“Mind the steps…” In 1963, in the heart of Liverpool, The Beatles weren’t on a stage — they were right there on the NEMS staircase, where Brian Epstein helped turn a local band into a national obsession. Word is it was just a signing for “Please Please Me”… until it suddenly became a spontaneous little mini-gig. No amp, no proper set-up — just raw guitars and a snare drum doing emergency duty. And here’s what’s driving fans mad: that moment was actually recorded.

Beatles
BEATLEMANIA BEFORE BEATLEMANIA! The long-lost day The Beatles ‘took over’ Brian Epstein’s Liverpool record shop — signing Please Please Me singles, playing an IMPROMPTU acoustic set on the STAIRS… and leaving fans desperate for a recording that may never exist

24 January 1963: Live: NEMS, Liverpool | The Beatles Bible

  • The Beatles made a “personal appearance” at Brian Epstein’s central Liverpool record store NEMS on Thursday 24 January 1963 — just weeks before the nation truly exploded into Beatlemania.
  • They autographed copies of the newly released Please Please Me single — then gave a brief acoustic performance at the foot of the shop’s staircase.
  • The set was wonderfully makeshift: John Lennon and George Harrison on acoustics, Paul McCartney on his Höfner bass without an amp, and Ringo Starr “making do” with a single snare drum.
  • And here’s the heartbreak: no recording is known to exist, meaning this tiny ‘in-store gig’ lives on mostly through photographs and fan folklore.

If you want a snapshot of The Beatles before the screams became a tsunami — this is it.

A black-and-white photo circulating again online has sent fans into a frenzy, capturing John, Paul, George and Ringo perched on the staircase inside NEMS — Brian Epstein’s Liverpool shop — looking almost casually famous.

Not stadium gods. Not untouchable icons.

Just four sharp-suited lads wedged into a retail space, turning a shop floor into a stage.

The ‘secret’ gig in the middle of Liverpool

Get Back to The Staircase | Paul mccartney, Beatles photos, The beatles

According to Beatles historians, the band popped into NEMS, Epstein’s central Liverpool record store, earlier that day before travelling to Wales for an evening concert in Mold.

The mission sounded simple: sign the new “Please Please Me” single and charm the customers.

But The Beatles being The Beatles, it didn’t stop there.

They reportedly played a brief acoustic performance right there at the foot of the staircase, as shoppers and staff looked on — a blink-and-you-miss-it moment that feels almost impossible in today’s era of security cordons and VIP routes.

The detail fans can’t stop talking about: the ‘no amp’ bass and the lone snare

Building The Beatles: How Beatlemania was created

This wasn’t a polished TV special. It was gloriously improvised.

John Lennon and George Harrison played acoustic guitars.

Paul McCartney used his famous Höfner bass — without an amplifier.

And Ringo Starr had to “make do” with a solitary snare drum.

Fans love this part because it’s the purest version of the band’s early magic: make it work, whatever’s in the room.

Where exactly was it?

The appearance is widely linked to the NEMS shop at 12–14 Whitechapel, Liverpool — one of the key addresses in the Epstein empire that helped propel the group from local heroes to national obsession.

Epstein, often dubbed the “Fifth Beatle”, famously ran NEMS and became the group’s manager in their crucial early years.

The brutal twist: the audio fans would pay a fortune to hear

And then comes the line that stings.

No recording of the in-store performance is known to exist.

That single fact turns the whole thing into catnip: a Beatles performance that’s documenteddated, and described — but essentially unhearable.

Social media is eating it up

The throwback has been resurfacing via Beatles fan pages that re-post “on this day” moments — and the reactions are exactly what you’d expect: delight, disbelief, and fans swapping their own imagined setlists like it’s a treasure map.

Because the fantasy is irresistible: being the customer who walked in for a single… and walked out having watched The Beatles play the stairs.

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