Liverpool is a famous port city in the northwest of England and the fifth largest city in the United Kingdom. Liverpool is the cultural capital of Europe, it is famous for soccer and music, and the story of The Beatles is intertwined with the city, where they started their rock and roll journey that influenced the world. Liverpool is also a great gift for fans, and every match day, Anfield is packed with people. In addition to the charm of music and soccer, Liverpool has several museums that are free to visit, as well as buildings that have been selected as World Heritage Sites, highlighting its rich cultural heritage.
Admission to the Beetlejuice Museum costs 13.95 pounds. Free docents are available at the entrance and are available in a variety of languages. The museum details every detail of the Beatles: from the birth of each Beatles member to their encounters, to their journey before fame, and the madness of fame and their recording studio. All done with 100% restoration.
Through the exhibition, learn how the Beatles were popular around the world, from Europe to the United States, this band harvested a lot of fanatical fans, you can feel the frenzy of that era, and deeply touched the current era of you.
Opposite the Beatles Museum is the Liverpool Ferris wheel. This Ferris wheel is smaller than the Ferris wheel in other cities, but. Sitting on it, you can see the vast sea on one side and the whole of Liverpool on the other.
Walk around and you will come to Albert Dock. This pier is the spiritual symbol of Liverpool, the beginning of the city's take-off, and there are many modern buildings along the pier. This dock carries so much of Liverpool's history. The Albert Dock was an important port for Liverpool back in the day, and the import and export trade with the rest of the world before and after the British Industrial Revolution and the slave trade were closely linked to this port.
Today the old warehouses of the docks have been transformed into stores, apartments, restaurants, bars, hotels, galleries and museums. The International Slave Museum, the Mersey Maritime Museum, the Tate Modern in Liverpool, and the Beatles Exhibition Gallery are all gathered here. If you are a Beatles fan, you can't miss The Cavern Club at night! If you are not very familiar with the Beatles or do not know their songs, everyone will sing along with the Beatle's songs. This atmosphere is still quite worth going to feel. The Cavern Club is one of the earliest Beatles clubs, where it seems crowded and small compared to the average bar, where people stand in the narrow aisles with glasses of wine, and where sentiment brings everyone together, and when the band plays the Beatles' classic songs, no matter where you are from in the world, you will be able to hum a few lines!