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PUBLICATION AND $1,000 CASH PRIZES: Last Call B&W
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By Jim Marshall, Amelia Davis

Publisher: Chronicle Books
Publication date: June 2026
Print length: 176 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
The final public performance of the Beatles at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park remains one of the most storied chapters in music history, marking the end of a touring era that defined a global phenomenon. On August 29, 1966, the band stepped onto a makeshift stage surrounded by a chain-link fence, playing a brief set to a crowd of roughly 25,000 fans. While the technical conditions of the night were famously chaotic, the visual record of the event was secured by Jim Marshall, the only photographer granted unrestricted access to the band’s inner circle during their stay. This historic convergence between the premier chronicler of rock culture and the world’s most influential group is now preserved in a deluxe volume titled The Beatles by Jim Marshall: Live at Candlestick Park 1966.

Marshall’s unique standing as a trusted peer allowed him to bypass the frantic energy of Beatlemania to capture the exhaustion and camaraderie that characterized the group's final days on the road. The collection features over 150 photographs, including rare proof sheets and a significant number of images that remained hidden in archives for six decades. Beyond the wide-angle shots of the windy stadium, the book documents the quiet tension of the locker room and candid interactions with figures such as Joan Baez and her sisters. These photographs utilize the high-contrast tones and sharp clarity that became Marshall’s signature, offering a raw, unfiltered perspective on the musicians before they retreated into the studio experimentation of the late 1960s.

As the 60th anniversary of this landmark performance arrives in 2026, the publication provides a vital reassessment of the band’s transition away from the stage. Accompanied by an essay from music historian Joel Selvin, the imagery serves as a definitive document of the moment the Beatles decided to stop being a live act. Marshall, who famously documented the Monterey Pop Festival and Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison, treats the Candlestick Park show with the same journalistic integrity and artistic flair that defined his career. The result is an essential artifact for historians and collectors alike, capturing the precise second the four men from Liverpool stepped off the stage and into legend.

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