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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
Entertainment
Laura Davis

International Beatle Week to celebrate Abbey Road anniversary and the Mathew Street Festival

The world's largest and longest-running Beatles festival returns to Liverpool this month - with special guests including John Lennon's sister Julia Baird and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame drummer Alan White.

International Beatleweek 2019 will feature 70 bands from 20 countries and is worth an estimated £2.8m to the city’s economy.

Fab Four fans from around 40 countries across the world, including Brazil, Russia, the US, Spain and the Netherlands, will converge on the Mersey for the seven-day event, organised by Cavern City Tours.

International Beatles Week back in 2016 (Liverpool Echo)

This year marks 50 years since the release of Abbey Road and 60 years since the Casbah Club was opened by Mona Best – mother of The Beatles’ first drummer Pete Best - in West Derby.

Both landmark anniversaries will be celebrated at events between August 21-27, as will the Mathew Street Festival which ran alongside Beatleweek for 20 years until it was cancelled in 2013.

The festival includes the Annual Beatles Convention at the Adelphi Hotel on Sunday, August 25 which features guest speakers, interviews, film shows, a giant Beatles flea market, and performances from 40 tribute bands.

John Lennon’s sister Julia Baird will be appearing at the event as well as Yes drummer Alan White, who played with both Lennon and George Harrison, and recording studio engineer Jack Douglas who worked with Lennon on both Imagine and Double Fantasy.

Bill Heckle, Cavern City Tours director, said: "Beatleweek remains the biggest celebration of Beatles’ music anywhere in the world, and despite it being 50 years since the band broke up, their songs continue to inspire a new generation of fans and musicians.

"What International Beatleweek has done over the past three decades is to create this amazing family all over the globe. It’s an umbrella for like-minded people, many of whom have forged deep friendships over many years – and some of which have resulted in marriage.

"This year’s event sold out in May which makes it the fastest-selling in Beatleweek’s long history. This is fantastic for the future of the festival, but also for Liverpool’s tourism industry."

He added that International Beatleweek is worth an estimated £1m a year to Liverpool, with thousands of festival-goers travelling from dozens of countries, spending money on hotels, taxis, experiences and souvenirs, and in restaurants, bars and cafes across the city.

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