Eubanks, Hull |
They had KRLA, 1110 AM in Pasadena, and the legendary
Eleven-Ten Men, including American Top 40-progenitor Casey Kasem, and the
comedy team of Hudson & Landry. They’d soon add current KDES-FM disc jockey
Russ O’Hara.
But mainly, they had Bob Eubanks and Dave Hull.
KRLA began calling itself “the original Beatles station in
Los Angeles” in February 1964, the month the Beatles arrived in New York. Hull
headed the Beatles Fan Club of Southern California and Eubanks produced their
only three concerts in Los Angeles County.
According to mydesert.com, Saturday, Hull and Eubanks will
reminisce about those days and present the Beatles tribute group Paperback
Writer in a benefit.
“We’re going to tell stories,” Eubanks said by telephone
from L.A. “I was on the business side of it when we were at KRLA in that I was
producing the concerts. David (Hull) was on the other side where he was out
with the folks. He was the fifth Beatle, for crying out loud! That’s how it all
came down.”
Hull is one of many “fifth Beatles.” New York DJ Murray the
K made that his brand. Bass guitarist Klaus Voorman and keyboard artist Billy
Preston also were called that. But Hull
never wanted the nickname.
“I just wanted to be known as Dave Hull, who got some of the
stories before anybody else had them,” he said. “Every city had a guy who was
strutting around saying he was the fifth Beatle. I did a TV show once with Pat
Sajak and he said, ‘I understand you’re the fifth Beatle.’ And before I could
say a thing about disliking that, he said, ‘You may be interested to know I was
the sixth Dave Clark Five.’ ”
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