ABSTRACT This article argues that the burgeoning British Poetry Revival not only anticipated the Beatles’ UK breakthrough of 1963 but also helped frame that cultural moment as the “dawn of the sixties.” It demonstrates that the pioneers of this performative, populist, and café-based movement, from Bernard Kops and Christopher Logue to Royston Ellis and Roger McGough, influenced the fledgling band with their US beat- and jazz-poetry-aligned principles in reaction against the perceived British parochialism and elitism of such poets as Philip Larkin. It further shows how the affinity between the Revival and the Beatles, which took root especially in the cafés of Liverpool, was key to the band’s initial assault on postwar pop music. This was an affinity, after all, that foregrounded the Beatles’ unstudied musical expression and vitalization of ordinary language on their first album, which led to Logue praising their songwriting for its “disobedience, sexuality, revolution, new values, and other infectious notions.”
Adam Mason (Mon,) studied this question.
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