what with all the backward masking and those satanic heavy metal bands out there.

If you've ever come across one of those late night broadcasts from something like The 700 Club, where some guy who worked as a roadie for say, Marilyn Manson, is dishing up salacious tales of group orgies and blood drinking, you know exactly what I'm talking about. The message is usually something along the lines of you need to burn all of your rock CDs and get with Jesus.


Which is why Mansfield's presentation ended up being such a pleasant surprise. Mansfield's church lecture actually turned out to be a truly wonderful remembrance of his time in the inner sanctum of the greatest band of all time, complete with music and lots of rare slides.

Mansfield did not dish up a single sordid tale of drugs or groupies (though he did verify this sort of thing went on...I mean, let's be honest here). Nor did he have a single bad thing to say about "The Lads" as he referred to them often in the most endearing of terms. In fact he described them as "the sweetest, most polite group of guys you'd ever want to meet." Perfect Gentlemen, was how he put it.

I honestly had to pinch myself to make sure I was really in church.

So the expected "burn your rock CDs" part of the program never did come. The "Get With Jesus" part, of course did. But here again I was rather surprised and somewhat taken back by the gentle and non-judgmental way this was presented.

Mansfield wrapped up his remembrances of the Beatles with his personal testimony of his eventual fall from the music business (again revealing none of the sorry details in the same show of class that characterized his earlier memories of the Beatles).

He went on to tell a simple story of finding personal peace with Jesus and settling down in the quiet California fishing town of Bodega Bay with his wife.

There was no hell and brimstone preaching to be found anywhere in the entire presentation. Yet, I was absolutely rivetted by it.

The part where he talked about one day not being able to find a job in the business he devoted so much of his life to hit me especially hard. As someone who worked in that business myself for over twenty years (though at nowhere near Mansfield's level), his was a testimony I had no problem relating to myself.

After introducing myself to Mansfield and embarrasing myself by attempting to bribe him out of a copy of his book with a Blogcritics review (he'd never heard of BC by the way), I decided to buy a copy from Amazon anyway the very next day. I devoured it in a single six hour sitting.

In much the same laid back style of the presentation I saw in church, The Beatles, The Bible, And Bodega Bay alternates chapters between Mansfield's Beatles memories of the past, with his present day prayers and meditations with God, most taking place from the idyllic Bodega Bay home he so clearly loves.

Alongside the Beatles pages, run chronological event summaries in the form of bullet points highlighting the Beatles career milestones. Meanwhile selected biblical passages run alongside the pages recounting his bayside devotional conversations with God.

Despite what one might see as a contradiction here, the two themes weave together remarkably well, and never for one second does the Christian part of his story come across as preachy or judgmental.

In the Beatles portion of the narrative, Mansfield traces his journey from his humble Idaho beginings to the ivory tower of Capitol Records in Hollywood, to being asked by the Fab Four themselves to run their Apple Records operation in the U.S. Along the way, Mansfield recounts numerous personal recollections from those heady days in the form of some very interesting and telling annecdotes.

This is all wonderfully illustrated with priceless, never before seen pictures and memorabilia from his personal collection. He even tells the story of nearly selling one such piece--a handwritten and signed note from John Lennon--to a used record dealer when he was later down on his luck. As soon as he realized what he almost did, he snatched back the picture as well as the twenty five cents the dealer was about to pay him for it.



Mansfield describes the thrill of being at the Beatles historic final London rooftop concert for the Let It Be film, with all of the excitement and awe of being a kid in what had to be the world's greatest candystore.

He also details the negotiation tactics of a ruthless Allen Klein as he was in the process of taking over Apple. In what came down to a tennis match for Mansfield's job, Mansfield won enabling him to wisely walk away from Klein's offer. He talks about how Capitol Records handled the "Paul Is Dead" rumors which swirled about after the release of Abbey Road. They eventually got a handwriting expert to verify everything Paul had signed for Capitol came from the same man.


There are also the numerous personal stories of his private moments with the most famous four men on earth. Like the time Mansfield had to be literally saved by Paul McCartney at a meeting where he was first shown the nude photographs of John and Yoko for the Two Virgins without prior warning. Or when he witnessed an impromptu living room jam session at George's house with the likes of Eric Clapton, Donovan, and the Jefferson Airplane's Jack Casady taking turns trying to one-up each other.

Of course there are also tragedies as Mansfield recounts the deaths of close friends like Beatles confidant Mal Evans, who was found shot under mysterious curcuimstances while Mansfield was across town accepting a Grammy Award. The two had spoken earlier the same day and Mansfield recalls sensing there was something terribly wrong.

When Mansfield got the news of John Lennon's death, he was in the process of going through his archive of Lennon photos at his home in what proved to be a moment of bittersweet, poetic irony.

Amazingly, Mansfield recounts these stories (and many more) not only fondly, but without even a hint of the scandal which colors so many of the other Beatles biographies and tell-all books which have come out over the years.

His credentials of having actually been there at a very high level are without question, having run Apple in the U.S. for the Beatles. The numerous photographs and personal recollections which color this book only further cement Mansfield's credibility. Yet it's clear that despite being the ultimate insider, Mansfield was also the Beatles friend first and foremost. And that he remains so without a single ax to grind here.



It is little wonder that this book is the only Beatles retrospective outside of the official "Anthology" that Paul, George, Ringo, and the Lennon estate represented by John's widow, Yoko Ono, personally signed off on and approved.

Likewise, Mansfield never really dishes up any dirt on his own eventual fall from the grace of the music industry, though it is clearly implied that such a fall did in fact take place at some point. Rather he fast forwards throughout the book to the present.

This is a time which finds Ken Mansfield at peace. With his past. With his family and his marriage. With his life. And at peace with the God who he finds himself in deep devotion and prayer with in his daily walks along his beloved Bodega Bay.

For a man who has lived several lifetimes worth of experience, any one of us should find ourselves so lucky at the journey's end.

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