Stu Sutcliffe was a key figure in the Beatles' early history, playing bass guitar and, many say, helping the group settle on a name. Not bad for a guy who wasn't even a musician. Sutcliffe was a promising painter who lived with John Lennon while both were students at the Liverpool College of Art. After Sutcliffe sold a painting for the princely sum of £65, Lennon persuaded him to buy a bass guitar and join his group, the Quarrymen, in 1959. According to some versions of Beatles lore, Sutcliffe helped shape rock n' roll history by suggesting the group change its name to play off Buddy Holly's band, the Crickets. A welcome addition for his good looks and bohemian fashion sense, Sutcliffe's elementary musical abilities never matched that of his bandmates and he left the group in 1961 (George Harrison later said of his playing: "It was a bit ropey, but it didn't matter at that time because he looked so cool.") Sutcliffe died of a brain hemorrhage the following year, just 21 years old.
(Read a 1966 TIME story on rock music: "The New Troubadors")
ncG1vNJzZmibn6PBprrTZ6uipZVjsLC5jq2gpp1fqL2mr8iao6xnoJawrK3GnqpomaKptqS4xGhnZWpobX11eJByaWpoZmescoWRamdvaY9mhnN9kGluZWhgY7W1ucs%3D