Barrow, 80, died in a Lancaster hospital on Saturday following a lengthy illness, his son Mike Barrow said Tuesday. Former Beatle Paul McCartney said Barrow "was a lovely guy who helped us in the early years of the Beatles." He called Barrow "super professional but always ready for a laugh."
Mike Barrow said his father coined the phrase at a time when the word "fab" was in common usage. He says "he just put the two together ... It was a masterstroke."
He was recruited for a job as the Beatles' press officer by manager Brian Epstein in 1962, the year they signed a record deal with Parlophone. Barrow wrote the press release for their debut single, "Love Me Do," and assembled a five-page kit titled "Introducing THE BEATLES" that featured a photograph on a pink card.
In Mark Lewisohn's Beatles biography "Tune In," Barrow remembered all four band members making distinct first impressions: McCartney was sociable, George Harrison inquisitive, Ringo Starr shy and John Lennon abrasive.