Podcast appearances and mentions of michael lindsay hogg

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Best podcasts about michael lindsay hogg

Latest podcast episodes about michael lindsay hogg

Morning Meeting
Episode 242: Save America—Deport Lorne Michaels!

Morning Meeting

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2025 30:47


This week, David Kamp explains why it's time to make Trump deport the creator of Saturday Night Live, Lorne Michaels. Then, Stuart Heritage tells us how and why the notorious Fyre Festival is back. We think? And finally, Jean Marsh, one of the great actresses of the past 50 years, who also co-created the beloved and influential television series Upstairs, Downstairs, died recently, and Michael Lindsay-Hogg will join us to share his tribute to the beautiful woman he knew and loved.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

360 Yourself!
Ep 271: Not To Be Afraid To Be Yourself - Norman Buckley (Executive Producer & Director, Sweet Magnolias)

360 Yourself!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2025 60:16


Norman Buckley is a prolific director whose work spans various networks, genres, and styles. Most recently, he executive produced and edited the short film STORAGE FEES. He is currently the co-executive producer/producing director on the Netflix show SWEET MAGNOLIAS. His previous credits include NCIS: HAWAII, PRETTY LITTLE LIARS, CHARMED, IN THE DARK, ZOO, QUANTICO, RIZZOLI AND ISLES, CHUCK, GOSSIP GIRL, AND THE OC. He was co-executive producer/producing director on PRETTY LITTLE LIARS: THE PERFECTIONISTS.After editing the pilot episode of THE OC in 2003, he began his directing career by helming six episodes of that series. He has gone on to direct over 140 episodes of television since then. His television movie THE PREGNANCY PROJECT won Best Primetime Program (Special or Movie of the Week) and Best Actress (Alexa Vega) at the 2012 Imagen Awards. His episode of THE OC “The Metamorphosis” was chosen by Entertainment Weekly magazine as one of the five best episodes of the series. His episode of GOSSIP GIRL “The Handmaiden's Tale” was chosen by Newsweek Magazine as one of the top ten television episodes of 2007.Buckley began working in the industry as an assistant editor on the Oscar-nominated films TENDER MERCIES, SILKWOOD, and PLACES IN THE HEART. He continued editing for a number of years on many films, television series, and TV movies. He worked with many outstanding directors, including Bruce Beresford, Robert Benton, Mike Nichols, Rob Reiner, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Richard Donner, J.S. Cardone, McG, Doug Liman, and Robert M. Young. He also learned the editing craft from some of the best film editors in the business, including Carol Littleton, Sam O'Steen, William Anderson, and Bob Leighton.He worked as an editor on many independent films at the Sundance, Toronto, and Telluride film festivals, including HAPPY, TEXAS, which he also associate-produced. Beginning in 2000, Buckley edited several television pilots, all of which were picked up to series, which led to his regular work in television.He has been nominated twice for an American Cinema Editors award: in 2003 for JOE AND MAX, for best-edited motion picture for non-commercial television, and he won the award in 2008 for the pilot of CHUCK, for best-edited one-hour series for commercial television.Buckley grew up in Fort Worth, Texas and studied history at the University of Texas at Arlington, before moving to Los Angeles where he would later graduate from the University of Southern California with a degree in Cinema/Television.He was an adjunct professor at the University of California Los Angeles film school, teaching both graduates and undergraduates.Norman Buckley was married to the late artist Davyd Whaley and he established The Davyd Whaley Foundation (davydwhaleyfoundation.org) to carry on Davyd's legacy by supporting emerging artists with annual grants. Most recently the Foundation has funded scholarships at the Art Students League in New York and the film school at UCLA, as well as providing funding for Art Division, Art of Elysium, and the Brentwood Art Center in Los Angeles. 

Rock Docs
Let It Be with Jeremy Kaplan of Dogs in a Pile

Rock Docs

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 56:42


Today's episode is about "Let It Be", from 1970 and 2024, directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg. Our guest today is Jeremy Kaplan of the band Dogs in a Pile. A restored version of the original Let It Be movie has shown up on Disney+. We talk about it. It's the Beatles, you know the story. How does this movie fit into the great context of the Get Back experience? Which version of the rooftop concert is better? And what's up with that very weird dialogue between Peter Jackson and Michael Lindsay-Hogg before the movie starts? Plus: Evan Laffer of Jokermen provides us with his very brief review of The Beach Boys documentary, also on Disney+. Rock Docs is a Treble Media Podcast hosted by David Lizerbram & Andrew Keatts Twitter: @RockDocsPod   Instagram: @RockDocsPod   Cover Art by N.C. Winters - check him out on Instagram at @NCWintersArt  

PBS NewsHour - Segments
'Talking Pictures' exhibit chronicles prolific career of artist Michael Lindsay-Hogg

PBS NewsHour - Segments

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 6:59


The "Talking Pictures" art show in Hudson, New York, plays off the previous prolific career of Michael Lindsay-Hogg. He was at the creation of some of the biggest music moments of the 1960s and 70s. Famed director Peter Jackson has remastered Lindsay-Hogg's original "Let It Be" film for Disney+. Special correspondent Christopher Booker takes a look for our arts and culture series, CANVAS. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

PBS NewsHour - Art Beat
'Talking Pictures' exhibit chronicles prolific career of artist Michael Lindsay-Hogg

PBS NewsHour - Art Beat

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 6:59


The "Talking Pictures" art show in Hudson, New York, plays off the previous prolific career of Michael Lindsay-Hogg. He was at the creation of some of the biggest music moments of the 1960s and 70s. Famed director Peter Jackson has remastered Lindsay-Hogg's original "Let It Be" film for Disney+. Special correspondent Christopher Booker takes a look for our arts and culture series, CANVAS. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

Things We Said Today Beatles Radio
Things We Said Today #412 – A Visit with Sir Michael Lindsay-Hogg

Things We Said Today Beatles Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 60:45


            In Episode 412 of Things We Said Today, Ken Michaels, Allan Kozinn and Darren Devivo have a chat with Sir Michael Lindsay-Hogg about “Let It Be” – the original film as well as the newly remastered version. Since we did a show just last week, the News segment is fairly short; the interview begins at 9'05”.             As always, we welcome your thoughts about this episode of the show or any other episode. We invite you to send your comments about this or any of our other shows to our email address thingswesaidtodayradioshow@gmail.com, join our "Things We Said Today Beatles Fans" Facebook page and comment there, tweet us at @thingswesaidfab or catch us each on Facebook and give us your thoughts. And we thank you very much for listening. You can hear and download our show on Podbean, the Podbean app and iTunes and stream us through the Tune In Radio app and from our very own YouTube page.  Our shows appear every two weeks. Please be sure and write a (good, ideally!) review of our show on our iTunes page. If you subscribe to any of our program providers, you'll get the first word as soon as a new show is available. We don't want you to miss us. Our download numbers have been continually rising, as more people discover us and it's all because of you. So we thank you very much for your support!             Be sure to check out the video version of Things We Said Today on our YouTube channel, https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-zgHaPfL6BGmOX5NoyFE-A. The audio version can be found at Podbean: https://beatlesexaminer.podbean.com/ as well as at iHeart Radio, Apple podcasts and other distributors of fine podcasts.             MANY MANY WAYS TO CONTACT US:             Our email address: thingswesaidtodayradioshow@gmail.com             Twitter @thingswesaidfab             Facebook:  Things We Said Today video podcast      ALLAN on Facebook: Allan Kozinn or Allan Kozinn Remixed.             Allan's Twitter feed: @kozinn             The McCartney Legacy's website: https://www.mccartneylegacy.com/             The McCartney Legacy on Facebook: McCartney Legacy, and on Twitter: @McCARTNEYLEGACY             The McCartney Legacy YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8zaPoY45IxDZKRMf2Z6VyA             KEN's YouTube Channel, Ken Michaels Radio: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq_Dkp6fkIsYwGq_vCwltyg             Ken's Website Beatles Trivia Page: https://www.kenmichaelsradio.com/beatles-trivia--games.html Ken's other podcast, Talk  More Talk: A Solo-Beatles Videocast You Tube channel:  https://www.youtube.com/@talkmoretalksolobeatles             Ken's Weekly Beatles radio show "Every Little Thing" On Demand:  http://wfdu.fm/Listen/hd1%20recent%20archives/             Ken's e-mail:  everylittlething@att.net Ken's Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/ken.michaels.31/ DARREN's radio show can be heard 10pm to 2am Monday through Thursday and 1pm to 4pm Saturday on WFUV 90.7 FM (or 90.7 FM HD2), or at wfuv.org, or on the WFUV app.             Darren on Facebook: Darren DeVivo, and Darren DeVivo: WFUV DJ and Beatles Podcaster Darren's email: darrendevivo@wfmu.org

Things We Said Today Beatles Radio
Things We Said Today #411 – The restored “Let It Be,” John's “Mind Games,” Ringo's virtual Q&A

Things We Said Today Beatles Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2024 136:45


In Episode 410 of Things We Said Today, Ken Michaels, Allan Kozinn and Darren Devivo discuss the newly restored version of Michael Lindsay-Hogg's 1970 “Let It Be,” and how it got its bad reputation, and how it looks now; the just announced “Mind Games” archival release, due in July, and Ringo Starr's virtual press conference on May 15. [For listeners looking for specific topics, the first part of the show is devoted to the News, with “Let It Be” discussion starting at 33 minutes, the overview of the “Mind Games” reissue (and formats) beginning at 1 hour 33 minutes, and the report on Ringo's press conference getting underway at 1 hour 52 minutes. Yeah, it's a long one, but think of it as three shows in one!]             As always, we welcome your thoughts about this episode of the show or any other episode. We invite you to send your comments about this or any of our other shows to our email address thingswesaidtodayradioshow@gmail.com, join our "Things We Said Today Beatles Fans" Facebook page and comment there, tweet us at @thingswesaidfab or catch us each on Facebook and give us your thoughts. And we thank you very much for listening. You can hear and download our show on Podbean, the Podbean app and iTunes and stream us through the Tune In Radio app and from our very own YouTube page.  Our shows appear every two weeks. Please be sure and write a (good, ideally!) review of our show on our iTunes page. If you subscribe to any of our program providers, you'll get the first word as soon as a new show is available. We don't want you to miss us. Our download numbers have been continually rising, as more people discover us and it's all because of you. So we thank you very much for your support!             Be sure to check out the video version of Things We Said Today on our YouTube channel, https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-zgHaPfL6BGmOX5NoyFE-A. The audio version can be found at Podbean: https://beatlesexaminer.podbean.com/ as well as at iHeart Radio, Apple podcasts and other distributors of fine podcasts.             MANY MANY WAYS TO CONTACT US:             Our email address: thingswesaidtodayradioshow@gmail.com             Twitter @thingswesaidfab             Facebook:  Things We Said Today video podcast      ALLAN on Facebook: Allan Kozinn or Allan Kozinn Remixed.             Allan's Twitter feed: @kozinn             The McCartney Legacy's website: https://www.mccartneylegacy.com/             The McCartney Legacy on Facebook: McCartney Legacy, and on Twitter: @McCARTNEYLEGACY             The McCartney Legacy YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8zaPoY45IxDZKRMf2Z6VyA             KEN's YouTube Channel, Ken Michaels Radio: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq_Dkp6fkIsYwGq_vCwltyg             Ken's Website Beatles Trivia Page: https://www.kenmichaelsradio.com/beatles-trivia--games.html Ken's other podcast, Talk  More Talk: A Solo-Beatles Videocast You Tube channel:  https://www.youtube.com/@talkmoretalksolobeatles             Ken's Weekly Beatles radio show "Every Little Thing" On Demand:  http://wfdu.fm/Listen/hd1%20recent%20archives/             Ken's e-mail:  everylittlething@att.net Ken's Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/ken.michaels.31/ DARREN's radio show can be heard 10pm to 2am Monday through Thursday and 1pm to 4pm Saturday on WFUV 90.7 FM (or 90.7 FM HD2), or at wfuv.org, or on the WFUV app.             Darren on Facebook: Darren DeVivo, and Darren DeVivo: WFUV DJ and Beatles Podcaster Darren's email: darrendevivo@wfmu.org

Ranking The Beatles
BONUS! A Let It Be Podcast Roundtable Chat

Ranking The Beatles

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024 113:58


After decades of hiding in the Apple vaults, the Beatles' 1970 film Let It Be is finally out! Lovingly restored thanks to Peter Jackson's team, the documentary directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg finally gets it place in the sun. What better way to celebrate than with Beatle pals!?!? We were thrilled as could be to join our pals from the Blotto Beatles, Paul or Nothing, BC The Beatles, and Fans on the Run podcasts to talk all things Let it Be. First thoughts, long time thoughts, expectations, theories, what-have-yous. The beauty of the Beatles, bringing people together as always. If you don't listen to their shows, you better get on it!! Unfortunately, Julia was unable to join the chat. So, much like the short Peter Jackson/Michael Lindsay-Hogg interview that precedes Let It Be, she and I sat down separately to record an intro and get her thoughts on tape as well. What are your thoughts on Let it Be? Let us know in the comments on ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, or ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Twitter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠! Be sure to check out ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.rankingthebeatles.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and grab a Rank Your Own Beatles poster, a shirt, a jumper, whatever you like! And if you're digging what we do, don't forget to ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Buy Us A Coffee⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rankingthebeatles/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rankingthebeatles/support

Oh Brother
Let it Be - Michael Lindsay-Hogg

Oh Brother

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2024 34:21


On this week's episode of the  @ohbrotherpodcast  Dan and Mike discuss the recently restored 1970 documentary, Let it Be, from director Michael Lindsay-Hogg about the Beatles shortly before their breakup. Check out our site! ohbpodcast.comFollow us on socials! https://linktr.ee/ohbpodcast#podcast #movie #youtube #thebeatles #letitbe #beatlesletitbeSend us a Text Message.Actress Karissa Lee Staples Support the Show.Oh Brother Podcast: Subscribe on YouTube Listen on all podcast platforms Follow us on TikTok & Instagram Leave a 5-star rating/review on Apple Podcasts

Talk More Talk: A Solo Beatles Videocast
Episode 133: The Restored “Let It Be” with Special Guest Ken Womack

Talk More Talk: A Solo Beatles Videocast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 118:00


It's finally here--Peter Jackson's restored version of Michael Lindsay-Hogg's 1970 film. Original TMT host Ken Womack returns to discuss the long-awaited return of the documentary, its relation to "Get Back," and much more.   Ken Womack: https://kennethwomack.com/ talkmoretalk.com talkmoresolotalk@gmail.com @talkmoretalk1 https://www.facebook.com/talkmoretalkvideocast https://www.youtube.com/c/TalkMoreTalkASoloBeatlesVideocast

Glass Onion Beatles Podcast
S05 E04 - Let It Be: La película.

Glass Onion Beatles Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2024 90:02


¡Hola! ¿Cómo estás? Bienvenido al cuarto episodio de la quinta temporada de Glass Onion. El 8 de mayo de 2024 salió, después de muchos años de espera, Let It Be, la película de Michael Lindsay-Hogg. La vimos y debatimos sobre ella y su relación con Get Back de Peter Jackson. Pero antes hay noticias y hablamos sobre esto: - Se viene One Hand Clapping de Wings. - La nueva composición de (James) McCartney y Lennon (Sean Ono). - El nuevo EP de Ringo, Crooked Boy. - Y la historia de la guitarra que usó John en Help! que se va a subastar. Y además de todo esto tenemos el segmento de allegados así que aprovechamos y comentamos sobre la vida y obra del director de Let It Be, Michael Lindsay-Hogg. ¡Todo esto en solo una hora y media! Ahhh y se viene Help me, Rhonda! *Ruido de mate*

Journal du Rock
Bruce Springsteen et Shane MacGowan des Pogues ; AC/DC ; Apple, Sonny and Cher ; les Beatles ; les Foo Fighters et Van Halen ; Def Leppard

Journal du Rock

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2024 3:53


Bruce Springsteen a rendu hommage au regretté Shane MacGowan en reprenant un classique des Pogues lors d'un concert en Irlande. Il ne reste que 4 jours avant le début de la première tournée d'AC/DC en 8 ans, le groupe profite d'une répétition pour dévoiler une photo réunissant ses membres actuels. Apple s'est excusé d'avoir " raté le coche " avec sa nouvelle publicité pour l'iPad Pro, dans laquelle des instruments de musique et du matériel vintage sont détruits, le tout au son de la chanson " All I Need Is You " de Sonny and Cher. Une nouvelle vidéo du classique des Beatles, "Let It Be" a été partagée, réalisée à partir de séquences restaurées et d'extraits inédits du film du même nom sorti en 1970, réalisé par Michael Lindsay-Hogg et a servi de base à ‘'Get Back'', le long-métrage de Peter Jackson. Les Foo Fighters avaient prévu une petite surprise pour le public de Welcome to Rockville samedi, en faisant semblant de jouer deux classiques de Van Halen, qui étaient en réalité interprétés depuis les coulisses par Wolfgang Van Halen, le fils d'Eddie Van Halen. Bien qu'il soit l'une des figures de proue de la New Wave of British Heavy Metal, Joe Elliott, chanteur de Def Leppard, ne pense pas que son groupe entre dans la catégorie du heavy metal. Mots-Clés : Nowlan Park, Kilkenny, Irlande, show, Bruce Springsteen, The E Street Band , A Rainy Night In Soho, malade, Dublin, songwriter, passion, intensité, parole, cliché, Instagram, Brian Johnson,chant, Angus Young,guitare, guitariste, rythmique, Stevie Young, batteur, Matt Laug, bassiste, Chris Chaney, controverse, PDG, société, Tim Cook, piano, trompette, métronome, platine, enceinte, jeux, arcade, train,original, nouvelle, version, retravaillé, soin, officiel, disponible, plaisanterie , medley, concert, Dave Grohl , solo , public, Eruption, classique , caméra, interprétation, parfait, problème, terme, impression, monde, crétin, stupide, étiquettes, Rolling Stones. --- Classic 21 vous informe des dernières actualités du rock, en Belgique et partout ailleurs. Le Journal du Rock, chaque jour à 7h30 et 18h30. Merci pour votre écoute Pour écouter Classic 21 à tout moment : www.rtbf.be/classic21 Retrouvez tous les contenus de la RTBF sur notre plateforme Auvio.be Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.

Capture d'écrans
Quand les Beatles s'installaient sur un toit...

Capture d'écrans

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2024 4:04


durée : 00:04:04 - Capture d'écrans - par : Eva Roque - La plateforme Disney+ propose une version restaurée du documentaire de Michael Lindsay-Hogg, "Let it be". Pendant un mois, le réalisateur a filmé les répétitions des Beatles et le mythique concert donné sur les toits de Londres...

The Empire Film Podcast
#616 — Josh O'Connor, Owen Teague, Freya Allan & Kevin Durand, Michael Lindsay-Hogg

The Empire Film Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2024 114:42


Another guestapalooza on this week's Empire Podcast, folks! First up, Chris Hewitt has a lovely chat with Josh O'Connor — not about his talk-of-the-town tennis movie, Challengers, but his new film, Alice Rorhwacher's La Chimera, for which O'Connor learned Italian and, effectively, manifested into his life by way of a letter. [20:12 - 35:25 approx] Then, Dan Jolin, our very own Planet Of The Apes expert, sits down with Owen Teague, Freya Allan, and Kevin Durand, the lead trio of the new movie, Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes, for a chaotic chat about rapping apes, deadly spiders, and bare feet. [58:00 - 1:14.05 approx] And finally, Chris has a heartfelt talk with Michael Lindsay-Hogg, the director of the legendary Beatles documentary Let It Be, which is getting a wide release on Disney+ this week after years of being placed on the shelf. [1:39:45 - 1:53:05 approx] Either side of those is a fun episode in which Chris is joined in the podbooth by Helen O'Hara and James Dyer, as they discuss the best films to be adapted from TV shows, review all three of the aforementioned movies plus Jerry Seinfeld's Unfrosted, and tackle most of the week's movie news, including the announcement of a Lord Of The Rings movie directed by and starring Andy Serkis. They'll talk Ralph Ineson as Galactus next week, fear not. Enjoy!

Spoilerpiece Theatre
Episode 513: "Let It Be" remastered, "Evil Does Not Exist," and "Force of Nature: The Dry 2"

Spoilerpiece Theatre

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2024 65:35


This week there's a music documentary, an eco-fable set in Japan, and Dave's favorite cinematic subgenre: Australian detective stories starring Eric Bana! To start things, Dave fills Megan and Evan in on Michael Lindsay-Hogg's remastered LET IT BE, which crawled so Peter Jackson's GET BACK could fuggin' sprint. Megan watched EVIL DOES NOT EXIST, said eco-fable, which focuses on a village near Tokyo and a clamping site being developed nearby. This is Ryusuke Hamaguchi's follow-up to the much-lauded DRIVE MY CAR. Finally, everyone saw FORCE OF NATURE: THE DRY 2, which features Bana reprising the role of Aaron Falk from THE DRY. (Aside: (Dave and Evan's alternate title: THE WET, as this story is set almost entirely in a rain forest.) Of course, Dave can't resist doing his bad Australian accent and giggling uncontrollably. But is THE DRY 2 good? We let you know! Over on Patreon we talk about the 1979 comedy THE FRISCO KID starring Gene Wilder and Harrison Ford.

BC the Beatles
‘Let It Be' Revisited with Director Michael Lindsay-Hogg

BC the Beatles

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2024 53:07


We're thrilled to welcome the incredible Michael Lindsay-Hogg to the podcast. Michael is, of course, the director of the Beatles' film “Let it Be,” now fully restored and available worldwide on Disney Plus. Michael joined us to talk about his original vision for "Let it Be," its relationship to "Get Back," and give us the details on how he originally wanted the film to end. And of course we couldn't resist asking him about one our favorite films that Michael directed, "Two of Us." After the interview, we chat about our experiences at the New York and Los Angeles advance screenings of "Let it Be," and our impressions of the film now, especially in the context of "Get Back." Warning: we'll be discussing plot points for "Let it Be," so if you wish to remain spoiler-free until you've seen the film, that discussion begins at approximately 27:00.  --------------------- Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter/X for photos, videos, and more from this episode & past episodes — we're @bcthebeatles everywhere. Follow BC the Beatles on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you're listening now. Buy us a coffee! www.ko-fi.com/bcthebeatles Contact us at bcthebeatles@gmail.com.  

Untitled Beatles Podcast
Let It Be 50th Anniversary

Untitled Beatles Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2024 76:18


We're all going Michael Lindsay-Hogg wild for next week's "Let It Be" documentary re-release. So let's set the mood, and get back to OUR VERY FIRST EPISODE. No MAL technology to clean the audio, no overproduced, Dumb & Schticky audio drops (you're welcome again, SpongeBobbyHil589). Just a couple guys gabbin' fab about the Fab Four exactly as you've always loved them: naked. ----- [Originally released May 29, 2020] It's the first episode of the Untitled Beatles Podcast, recorded before "Untitled" was decided as the title. On its 50th anniversary, TJ and Tony explore Let It Be - TJ's favorite Beatle album and Tony's second-least(?) favorite. Enjoy the long and rambling road.   ----- EPISODE LINKS Like and subscribe! Please support our scrappy show. Score some sweet merch or find us on Patreon. Come hang with us on Facebook/Twitter/Instagram! Drop us a review on Apple Podcasts!

The Roundtable
Michael Lindsay-Hogg: "Talking Pictures" and Rock and Roll Circus at Hudson Hall

The Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 41:32


Artist, author, and director Michael Lindsay-Hogg helped create some of the most iconic moments in popular culture. Now based in Hudson, New York, Lindsay-Hogg's talent as a self-taught artist is being celebrated with a solo exhibition at Hudson Hall entitled "Talking Pictures." On May 4, Hudson Hall will present a screening of "The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus" with a discussion and poster signing with Lindsay-Hogg and Melissa Auf der Maur.

BC the Beatles
A "Let it Be" Teaser with Giles Martin and a Track-by-Track Recap of the 2021 Remixes [Encore]

BC the Beatles

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2024 78:38


The trailer for the restored version of Michael Lindsay-Hogg's "Let it Be" film dropped this week, and we couldn't be more excited! So in anticipation of the big day, we combined two of our favorite "Let it Be" episodes from the archives. Giles Martin on Remixing a #NextGen "Let it Be" — our first interview with Giles from 2021, where he tells us about everything from making the Beatles sound “fresh” for a new generation to dealing with critics. The "Let it Be" Remixes, Track-by-Track — our analysis and impressions of Giles Martin's 2021 Let it Be remixed album And stay subscribed for next week's episode, all about the film, and featuring a very special guest! --------------------- Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter/X for photos, videos, and more from this episode & past episodes — we're @bcthebeatles everywhere. Follow BC the Beatles on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you're listening now. Buy us a coffee! www.ko-fi.com/bcthebeatles Contact us at bcthebeatles@gmail.com

Journal du Rock
Beatles ; bibliothèque du Congrès américain ; Nick Cave ; Tom Delonge de Blink 182

Journal du Rock

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2024 2:36


Le film "Let It Be" des Beatles vient d'être restauré 54 ans après sa sortie ! e film, de Michael Lindsay-Hogg, sorti à l'origine en 1970, fournissant les images du film Get Back, de Peter Jackson, a été restauré par ce dernier et sera disponible en streaming à partir du 8 mai prochain. C'est la première fois depuis plus de 50 ans que le film original est officiellement mis à la disposition du public. James Hetfield (Metallica) s'est fait faire un tatouage avec les cendres de Lemmy Kilminster (Motörhead). Le tattoo représente l'as de pique à l'intérieur d'un symbole de croix de fer, que Hetfield a déjà intégré sur ses guitares par le passé. James Hetfield a déclaré « Le tattoo est composé d'encre noire mélangée à une pincée de ses cendres de crémation qui m'ont été si gracieusement données." » Des albums de Green Day, The Cars, et Jefferson Airplane sont désormais inscrits au registre national des enregistrements par la bibliothèque du Congrès américain. 2 5 nouveaux morceaux et albums de musique ont été désignés comme des "trésors dignes d'être conservés". Outre Dookie, l'album phare de Green Day et Parallel Lines de Blondie, d'autres albums ont été inscrits parmi les "sons marquants de l'histoire", notamment Arrival d'ABBA et Wide Open Spaces de The Chicks. Surrealistic Pillow de Jefferson Airplane et le premier album éponyme de The Cars figurent également sur la liste. James Hetfield (Metallica) s'est fait faire un tatouage avec les cendres de Lemmy Kilminster (Motörhead). Le tattoo représente l'as de pique à l'intérieur d'un symbole de croix de fer, que Hetfield a déjà intégré sur ses guitares par le passé. James Hetfield a déclaré « Le tattoo est composé d'encre noire mélangée à une pincée de ses cendres de crémation qui m'ont été si gracieusement données." » Nick Cave fait la paix avec les artistes qui l'ont déçu. "Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Nina Simone, Kanye, Van Morrison, Morrissey, Brian Eno, Leonard Cohen, Patti Smith, ce sont des artistes qui, pour moi, forment une sorte de confédération de l'excellence, mais à un moment ou à un autre, ils m'ont tous déplu. En fait, si je sens qu'un artiste crée, dit ou fait des choses uniquement pour gagner l'approbation du public ou pour se plier aux exigences du marché, eh bien, c'est là que j'ai tendance à me détourner de lui"." Tom Delonge de Blink 182 s'est associé à Fender pour une nouvelle guitare signature Starcaster, qu'il décrit comme "la guitare la plus cool jamais fabriquée". Initialement sorti dans les années 70 pour offrir des sons polyvalents aux guitaristes, le design du modèle original a été modifié par l'artiste pour son édition signature, introduisant désormais des éléments plus modernes pour rendre l'apparence et la sensation uniques à ses yeux. --- Classic 21 vous informe des dernières actualités du rock, en Belgique et partout ailleurs. Le Journal du Rock, chaque jour à 7h30 et 18h30. Merci pour votre écoute Pour écouter Classic 21 à tout moment : www.rtbf.be/classic21 Retrouvez tous les contenus de la RTBF sur notre plateforme Auvio.be Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.

Nothing Is Real - A Beatles Podcast
Live At The Roundhouse - Part Two

Nothing Is Real - A Beatles Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2023 59:40 Very Popular


Live at the Roundhouse - Part TwoIn December 1968, Michael Lindsay-Hogg directed a TV special where the kings of British rock gathered to play their new material. Unfortunately, it was with the Rolling Stones. Whither The Roundhouse? What happened next and what could have happened?Live on tape from Dublin & Belfast, it's Nothing Is Real. Website: nothingisrealpod.com/X: @BeatlesPodFacebook Group: tiny.cc/NIRFBGMastodon: @nothingisreal@mastodon.ieInstagram: instagram.com/beatlespod/YouTube: tiny.cc/NIRYTSupport: tiny.cc/NIRsupport_____________Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/nothing-is-real-a-beatles-podcast. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/nothing-is-real-a-beatles-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jacobin Radio
Michael and Us: A Prurient Interest

Jacobin Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2023 48:49


Ed Harris is a senator with presidential ambitions. Diane Keaton is the love of his life, but uncomfortable in politics. And with the White House in his grasp, his campaign is about to be rattled by a very, very stupid revelation from her past. We discuss Michael Lindsay-Hogg's RUNNING MATES (1992), a movie that emerged straight from the primordial ooze of the 1992 election cycle.Michael and Us is a podcast about political cinema and our crumbling world hosted by Will Sloan and Luke Savage. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Michael and Us
#479 - A Prurient Interest

Michael and Us

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2023 48:49


Ed Harris is a senator with presidential ambitions. Diane Keaton is the love of his life, but uncomfortable in politics. And with the White House in his grasp, his campaign is about to be rattled by a very, very stupid revelation from her past. We discuss Michael Lindsay-Hogg's RUNNING MATES (1992), a movie that emerged straight from the primordial ooze of the 1992 election cycle. Join us on Patreon for an extra episode every week - https://www.patreon.com/michaelandus

Richard Syrett's Strange Planet
975 Rock Journalist Harvey Kubernik on The Rolling Stones

Richard Syrett's Strange Planet

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2023 61:46


EPISODE #975 ROCK JOURNALIST HARVEY KUBERNIK ON THE ROLLING STONES Richard welcomes music historian/Rock Journalist Harvey Kubernik who wrote d the introduction to a new collection of photographs and essays, "The Rolling Stones: Icons." He discusses his own personal history with the individual members of the group as well as the legendary band's history and legacy. GUEST: Harvey Kubernik is the author of 19 books, including "Canyon Of Dreams: The Magic And The Music Of Laurel Canyon" and "Turn Up The Radio! Rock, Pop and Roll In Los Angeles 1956-1972." Sterling/Barnes and Noble in 2018 published Harvey and Kenneth Kubernik's "The Story Of The Band: From Big Pink To The Last Waltz." For summer 2021 the duo has written a multi-narrative book on Jimi Hendrix for the publisher. Otherworld Cottage Industries in July 2020 published Harvey's 508-page book, "Docs That Rock, Music That Matters," featuring Harvey's interviews with D.A. Pennebaker, Chris Hegedus, Albert Maysles, Murray Lerner, Morgan Neville, Curtis Hanson, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Andrew Loog Oldham, Dick Clark, Ray Manzarek, Travis Pike, Allan Arkush, and David Leaf, among others. Harvey is active in the music documentary and TV/film world. In 2020 Kubernik served as Consultant on "Laurel Canyon: A Place In Time" documentary directed by Alison Ellwood which debuted in 2020 on the EPIX/MGM television channel. Kubernik's writings are in several book anthologies, most notably "The Rolling Stone Book Of The Beats" and "Drinking With Bukowski." WEBSITE: https://www.otherworldcottageindustries.com/KUBERNIK'SCORNER.html BOOKS: The Rolling Stones: Icons Jimi Hendrix: Voodoo Child DOCS THAT ROCK, MUSIC THAT MATTERS 1967: A Complete Rock Music History of the Summer of Love Turn Up the Radio!: Rock, Pop, and Roll in Los Angeles 1956 1972 BECOME A PREMIUM SUBSCRIBER!!! https://strangeplanet.supportingcast.fm Use the discount code "Planet" to receive one month off the first subscription. We and our partners use cookies to personalize your experience, to show you ads based on your interests, and for measurement and analytics purposes. By using our website and services, you agree to our use of cookies as described in our Cookie Policy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://strangeplanet.supportingcast.fm/

Rock N Roll Pantheon
Rock's Backpages: Fred Goodman on Rock Films + D.A. Pennebaker + Burt Bacharach

Rock N Roll Pantheon

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2023 73:02


In this episode we welcome the exemplary Fred Goodman and ask him about his journalistic career and highly acclaimed books. Fred talks about his early years as a jazz columnist for Cash Box, as well as his interest in the business side of popular music. He describes how a stint as a Senior Editor at Rolling Stone led to the idea of a book about "the head-on collision of rock and commerce", subsequently published as 1997's The Mansion on the Hill. Avid fans of that classic tome, Mark and Barney ask their guest about legendary figures such as Albert Grossman, David Geffen and Jon Landau, after which Fred explains why – in an effort to champion the late Mexican-American singer in her native USA – he wrote 2019's Why Lhasa de Sela Matters. Moving on to Fred's latest book Rock On Film, conversation turns to some of his favourite music movies from A Hard Day's Night to This is Spinal Tap with a nod to Michael Lindsay-Hogg who wrote the foreword to Rock On Film. Clips from an audio interview with the late D.A. Pennebaker lead in turn to a discussion of 1967's Bob Dylan documentary Dont Look Back. Not long after we've paid tribute to Television's mercurial Tom Verlaine, breaking news comes in that we've also just lost the great Burt Bacharach. Putting ourselves on the spot in real time, we talk about the genius who (with lyricist Hal David) created masterworks from 'Make it Easy on Yourself' to 'Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head'. Finally, Mark talks us out with quotes from pieces about folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, the Rolling Stones' Beggars Banquet and the late David Crosby, while Jasper concludes the episode with remarks about pieces on Keane and pop's relationship with social class. Many thanks to special guest Fred Goodman. Rock on Film is published by Running Press and Why Lhasa De Sela Matters is published by University of Texas Press. Pieces discussed: The Mansion on the Hill, Rock and Roll on Film, Richard Lester audio, 25 Essential Music DVDs, The Harder They Come, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Spinal Tap, Metallica's Some Kind of Monster, D.A. Pennebaker audio, Television, Tom Verlaine, Burt Bacharach, Peter, Paul and Mary, Beggars Banquet, David Crosby, Keane and Class. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Rock's Backpages
E146: Fred Goodman on Rock Films + D.A. Pennebaker + Burt Bacharach

Rock's Backpages

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2023 70:17


In this episode we welcome the exemplary Fred Goodman and ask him about his journalistic career and highly acclaimed books. Fred talks about his early years as a jazz columnist for Cash Box, as well as his interest in the business side of popular music. He describes how a stint as a Senior Editor at Rolling Stone led to the idea of a book about "the head-on collision of rock and commerce", subsequently published as 1997's The Mansion on the Hill. Avid fans of that classic tome, Mark and Barney ask their guest about legendary figures such as Albert Grossman, David Geffen and Jon Landau, after which Fred explains why – in an effort to champion the late Mexican-American singer in her native USA – he wrote 2019's Why Lhasa de Sela Matters. Moving on to Fred's latest book Rock On Film, conversation turns to some of his favourite music movies from A Hard Day's Night to This is Spinal Tap with a nod to Michael Lindsay-Hogg who wrote the foreword to Rock On Film. Clips from an audio interview with the late D.A. Pennebaker lead in turn to a discussion of 1967's Bob Dylan documentary Dont Look Back. Not long after we've paid tribute to Television's mercurial Tom Verlaine, breaking news comes in that we've also just lost the great Burt Bacharach. Putting ourselves on the spot in real time, we talk about the genius who (with lyricist Hal David) created masterworks from 'Make it Easy on Yourself' to 'Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head'. Finally, Mark talks us out with quotes from pieces about folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, the Rolling Stones' Beggars Banquet and the late David Crosby, while Jasper concludes the episode with remarks about pieces on Keane and pop's relationship with social class. Many thanks to special guest Fred Goodman. Rock on Film is published by Running Press and Why Lhasa De Sela Matters is published by University of Texas Press. Pieces discussed: The Mansion on the Hill, Rock and Roll on Film, Richard Lester audio, 25 Essential Music DVDs, The Harder They Come, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Spinal Tap, Metallica's Some Kind of Monster, D.A. Pennebaker audio, Television, Tom Verlaine, Burt Bacharach, Peter, Paul and Mary, Beggars Banquet, David Crosby, Keane and Class.

Glass Onion: On John Lennon
Episode 86- Two of Us: The Ballad of Lennon & McCartney

Glass Onion: On John Lennon

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 130:00


John Lennon and Paul McCartney are inextricably linked, and what more is there to say at this point? Well, I give it a shot in a podcast of 3 sections, looking at common Lennon/McCartney tropes and assumptions, giving a guitar & vocal lesson on the song 'Two Of Us' and then walking you through the highly entertaining 2000 TV film 'Two Of Us', directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg and starring Aiden Quinn and Jared Harris. There are a record number of clips included here and it's hopefully a pretty epic ride to end the year of 2022. Here's to more Glass Onion in 2023 so keep listening! Enjoy! Feedback and voluntary Paypal donations to glassonionpod@yahoo.com OR Support the show at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/antonyrotunno Facebook page- https://www.facebook.com/glassonionjlpod Twitter handle https://www.twitter.com/OnionLennon Antony's website (music, podcasts, blog, life coaching) https://www.antonyrotunno.com Antony's 'Life And Life Only' podcast (on Psychology) https://www.lifeandlifeonly.podbean.com episode links Superb series called ‘Understanding Lennon/McCartney' (breathless345 channel) https://www.youtube.com/@breathless345 ‘The Music of Lennon & McCartney' 1965 TV special https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bsNdREJjnLg The 2000 ‘Two Of Us' TV film https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9EE7621F8B595506 Mae Brussell broadcast from 14th December 1980 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QgLhWbvRw0E James Corbett's tribute to Mae https://www.corbettreport.com/episode-212-remembering-mae-brussell/ Recommended book (Lennon and Doggett- what can go wrong?) https://books.google.co.uk/books/about/The_Art_And_Music_Of_John_Lennon.html?id=16h6ju_-5dYC&redir_esc=y Beatles Jazz & Soul Covers ('Under The Covers' podcast) https://anchor.fm/underthecoverspodcast12/episodes/Beatles-Jazz--Soul-Covers-e1mdirq Ian Hart as John Lennon in ‘Snodgrass' https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ek89aSrwMN0

I am the EggPod
106: Michael Lindsay-Hogg - Directing Let it Be

I am the EggPod

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2022 78:38 Very Popular


Michael Lindsay-Hogg discusses his experience of directing The Beatles' Let it Be movie. Hosted by Chris Shaw.

Top Docs:  Award-Winning Documentary Filmmakers
”The Beatles: Get Back” with Peter Jackson

Top Docs: Award-Winning Documentary Filmmakers

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2022 35:10


Legendary Director Peter Jackson joins Mike to discuss the Emmy-nominated “The Beatles: Get Back”.  Peter discusses why after a career that has spanned “Heavenly Creatures,” “The Lord of the Rings,” “The Hobbit,” and “King Kong,” he turned to documentary filmmaking with "They Shall Not Grow Old." And how the techniques that he employed in turning the trenches of the First World War to life  came to be useful when faced with the 60 hours of 16mm film shot by Michael Lindsay Hogg in 1969 during the Beatles' rehearsal for and recording of “Let it Be.” Peter tells Mike about the challenges posed by the 130 hours of sound recordings, and how his team wrote custom software to isolate and clarify sound–and how this became the spine of the film.  He virtually brings us into the New Zealand editing bay with Jabez Olssen where his team (again) built new processes to make the rushes amenable to editing.  He explains to Mike why the now-famous scene of Paul creating “Get Back” was–for the sake of historical accuracy–not overly edited, and how the rooftop concert was edited in one productive week before showing it to the surviving Beatles.  And he sums up his years of daily exposure to the inner workings of the Beatles by saying that they were 4 nice boys with incredible talent who managed to find each other. “The Beatles: Get Back” is now streaming on Disney+.   Follow on Twitter: @topdocspod @jabezolssen   The Presenting Sponsor of "Top Docs" is Netflix. Listen to our recent conversations with these Emmy®-nominated directors whose documentaries are currently on Netflix: Andrew Rossi on "The Andy Warhol Diaries" Coodie Simmons and Chike Ozah on "jeen-yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy" Felicity Morris on “The Tinder Swindler”

Journal du Rock
Le Journal Du Rock - dEUS ; décès de Judith Durham des Seekers ; les Rolling Stones ; John Lennon et Paul McCartney ; Slipknot ; Offspring

Journal du Rock

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2022 3:21


Ronquières Festival, l'annonce par Tom Barman de la sortie d'un album de dEUS en février/mars 2023 qui sera suivi d'une tournée et un single est attendu dans les jours qui arrivent. Nous avons appris le décès de Judith Durham, l'ex chanteuse des Seekers, elle avait 79 ans. Les Rolling Stones ont partagé des versions améliorées en 4K des deux vidéos qu'ils ont tournées en 1968 avec le réalisateur Michael Lindsay-Hogg pour "Jumpin' Jack Flash", à voir Classic 21.be. Une lettre de John Lennon à Paul McCartney est mise en vente, missive âpre à lire dans son intégralité sur Classic 21.be. Slipknot sort un nouveau single, "Yen" de l'album ‘'The End, So Far'', prévu pour le 30 septembre prochain. Le véhicule de tournée de Offspring a pris feu ce week-end au Canada. --- Classic 21 vous informe des dernières actualités du rock, en Belgique et partout ailleurs. Le Journal du Rock, chaque jour à 7h30 et 18h30.

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs
Episode 150: “All You Need is Love” by the Beatles

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2022


This week's episode looks at “All You Need is Love”, the Our World TV special, and the career of the Beatles from April 1966 through August 1967. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a thirteen-minute bonus episode available, on "Rain" by the Beatles. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt's irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ NB for the first few hours this was up, there was a slight editing glitch. If you downloaded the old version and don't want to redownload the whole thing, just look in the transcript for "Other than fixing John's two flubbed" for the text of the two missing paragraphs. Errata I say "Come Together" was a B-side, but the single was actually a double A-side. Also, I say the Lennon interview by Maureen Cleave appeared in Detroit magazine. That's what my source (Steve Turner's book) says, but someone on Twitter says that rather than Detroit magazine it was the Detroit Free Press. Also at one point I say "the videos for 'Paperback Writer' and 'Penny Lane'". I meant to say "Rain" rather than "Penny Lane" there. Resources No Mixcloud this week due to the number of songs by the Beatles. I have read literally dozens of books on the Beatles, and used bits of information from many of them. All my Beatles episodes refer to: The Complete Beatles Chronicle by Mark Lewisohn, All The Songs: The Stories Behind Every Beatles Release by Jean-Michel Guesdon, And The Band Begins To Play: The Definitive Guide To The Songs of The Beatles by Steve Lambley, The Beatles By Ear by Kevin Moore, Revolution in the Head by Ian MacDonald, and The Beatles Anthology. For this episode, I also referred to Last Interview by David Sheff, a longform interview with John Lennon and Yoko Ono from shortly before Lennon's death; Many Years From Now by Barry Miles, an authorised biography of Paul McCartney; and Here, There, and Everywhere: My Life Recording the Music of the Beatles by Geoff Emerick and Howard Massey. Particularly useful this time was Steve Turner's book Beatles '66. I also used Turner's The Beatles: The Stories Behind the Songs 1967-1970. Johnny Rogan's Starmakers and Svengalis had some information on Epstein I hadn't seen anywhere else. Some information about the "Bigger than Jesus" scandal comes from Ward, B. (2012). “The ‘C' is for Christ”: Arthur Unger, Datebook Magazine and the Beatles. Popular Music and Society, 35(4), 541-560. https://doi.org/10.1080/03007766.2011.608978 Information on Robert Stigwood comes from Mr Showbiz by Stephen Dando-Collins. And the quote at the end from Simon Napier-Bell is from You Don't Have to Say You Love Me, which is more entertaining than it is accurate, but is very entertaining. Sadly the only way to get the single mix of "All You Need is Love" is on this ludicrously-expensive out-of-print box set, but the stereo mix is easily available on Magical Mystery Tour. Patreon This podcast is brought to you by the generosity of my backers on Patreon. Why not join them? Transcript A quick note before I start the episode -- this episode deals, in part, with the deaths of three gay men -- one by murder, one by suicide, and one by an accidental overdose, all linked at least in part to societal homophobia. I will try to deal with this as tactfully as I can, but anyone who's upset by those things might want to read the transcript instead of listening to the episode. This is also a very, very, *very* long episode -- this is likely to be the longest episode I *ever* do of this podcast, so settle in. We're going to be here a while. I obviously don't know how long it's going to be while I'm still recording, but based on the word count of my script, probably in the region of three hours. You have been warned. In 1967 the actor Patrick McGoohan was tired. He had been working on the hit series Danger Man for many years -- Danger Man had originally run from 1960 through 1962, then had taken a break, and had come back, retooled, with longer episodes in 1964. That longer series was a big hit, both in the UK and in the US, where it was retitled Secret Agent and had a new theme tune written by PF Sloan and Steve Barri and recorded by Johnny Rivers: [Excerpt: Johnny Rivers, "Secret Agent Man"] But McGoohan was tired of playing John Drake, the agent, and announced he was going to quit the series. Instead, with the help of George Markstein, Danger Man's script editor, he created a totally new series, in which McGoohan would star, and which McGoohan would also write and direct key episodes of. This new series, The Prisoner, featured a spy who is only ever given the name Number Six, and who many fans -- though not McGoohan himself -- took to be the same character as John Drake. Number Six resigns from his job as a secret agent, and is kidnapped and taken to a place known only as The Village -- the series was filmed in Portmeirion, an unusual-looking town in Gwynnedd, in North Wales -- which is full of other ex-agents. There he is interrogated to try to find out why he has quit his job. It's never made clear whether the interrogators are his old employers or their enemies, and there's a certain suggestion that maybe there is no real distinction between the two sides, that they're both running the Village together. He spends the entire series trying to escape, but refuses to explain himself -- and there's some debate among viewers as to whether it's implied or not that part of the reason he doesn't explain himself is that he knows his interrogators wouldn't understand why he quit: [Excerpt: The Prisoner intro, from episode Once Upon a Time, ] Certainly that explanation would fit in with McGoohan's own personality. According to McGoohan, the final episode of The Prisoner was, at the time, the most watched TV show ever broadcast in the UK, as people tuned in to find out the identity of Number One, the person behind the Village, and to see if Number Six would break free. I don't think that's actually the case, but it's what McGoohan always claimed, and it was certainly a very popular series. I won't spoil the ending for those of you who haven't watched it -- it's a remarkable series -- but ultimately the series seems to decide that such questions don't matter and that even asking them is missing the point. It's a work that's open to multiple interpretations, and is left deliberately ambiguous, but one of the messages many people have taken away from it is that not only are we trapped by a society that oppresses us, we're also trapped by our own identities. You can run from the trap that society has placed you in, from other people's interpretations of your life, your work, and your motives, but you ultimately can't run from yourself, and any time you try to break out of a prison, you'll find yourself trapped in another prison of your own making. The most horrifying implication of the episode is that possibly even death itself won't be a release, and you will spend all eternity trying to escape from an identity you're trapped in. Viewers became so outraged, according to McGoohan, that he had to go into hiding for an extended period, and while his later claims that he never worked in Britain again are an exaggeration, it is true that for the remainder of his life he concentrated on doing work in the US instead, where he hadn't created such anger. That final episode of The Prisoner was also the only one to use a piece of contemporary pop music, in two crucial scenes: [Excerpt: The Prisoner, "Fall Out", "All You Need is Love"] Back in October 2020, we started what I thought would be a year-long look at the period from late 1962 through early 1967, but which has turned out for reasons beyond my control to take more like twenty months, with a song which was one of the last of the big pre-Beatles pop hits, though we looked at it after their first single, "Telstar" by the Tornadoes: [Excerpt: The Tornadoes, "Telstar"] There were many reasons for choosing that as one of the bookends for this fifty-episode chunk of the podcast -- you'll see many connections between that episode and this one if you listen to them back-to-back -- but among them was that it's a song inspired by the launch of the first ever communications satellite, and a sign of how the world was going to become smaller as the sixties went on. Of course, to start with communications satellites didn't do much in that regard -- they were expensive to use, and had limited bandwidth, and were only available during limited time windows, but symbolically they meant that for the first time ever, people could see and hear events thousands of miles away as they were happening. It's not a coincidence that Britain and France signed the agreement to develop Concorde, the first supersonic airliner, a month after the first Beatles single and four months after the Telstar satellite was launched. The world was becoming ever more interconnected -- people were travelling faster and further, getting news from other countries quicker, and there was more cultural conversation – and misunderstanding – between countries thousands of miles apart. The Canadian media theorist Marshall McLuhan, the man who also coined the phrase “the medium is the message”, thought that this ever-faster connection would fundamentally change basic modes of thought in the Western world. McLuhan thought that technology made possible whole new modes of thought, and that just as the printing press had, in his view, caused Western liberalism and individualism, so these new electronic media would cause the rise of a new collective mode of thought. In 1962, the year of Concorde, Telstar, and “Love Me Do”, McLuhan wrote a book called The Gutenberg Galaxy, in which he said: “Instead of tending towards a vast Alexandrian library the world has become a computer, an electronic brain, exactly as an infantile piece of science fiction. And as our senses have gone outside us, Big Brother goes inside. So, unless aware of this dynamic, we shall at once move into a phase of panic terrors, exactly befitting a small world of tribal drums, total interdependence, and superimposed co-existence.… Terror is the normal state of any oral society, for in it everything affects everything all the time.…” He coined the term “the Global Village” to describe this new collectivism. The story we've seen over the last fifty episodes is one of a sort of cultural ping-pong between the USA and the UK, with innovations in American music inspiring British musicians, who in turn inspired American ones, whether that being the Beatles covering the Isley Brothers or the Rolling Stones doing a Bobby Womack song, or Paul Simon and Bob Dylan coming over to the UK and learning folk songs and guitar techniques from Martin Carthy. And increasingly we're going to see those influences spread to other countries, and influences coming *from* other countries. We've already seen one Jamaican artist, and the influence of Indian music has become very apparent. While the focus of this series is going to remain principally in the British Isles and North America, rock music was and is a worldwide phenomenon, and that's going to become increasingly a part of the story. And so in this episode we're going to look at a live performance -- well, mostly live -- that was seen by hundreds of millions of people all over the world as it happened, thanks to the magic of satellites: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "All You Need is Love"] When we left the Beatles, they had just finished recording "Tomorrow Never Knows", the most experimental track they had recorded up to that date, and if not the most experimental thing they *ever* recorded certainly in the top handful. But "Tomorrow Never Knows" was only the first track they recorded in the sessions for what would become arguably their greatest album, and certainly the one that currently has the most respect from critics. It's interesting to note that that album could have been very, very, different. When we think of Revolver now, we think of the innovative production of George Martin, and of Geoff Emerick and Ken Townshend's inventive ideas for pushing the sound of the equipment in Abbey Road studios, but until very late in the day the album was going to be recorded in the Stax studios in Memphis, with Steve Cropper producing -- whether George Martin would have been involved or not is something we don't even know. In 1965, the Rolling Stones had, as we've seen, started making records in the US, recording in LA and at the Chess studios in Chicago, and the Yardbirds had also been doing the same thing. Mick Jagger had become a convert to the idea of using American studios and working with American musicians, and he had constantly been telling Paul McCartney that the Beatles should do the same. Indeed, they'd put some feelers out in 1965 about the possibility of the group making an album with Holland, Dozier, and Holland in Detroit. Quite how this would have worked is hard to figure out -- Holland, Dozier, and Holland's skills were as songwriters, and in their work with a particular set of musicians -- so it's unsurprising that came to nothing. But recording at Stax was a different matter.  While Steve Cropper was a great songwriter in his own right, he was also adept at getting great sounds on covers of other people's material -- like on Otis Blue, the album he produced for Otis Redding in late 1965, which doesn't include a single Cropper original: [Excerpt: Otis Redding, "Satisfaction"] And the Beatles were very influenced by the records Stax were putting out, often namechecking Wilson Pickett in particular, and during the Rubber Soul sessions they had recorded a "Green Onions" soundalike track, imaginatively titled "12-Bar Original": [Excerpt: The Beatles, "12-Bar Original"] The idea of the group recording at Stax got far enough that they were actually booked in for two weeks starting the ninth of April, and there was even an offer from Elvis to let them stay at Graceland while they recorded, but then a couple of weeks earlier, the news leaked to the press, and Brian Epstein cancelled the booking. According to Cropper, Epstein talked about recording at the Atlantic studios in New York with him instead, but nothing went any further. It's hard to imagine what a Stax-based Beatles album would have been like, but even though it might have been a great album, it certainly wouldn't have been the Revolver we've come to know. Revolver is an unusual album in many ways, and one of the ways it's most distinct from the earlier Beatles albums is the dominance of keyboards. Both Lennon and McCartney had often written at the piano as well as the guitar -- McCartney more so than Lennon, but both had done so regularly -- but up to this point it had been normal for them to arrange the songs for guitars rather than keyboards, no matter how they'd started out. There had been the odd track where one of them, usually Lennon, would play a simple keyboard part, songs like "I'm Down" or "We Can Work it Out", but even those had been guitar records first and foremost. But on Revolver, that changed dramatically. There seems to have been a complex web of cause and effect here. Paul was becoming increasingly interested in moving his basslines away from simple walking basslines and root notes and the other staples of rock and roll basslines up to this point. As the sixties progressed, rock basslines were becoming ever more complex, and Tyler Mahan Coe has made a good case that this is largely down to innovations in production pioneered by Owen Bradley, and McCartney was certainly aware of Bradley's work -- he was a fan of Brenda Lee, who Bradley produced, for example. But the two influences that McCartney has mentioned most often in this regard are the busy, jazz-influenced, basslines that James Jamerson was playing at Motown: [Excerpt: The Four Tops, "It's the Same Old Song"] And the basslines that Brian Wilson was writing for various Wrecking Crew bassists to play for the Beach Boys: [Excerpt: The Beach Boys, "Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)"] Just to be clear, McCartney didn't hear that particular track until partway through the recording of Revolver, when Bruce Johnston visited the UK and brought with him an advance copy of Pet Sounds, but Pet Sounds influenced the later part of Revolver's recording, and Wilson had already started his experiments in that direction with the group's 1965 work. It's much easier to write a song with this kind of bassline, one that's integral to the composition, on the piano than it is to write it on a guitar, as you can work out the bassline with your left hand while working out the chords and melody with your right, so the habit that McCartney had already developed of writing on the piano made this easier. But also, starting with the recording of "Paperback Writer", McCartney switched his style of working in the studio. Where up to this point it had been normal for him to play bass as part of the recording of the basic track, playing with the other Beatles, he now started to take advantage of multitracking to overdub his bass later, so he could spend extra time getting the bassline exactly right. McCartney lived closer to Abbey Road than the other three Beatles, and so could more easily get there early or stay late and tweak his parts. But if McCartney wasn't playing bass while the guitars and drums were being recorded, that meant he could play something else, and so increasingly he would play piano during the recording of the basic track. And that in turn would mean that there wouldn't always *be* a need for guitars on the track, because the harmonic support they would provide would be provided by the piano instead. This, as much as anything else, is the reason that Revolver sounds so radically different to any other Beatles album. Up to this point, with *very* rare exceptions like "Yesterday", every Beatles record, more or less, featured all four of the Beatles playing instruments. Now John and George weren't playing on "Good Day Sunshine" or "For No One", John wasn't playing on "Here, There, and Everywhere", "Eleanor Rigby" features no guitars or drums at all, and George's "Love You To" only features himself, plus a little tambourine from Ringo (Paul recorded a part for that one, but it doesn't seem to appear on the finished track). Of the three songwriting Beatles, the only one who at this point was consistently requiring the instrumental contributions of all the other band members was John, and even he did without Paul on "She Said, She Said", which by all accounts features either John or George on bass, after Paul had a rare bout of unprofessionalism and left the studio. Revolver is still an album made by a group -- and most of those tracks that don't feature John or George instrumentally still feature them vocally -- it's still a collaborative work in all the best ways. But it's no longer an album made by four people playing together in the same room at the same time. After starting work on "Tomorrow Never Knows", the next track they started work on was Paul's "Got to Get You Into My Life", but as it would turn out they would work on that song throughout most of the sessions for the album -- in a sign of how the group would increasingly work from this point on, Paul's song was subject to multiple re-recordings and tweakings in the studio, as he tinkered to try to make it perfect. The first recording to be completed for the album, though, was almost as much of a departure in its own way as "Tomorrow Never Knows" had been. George's song "Love You To" shows just how inspired he was by the music of Ravi Shankar, and how devoted he was to Indian music. While a few months earlier he had just about managed to pick out a simple melody on the sitar for "Norwegian Wood", by this point he was comfortable enough with Indian classical music that I've seen many, many sources claim that an outside session player is playing sitar on the track, though Anil Bhagwat, the tabla player on the track, always insisted that it was entirely Harrison's playing: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Love You To"] There is a *lot* of debate as to whether it's George playing on the track, and I feel a little uncomfortable making a definitive statement in either direction. On the one hand I find it hard to believe that Harrison got that good that quickly on an unfamiliar instrument, when we know he wasn't a naturally facile musician. All the stories we have about his work in the studio suggest that he had to work very hard on his guitar solos, and that he would frequently fluff them. As a technical guitarist, Harrison was only mediocre -- his value lay in his inventiveness, not in technical ability -- and he had been playing guitar for over a decade, but sitar only a few months. There's also some session documentation suggesting that an unknown sitar player was hired. On the other hand there's the testimony of Anil Bhagwat that Harrison played the part himself, and he has been very firm on the subject, saying "If you go on the Internet there are a lot of questions asked about "Love You To". They say 'It's not George playing the sitar'. I can tell you here and now -- 100 percent it was George on sitar throughout. There were no other musicians involved. It was just me and him." And several people who are more knowledgeable than myself about the instrument have suggested that the sitar part on the track is played the way that a rock guitarist would play rather than the way someone with more knowledge of Indian classical music would play -- there's a blues feeling to some of the bends that apparently no genuine Indian classical musician would naturally do. I would suggest that the best explanation is that there's a professional sitar player trying to replicate a part that Harrison had previously demonstrated, while Harrison was in turn trying his best to replicate the sound of Ravi Shankar's work. Certainly the instrumental section sounds far more fluent, and far more stylistically correct, than one would expect: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Love You To"] Where previous attempts at what got called "raga-rock" had taken a couple of surface features of Indian music -- some form of a drone, perhaps a modal scale -- and had generally used a guitar made to sound a little bit like a sitar, or had a sitar playing normal rock riffs, Harrison's song seems to be a genuine attempt to hybridise Indian ragas and rock music, combining the instrumentation, modes, and rhythmic complexity of someone like Ravi Shankar with lyrics that are seemingly inspired by Bob Dylan and a fairly conventional pop song structure (and a tiny bit of fuzz guitar). It's a record that could only be made by someone who properly understood both the Indian music he's emulating and the conventions of the Western pop song, and understood how those conventions could work together. Indeed, one thing I've rarely seen pointed out is how cleverly the album is sequenced, so that "Love You To" is followed by possibly the most conventional song on Revolver, "Here, There, and Everywhere", which was recorded towards the end of the sessions. Both songs share a distinctive feature not shared by the rest of the album, so the two songs can sound more of a pair than they otherwise would, retrospectively making "Love You To" seem more conventional than it is and "Here, There, and Everywhere" more unconventional -- both have as an introduction a separate piece of music that states some of the melodic themes of the rest of the song but isn't repeated later. In the case of "Love You To" it's the free-tempo bit at the beginning, characteristic of a lot of Indian music: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Love You To"] While in the case of "Here, There, and Everywhere" it's the part that mimics an older style of songwriting, a separate intro of the type that would have been called a verse when written by the Gershwins or Cole Porter, but of course in the intervening decades "verse" had come to mean something else, so we now no longer have a specific term for this kind of intro -- but as you can hear, it's doing very much the same thing as that "Love You To" intro: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Here, There, and Everywhere"] In the same day as the group completed "Love You To", overdubbing George's vocal and Ringo's tambourine, they also started work on a song that would show off a lot of the new techniques they had been working on in very different ways. Paul's "Paperback Writer" could indeed be seen as part of a loose trilogy with "Love You To" and "Tomorrow Never Knows", one song by each of the group's three songwriters exploring the idea of a song that's almost all on one chord. Both "Tomorrow Never Knows" and "Love You To" are based on a drone with occasional hints towards moving to one other chord. In the case of "Paperback Writer", the entire song stays on a single chord until the title -- it's on a G7 throughout until the first use of the word "writer", when it quickly goes to a C for two bars. I'm afraid I'm going to have to sing to show you how little the chords actually change, because the riff disguises this lack of movement somewhat, but the melody is also far more horizontal than most of McCartney's, so this shouldn't sound too painful, I hope: [demonstrates] This is essentially the exact same thing that both "Love You To" and "Tomorrow Never Knows" do, and all three have very similarly structured rising and falling modal melodies. There's also a bit of "Paperback Writer" that seems to tie directly into "Love You To", but also points to a possible very non-Indian inspiration for part of "Love You To". The Beach Boys' single "Sloop John B" was released in the UK a couple of days after the sessions for "Paperback Writer" and "Love You To", but it had been released in the US a month before, and the Beatles all got copies of every record in the American top thirty shipped to them. McCartney and Harrison have specifically pointed to it as an influence on "Paperback Writer". "Sloop John B" has a section where all the instruments drop out and we're left with just the group's vocal harmonies: [Excerpt: The Beach Boys, "Sloop John B"] And that seems to have been the inspiration behind the similar moment at a similar point in "Paperback Writer", which is used in place of a middle eight and also used for the song's intro: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Paperback Writer"] Which is very close to what Harrison does at the end of each verse of "Love You To", where the instruments drop out for him to sing a long melismatic syllable before coming back in: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Love You To"] Essentially, other than "Got to Get You Into My Life", which is an outlier and should not be counted, the first three songs attempted during the Revolver sessions are variations on a common theme, and it's a sign that no matter how different the results might  sound, the Beatles really were very much a group at this point, and were sharing ideas among themselves and developing those ideas in similar ways. "Paperback Writer" disguises what it's doing somewhat by having such a strong riff. Lennon referred to "Paperback Writer" as "son of 'Day Tripper'", and in terms of the Beatles' singles it's actually their third iteration of this riff idea, which they originally got from Bobby Parker's "Watch Your Step": [Excerpt: Bobby Parker, "Watch Your Step"] Which became the inspiration for "I Feel Fine": [Excerpt: The Beatles, "I Feel Fine"] Which they varied for "Day Tripper": [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Day Tripper"] And which then in turn got varied for "Paperback Writer": [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Paperback Writer"] As well as compositional ideas, there are sonic ideas shared between "Paperback Writer", "Tomorrow Never Knows", and "Love You To", and which would be shared by the rest of the tracks the Beatles recorded in the first half of 1966. Since Geoff Emerick had become the group's principal engineer, they'd started paying more attention to how to get a fuller sound, and so Emerick had miced the tabla on "Love You To" much more closely than anyone would normally mic an instrument from classical music, creating a deep, thudding sound, and similarly he had changed the way they recorded the drums on "Tomorrow Never Knows", again giving a much fuller sound. But the group also wanted the kind of big bass sounds they'd loved on records coming out of America -- sounds that no British studio was getting, largely because it was believed that if you cut too loud a bass sound into a record it would make the needle jump out of the groove. The new engineering team of Geoff Emerick and Ken Scott, though, thought that it was likely you could keep the needle in the groove if you had a smoother frequency response. You could do that if you used a microphone with a larger diaphragm to record the bass, but how could you do that? Inspiration finally struck -- loudspeakers are actually the same thing as microphones wired the other way round, so if you wired up a loudspeaker as if it were a microphone you could get a *really big* speaker, place it in front of the bass amp, and get a much stronger bass sound. The experiment wasn't a total success -- the sound they got had to be processed quite extensively to get rid of room noise, and then compressed in order to further prevent the needle-jumping issue, and so it's a muddier, less defined, tone than they would have liked, but one thing that can't be denied is that "Paperback Writer"'s bass sound is much, much, louder than on any previous Beatles record: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Paperback Writer"] Almost every track the group recorded during the Revolver sessions involved all sorts of studio innovations, though rarely anything as truly revolutionary as the artificial double-tracking they'd used on "Tomorrow Never Knows", and which also appeared on "Paperback Writer" -- indeed, as "Paperback Writer" was released several months before Revolver, it became the first record released to use the technique. I could easily devote a good ten minutes to every track on Revolver, and to "Paperback Writer"s B-side, "Rain", but this is already shaping up to be an extraordinarily long episode and there's a lot of material to get through, so I'll break my usual pattern of devoting a Patreon bonus episode to something relatively obscure, and this week's bonus will be on "Rain" itself. "Paperback Writer", though, deserved the attention here even though it was not one of the group's more successful singles -- it did go to number one, but it didn't hit number one in the UK charts straight away, being kept off the top by "Strangers in the Night" by Frank Sinatra for the first week: [Excerpt: Frank Sinatra, "Strangers in the Night"] Coincidentally, "Strangers in the Night" was co-written by Bert Kaempfert, the German musician who had produced the group's very first recording sessions with Tony Sheridan back in 1961. On the group's German tour in 1966 they met up with Kaempfert again, and John greeted him by singing the first couple of lines of the Sinatra record. The single was the lowest-selling Beatles single in the UK since "Love Me Do". In the US it only made number one for two non-consecutive weeks, with "Strangers in the Night" knocking it off for a week in between. Now, by literally any other band's standards, that's still a massive hit, and it was the Beatles' tenth UK number one in a row (or ninth, depending on which chart you use for "Please Please Me"), but it's a sign that the group were moving out of the first phase of total unequivocal dominance of the charts. It was a turning point in a lot of other ways as well. Up to this point, while the group had been experimenting with different lyrical subjects on album tracks, every single had lyrics about romantic relationships -- with the possible exception of "Help!", which was about Lennon's emotional state but written in such a way that it could be heard as a plea to a lover. But in the case of "Paperback Writer", McCartney was inspired by his Aunt Mill asking him "Why do you write songs about love all the time? Can you ever write about a horse or the summit conference or something interesting?" His response was to think "All right, Aunt Mill, I'll show you", and to come up with a lyric that was very much in the style of the social satires that bands like the Kinks were releasing at the time. People often miss the humour in the lyric for "Paperback Writer", but there's a huge amount of comedy in lyrics about someone writing to a publisher saying they'd written a book based on someone else's book, and one can only imagine the feeling of weary recognition in slush-pile readers throughout the world as they heard the enthusiastic "It's a thousand pages, give or take a few, I'll be writing more in a week or two. I can make it longer..." From this point on, the group wouldn't release a single that was unambiguously about a romantic relationship until "The Ballad of John and Yoko",  the last single released while the band were still together. "Paperback Writer" also saw the Beatles for the first time making a promotional film -- what we would now call a rock video -- rather than make personal appearances on TV shows. The film was directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg, who the group would work with again in 1969, and shows Paul with a chipped front tooth -- he'd been in an accident while riding mopeds with his friend Tara Browne a few months earlier, and hadn't yet got round to having the tooth capped. When he did, the change in his teeth was one of the many bits of evidence used by conspiracy theorists to prove that the real Paul McCartney was dead and replaced by a lookalike. It also marks a change in who the most prominent Beatle on the group's A-sides was. Up to this point, Paul had had one solo lead on an A-side -- "Can't Buy Me Love" -- and everything else had been either a song with multiple vocalists like "Day Tripper" or "Love Me Do", or a song with a clear John lead like "Ticket to Ride" or "I Feel Fine". In the rest of their career, counting "Paperback Writer", the group would release nine new singles that hadn't already been included on an album. Of those nine singles, one was a double A-side with one John song and one Paul song, two had John songs on the A-side, and the other six were Paul. Where up to this point John had been "lead Beatle", for the rest of the sixties, Paul would be the group's driving force. Oddly, Paul got rather defensive about the record when asked about it in interviews after it failed to go straight to the top, saying "It's not our best single by any means, but we're very satisfied with it". But especially in its original mono mix it actually packs a powerful punch: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Paperback Writer"] When the "Paperback Writer" single was released, an unusual image was used in the advertising -- a photo of the Beatles dressed in butchers' smocks, covered in blood, with chunks of meat and the dismembered body parts of baby dolls lying around on them. The image was meant as part of a triptych parodying religious art -- the photo on the left was to be an image showing the four Beatles connected to a woman by an umbilical cord made of sausages, the middle panel was meant to be this image, but with halos added over the Beatles' heads, and the panel on the right was George hammering a nail into John's head, symbolising both crucifixion and that the group were real, physical, people, not just images to be worshipped -- these weren't imaginary nails, and they weren't imaginary people. The photographer Robert Whittaker later said: “I did a photograph of the Beatles covered in raw meat, dolls and false teeth. Putting meat, dolls and false teeth with The Beatles is essentially part of the same thing, the breakdown of what is regarded as normal. The actual conception for what I still call “Somnambulant Adventure” was Moses coming down from Mount Sinai with the Ten Commandments. He comes across people worshipping a golden calf. All over the world I'd watched people worshiping like idols, like gods, four Beatles. To me they were just stock standard normal people. But this emotion that fans poured on them made me wonder where Christianity was heading.” The image wasn't that controversial in the UK, when it was used to advertise "Paperback Writer", but in the US it was initially used for the cover of an album, Yesterday... And Today, which was made up of a few tracks that had been left off the US versions of the Rubber Soul and Help! albums, plus both sides of the "We Can Work It Out"/"Day Tripper" single, and three rough mixes of songs that had been recorded for Revolver -- "Doctor Robert", "And Your Bird Can Sing", and "I'm Only Sleeping", which was the song that sounded most different from the mixes that were finally released: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "I'm Only Sleeping (Yesterday... and Today mix)"] Those three songs were all Lennon songs, which had the unfortunate effect that when the US version of Revolver was brought out later in the year, only two of the songs on the album were by Lennon, with six by McCartney and three by Harrison. Some have suggested that this was the motivation for the use of the butcher image on the cover of Yesterday... And Today -- saying it was the Beatles' protest against Capitol "butchering" their albums -- but in truth it was just that Capitol's art director chose the cover because he liked the image. Alan Livingston, the president of Capitol was not so sure, and called Brian Epstein to ask if the group would be OK with them using a different image. Epstein checked with John Lennon, but Lennon liked the image and so Epstein told Livingston the group insisted on them using that cover. Even though for the album cover the bloodstains on the butchers' smocks were airbrushed out, after Capitol had pressed up a million copies of the mono version of the album and two hundred thousand copies of the stereo version, and they'd sent out sixty thousand promo copies, they discovered that no record shops would stock the album with that cover. It cost Capitol more than two hundred thousand dollars to recall the album and replace the cover with a new one -- though while many of the covers were destroyed, others had the new cover, with a more acceptable photo of the group, pasted over them, and people have later carefully steamed off the sticker to reveal the original. This would not be the last time in 1966 that something that was intended as a statement on religion and the way people viewed the Beatles would cause the group trouble in America. In the middle of the recording sessions for Revolver, the group also made what turned out to be their last ever UK live performance in front of a paying audience. The group had played the NME Poll-Winners' Party every year since 1963, and they were always shows that featured all the biggest acts in the country at the time -- the 1966 show featured, as well as the Beatles and a bunch of smaller acts, the Rolling Stones, the Who, the Yardbirds, Roy Orbison, Cliff Richard and the Shadows, the Seekers, the Small Faces, the Walker Brothers, and Dusty Springfield. Unfortunately, while these events were always filmed for TV broadcast, the Beatles' performance on the first of May wasn't filmed. There are various stories about what happened, but the crux appears to be a disagreement between Andrew Oldham and Brian Epstein, sparked by John Lennon. When the Beatles got to the show, they were upset to discover that they had to wait around before going on stage -- normally, the awards would all be presented at the end, after all the performances, but the Rolling Stones had asked that the Beatles not follow them directly, so after the Stones finished their set, there would be a break for the awards to be given out, and then the Beatles would play their set, in front of an audience that had been bored by twenty-five minutes of awards ceremony, rather than one that had been excited by all the bands that came before them. John Lennon was annoyed, and insisted that the Beatles were going to go on straight after the Rolling Stones -- he seems to have taken this as some sort of power play by the Stones and to have got his hackles up about it. He told Epstein to deal with the people from the NME. But the NME people said that they had a contract with Andrew Oldham, and they weren't going to break it. Oldham refused to change the terms of the contract. Lennon said that he wasn't going to go on stage if they didn't directly follow the Stones. Maurice Kinn, the publisher of the NME, told Epstein that he wasn't going to break the contract with Oldham, and that if the Beatles didn't appear on stage, he would get Jimmy Savile, who was compering the show, to go out on stage and tell the ten thousand fans in the audience that the Beatles were backstage refusing to appear. He would then sue NEMS for breach of contract *and* NEMS would be liable for any damage caused by the rioting that was sure to happen. Lennon screamed a lot of abuse at Kinn, and told him the group would never play one of their events again, but the group did go on stage -- but because they hadn't yet signed the agreement to allow their performance to be filmed, they refused to allow it to be recorded. Apparently Andrew Oldham took all this as a sign that Epstein was starting to lose control of the group. Also during May 1966 there were visits from musicians from other countries, continuing the cultural exchange that was increasingly influencing the Beatles' art. Bruce Johnston of the Beach Boys came over to promote the group's new LP, Pet Sounds, which had been largely the work of Brian Wilson, who had retired from touring to concentrate on working in the studio. Johnston played the record for John and Paul, who listened to it twice, all the way through, in silence, in Johnston's hotel room: [Excerpt: The Beach Boys, "God Only Knows"] According to Johnston, after they'd listened through the album twice, they went over to a piano and started whispering to each other, picking out chords. Certainly the influence of Pet Sounds is very noticeable on songs like "Here, There, and Everywhere", written and recorded a few weeks after this meeting: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "Here, There, and Everywhere"] That track, and the last track recorded for the album, "She Said She Said" were unusual in one very important respect -- they were recorded while the Beatles were no longer under contract to EMI Records. Their contract expired on the fifth of June, 1966, and they finished Revolver without it having been renewed -- it would be several months before their new contract was signed, and it's rather lucky for music lovers that Brian Epstein was the kind of manager who considered personal relationships and basic honour and decency more important than the legal niceties, unlike any other managers of the era, otherwise we would not have Revolver in the form we know it today. After the meeting with Johnston, but before the recording of those last couple of Revolver tracks, the Beatles also met up again with Bob Dylan, who was on a UK tour with a new, loud, band he was working with called The Hawks. While the Beatles and Dylan all admired each other, there was by this point a lot of wariness on both sides, especially between Lennon and Dylan, both of them very similar personality types and neither wanting to let their guard down around the other or appear unhip. There's a famous half-hour-long film sequence of Lennon and Dylan sharing a taxi, which is a fascinating, excruciating, example of two insecure but arrogant men both trying desperately to impress the other but also equally desperate not to let the other know that they want to impress them: [Excerpt: Dylan and Lennon taxi ride] The day that was filmed, Lennon and Harrison also went to see Dylan play at the Royal Albert Hall. This tour had been controversial, because Dylan's band were loud and raucous, and Dylan's fans in the UK still thought of him as a folk musician. At one gig, earlier on the tour, an audience member had famously yelled out "Judas!" -- (just on the tiny chance that any of my listeners don't know that, Judas was the disciple who betrayed Jesus to the authorities, leading to his crucifixion) -- and that show was for many years bootlegged as the "Royal Albert Hall" show, though in fact it was recorded at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester. One of the *actual* Royal Albert Hall shows was released a few years ago -- the one the night before Lennon and Harrison saw Dylan: [Excerpt: Bob Dylan, "Like a Rolling Stone", Royal Albert Hall 1966] The show Lennon and Harrison saw would be Dylan's last for many years. Shortly after returning to the US, Dylan was in a motorbike accident, the details of which are still mysterious, and which some fans claim was faked altogether. The accident caused him to cancel all the concert dates he had booked, and devote himself to working in the studio for several years just like Brian Wilson. And from even further afield than America, Ravi Shankar came over to Britain, to work with his friend the violinist Yehudi Menuhin, on a duet album, West Meets East, that was an example in the classical world of the same kind of international cross-fertilisation that was happening in the pop world: [Excerpt: Yehudi Menuhin and Ravi Shankar, "Prabhati (based on Raga Gunkali)"] While he was in the UK, Shankar also performed at the Royal Festival Hall, and George Harrison went to the show. He'd seen Shankar live the year before, but this time he met up with him afterwards, and later said "He was the first person that impressed me in a way that was beyond just being a famous celebrity. Ravi was my link to the Vedic world. Ravi plugged me into the whole of reality. Elvis impressed me when I was a kid, and impressed me when I met him, but you couldn't later on go round to him and say 'Elvis, what's happening with the universe?'" After completing recording and mixing the as-yet-unnamed album, which had been by far the longest recording process of their career, and which still nearly sixty years later regularly tops polls of the best album of all time, the Beatles took a well-earned break. For a whole two days, at which point they flew off to Germany to do a three-day tour, on their way to Japan, where they were booked to play five shows at the Budokan. Unfortunately for the group, while they had no idea of this when they were booked to do the shows, many in Japan saw the Budokan as sacred ground, and they were the first ever Western group to play there. This led to numerous death threats and loud protests from far-right activists offended at the Beatles defiling their religious and nationalistic sensibilities. As a result, the police were on high alert -- so high that there were three thousand police in the audience for the shows, in a venue which only held ten thousand audience members. That's according to Mark Lewisohn's Complete Beatles Chronicle, though I have to say that the rather blurry footage of the audience in the video of those shows doesn't seem to show anything like those numbers. But frankly I'll take Lewisohn's word over that footage, as he's not someone to put out incorrect information. The threats to the group also meant that they had to be kept in their hotel rooms at all times except when actually performing, though they did make attempts to get out. At the press conference for the Tokyo shows, the group were also asked publicly for the first time their views on the war in Vietnam, and John replied "Well, we think about it every day, and we don't agree with it and we think that it's wrong. That's how much interest we take. That's all we can do about it... and say that we don't like it". I say they were asked publicly for the first time, because George had been asked about it for a series of interviews Maureen Cleave had done with the group a couple of months earlier, as we'll see in a bit, but nobody was paying attention to those interviews. Brian Epstein was upset that the question had gone to John. He had hoped that the inevitable Vietnam question would go to Paul, who he thought might be a bit more tactful. The last thing he needed was John Lennon saying something that would upset the Americans before their tour there a few weeks later. Luckily, people in America seemed to have better things to do than pay attention to John Lennon's opinions. The support acts for the Japanese shows included  several of the biggest names in Japanese rock music -- or "group sounds" as the genre was called there, Japanese people having realised that trying to say the phrase "rock and roll" would open them up to ridicule given that it had both "r" and "l" sounds in the phrase. The man who had coined the term "group sounds", Jackey Yoshikawa, was there with his group the Blue Comets, as was Isao Bito, who did a rather good cover version of Cliff Richard's "Dynamite": [Excerpt: Isao Bito, "Dynamite"] Bito, the Blue Comets, and the other two support acts, Yuya Uchida and the Blue Jeans, all got together to perform a specially written song, "Welcome Beatles": [Excerpt: "Welcome Beatles" ] But while the Japanese audience were enthusiastic, they were much less vocal about their enthusiasm than the audiences the Beatles were used to playing for. The group were used, of course, to playing in front of hordes of screaming teenagers who could not hear a single note, but because of the fear that a far-right terrorist would assassinate one of the group members, the police had imposed very, very, strict rules on the audience. Nobody in the audience was allowed to get out of their seat for any reason, and the police would clamp down very firmly on anyone who was too demonstrative. Because of that, the group could actually hear themselves, and they sounded sloppy as hell, especially on the newer material. Not that there was much of that. The only song they did from the Revolver sessions was "Paperback Writer", the new single, and while they did do a couple of tracks from Rubber Soul, those were under-rehearsed. As John said at the start of this tour, "I can't play any of Rubber Soul, it's so unrehearsed. The only time I played any of the numbers on it was when I recorded it. I forget about songs. They're only valid for a certain time." That's certainly borne out by the sound of their performances of Rubber Soul material at the Budokan: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "If I Needed Someone (live at the Budokan)"] It was while they were in Japan as well that they finally came up with the title for their new album. They'd been thinking of all sorts of ideas, like Abracadabra and Magic Circle, and tossing names around with increasing desperation for several days -- at one point they seem to have just started riffing on other groups' albums, and seem to have apparently seriously thought about naming the record in parodic tribute to their favourite artists -- suggestions included The Beatles On Safari, after the Beach Boys' Surfin' Safari (and possibly with a nod to their recent Pet Sounds album cover with animals, too), The Freewheelin' Beatles, after Dylan's second album, and my favourite, Ringo's suggestion After Geography, for the Rolling Stones' Aftermath. But eventually Paul came up with Revolver -- like Rubber Soul, a pun, in this case because the record itself revolves when on a turntable. Then it was off to the Philippines, and if the group thought Japan had been stressful, they had no idea what was coming. The trouble started in the Philippines from the moment they stepped off the plane, when they were bundled into a car without Neil Aspinall or Brian Epstein, and without their luggage, which was sent to customs. This was a problem in itself -- the group had got used to essentially being treated like diplomats, and to having their baggage let through customs without being searched, and so they'd started freely carrying various illicit substances with them. This would obviously be a problem -- but as it turned out, this was just to get a "customs charge" paid by Brian Epstein. But during their initial press conference the group were worried, given the hostility they'd faced from officialdom, that they were going to be arrested during the conference itself. They were asked what they would tell the Rolling Stones, who were going to be visiting the Philippines shortly after, and Lennon just said "We'll warn them". They also asked "is there a war on in the Philippines? Why is everybody armed?" At this time, the Philippines had a new leader, Ferdinand Marcos -- who is not to be confused with his son, Ferdinand Marcos Jr, also known as Bongbong Marcos, who just became President-Elect there last month. Marcos Sr was a dictatorial kleptocrat, one of the worst leaders of the latter half of the twentieth century, but that wasn't evident yet. He'd been elected only a few months earlier, and had presented himself as a Kennedy-like figure -- a young man who was also a war hero. He'd recently switched parties from the Liberal party to the right-wing Nacionalista Party, but wasn't yet being thought of as the monstrous dictator he later became. The person organising the Philippines shows had been ordered to get the Beatles to visit Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos at 11AM on the day of the show, but for some reason had instead put on their itinerary just the *suggestion* that the group should meet the Marcoses, and had put the time down as 3PM, and the Beatles chose to ignore that suggestion -- they'd refused to do that kind of government-official meet-and-greet ever since an incident in 1964 at the British Embassy in Washington where someone had cut off a bit of Ringo's hair. A military escort turned up at the group's hotel in the morning, to take them for their meeting. The group were all still in their rooms, and Brian Epstein was still eating breakfast and refused to disturb them, saying "Go back and tell the generals we're not coming." The group gave their performances as scheduled, but meanwhile there was outrage at the way the Beatles had refused to meet the Marcos family, who had brought hundreds of children -- friends of their own children, and relatives of top officials -- to a party to meet the group. Brian Epstein went on TV and tried to smooth things over, but the broadcast was interrupted by static and his message didn't get through to anyone. The next day, the group's security was taken away, as were the cars to take them to the airport. When they got to the airport, the escalators were turned off and the group were beaten up at the arrangement of the airport manager, who said in 1984 "I beat up the Beatles. I really thumped them. First I socked Epstein and he went down... then I socked Lennon and Ringo in the face. I was kicking them. They were pleading like frightened chickens. That's what happens when you insult the First Lady." Even on the plane there were further problems -- Brian Epstein and the group's road manager Mal Evans were both made to get off the plane to sort out supposed financial discrepancies, which led to them worrying that they were going to be arrested or worse -- Evans told the group to tell his wife he loved her as he left the plane. But eventually, they were able to leave, and after a brief layover in India -- which Ringo later said was the first time he felt he'd been somewhere truly foreign, as opposed to places like Germany or the USA which felt basically like home -- they got back to England: [Excerpt: "Ordinary passenger!"] When asked what they were going to do next, George replied “We're going to have a couple of weeks to recuperate before we go and get beaten up by the Americans,” The story of the "we're bigger than Jesus" controversy is one of the most widely misreported events in the lives of the Beatles, which is saying a great deal. One book that I've encountered, and one book only, Steve Turner's Beatles '66, tells the story of what actually happened, and even that book seems to miss some emphases. I've pieced what follows together from Turner's book and from an academic journal article I found which has some more detail. As far as I can tell, every single other book on the Beatles released up to this point bases their account of the story on an inaccurate press statement put out by Brian Epstein, not on the truth. Here's the story as it's generally told. John Lennon gave an interview to his friend, Maureen Cleave of the Evening Standard, during which he made some comments about how it was depressing that Christianity was losing relevance in the eyes of the public, and that the Beatles are more popular than Jesus, speaking casually because he was talking to a friend. That story was run in the Evening Standard more-or-less unnoticed, but then an American teen magazine picked up on the line about the Beatles being bigger than Jesus, reprinted chunks of the interview out of context and without the Beatles' knowledge or permission, as a way to stir up controversy, and there was an outcry, with people burning Beatles records and death threats from the Ku Klux Klan. That's... not exactly what happened. The first thing that you need to understand to know what happened is that Datebook wasn't a typical teen magazine. It *looked* just like a typical teen magazine, certainly, and much of its content was the kind of thing that you would get in Tiger Beat or any of the other magazines aimed at teenage girls -- the September 1966 issue was full of articles like "Life with the Walker Brothers... by their Road Manager", and interviews with the Dave Clark Five -- but it also had a long history of publishing material that was intended to make its readers think about social issues of the time, particularly Civil Rights. Arthur Unger, the magazine's editor and publisher, was a gay man in an interracial relationship, and while the subject of homosexuality was too taboo in the late fifties and sixties for him to have his magazine cover that, he did regularly include articles decrying segregation and calling for the girls reading the magazine to do their part on a personal level to stamp out racism. Datebook had regularly contained articles like one from 1963 talking about how segregation wasn't just a problem in the South, saying "If we are so ‘integrated' why must men in my own city of Philadelphia, the city of Brotherly Love, picket city hall because they are discriminated against when it comes to getting a job? And how come I am still unable to take my dark- complexioned friends to the same roller skating rink or swimming pool that I attend?” One of the writers for the magazine later said “We were much more than an entertainment magazine . . . . We tried to get kids involved in social issues . . . . It was a well-received magazine, recommended by libraries and schools, but during the Civil Rights period we did get pulled off a lot of stands in the South because of our views on integration” Art Unger, the editor and publisher, wasn't the only one pushing this liberal, integrationist, agenda. The managing editor at the time, Danny Fields, was another gay man who wanted to push the magazine even further than Unger, and who would later go on to manage the Stooges and the Ramones, being credited by some as being the single most important figure in punk rock's development, and being immortalised by the Ramones in their song "Danny Says": [Excerpt: The Ramones, "Danny Says"] So this was not a normal teen magazine, and that's certainly shown by the cover of the September 1966 issue, which as well as talking about the interviews with John Lennon and Paul McCartney inside, also advertised articles on Timothy Leary advising people to turn on, tune in, and drop out; an editorial about how interracial dating must be the next step after desegregation of schools, and a piece on "the ten adults you dig/hate the most" -- apparently the adult most teens dug in 1966 was Jackie Kennedy, the most hated was Barry Goldwater, and President Johnson, Billy Graham, and Martin Luther King appeared in the top ten on both lists. Now, in the early part of the year Maureen Cleave had done a whole series of articles on the Beatles -- double-page spreads on each band member, plus Brian Epstein, visiting them in their own homes (apart from Paul, who she met at a restaurant) and discussing their daily lives, their thoughts, and portraying them as rounded individuals. These articles are actually fascinating, because of something that everyone who met the Beatles in this period pointed out. When interviewed separately, all of them came across as thoughtful individuals, with their own opinions about all sorts of subjects, and their own tastes and senses of humour. But when two or more of them were together -- especially when John and Paul were interviewed together, but even in social situations, they would immediately revert to flip in-jokes and riffing on each other's statements, never revealing anything about themselves as individuals, but just going into Beatle mode -- simultaneously preserving the band's image, closing off outsiders, *and* making sure they didn't do or say anything that would get them mocked by the others. Cleave, as someone who actually took them all seriously, managed to get some very revealing information about all of them. In the article on Ringo, which is the most superficial -- one gets the impression that Cleave found him rather difficult to talk to when compared to the other, more verbally facile, band members -- she talked about how he had a lot of Wild West and military memorabilia, how he was a devoted family man and also devoted to his friends -- he had moved to the suburbs to be close to John and George, who already lived there. The most revealing quote about Ringo's personality was him saying "Of course that's the great thing about being married -- you have a house to sit in and company all the time. And you can still go to clubs, a bonus for being married. I love being a family man." While she looked at the other Beatles' tastes in literature in detail, she'd noted that the only books Ringo owned that weren't just for show were a few science fiction paperbacks, but that as he said "I'm not thick, it's just that I'm not educated. People can use words and I won't know what they mean. I say 'me' instead of 'my'." Ringo also didn't have a drum kit at home, saying he only played when he was on stage or in the studio, and that you couldn't practice on your own, you needed to play with other people. In the article on George, she talked about how he was learning the sitar,  and how he was thinking that it might be a good idea to go to India to study the sitar with Ravi Shankar for six months. She also talks about how during the interview, he played the guitar pretty much constantly, playing everything from songs from "Hello Dolly" to pieces by Bach to "the Trumpet Voluntary", by which she presumably means Clarke's "Prince of Denmark's March": [Excerpt: Jeremiah Clarke, "Prince of Denmark's March"] George was also the most outspoken on the subjects of politics, religion, and society, linking the ongoing war in Vietnam with the UK's reverence for the Second World War, saying "I think about it every day and it's wrong. Anything to do with war is wrong. They're all wrapped up in their Nelsons and their Churchills and their Montys -- always talking about war heroes. Look at All Our Yesterdays [a show on ITV that showed twenty-five-year-old newsreels] -- how we killed a few more Huns here and there. Makes me sick. They're the sort who are leaning on their walking sticks and telling us a few years in the army would do us good." He also had very strong words to say about religion, saying "I think religion falls flat on its face. All this 'love thy neighbour' but none of them are doing it. How can anybody get into the position of being Pope and accept all the glory and the money and the Mercedes-Benz and that? I could never be Pope until I'd sold my rich gates and my posh hat. I couldn't sit there with all that money on me and believe I was religious. Why can't we bring all this out in the open? Why is there all this stuff about blasphemy? If Christianity's as good as they say it is, it should stand up to a bit of discussion." Harrison also comes across as a very private person, saying "People keep saying, ‘We made you what you are,' well, I made Mr. Hovis what he is and I don't go round crawling over his gates and smashing up the wall round his house." (Hovis is a British company that makes bread and wholegrain flour). But more than anything else he comes across as an instinctive anti-authoritarian, being angry at bullying teachers, Popes, and Prime Ministers. McCartney's profile has him as the most self-consciously arty -- he talks about the plays of Alfred Jarry and the music of Karlheinz Stockhausen and Luciano Berio: [Excerpt: Luciano Berio, "Momenti (for magnetic tape)"] Though he was very worried that he might be sounding a little too pretentious, saying “I don't want to sound like Jonathan Miller going on" --

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all you need is love telstar peter cook biblical hebrew steve cropper royal festival hall british embassy michael nesmith melody maker michael crawford la marseillaise greensleeves strawberry fields forever john sebastian cropper in my life norwegian wood imelda marcos united press international tiger beat emerick hayley mills number six clang ivor novello nems steve turner patrick mcgoohan tommy dorsey karlheinz stockhausen edenic beloved disciple nelsons allen klein london evening standard green onions entertainments yehudi menuhin freewheelin david mason roger mcguinn candlestick park tomorrow never knows mellotron delia derbyshire derek taylor us west coast medicine show swinging london whiter shade ken scott ferdinand marcos jr love me do sky with diamonds dave clark five three blind mice merry pranksters newfield peter asher walker brothers carl wilson emi records spicks release me country joe mellow yellow she loves you hovis joe meek jane asher georgie fame road manager biggles say you love me ian macdonald churchills danger man david sheff paperback writer long tall sally i feel fine geoff emerick humperdinck james jamerson merseybeat bruce johnston european broadcasting union mark lewisohn michael lindsay hogg august bank holiday edwardian england sergeant pepper it be nice alfred jarry brechtian john drake martin carthy billy j kramer hogshead all our yesterdays northern songs good day sunshine zeffirelli bongbong marcos john betjeman alternate titles sloop john b gershwins tony sheridan portmeirion baby you simon scott leo mckern you know my name robert stigwood richard condon joe orton cynthia lennon west meets east tony palmer bert kaempfert bert berns mount snowdon from head mcgoohan owen bradley exciters she said she said david tudor tyler mahan coe hide your love away only sleeping montys danny fields john dunbar brandenburg concerto andrew oldham barry miles marcoses nik cohn michael hordern your mother should know brian hodgson alma cogan how i won invention no mike vickers mike hennessey we can work stephen dando collins tara browne lewisohn love you to steve barri get you into my life alistair taylor up against it christopher strachey gordon waller kaempfert tilt araiza
Rock Docs
Hey Jude, Get Back with James Campion

Rock Docs

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 53:14


Rock Docs: A Podcast About Music Documentaries We're joined by Very Special Guest James Campion, author of Take a Sad Song: The Emotional Currency of "Hey Jude". We discuss his book about "Hey Jude" and the influence that the song had on the "Let It Be" sessions that led to Get Back. James shares his insights after talking to songwriters, musicologists, and even Michael Lindsay-Hogg himself about this era of the Beatles' career. Plus we talk about our mutual love of rock docs and James puts on the spot to reveal our favorite Beatles documentaries (other than Get Back, of course). Hosted by David Lizerbram & Andrew Keatts Twitter: @RockDocsPod Instagram: @RockDocsPod Cover Art by N.C. Winters - check him out on Instagram at @NCWintersArt  

Talk More Talk: A Solo Beatles Videocast
TMT Extra: NY Metro Fest for Beatles Fans 2022 Wrapup

Talk More Talk: A Solo Beatles Videocast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2022 72:58 Very Popular


Taken from our live YouTube chat held on 4/8/22, we discuss the highlights of the first Fest in almost three years.  Hear about our experiences seeing Peter Jackson, Michael Lindsay Hogg, Mark Lewisohn, and much more.     talkmoretalk.com talkmoresolotalk@gmail.com @talkmoretalk1 https://www.facebook.com/talkmoretalkvideocast https://www.youtube.com/c/TalkMoreTalkASoloBeatlesVideocast

Another Kind of Mind: A Different Kind of Beatles Podcast
AKOM on GET BACK: Four Sides of a Square

Another Kind of Mind: A Different Kind of Beatles Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2022 141:50


The third and final episode in our Get Back analysis is dedicated to Band Dynamics- the working and personal relationships within the Beatles and how all those conflicts, bonds and loyalties interact. We also take a look at the Get Back deadlines; Were they as crazy as we think? Join Phoebe, Daphne, Iris and Thalia for this lively, thoughtful and engrossing panel. SOURCES The Banality of Genius: Notes on Peter Jackson's Get Back, Ian Leslie (Jan 26 2022) Get Back, dir. Peter Jackson (2021) John Lennon Interview w/ DJ John Small (October 22nd, 1969) Beatles Anthology, dir. Geoff Wonfor; Bob Smeaton (1995) Peace and Love, Broken Record podcast w/ Rick Rubin (Sep 21, 2021) Ringo Interview from: Understanding McCartney/Ep 5, dir breathless345 (2020) Ringo Starr Interview w/ Howard Stern (2000) Felix Dennis quote from: You Never Give Me Your Money: The Battle for the Soul of the Beatles, Peter Doggett (2009) Playboy interview w/ Allen Klein (1971) Solid State, The Story of Abbey Road and the End of the Beatles, Ken Womack (2019) Maureen Starkey interview (published 1998) Tune In, Mark Lewisohn (2013) Beatles on the Roof, Tony Barrel (2017) With a Little Help from My Friends, the Making of Sergeant Pepper, George Martin (1994) Maximum Volume: The Life of Beatles Producer George Martin (The Early Years, 1926-1966) Ken Womack (2018) Philip Norman (?) Playback: An Illustrated Memoir, George Martin (2002) Let it Be, dir Michael Lindsay-Hogg (1970) George Harrison, Guitar World: When We Was Fab. (1992) THE LYRICS, Paul McCartney and Paul Muldoon (2021) Many Years From Now, Barry Miles (1997) Peter Jackson on Stephen Colbert (Nov 25, 2021)

Este pana y el otro
EP 096 | The Beatles: Get Back

Este pana y el otro

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2022 51:26


¿El tema del EP096? "Los Bitels" no necesitan justificación para hablar de ellos, pero la mini serie de 3 episodios de Disney+ llamada "Get Back" dirigida por Peter Jackson y Michael Lindsay-Hogg, nos lleva a un viaje detrás de la creación del disco "Let It Be" y el último concierto de la banda en público.

Evil Genius Chronicles
Evil Genius Chronicles Podcast for February 17 2022 – Embrace the Douche

Evil Genius Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2022 50:50


In this episode, I play a song by Camper van Beethoven; I'm in the 2022 class of the Podcast Hall of Fame; I am in Apple Podcasts and Spotify; I finally watched Get Back but I had to do some remedial Beatles work first; Michael Lindsay Hogg is the villain of the piece; Let It … Continue reading Evil Genius Chronicles Podcast for February 17 2022 – Embrace the Douche The post Evil Genius Chronicles Podcast for February 17 2022 – Embrace the Douche first appeared on Evil Genius Chronicles.

Another Kind of Mind: A Different Kind of Beatles Podcast
AKOM on GET BACK: Brothers, Friends, Bandmates

Another Kind of Mind: A Different Kind of Beatles Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2022 125:17


AKOM on GET BACK: Brothers, Friends, Bandmates Episode 2 is all about George, Paul and George & Paul; we take a look into their dynamic as bandmates, friends and surrogate brothers. We also examine George as a Producer for insight into the creative conflicts between Paul and George.  Other topics include: The Beatles' Rooftop Performance, Eric Clapton and Scenes that Surprised Us. SOURCES/REFERENCES Get Back, dir. Peter Jackson (2021) "Why the Beatles Broke Up" by Mikael Gilmore for Rolling Stone (2000) "Paul McCartney: the Musical Genius with Staying Power" The Times UK, Caitlin Moran (Dec 25, 2021) George Harrison, NME: This Song. (December 11th, 1976) “The Banality of Genius: Notes on Peter Jackson's Get Back” Ian Leslie  (Jan 26 2022) George Harrison, Guitar World: When We Was Fab. (1992) Paul McCartney on Egypt Station, NME interview w/ Dan Stubbs (2018) "Beatlesongs," William J Dowlding (1989) "Get Back Halftime Report" on Hey Dullblog Geoff Emerick interview w/ Alan Light for Blender.com (2009) George Martin interviewed by Richard Buskin (March 3,1987) "Behind the Locked Door," Graeme Thomson (2013) Michael Lindsay Hogg, Interview for Radio New Zealand (Dec 4, 2021) Paul McCartney interview with Parkinson (1997)

The Rhodcasts
Up On the Roof — An Up All Night Flashback

The Rhodcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 29:39


It was 50 years ago to the day when four of the very few people in the world who can actually say “I was there” talked to RHOD SHARP about The Beatles' rooftop concert on January 30, 1969. In a conversation broadcast on BBC 5 Live's Up All Night in 2019, Let It Be director Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Apple Corps' Kevin Harrington and Ken Mansfield and Metropolitan police constable Ken Wharfe provide a fresh take on the events depicted anew in Peter Jackson's extended documentary.

Another Kind of Mind: A Different Kind of Beatles Podcast
AKOM on GET BACK: Love, Heroin and the Power of Editing

Another Kind of Mind: A Different Kind of Beatles Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2022 79:43


Part 1 in a 3-part conversation about Peter Jackson's documentary epic, GET BACK.   Join Phoebe and Daphne for a discussion of Peter Jackson's most controversial edits, Yoko's celluloid makeover, the state of John & Paul's relationship and the invisible interloper, heroin. SOURCES Get Back, dir. Peter Jackson (2021) Michael Lindsay Hogg, Interview for Radio New Zealand (Dec 4, 2021) Understanding Lennon/McCartney vol 2, dir. breathless345 (2022)

Reality Life with Kate Casey
Ep. - 435 - THE BEATLES: GET BACK SISTER WIVES AND REAL HOUSEWIVES OF SALT LAKE CITY

Reality Life with Kate Casey

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2022 36:22


Kate discusses this week's episodes of Real Housewives of Salt Lake City and Sister Wives. Veteran unscripted TV producer Eliot Goldberg discusses The Beatles: Get Back, a documentary series covering the making of the Beatles' 1970 album Let It Be (which had the working title of Get Back) and draws largely from unused footage and audio material originally captured for the identically titled 1970 documentary of the album by Michael Lindsay-Hogg. Reality Life with Kate CaseyPatreon: http://www.patreon.com/katecaseyCameo: https://cameo.com/katecaseyTwitter: https://twitter.com/katecaseyInstagram: http://www.instagram.com/katecaseycaTik Tok: http://www.tiktok.com/itskatecaseyClubhouse: @katecasey Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/113157919338245Amazon.com: www.amazon.com/shop/katecaseySee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

When They Was Fab: Electric Arguments About the Beatles
2022.r02 Peter Jackson's: The Beatles - Get Back. Days 18-20, January 27-29 1969 - Kit O'Toole

When They Was Fab: Electric Arguments About the Beatles

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2022 71:33


The penultimate episode of our "Get Back" review.      Allen Klein enters the Beatles world, weather delays the proposed show, and Paul gets cold feet.       Rehearsals and recording continue while Glyn Johns and Michael Lindsay-Hogg hold their collective breath (for reasons other than Ringo farting).

Needs Some Introduction - House of the Dragon/The Patient
E68 (Excerpt): The Beatles: Get Back - Episodes 2 and 3 PLUS: Beatles Deep Cuts

Needs Some Introduction - House of the Dragon/The Patient

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2022 30:30


Iain and I discuss the rest of the Peter Jackson documentary. They finally perform again, publicly (the famous rooftop concert). Plus we play some deeper cuts. Make sure to listen on Spotify to hear the full tracks. ------------------ The Beatles: Get Back Series Directed by Peter Jackson ... (3 episodes, 2021) Michael Lindsay-Hogg ... (3 episodes, 2021) Series Cast John Lennon John Lennon ... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Paul McCartney Paul McCartney ... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 George Harrison George Harrison ... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Ringo Starr Ringo Starr ... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Michael Lindsay-Hogg Michael Lindsay-Hogg ... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Linda McCartney Linda McCartney ... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Yoko Ono Yoko Ono ... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Mal Evans Mal Evans ... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Billy Preston Billy Preston ... Self (archive footage)2 episodes, 2021 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/needs/message

Yeah-Uh-Huh
Yeah Uh Huh Episode 41 - The Beatles' "Get Back" with Nick!

Yeah-Uh-Huh

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2021 71:24


Fifty two years ago Michael Lindsay-Hogg produced the largely reviled documentary "Let It Be". The film became known for it's apparent depiction of the sad, acrimonious end of the greatest rock and roll band of all time, The Beatles. So much was made of that portrayal that it has helped to shape rock and roll folklore and perpetuate falsehoods about the band's break up that have gone virtually uncontested all this time. It was not until famed "Hobbit" director Peter Jackson was given access to 60 hours of unreleased 8mm film from those sessions, in addition to 150 hours of audio, that the world became exposed to a far different story. For a world trying to crawl and pull itself out of the quagmire of Corona, the results of Jackson's technical restoration was were almost inspirational. In "Get Back", the incredible 3 part documentary released on Disney Plus over this year's Thanksgiving holiday, we get to see the fab four rewrite history and show that the chemistry of their earliest days of the Cavern Club and their very first salvos of the British Invasion of 1963 was still alive and well. If you have not seen it, we encourage you to go back and take however much time it requires to consume 8 hours of documentary perfection then come back to listen to Lisa, Aaron, myself and special guest Nick make our observations. Note: Spotify users will be able to see the video for this episode "Get Back" on Disney+ https://www.disneyplus.com/series/the-beatles-get-back/7DcWEeWVqrkE Trailer for "Get Back" https://youtu.be/Auta2lagtw4 No Beatles music was used in this episode. All Music in this episode are unlicensed from the following free sources An album in the style of The Beatles, generated by OpenAI Jukebox https://youtu.be/yZu24pddzwk Sitar Music No Copyright| Indian Music Sitar https://youtu.be/YOmgNKu4IkA Video used in this Episode The Beatles - Live at Crosley Field, Cincinnati, Ohio (August 21, 1966) https://youtu.be/3srwQ4E-KQ4 Beatles Abbey Road cover photo session https://youtu.be/3LmncKbU1LQ The Beatles' final photo session (FULL FILM) https://youtu.be/QbJWdBcYZmM The Beatles reunion- live at Friar Park-1994 (full version) https://youtu.be/YQi3UkJbIGM Our Socials Yeah Uh Huh on Facebook https://facebook.com/YeahUhHuhPod Yeah Uh Huh on Twitter https://twitter.com/YeahUhHuhPod Yeah Uh Huh on Instagram https://instagram.com/YeahUhHuhPod --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lisa-huey/message

Needs Some Introduction - House of the Dragon/The Patient

Iain and I discuss the new Peter Jackson documentary about the failed television special that eventually became the Let it Be album. We discuss the complex technology required to pull it off. Plus we get to see each of the group at their best and worst (except the even keeled Ringo). There are tons of works in progress here that will eventually show up on each of their solo records. You can really see them beginning to come apart at the seams. ------------------ The Beatles: Get Back Series Directed by Peter Jackson...(3 episodes, 2021) Michael Lindsay-Hogg...(3 episodes, 2021) Series Cast John LennonJohn Lennon... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Paul McCartneyPaul McCartney... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 George HarrisonGeorge Harrison... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Ringo StarrRingo Starr... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Michael Lindsay-HoggMichael Lindsay-Hogg... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Linda McCartneyLinda McCartney... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Yoko OnoYoko Ono... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Mal EvansMal Evans... Self (archive footage)3 episodes, 2021 Billy PrestonBilly Preston... Self (archive footage)2 episodes, 2021 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/needs/message

Cinematório Podcasts
cinematório café: ”The Beatles: Get Back”

Cinematório Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2021 102:15


Como Peter Jackson muda nossa perspectiva sobre o último show dos Beatles? Analisamos a estrutura narrativa do roteiro e o uso da metalinguagem na minissérie. Nesta edição, o podcast cinematório café analisa a minissérie documental "The Beatles: Get Back" (2021), dirigida por Peter Jackson, que mostra os bastidores da gravação do disco "Let It Be" e da última apresentação ao vivo dos Beatles: o inesquecível show no topo do prédio da Apple Corps, em Londres, em janeiro de 1969. Disponível na plataforma Disney+ e dividida em três partes que totalizam quase 8 horas de duração, “The Beatles: Get Back” é um prato cheio para os fãs da banda. Criada inteiramente a partir de filmagens restauradas até então inéditas ao grande público, a produção proporciona um olhar íntimo sobre o processo criativo e o relacionamento entre John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison e Ringo Starr em um momento crucial de suas carreiras. Dirigida pelo cineasta Peter Jackson (da trilogia “O Senhor dos Anéis”), “The Beatles: Get Back” foi compilada a partir de mais de 150 horas de áudio e quase 60 horas de filmagens -- conduzidas ao longo de janeiro de 1969 pelo diretor Michael Lindsay-Hogg e editadas originalmente por ele no clássico documentário "Let It Be" (1970). No podcast, nós analisamos como Jackson mudou a perspectiva que se tinha até então sobre aquele período, quando os Beatles estavam próximos de acabar com a banda. Também comentamos a estrutura narrativa do roteiro e o uso da metalinguagem, e destacamos os momentos mais marcantes que mostram os músicos criando alguns de seus maiores sucessos, incluindo "Get Back", "Let It Be", "I've Got a Feeling" e "The Long and Winding Road". Quem se senta à mesa conosco para falar sobre "The Beatles: Get Back" são Paulo Henrique Fontenelle, diretor dos documentários “Loki – Arnaldo Baptista”, “Cássia” e “Dossiê Jango”, e Ana Lúcia Andrade, professora de Cinema da Escola de Belas Artes da UFMG. O cinematório café é produzido e apresentado por Renato Silveira e Kel Gomes. A cada episódio, nós propomos um debate em torno de filmes recém-lançados e temas relacionados ao cinema, sempre em um clima de descontração e buscando refletir sobre imagens presentes no nosso dia a dia. Quer mandar um e-mail? Escreva para contato@cinematorio.com.br. A sua mensagem pode ser lida no podcast! - Visite a página do podcast no site e confira material extra sobre o tema do episódio! - Junte-se ao Cineclube Cinematório e tenha acesso a conteúdo exclusivo de cinema!

The MovieJeff.com Review Show
398: The Beatles: Get Back (2021) & Let It Be (1970)

The MovieJeff.com Review Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2021 44:58


I watched the new Peter Jackson mega-documentary on a little band from Liverpool, four lads who by The Beatles — ever heard of 'em? Then, because I am a massive freak who can't take enough punishment, I watched the original 1970 Michael Lindsay-Hogg film, Let It Be. Read my full reviews

Two Geeks and A Marketing Podcast
The one about branding tricks with magazines, BlaBlaCar, microphones and The King's Speech - TG62

Two Geeks and A Marketing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2021 75:23


The one about branding tricks with magazines, BlaBlaCar, microphones and The King's Speech - TG62    00:00:00 Introduction   Here are your hosts, Roger and Pascal.      00:02:23 In the News   A selection of announcements and news releases from the world of marketing and technology that caught our attention.    00:16:16 Content Spotlights   ROGER: Starting a Business? Use This Old School Tactic to Jumpstart Your Brand. This simple technique catapulted the second largest boutique hotel company in the world, and it can work for your business too. By Nicholas Sonnenberg, Inc. https://www.inc.com/nicholas-sonnenberg/starting-a-business-use-this-old-school-tactic-to-jumpstart-your-brand.html (https://www.inc.com/nicholas-sonnenberg/starting-a-business-use-this-old-school-tactic-to-jumpstart-your-brand.html)  PASCAL: The Beatles: Get Back – the 3-part documentary directed by Peter Jackson with 1969 footage recorded over 4 weeks by Michael Lindsay-Hogg and colleagues. https://www.disneyplus.com/en-gb/series/the-beatles-get-back/7DcWEeWVqrkE (https://www.disneyplus.com/en-gb/series/the-beatles-get-back/7DcWEeWVqrkE)    00:32:01 Marketing Tech and Apps    ROGER: It's all about getting help from others  BlaBlaCar – Carpooling Journeys: https://www.blablacar.co.uk/ (https://www.blablacar.co.uk/)  TaskRabbit – Help with stuff at home: https://www.taskrabbit.co.uk/ (https://www.taskrabbit.co.uk/)  PASCAL: It's all about your mobile audio video kit  Sennheiser MKE 200 Tripod Kit – All in one Directional On-Camera Microphone with Smartphone Clamp & Manfrotto PIXI Mini Tripod  https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sennheiser-Professional-Directional-Microphone-509256/dp/B08YS2JKMG?th=1 (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sennheiser-Professional-Directional-Microphone-509256/dp/B08YS2JKMG?th=1)  Anchor by Spotify - accounts have now been enabled for Video Podcasts as well as audio only https://anchor.fm/ (https://anchor.fm)  00:41:49 This Week in History   Our selection of historical events and anniversaries from the world of science, technology and popular culture.    00:47:00 Creator Shout Outs   ROGER: Angus Grady – the LinkedIn Unlocker. https://www.linkedin.com/in/angusgrady/ (https://www.linkedin.com/in/angusgrady/)  PASCAL: Mark Asquith, co-founder of captivate.fm and the host of ‘7-minute mentor' audio series – just published all 607 episodes on dedicated website: https://www.the7minutementor.com/ (https://www.the7minutementor.com/)    00:52:45 Film Marketing   The King's Speech (2010)  It takes leadership to confront a nation's fear. It takes friendship to conquer your own.  Written by: David Seidler   Directed by: Tom Hooper   Starring: Colin Firth (King George VI), Helena Bonham Carter (Queen Elizabeth), Geoffrey Rush (Lionel Logue), Jennifer Ehle (Myrtle Logue), Guy Pearce (King Edward VIII).  We look at the word of mouth marketing for this excellent character study. A must watch for anyone who has to take part in public speaking. The dialogue between Colin Firth and Geoffrey Rush is exquisite. About Two Geeks and A Marketing Podcast     Hosted by the two geeks, Roger Edwards and Pascal Fintoni, to keep you up to date with the latest news, tech, content and wisdom from the world of marketing.   Roger is a man on a mission to keep marketing simple. He is the voice of the Marketing & Finance Podcast and the host of the RogVLOG series.    Pascal is also on a mission to demystify digital marketing. He's the host of the Content Marketing Studio video podcast and many other video series.   Every week we'll bring you

Something About the Beatles
224C The Making of Get Back part three with Peter Jackson

Something About the Beatles

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2021 69:28


In the third and final hour, Dan Rivkin (They May be Parted blog) and I explore more of the Get Back project with its director. Among the subjects discussed:    ~ Coordination between the Get Back book, the Let It Be album reissue and this film (hint: none)   ~ Directives from the Beatle heirs and Apple (hint: none)   ~ Michael Lindsay-Hogg's original draft of Let It Be   ~ The missing Nagra audio   ~ An extended cut?   Be sure to check out party one and two, as well as the write up in Forbes.

Talk Is Jericho
The Fab Three Get Back with The Beatles Incredible Documentary

Talk Is Jericho

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 82:51


The Fab 3 (Jericho, drummer Mike Portnoy, and Anthrax's Charlie Benante) return to celebrate the release of Peter Jackson's 8-hour documentary series, “Get Back,” on their favorite band, The Beatles! Peter Jackson sifted through, and restored, the original footage captured for Michael Lindsay Hogg's 1970 documentary about the making of the “Let It Be” album, and The Fab 3 share their thoughts about what's included. They marvel at the camaraderie and comedy between John Lennon, Sir Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr, along with the incredible musicianship and performance of the band's famed 1969 rooftop concert at their Apple Corps headquarters. They share favorite scenes and moments, what surprised them most about the footage and the relationships, and the myth the documentary dispels about the picture painted of the 4 Beatles in the original “Let It Be” doc.Thanks to our sponsors!Steven Singer Jewelers: One place! Once price! www.IHateStevenSinger.com Skylight Frame: go to www.skylightframe.com and use promo code JERICHO for $10 off

Talk Is Jericho
The Fab Three Get Back with The Beatles Incredible Documentary

Talk Is Jericho

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 87:46


The Fab 3 (Jericho, drummer Mike Portnoy, and Anthrax's Charlie Benante) return to celebrate the release of Peter Jackson's 8-hour documentary series, “Get Back,” on their favorite band, The Beatles! Peter Jackson sifted through, and restored, the original footage captured for Michael Lindsay Hogg's 1970 documentary about the making of the “Let It Be” album, and The Fab 3 share their thoughts about what's included. They marvel at the camaraderie and comedy between John Lennon, Sir Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr, along with the incredible musicianship and performance of the band's famed 1969 rooftop concert at their Apple Corps headquarters. They share favorite scenes and moments, what surprised them most about the footage and the relationships, and the myth the documentary dispels about the picture painted of the 4 Beatles in the original “Let It Be” doc. Thanks to our sponsors! Steven Singer Jewelers: One place! Once price! www.IHateStevenSinger.com Skylight Frame: go to www.skylightframe.com and use promo code JERICHO for $10 off

When They Was Fab: Electric Arguments About the Beatles
2021.r33 Peter Jackson‘s: The Beatles - Get Back. Days 1-3, January 2-6, 1969

When They Was Fab: Electric Arguments About the Beatles

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 65:51


WTWF starts its deep dive into the new production from Disney+, Peter Jackson and the Beatles.    This week, the first three days as presented in part one of the new feature.   A new year, a soundstage (paid for by another production), four Beatles, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Glyn Johns and Mal Evans in search of some chairs.     Is it any wonder the disagreements move from subtext to screen.

Screw It, We're Just Gonna Talk About the Beatles
Get Back (2021 film) - Discussion

Screw It, We're Just Gonna Talk About the Beatles

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 127:27


In this two hour discussion, the panel gets into the amazing tour de force Beatles documentary "Get Back." Directed by Peter Jackson, released as three 2.5+ hour episodes on Disney+ over American Thanksgiving weekend in 2021, this doc is taking Beatle fandom by storm. It's an incredibly intimate look at the band at work. Yes, we see the fights and the tension. But we also see the friendship and empathy, the musical genius and passion for what they were making. You feel as if you are really hanging out with the Beatles in an unguarded environment. In addition to that intimate feeling, you see many now-iconic Beatles songs (aren't they all iconic, though) get developed, sometimes from scratch right before your eyes. Among the many subjects we touch on: all the toast, Yoko Ono's presence, the relationships between Paul and John and George, whether Ringo is chill sad or hungover, the director Michael Lindsay-Hogg (villain or just arrogant 'college sophomore' energy), Billy Preston's incredible impact, calming George Martin, George's cool clothes, the musicianship and seeing them play, how we're hungry for MORE MORE of this kind of footage if only it existed, Ringo's fart, the cops and the straps in their mouths, the stuffy London business owners, Peter Sellers, Paul's ambition, the flowerpot conversation, the songwriting, Allen Klein, Glyn Johns, Apple Studios and Magic Alex' insane guitar prototype. Beatles fans everywhere are joyfully examining and discussing this documentary.  It's an incredible film and a joy to watch. I hope everyone listening to this feels the same way!

Getting lumped up with Rob Rossi
RockerMike and Rob review The Beatles Get back documentary and Perfect Day a Lou Reed book.

Getting lumped up with Rob Rossi

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 48:25


RockerMike and Rob review The Beatles Get back documentary and Perfect Day: An Intimate Portrait Of Life With Lou Reed by Kronstad, Bettye review. The Beatles: Get Back is a 2021 documentary series directed and produced by Peter Jackson. It covers the making of the Beatles' 1970 album Let It Be, which had the working title of Get Back, and draws from material originally captured for Michael Lindsay-Hogg's 1970 documentary of the album, also titled Let It Be. Originally conceived as a feature film, The Beatles: Get Back consists of three episodes with runtimes between two and three hours each, resulting in a total runtime of nearly eight hours of material. The series is presented by Walt Disney Studios in association with Apple Corps and WingNut Films. Lou Reed Perfect day written by Bettye Kronstad. Bettye Kronstad met Lou Reed in 1968 as a nineteen-year-old Columbia University student; they were married, briefly, in 1973. Their relationship spanned some of the most pivotal years of his life and career, from the demise of The Velvet Underground to the writing and recording of his seminal solo masterpieces Transformer, for which Lou wrote ‘Perfect Day' about an afternoon they spent together in the park, and Berlin, which draws on tales from Bettye's childhood.

In Perfect Day, Bettye looks back on their initially idyllic life together on the Upper East Side; Lou's struggle to launch a solo career after leaving perhaps the most influential rock band of all time; his work and friendships with fellow stars David Bowie and Iggy Pop; and his descent into drink and drug abuse following the success of Transformer, which sent him spinning out from gentle soul to rock'n'roll animal and brought a swift and calamitous end to their relationship. The result is a powerful and poignant meditation on love, loss, writing, and music. https://www.amazon.com/Perfect-Day-Intimate-Portrait-Life/dp/1911036068/ref=nodl_ Perfect Day: An Intimate Portrait Of Life With Lou Reed https://g.co/kgs/sKUW8p https://www.goodreads.com › showPerfect Day: My Life With Lou Reed by Bettye Kronstad | Goodreads https://postpunkmonk.com › book-...Book Week – Bettye Kronstad: Perfect Day; An Intimate Portrait Of Life With ... Ad·https://www.disneyplus.com/The Beatles Get Back - Now streaming on Disney+ .‘Get Back' Easter Eggs: From ‘Hard Day's Night' Callbacks to the Real Story of That Meeting at George's House.1 day ago .The Beatles get back in the UK Top 40 after Peter Jackson's Disney documentary.1 hour ago .Original ‘Let It Be' Director Defends His Film: ‘I Don't Care' That Ringo Hates It.1 month ago https://m.imdb.com › titleThe Beatles: Get Back (TV Mini Series 2021) - IMDb https://www.theguardian.com › decThe world owes Yoko an apology! 10 things we learned from The Beatles Please follow us on Youtube,Facebook,Instagram,Twitter,Patreon and at www.gettinglumpedup.com https://linktr.ee/RobRossi Get your T-shirt at https://www.prowrestlingtees.com/gettinglumpedup And https://www.bonfire.com/store/getting-lumped-up/ https://app.hashtag.expert/?fpr=roberto-rossi80 https://dc2bfnt-peyeewd4slt50d2x1b.hop.clickbank.net https://8bcded2xph1jdsb8mqp8th3y0n.hop.clickbank.net/?cbpage=nb Subscribe to the channel and hit the like button --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rob-rossi/support https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/getting-lumped-up-with-rob-rossi/id1448899708 https://open.spotify.com/show/00ZWLZaYqQlJji1QSoEz7a https://www.patreon.com/Gettinglumpedup #beatlesmania #beatles #beatlesforever #beatlesmemes #thebeatles #beatlescover #beatlesfan #thebeatles #documentary #documentaryphotography #documentaryfilm #bookstore #books #booksofinstagram #bookstack #bookshelf #booksbooksbooks #bookstagram #bookstagrammer --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rob-rossi/support

Civilcinema
#477 The Beatles: Get Back (2021), de Peter Jackson

Civilcinema

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2021 154:10


Viejos como el tiempo. Así deben haberse sentido John, Paul, George y Ringo al final de una larguísima década que jamás les dio tregua, y quizás ahí radica ese deseo de regresar, de mirar hacia atrás, hacia un punto de origen que apenas se divisa en las sesiones registradas por Michael Lindsay-Hogg y su equipo, en enero de 1969. Para quienes crecimos escuchando estas canciones en clave póstuma —porque así emergieron en Let it Be, en mayo de 1970, casi un año y medio después— acaso la mayor sorpresa del esfuerzo documental de Peter Jackson, es comprobar que estas sesiones no fueron un dechado de caos y discordia, sino la prueba viva de un ente que evoluciona, cambia y se adapta en la medida que sus integrantes se lanzan en distintas direcciones, incluyendo la de tocar y compartir, en armonía. Pasar casi ocho horas junto a The Beatles es una lección y al mismo tiempo un regalo. De eso hablamos y celebramos en este podcast.

Junk Filter
63: The Beatles: Get Back (with Rob Rousseau)

Junk Filter

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2021 97:15


Writer and podcaster Rob Rousseau joins me from Montreal to discuss Peter Jackson's new epic-length documentary about those four mop-topped Lads from Liverpool. The Beatles: Get Back draws from the raw material collected in 1969 by director Michael Lindsay-Hogg for his 1970 documentary Let It Be. More than just a documentary about the Beatles, Get Back is more importantly a film about the process of artistic expression and collaboration that also offers a detailed reconsideration of the official myths and legends about the final days of the band. Rob and I also discuss Smooth Ringo, Checked Out John, Handsome Paul and George's amazing fits. Patrons of the Junk Filter podcast receive access to additional exclusive episodes every month: some of our notable previous guests include Jacob Bacharach, Jared Yates Sexton, David Roth, Bryan Quinby, Karen Geier and more! Sign up at https://www.patreon.com/junkfilter Follow Rob Rousseau on Twitter, listen to his show The Insurgents, and check out his regular live show on Twitch. Ramsey Lewis - Cry Baby Cry Evinha - Something

RNZ: Saturday Morning
Michael Lindsay-Hogg: The unlikely star in new Beatles film 'Get Back'

RNZ: Saturday Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2021 39:58


Among the fascinating characters hovering around The Beatles in Peter Jackson's documentary Get Back is Michael Lindsay-Hogg, the director charged with making a film out of the band's rehearsals for 1970 album Let It Be.

RNZ: Saturday Morning
Michael Lindsay-Hogg: The unlikely star in new Beatles film 'Get Back'

RNZ: Saturday Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2021 39:58


Among the fascinating characters hovering around The Beatles in Peter Jackson's documentary Get Back is Michael Lindsay-Hogg, the director charged with making a film out of the band's rehearsals for 1970 album Let It Be.

The Walrus Was Paul
S2 B1 - Bonus Episode - Paul's take on the Get Back Documentary

The Walrus Was Paul

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2021 24:16


What's one more opinion, right? The Walrus Was Paul host Paul Romanuk has his take on the spectacular Peter Jackson Get Back documentary that has the Beatles (and non-Beatles) world buzzing. In a nutshell - how about some appreciation for the amazing work of the project's original director, Michael Lindsay-Hogg? Not only is he responsible for the 60+ hours of footage and 150+ hours of audio tapes that formed the backbone of 2021's Get Back, but, as the new film clearly shows, he accomplished this with a group of four musicians who were, at the time, pretty indifferent to the whole concept. You can find out more about Michael Lindsay-Hogg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Lindsay-Hogg (here), or at his personal webpage: https://michaellindsay-hogg.com/paintings (michael lindsay-hogg.com)

Phi Phenonenon
Episode 85 – 'Let It Be' v. 'Get Back'

Phi Phenonenon

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2021 70:47


Which is your favorite Beatle(s' documentary about making their last released album, one that ultimately documented simmering tensions that would lead to the band's breakup within a year)? The Beatles originally planned on following up their White Album recording sessions by getting back to their roots, recording without studio trickery or overdubs, and film the proceedings from January/February 1969 for a TV special. It didn't end up that way. The footage didn't show until well after the band's breakup, in 1970's 80-minute Let It Be, directed Michael Lindsay-Hogg. Out of print for decades, a long-promised restoration plan for that film morphed into the recently released three-part Get Back, directed by Peter Jackson, and clocking at 468 minutes — but without ever releasing the original film. Beatle lovers Ted Haycraft and Aaron Smith are on this episode as we discuss:- When the second volume Mark Lewisohn's mammoth All These Years three-volume Beatle biography might see the light of day;- misremembering all that Let It Be did not include of such a dramatic session;- whether or not Jackson and WETA's restoration work on the footage was overcooked;- or did Let It Be just need a subtitle track?Also:- Why Get Back is such a treasure for completists even if it's only played as background noise;- how its Thanksgiving release relitigates all questions of the Beatles' 50-year-old breakup;- (should they have made more an effort to integrate Harrison's eventual All Things Must Pass songs he offered?) (did Yoko Ono hang around way too close to Lennon during rehearsals?) (does she deserve to carry that weight she — still — gets from Beatles fans?);- and where these films stand on all-time behind-the-scenes music docs.Let It Be is not commercially available, though versions can be found online. The new three-part documentary Get Back, made from the same footage (restored and given VFX sweetener), is now streaming on Disney+.

The Movie Podcast
The Beatles: Get Back Review

The Movie Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2021 31:50


Daniel, Shahbaz, & Anthony review THE BEATLES: GET BACK, a Disney+ original docuseries directed by Peter Jackson. It is produced by Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono Lennon, Olivia Harrison, Jonathan Clyde, Clare Olssen and Peter Jackson, with Apple Corps' Jeff Jones and Ken Kamins serving as executive producers. The docuseries will debut exclusively on Disney+ November 25, 26, and 27, 2021.Listen now on all podcast feeds and on TheMoviePodcast.caContact: hello@themoviepodcast.ca“The Beatles: Get Back” takes audiences back in time to the band's January 1969 recording sessions, which became a pivotal moment in music history. The docuseries showcases The Beatles' creative process as they attempt to write 14 new songs in preparation for their first live concert in over two years. Faced with a nearly impossible deadline, the strong bonds of friendship shared by John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr are put to the test. The docuseries is compiled from nearly 60 hours of unseen footage shot over 21 days, directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg in 1969, and from more than 150 hours of unheard audio, most of which has been locked in a vault for over half a century. Jackson is the only person in 50 years to have been given access to this Beatles treasure trove, all of which has now been brilliantly restored. What emerges is an unbelievably intimate portrait of The Beatles, showing how, with their backs against the wall, they could still rely on their friendship, good humor, and creative geniusFOLLOW USDaniel on Twitter, Instagram, and LetterboxdShahbaz on Twitter, Instagram, and LetterboxdAnthony on Twitter, Instagram, and LetterboxdThe Movie Podcast on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, Discord, and YouTubeThe Movie Podcast is on a mission to hit 200 Apple Podcast reviews, click here to head over to our show page on APPLE PODCASTS and leave us a 5 STAR review!ABOUTThe Movie Podcast is one of Canada's top film and review podcasts. Every week you'll hear film lovers Daniel, Shahbaz, and Anthony discuss the biggest movie news, talk trailers, what's coming soon, ponder a unique topic of show, and speak to special guests from across the film industry. Catch a new episode of The Movie Podcast every Monday and watch out for Review episodes on all the latest movies and series.

Things We Said Today Beatles Radio
Things We Said Today #355 – Some Quality Time With Peter Jackson

Things We Said Today Beatles Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 232:10


In Episode 355 of Things We Said Today, Ken Michaels, Allan Kozinn and Darren DeVivo interview Peter Jackson, the director of “The Beatles: Get Back” – the most anticipated Beatles project since “The Beatles Anthology,” in 1995. Mr. Jackson is also, of course, the director of the “Lord of the Rings” and “Hobbit” trilogies, and the extraordinary World War I documentary, “They Shall Not Grow Old.” And true to form, the master of film epics spent no less than four hours with us. Included is lots of new information about the film and the techniques Mr. Jackson used to make it – including demonstrations of his new AI-based audio system (MAL), which goes far beyond spectral technology in separating layers of sound within a mono recording. Lots of talk as well about the Nagra tapes, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, the power dynamic within the Beatles during the making of “Let It Be,” and other topics – and a number of mysteries Mr. Jackson still wants to get to the bottom of.  NOTE: This is an audio version of the podcast. There is also a video version on our YouTube page. As always, we welcome your thoughts about this episode of the show or any other episode. We invite you to send your comments about this or any of our other shows to our email address thingswesaidtodayradioshow@gmail.com, join our "Things We Said Today Beatles Fans" Facebook page and comment there, tweet us at @thingswesaidfab or catch us each on Facebook and give us your thoughts. And we thank you very much for listening. You can hear and download our show on Podbean, the Podbean app and iTunes and stream us through the Tune In Radio app and from our very own YouTube page.  Our shows appear every two weeks. Please be sure and write a (good, ideally!) review of our show on our iTunes page. If you subscribe to any of our program providers, you'll get the first word as soon as a new show is available. We don't want you to miss us. Our download numbers have been continually rising, as more people discover us and it's all because of you. So we thank you very much for your support!

Dave Fanning
Let It Be with Michael Lindsay-Hogg

Dave Fanning

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2021 44:17


Ahead of the release of Peter Jackson's 'The Beatles: Get Back' Dave chats to director, Michael Lindsay-Hogg about filming the original 'Let It Be' film, released in 1970!

Bienvenido a los 90
P.803 - Se publica el libro 'Get Back' de The Beatles

Bienvenido a los 90

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2021 68:59


-- EN ABIERTO EL MIÉRCOLES 01/11 -- Con motivo del 50 aniversario de 'Let it Be', Apple propuso al director Peter Jackson reconstruir lo que ocurrió aquel enero de 1969. Michael Lindsay-Hogg y su equipo habían grabado a los Beatles durante 60 horas pero en la película de 1970, se utilizó una parte muy pequeña. Ahora con la nueva tecnología en audio y vídeo, los días 25 26 y 27 de noviembre se presentan 3 nuevos documentales en la plataforma de Disney+. Al margen de todo eso, se reedita el libro 'Get Back' con todas las conversaciones que los cuatro músicos y su equipo tuvieron en aquellas sesiones. Recomendación podcast musical: SIN BANDERA RADIO Espacio patrocinado por: CARMEN VENTURA, NORBERTO BLANQUER, JORDI, ROSA RIVAS, INFESTOS, 61 GARAGE, MR.KAFFE, ISRAEL, TOLO SENT, ANXO, RAUL SANCHEZ, VICTORGB, EDUARDO MAYORDONO, BARON72, EDUARDO VAQUERIZO, LIP, ALEJANDRO GOMEZ, DANI RM, JOCIO, AYTIRO SAKI, MARCOS, PABLO ARABIA, CARLOS CONSEGLIERI, JEKY LOSABE, CESMUNSAL, LARUBIAPRODUCCIONES, RUBIO CARBÓN, PILAR DÍEZ, ALFONSO MOYA, JON LÓPEZ, FERNANDO MASERO, RODRIGO GUADIÁN, DOMINGO SANTABÁRBARA, JOSE MIGUEL, ALEXANDER CASTAÑEDA, ANTO78, JULMORGON, JUANMI, MIGUEL BLANCO, JUAN CARLOS ACERO, GIULIA GOVERNI, PERE PASQUAL, SPINDA RECORDS, FRANC PUERTO, DAVICIN BLACKMETAL, NURIA SONABÉ, JM MORENTE, AGUI102, OCTAVIO OLIVA SÁNCHEZ, SCREAMING, AMANDA PATTERSON, APF, JON PEREZ, MIQUEL CH, ALVARO PEREZ, MIGUEL ANGEL TINTE, CARMENLIMBOSTAR, UNAI ELORDUI y varios oyentes anónimos. ¡¡GRACIAS!! 🙏

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs
Episode 135: “The Sound of Silence” by Simon and Garfunkel

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2021


Episode one hundred and thirty-five of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at “The Sound of Silence" by Simon and Garfunkel, and the many records they made, together and apart, before their success. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a ten-minute bonus episode available, on "Blues Run the Game" by Jackson C. Frank. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt's irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ Errata I talk about a tour of Lancashire towns, but some of the towns I mention were in Cheshire at the time, and some are in Greater Manchester or Merseyside now. They're all very close together though. I say Mose Rager was Black. I was misremembering, confusing Mose Rager, a white player in the Muhlenberg style, with Arnold Schultz, a Black player who invented it. I got this right in the episode on "Bye Bye Love". Also, I couldn't track down a copy of the Paul Kane single version of “He Was My Brother” in decent quality, so I used the version on The Paul Simon Songbook instead, as they're basically identical performances. Resources As usual, I've created a Mixcloud playlist of the music excerpted here. This compilation collects all Simon and Garfunkel's studio albums, with bonus tracks, plus a DVD of their reunion concert. There are many collections of the pre-S&G recordings by the two, as these are now largely in the public domain. This one contains a good selection. I've referred to several books for this episode: Simon and Garfunkel: Together Alone by Spencer Leigh is a breezy, well-researched, biography of the duo. Paul Simon: The Life by Robert Hilburn is the closest thing there is to an authorised biography of Simon. And What is it All But Luminous? is Art Garfunkel's memoir. It's not particularly detailed, being more a collection of thoughts and poetry than a structured narrative, but gives a good idea of Garfunkel's attitude to people and events in his life. Roots, Radicals, and Rockers: How Skiffle Changed the World by Billy Bragg has some great information on the British folk scene of the fifties and sixties. And Singing From the Floor is an oral history of British folk clubs, including a chapter on Dylan's 1962 visit to London. Patreon This podcast is brought to you by the generosity of my backers on Patreon. Why not join them? Transcript Today, we're going to take a look at a hit record that almost never happened -- a record by a duo who had already split up, twice, by the time it became a hit, and who didn't know it was going to come out. We're going to look at how a duo who started off as an Everly Brothers knockoff, before becoming unsuccessful Greenwich Village folkies, were turned into one of the biggest acts of the sixties by their producer. We're going to look at Simon and Garfunkel, and at "The Sound of Silence": [Excerpt: Simon and Garfunkel, "The Sound of Silence"] The story of Simon and Garfunkel starts with two children in a school play.  Neither Paul Simon or Art Garfunkel had many friends when they met in a school performance of Alice in Wonderland, where Simon was playing the White Rabbit and Garfunkel the Cheshire Cat. Simon was well-enough liked, by all accounts, but he'd been put on an accelerated programme for gifted students which meant he was progressing through school faster than his peers. He had a small social group, mostly based around playing baseball, but wasn't one of the popular kids. Art Garfunkel, another gifted student, had no friends at all until he got to know Simon, who he described later as his "one and only friend" in this time period. One passage in Garfunkel's autobiography seems to me to sum up everything about Garfunkel's personality as a child -- and indeed a large part of his personality as it comes across in interviews to this day. He talks about the pleasure he got from listening to the chart rundown on the radio -- "It was the numbers that got me. I kept meticulous lists—when a new singer like Tony Bennett came onto the charts with “Rags to Riches,” I watched the record jump from, say, #23 to #14 in a week. The mathematics of the jumps went to my sense of fun." Garfunkel is, to this day, a meticulous person -- on his website he has a list of every book he's read since June 1968, which is currently up to one thousand three hundred and ten books, and he has always had a habit of starting elaborate projects and ticking off every aspect of them as he goes. Both Simon and Garfunkel were outsiders at this point, other than their interests in sport, but Garfunkel was by far the more introverted of the two, and as a result he seems to have needed their friendship more than Simon did. But the two boys developed an intense, close, friendship, initially based around their shared sense of humour. Both of them were avid readers of Mad magazine, which had just started publishing when the two of them had met up, and both could make each other laugh easily. But they soon developed a new interest, when Martin Block on the middle-of-the-road radio show Make Believe Ballroom announced that he was going to play the worst record he'd ever heard. That record was "Gee" by the Crows: [Excerpt: The Crows, "Gee"] Paul Simon later said that that record was the first thing he'd ever heard on that programme that he liked, and soon he and Garfunkel had become regular listeners to Alan Freed's show on WINS, loving the new rock and roll music they were discovering. Art had already been singing in public from an early age -- his first public performance had been singing Nat "King" Cole's hit "Too Young" in a school talent contest when he was nine -- but the two started singing together. The first performance by Simon and Garfunkel was at a high school dance and, depending on which source you read, was a performance either of "Sh'Boom" or of Big Joe Turner's "Flip, Flop, and Fly": [Excerpt: Big Joe Turner, "Flip, Flop, and Fly"] The duo also wrote at least one song together as early as 1955 -- or at least Garfunkel says they wrote it together. Paul Simon describes it as one he wrote. They tried to get a record deal with the song, but it was never recorded at the time -- but Simon has later performed it: [Excerpt: Paul Simon, "The Girl For Me"] Even at this point, though, while Art Garfunkel was putting all his emotional energy into the partnership with Simon, Simon was interested in performing with other people. Al Kooper was another friend of Simon's at the time, and apparently Simon and Kooper would also perform together. Once Elvis came on to Paul's radar, he also bought a guitar, but it was when the two of them first heard the Everly Brothers that they realised what it was that they could do together. Simon fell in love with the Everly Brothers as soon as he heard "Bye Bye Love": [Excerpt: The Everly Brothers, "Bye Bye Love"] Up to this point, Paul hadn't bought many records -- he spent his money on baseball cards and comic books, and records just weren't good value. A pack of baseball cards was five cents, a comic book was ten cents, but a record was a dollar. Why buy records when you could hear music on the radio for free? But he needed that record, he couldn't just wait around to hear it on the radio. He made an hour-long two-bus journey to a record shop in Queens, bought the record, took it home, played it... and almost immediately scratched it. So he got back on the bus, travelled for another hour, bought another copy, took it home, and made sure he didn't scratch that one. Simon and Garfunkel started copying the Everlys' harmonies, and would spend hours together, singing close together watching each other's mouths and copying the way they formed words, eventually managing to achieve a vocal blend through sheer effort which would normally only come from familial closeness. Paul became so obsessed with music that he sold his baseball card collection and bought a tape recorder for two hundred dollars. They would record themselves singing, and then sing back along with it, multitracking themselves, but also critiquing the tape, refining their performances. Paul's father was a bass player -- "the family bassman", as he would later sing -- and encouraged his son in his music, even as he couldn't see the appeal in this new rock and roll music. He would critique Paul's songs, saying things like "you went from four-four to a bar of nine-eight, you can't do that" -- to which his son would say "I just did" -- but this wasn't hostile criticism, rather it was giving his son a basic grounding in song construction which would prove invaluable. But the duo's first notable original song -- and first hit -- came about more or less by accident. In early 1956, the doo-wop group the Clovers had released the hit single "Devil or Angel". Its B-side had a version of "Hey Doll Baby", a song written by the blues singer Titus Turner, and which sounds to me very inspired by Hank Williams' "Hey, Good Lookin'": [Excerpt: The Clovers, "Hey, Doll Baby"] That song was picked up by the Everly Brothers, who recorded it for their first album: [Excerpt: The Everly Brothers, "Hey Doll Baby"] Here is where the timeline gets a little confused for me, because that album wasn't released until early 1958, although the recording session for that track was in August 1957. Yet that track definitely influenced Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel to record a song that they released in November 1957. All I can imagine is that they heard the brothers perform it live, or maybe a radio station had an acetate copy. Because the way everyone has consistently told the story is that at the end of summer 1957, Simon and Garfunkel had both heard the Everly Brothers perform "Hey Doll Baby", but couldn't remember how it went. The two of them tried to remember it, and to work a version of it out together, and their hazy memories combined to reconstruct something that was completely different, and which owed at least as much to "Wake Up Little Suzie" as to "Hey Doll Baby". Their new song, "Hey Schoolgirl", was catchy enough that they thought if they recorded a demo of it, maybe the Everly Brothers themselves would record the song. At the demo studio they happened to encounter Sid Prosen, who owned a small record label named Big Records. He heard the duo perform and realised he might have his own Everly Brothers here. He signed the duo to a contract, and they went into a professional studio to rerecord "Hey Schoolgirl", this time with Paul's father on bass, and a couple of other musicians to fill out the sound: [Excerpt: Tom and Jerry, "Hey Schoolgirl"] Of course, the record couldn't be released under their real names -- there was no way anyone was going to buy a record by Simon and Garfunkel. So instead they became Tom and Jerry. Paul Simon was Jerry Landis -- a surname he chose because he had a crush on a girl named Sue Landis. Art became Tom Graff, because he liked drawing graphs. "Hey Schoolgirl" became a local hit. The two were thrilled to hear it played on Alan Freed's show (after Sid Prosen gave Freed two hundred dollars), and were even more thrilled when they got to perform on American Bandstand, on the same show as Jerry Lee Lewis. When Dick Clark asked them where they were from, Simon decided to claim he was from Macon, Georgia, where Little Richard came from, because all his favourite rock and roll singers were from the South. "Hey Schoolgirl" only made number forty-nine nationally, because the label didn't have good national distribution, but it sold over a hundred thousand copies, mostly in the New York area. And Sid Prosen seems to have been one of a very small number of independent label owners who wasn't a crook -- the two boys got about two thousand dollars each from their hit record. But while Tom and Jerry seemed like they might have a successful career, Simon and Garfunkel were soon to split up, and the reason for their split was named True Taylor. Paul had been playing some of his songs for Sid Prosen, to see what the duo's next single should be, and Prosen had noticed that while some of them were Everly Brothers soundalikes, others were Elvis soundalikes. Would Paul be interested in recording some of those, too? Obviously Art couldn't sing on those, so they'd use a different name, True Taylor. The single was released around the same time as the second Tom and Jerry record, and featured an Elvis-style ballad by Paul on one side, and a rockabilly song written by his father on the other: [Excerpt: True Taylor, "True or False"] But Paul hadn't discussed that record with Art before doing it, and the two had vastly different ideas about their relationship. Paul was Art's only friend, and Art thought they had an indissoluble bond and that they would always work together. Paul, on the other hand, thought of Art as one of his friends and someone he made music with, but he could play at being Elvis if he wanted, as well as playing at being an Everly brother. Garfunkel, in his memoir published in 2017, says "the friendship was shattered for life" -- he decided then and there that Paul Simon was a "base" person, a betrayer. But on the other hand, he still refers to Simon, over and over again, in that book as still being his friend, even as Simon has largely been disdainful of him since their last performance together in 2010. Friendships are complicated. Tom and Jerry struggled on for a couple more singles, which weren't as successful as "Hey Schoolgirl" had been, with material like "Two Teenagers", written by Rose Marie McCoy: [Excerpt: Tom and Jerry, "Two Teenagers"] But as they'd stopped being friends, and they weren't selling records, they drifted apart and didn't really speak for five years, though they would occasionally run into one another. They both went off to university, and Garfunkel basically gave up on the idea of having a career in music, though he did record a couple of singles, under the name "Artie Garr": [Excerpt: Artie Garr, "Beat Love"] But for the most part, Garfunkel concentrated on his studies, planning to become either an architect or maybe an academic. Paul Simon, on the other hand, while he was technically studying at university too, was only paying minimal attention to his studies. Instead, he was learning the music business. Every afternoon, after university had finished, he'd go around the Brill Building and its neighbouring buildings, offering his services both as a songwriter and as a demo performer. As Simon was competent on guitar, bass, and drums, could sing harmonies, and could play a bit of piano if it was in the key of C, he could use primitive multitracking to play and sing all the parts on a demo, and do it well: [Excerpt: Paul Simon, "Boys Were Made For Girls"] That's an excerpt from a demo Simon recorded for Burt Bacharach, who has said that he tried to get Simon to record as many of his demos as possible, though only a couple of them have surfaced publicly. Simon would also sometimes record demos with his friend Carole Klein, sometimes under the name The Cosines: [Excerpt: The Cosines, "Just to Be With You"] As we heard back in the episode on "Will You Love Me Tomorrow?", Carole Klein went on to change her name to Carole King, and become one of the most successful songwriters of the era -- something which spurred Paul Simon on, as he wanted to emulate her success. Simon tried to get signed up by Don Kirshner, who was publishing Goffin and King, but Kirshner turned Simon down -- an expensive mistake for Kirshner, but one that would end up benefiting Simon, who eventually figured out that he should own his own publishing. Simon was also getting occasional work as a session player, and played lead guitar on "The Shape I'm In" by Johnny Restivo, which made the lower reaches of the Hot One Hundred: [Excerpt: Johnny Restivo, "The Shape I'm In"] Between 1959 and 1963 Simon recorded a whole string of unsuccessful pop singles. including as a member of the Mystics: [Excerpt: The Mystics, "All Through the Night"] He even had a couple of very minor chart hits -- he got to number 99 as Tico and the Triumphs: [Excerpt: Tico and the Triumphs, "Motorcycle"] and number ninety-seven as Jerry Landis: [Excerpt: Jerry Landis, "The Lone Teen Ranger"] But he was jumping around, hopping onto every fad as it passed, and not getting anywhere. And then he started to believe that he could do something more interesting in music. He first became aware that the boundaries of what could be done in music extended further than "ooh-bop-a-loochy-ba" when he took a class on modern music at university, which included a trip to Carnegie Hall to hear a performance of music by the avant-garde composer Edgard Varese: [Excerpt: Edgard Varese, "Ionisation"] Simon got to meet Varese after the performance, and while he would take his own music in a very different, and much more commercial, direction than Varese's, he was nonetheless influenced by what Varese's music showed about the possibilities that existed in music. The other big influence on Simon at this time was when he heard The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan: [Excerpt: Bob Dylan, "Girl From the North Country"] Simon immediately decided to reinvent himself as a folkie, despite at this point knowing very little about folk music other than the Everly Brothers' Songs Our Daddy Taught Us album. He tried playing around Greenwich Village, but found it an uncongenial atmosphere, and inspired by the liner notes to the Dylan album, which talked about Dylan's time in England, he made what would be the first of several trips to the UK, where he was given a rapturous reception simply on the grounds of being an American and owning a better acoustic guitar -- a Martin -- than most British people owned. He had the showmanship that he'd learned from watching his father on stage and sometimes playing with him, and from his time in Tom and Jerry and working round the studios, and so he was able to impress the British folk-club audiences, who were used to rather earnest, scholarly, people, not to someone like Simon who was clearly ambitious and very showbiz. His repertoire at this point consisted mostly of songs from the first two Dylan albums, a Joan Baez record, Little Willie John's "Fever", and one song he'd written himself, an attempt at a protest song called "He Was My Brother", which he would release on his return to the US under yet another stage name, Paul Kane: [Excerpt: Paul Kane, "He Was My Brother"] Simon has always stated that that song was written about a friend of his who was murdered when he went down to Mississippi with the Freedom Riders -- but while Simon's friend was indeed murdered, it wasn't until about a year after he wrote the song, and Simon has confused the timelines in his subsequent recollections. At the time he recorded that, when he had returned to New York at the end of the summer, Simon had a job as a song plugger for a publishing company, and he gave the publishing company the rights to that song and its B-side, which led to that B-side getting promoted by the publisher, and ending up covered on one of the biggest British albums of 1964, which went to number two in the UK charts: [Excerpt: Val Doonican, "Carlos Dominguez"] Oddly, that may not end up being the only time we feature a Val Doonican track on this podcast. Simon continued his attempts to be a folkie, even teaming up again with Art Garfunkel, with whom he'd re-established contact, to perform in Greenwich Village as Kane and Garr, but they went down no better as a duo than Simon had as a solo artist. Simon went back to the UK again over Christmas 1963, and while he was there he continued work on a song that would become such a touchstone for him that of the first six albums he would be involved in, four would feature the song while a fifth would include a snippet of it. "The Sound of Silence" was apparently started in November 1963, but not finished until February 1964, by which time he was once again back in the USA, and back working as a song plugger. It was while working as a song plugger that Simon first met Tom Wilson, Bob Dylan's producer at Columbia. Simon met up with Wilson trying to persuade him to use some of the songs that the publishing company were putting out. When Wilson wasn't interested, Simon played him a couple of his own songs. Wilson took one of them, "He Was My Brother", for the Pilgrims, a group he was producing who were supposed to be the Black answer to Peter, Paul, and Mary: [Excerpt: The Pilgrims, "He Was My Brother"] Wilson was also interested in "The Sound of Silence", but Simon was more interested in getting signed as a performer than in having other acts perform his songs. Wilson was cautious, though -- he was already producing one folkie singer-songwriter, and he didn't really need a second one. But he *could* probably do with a vocal group... Simon mentioned that he had actually made a couple of records before, as part of a duo. Would Wilson be at all interested in a vocal *duo*? Wilson would be interested. Simon and Garfunkel auditioned for him, and a few days later were in the Columbia Records studio on Seventh Avenue recording their first album as a duo, which was also the first time either of them would record under their own name. Wednesday Morning, 3AM, the duo's first album, was a simple acoustic album, and the only instrumentation was Simon and Barry Kornfeld, a Greenwich Village folkie, on guitars, and Bill Lee, the double bass player who'd played with Dylan and others, on bass. Tom Wilson guided the duo in their song selection, and the eventual album contained six cover versions and six originals written by Simon. The cover versions were a mixture of hootenanny staples like "Go Tell it on the Mountain", plus Dylan's "The Times They Are A-Changin'", included to cross-promote Dylan's new album and to try to link the duo with the more famous writer, and one unusual one, "The Sun is Burning", written by Ian Campbell, a Scottish folk singer who Simon had got to know on his trips to the UK: [Excerpt: Simon and Garfunkel, "The Sun is Burning"] But the song that everyone was keenest on was "The Sound of Silence", the first song that Simon had written that he thought would stand up in comparison with the sort of song that Dylan was writing: [Excerpt: Simon and Garfunkel, "The Sound of Silence (Wednesday Morning 3AM version)"] In between sessions for the album, Simon and Garfunkel also played a high-profile gig at Gerde's Folk City in the Village, and a couple of shows at the Gaslight Cafe. The audiences there, though, regarded them as a complete joke -- Dave Van Ronk would later relate that for weeks afterwards, all anyone had to do was sing "Hello darkness, my old friend", for everyone around to break into laughter. Bob Dylan was one of those who laughed at the performance -- though Robert Shelton later said that Dylan hadn't been laughing at them, specifically, he'd just had a fit of the giggles -- and this had led to a certain amount of anger from Simon towards Dylan. The album was recorded in March 1964, and was scheduled for release  in October. In the meantime, they both made plans to continue with their studies and their travels. Garfunkel was starting to do postgraduate work towards his doctorate in mathematics, while Simon was now enrolled in Brooklyn Law School, but was still spending most of his time travelling, and would drop out after one semester. He would spend much of the next eighteen months in the UK. While he was occasionally in the US between June 1964 and November 1965, Simon now considered himself based in England, where he made several acquaintances that would affect his life deeply. Among them were a young woman called Kathy Chitty, with whom he would fall in love and who would inspire many of his songs, and an older woman called Judith Piepe (and I apologise if I'm mispronouncing her name, which I've only ever seen written down, never heard) who many people believed had an unrequited crush on Simon. Piepe ran her London flat as something of a commune for folk musicians, and Simon lived there for months at a time while in the UK. Among the other musicians who stayed there for a time were Sandy Denny, Cat Stevens, and Al Stewart, whose bedroom was next door to Simon's. Piepe became Simon's de facto unpaid manager and publicist, and started promoting him around the British folk scene. Simon also at this point became particularly interested in improving his guitar playing. He was spending a lot of time at Les Cousins, the London club that had become the centre of British acoustic guitar. There are, roughly, three styles of acoustic folk guitar -- to be clear, I'm talking about very broad-brush categorisations here, and there are people who would disagree and say there are more, but these are the main ones. Two of these are American styles -- there's the simple style known as Carter scratching, popularised by Mother Maybelle Carter of the Carter family, and for this all you do is alternate bass notes with your thumb while scratching the chord on the treble strings with one finger, like this: [Excerpt: Carter picking] That's the style played by a lot of country and folk players who were primarily singers accompanying themselves. In the late forties and fifties, though, another style had become popularised -- Travis picking. This is named after Merle Travis, the most well-known player in the style, but he always called it Muhlenberg picking, after Muhlenberg County, where he'd learned the style from Ike Everly -- the Everly Brothers' father -- and Mose Rager, a Black guitarist. In Travis picking, the thumb alternates between two bass notes, but rather than strumming a chord, the index and middle fingers play simple patterns on the treble strings, like this: [Excerpt: Travis picking] That's, again, a style primarily used for accompaniment, but it can also be used to play instrumentals by oneself. As well as Travis and Ike Everly, it's also the style played by Donovan, Chet Atkins, James Taylor, and more. But there's a third style, British baroque folk guitar, which was largely the invention of Davey Graham. Graham, you might remember, was a folk guitarist who had lived in the same squat as Lionel Bart when Bart started working with Tommy Steele, and who had formed a blues duo with Alexis Korner. Graham is now best known for one of his simpler pieces, “Anji”, which became the song that every British guitarist tried to learn: [Excerpt: Davey Graham, "Anji"] Dozens of people, including Paul Simon, would record versions of that. Graham invented an entirely new style of guitar playing, influenced by ragtime players like Blind Blake, but also by Bach, by Moroccan oud music, and by Celtic bagpipe music. While it was fairly common for players to retune their guitar to an open major chord, allowing them to play slide guitar, Graham retuned his to a suspended fourth chord -- D-A-D-G-A-D -- which allowed him to keep a drone going on some strings while playing complex modal counterpoints on others. While I demonstrated the previous two styles myself, I'm nowhere near a good enough guitarist to demonstrate British folk baroque, so here's an excerpt of Davey Graham playing his own arrangement of the traditional ballad "She Moved Through the Fair", recast as a raga and retitled "She Moved Thru' the Bizarre": [Excerpt: Davey Graham, "She Moved Thru' the Bizarre"] Graham's style was hugely influential on an entire generation of British guitarists, people who incorporated world music and jazz influences into folk and blues styles, and that generation of guitarists was coming up at the time and playing at Les Cousins. People who started playing in this style included Jimmy Page, Bert Jansch, Roy Harper, John Renbourn, Richard Thompson, Nick Drake, and John Martyn, and it also had a substantial influence on North American players like Joni Mitchell, Tim Buckley, and of course Paul Simon. Simon was especially influenced at this time by Martin Carthy, the young British guitarist whose style was very influenced by Graham -- but while Graham applied his style to music ranging from Dave Brubeck to Lutheran hymns to Big Bill Broonzy songs, Carthy mostly concentrated on traditional English folk songs. Carthy had a habit of taking American folk singers under his wing, and he taught Simon several songs, including Carthy's own arrangement of the traditional "Scarborough Fair": [Excerpt: Martin Carthy, "Scarborough Fair"] Simon would later record that arrangement, without crediting Carthy, and this would lead to several decades of bad blood between them, though Carthy forgave him in the 1990s, and the two performed the song together at least once after that. Indeed, Simon seems to have made a distinctly negative impression on quite a few of the musicians he knew in Britain at this time, who seem to, at least in retrospect, regard him as having rather used and discarded them as soon as his career became successful. Roy Harper has talked in liner notes to CD reissues of his work from this period about how Simon used to regularly be a guest in his home, and how he has memories of Simon playing with Harper's baby son Nick (now himself one of the greats of British guitar) but how as soon as he became successful he never spoke to Harper again. Similarly, in 1965 Simon started a writing partnership with Bruce Woodley of the Seekers, an Australian folk-pop band based in the UK, best known for "Georgy Girl". The two wrote "Red Rubber Ball", which became a hit for the Cyrkle: [Excerpt: The Cyrke, "Red Rubber Ball"] and also "Cloudy", which the Seekers recorded as an album track: [Excerpt: The Seekers, "Cloudy"] When that was recorded by Simon and Garfunkel, Woodley's name was removed from the writing credits, though Woodley still apparently received royalties for it. But at this point there *was* no Simon and Garfunkel. Paul Simon was a solo artist working the folk clubs in Britain, and Simon and Garfunkel's one album had sold a minuscule number of copies. They did, when Simon briefly returned to the US in March, record two tracks for a prospective single, this time with an electric backing band. One was a rewrite of the title track of their first album, now titled "Somewhere They Can't Find Me" and with a new chorus and some guitar parts nicked from Davey Graham's "Anji"; the other a Twist-beat song that could almost be Manfred Mann or Georgie Fame -- "We Got a Groovy Thing Goin'". That was also influenced by “Anji”, though by Bert Jansch's version rather than Graham's original. Jansch rearranged the song and stuck in this phrase: [Excerpt: Bert Jansch, “Anji”] Which became the chorus to “We Got a Groovy Thing Goin'”: [Excerpt: Simon and Garfunkel, "We Got a Groovy Thing Goin'"] But that single was never released, and as far as Columbia were concerned, Simon and Garfunkel were a defunct act, especially as Tom Wilson, who had signed them, was looking to move away from Columbia. Art Garfunkel did come to visit Simon in the UK a couple of times, and they'd even sing together occasionally, but it was on the basis of Paul Simon the successful club act occasionally inviting his friend on stage during the encore, rather than as a duo, and Garfunkel was still seeing music only as a sideline while Simon was now utterly committed to it. He was encouraged in this commitment by Judith Piepe, who considered him to be the greatest songwriter of his generation, and who started a letter-writing campaign to that effect, telling the BBC they needed to put him on the radio. Eventually, after a lot of pressure, they agreed -- though they weren't exactly sure what to do with him, as he didn't fit into any of the pop formats they had. He was given his own radio show -- a five-minute show in a religious programming slot. Simon would perform a song, and there would be an introduction tying the song into some religious theme or other. Two series of four episodes of this were broadcast, in a plum slot right after Housewives' Choice, which got twenty million listeners, and the BBC were amazed to find that a lot of people phoned in asking where they could get hold of the records by this Paul Simon fellow. Obviously he didn't have any out yet, and even the Simon and Garfunkel album, which had been released in the US, hadn't come out in Britain. After a little bit of negotiation, CBS, the British arm of Columbia Records, had Simon come in and record an album of his songs, titled The Paul Simon Songbook. The album, unlike the Simon and Garfunkel album, was made up entirely of Paul Simon originals. Two of them were songs that had previously been recorded for Wednesday Morning 3AM -- "He Was My Brother" and a new version of "The Sound of Silence": [Excerpt: Paul Simon, "The Sound of Silence"] The other ten songs were newly-written pieces like "April Come She Will", "Kathy's Song", a parody of Bob Dylan entitled "A Simple Desultory Philippic", and the song that was chosen as the single, "I am a Rock": [Excerpt: Paul Simon, "I am a Rock"] That song was also the one that was chosen for Simon's first TV appearance since Tom and Jerry had appeared on Bandstand eight years earlier. The appearance on Ready, Steady, Go, though, was not one that anyone was happy with. Simon had been booked to appear on  a small folk music series, Heartsong, but that series was cancelled before he could appear. Rediffusion, the company that made the series, also made Ready, Steady, Go, and since they'd already paid Simon they decided they might as well stick him on that show and get something for their money. Unfortunately, the episode in question was already running long, and it wasn't really suited for introspective singer-songwriter performances -- the show was geared to guitar bands and American soul singers. Michael Lindsay-Hogg, the director, insisted that if Simon was going to do his song, he had to cut at least one verse, while Simon was insistent that he needed to perform the whole thing because "it's a story". Lindsay-Hogg got his way, but nobody was happy with the performance. Simon's album was surprisingly unsuccessful, given the number of people who'd called the BBC asking about it -- the joke went round that the calls had all been Judith Piepe doing different voices -- and Simon continued his round of folk clubs, pubs, and birthday parties, sometimes performing with Garfunkel, when he visited for the summer, but mostly performing on his own. One time he did perform with a full band, singing “Johnny B Goode” at a birthday party, backed by a band called Joker's Wild who a couple of weeks later went into the studio to record their only privately-pressed five-song record, of them performing recent hits: [Excerpt: Joker's Wild, "Walk Like a Man"] The guitarist from Joker's Wild would later join the other band who'd played at that party, but the story of David Gilmour joining Pink Floyd is for another episode. During this time, Simon also produced his first record for someone else, when he was responsible for producing the only album by his friend Jackson C Frank, though there wasn't much production involved as like Simon's own album it was just one man and his guitar. Al Stewart and Art Garfunkel were also in the control room for the recording, but the notoriously shy Frank insisted on hiding behind a screen so they couldn't see him while he recorded: [Excerpt: Jackson C Frank, "Blues Run the Game"] It seemed like Paul Simon was on his way to becoming a respected mid-level figure on the British folk scene, releasing occasional albums and maybe having one or two minor hits, but making a steady living. Someone who would be spoken of in the same breath as Ralph McTell perhaps. Meanwhile, Art Garfunkel would be going on to be a lecturer in mathematics whose students might be surprised to know he'd had a minor rock and roll hit as a kid. But then something happened that changed everything. Wednesday Morning 3AM hadn't sold at all, and Columbia hadn't promoted it in the slightest. It was too collegiate and polite for the Greenwich Village folkies, and too intellectual for the pop audience that had been buying Peter, Paul, and Mary, and it had come out just at the point that the folk boom had imploded. But one DJ in Boston, Dick Summer, had started playing one song from it, "The Sound of Silence", and it had caught on with the college students, who loved the song. And then came spring break 1965. All those students went on holiday, and suddenly DJs in places like Cocoa Beach, Florida, were getting phone calls requesting "The Sound of Silence" by Simon and Garfunkel. Some of them with contacts at Columbia got in touch with the label, and Tom Wilson had an idea. On the first day of what turned out to be his last session with Dylan, the session for "Like a Rolling Stone", Wilson asked the musicians to stay behind and work on something. He'd already experimented with overdubbing new instruments on an acoustic recording with his new version of Dylan's "House of the Rising Sun", now he was going to try it with "The Sound of Silence". He didn't bother asking the duo what they thought -- record labels messed with people's records all the time. So "The Sound of Silence" was released as an electric folk-rock single: [Excerpt: Simon and Garfunkel, "The Sound of Silence"] This is always presented as Wilson massively changing the sound of the duo without their permission or knowledge, but the fact is that they had *already* gone folk-rock, back in March, so they were already thinking that way. The track was released as a single with “We Got a Groovy Thing Going” on the B-side, and was promoted first in the Boston market, and it did very well. Roy Harper later talked about Simon's attitude at this time, saying "I can remember going into the gents in The Three Horseshoes in Hempstead during a gig, and we're having a pee together. He was very excited, and he turns round to me and and says, “Guess what, man? We're number sixteen in Boston with The Sound of Silence'”. A few days later I was doing another gig with him and he made a beeline for me. “Guess what?” I said “You're No. 15 in Boston”. He said, “No man, we're No. 1 in Boston”. I thought, “Wow. No. 1 in Boston, eh?” It was almost a joke, because I really had no idea what that sort of stuff meant at all." Simon was even more excited when the record started creeping up the national charts, though he was less enthused when his copy of the single arrived from America. He listened to it, and thought the arrangement was a Byrds rip-off, and cringed at the way the rhythm section had to slow down and speed up in order to stay in time with the acoustic recording: [Excerpt: Simon and Garfunkel, "The Sound of Silence"] I have to say that, while the tempo fluctuations are noticeable once you know to look for them, it's a remarkably tight performance given the circumstances. As the record went up the charts, Simon was called back to America, to record an album to go along with it. The Paul Simon Songbook hadn't been released in the US,  and they needed an album *now*, and Simon was a slow songwriter, so the duo took six songs from that album and rerecorded them in folk-rock versions with their new producer Bob Johnston, who was also working with Dylan now, since Tom Wilson had moved on to Verve records. They filled out the album with "The Sound of Silence", the two electric tracks from March, one new song, "Blessed", and a version of "Anji", which came straight after "Somewhere They Can't Find Me", presumably to acknowledge Simon lifting bits of it. That version of “Anji” also followed Jansch's arrangement, and so included the bit that Simon had taken for “We Got a Groovy Thing Going” as well. They also recorded their next single, which was released on the British version of the album but not the American one, a song that Simon had written during a thoroughly depressing tour of Lancashire towns (he wrote it in Widnes, but a friend of Simon's who lived in Widnes later said that while it was written in Widnes it was written *about* Birkenhead. Simon has also sometimes said it was about Warrington or Wigan, both of which are so close to Widnes and so similar in both name and atmosphere that it would be the easiest thing in the world to mix them up.) [Excerpt: Simon and Garfunkel, "Homeward Bound"] These tracks were all recorded in December 1965, and they featured the Wrecking Crew -- Bob Johnston wanted the best, and didn't rate the New York players that Wilson had used, and so they were recorded in LA with Glen Campbell, Joe South, Hal Blaine, Larry Knechtel, and Joe Osborne. I've also seen in some sources that there were sessions in Nashville with A-team players Fred Carter and Charlie McCoy. By January, "The Sound of Silence" had reached number one, knocking "We Can Work it Out" by the Beatles off the top spot for two weeks, before the Beatles record went back to the top. They'd achieved what they'd been trying for for nearly a decade, and I'll give the last word here to Paul Simon, who said of the achievement: "I had come back to New York, and I was staying in my old room at my parents' house. Artie was living at his parents' house, too. I remember Artie and I were sitting there in my car one night, parked on a street in Queens, and the announcer said, "Number one, Simon & Garfunkel." And Artie said to me, "That Simon & Garfunkel, they must be having a great time.""

christmas united states america tv american new york history game black world art english uk house england british sound song dj friendship wild australian devil nashville south silence blessed bbc mountain sun fall in love britain cbs joker beatles roots queens mississippi columbia cd burning dvd rolling stones scottish village elvis rock and roll north american flip floor bob dylan twist bart djs riches pilgrims fever bach celtic mad pink floyd steady flop freed triumphs motorcycle alice in wonderland wins carnegie hall joni mitchell lutheran tilt paul simon seekers housewives moroccan gee james taylor mixcloud little richard tony bennett rags rising sun rock music lancashire cheshire garfunkel greenwich village tom wilson cloudy jimmy page macon woodley merseyside radicals wigan jerry lee lewis carole king white rabbit nat king cole verve artie go tell joan baez byrds burt bacharach rediffusion sound of silence hank williams cat stevens columbia records warrington glen campbell david gilmour greater manchester nick drake billy bragg wrecking crew walk like wednesday morning everly brothers dave brubeck richard thompson art garfunkel bill lee manfred mann varese freedom riders tico cheshire cat american bandstand chet atkins johnny b goode hempstead tim buckley too young brooklyn law school cocoa beach al stewart garr heartsong anji bandstand clovers carthy simon and garfunkel john martyn kirshner ian campbell freewheelin birkenhead al kooper brill building goffin roy harper hal blaine sandy denny big bill broonzy big joe turner muhlenberg alan freed all through times they are a changin kooper widnes bert jansch merle travis paul kane dave van ronk bye bye love seventh avenue michael lindsay hogg martin carthy bob johnston jackson c frank joe south lionel bart ralph mctell blind blake tommy steele little willie john charlie mccoy don kirshner john renbourn georgy girl dave gilmour will you love me tomorrow gameit robert hilburn mother maybelle carter everlys martin block both simon blues run gaslight cafe she moved through we can work make believe ballroom edgard varese dick summer davey graham rockers how skiffle changed in travis paul simon the life tilt araiza
I Know I Know: A Solo Beatles Podcast
Let it be: My Chat With Michael Lindsay-Hogg

I Know I Know: A Solo Beatles Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 35:49


Let it be? This man has done it all. He is none other than Michael Lindsay-Hogg. He has worked with the Beatles, Stones, Wings, The Who, and many other notable artists.To Get in contact with the show, reach us at beatlesradioshow@icloud.com.Keep Up with MLHmichaellindsay-hogg.com

Morning Meeting
Episode 37: The New Status Symbol? Being Boring!

Morning Meeting

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2021 27:16


The secret to being rich and successful? Be boring! Strange as it seems, the evidence is strong. And this week, Ashley and Mike talk about why the trend is catching on. There's also a look at the true-crime story that has gripped France, as well as a London apartment that is selling for a reported $241 million. Plus, noted director and writer Michael Lindsay-Hogg stops by to share his memories of the great life lived by actor Norman Lloyd.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Morning Meeting
Episode 37: The New Status Symbol? Being Boring!

Morning Meeting

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2021 27:16


Morning Meeting is where the conversation begins. Listen in! The secret to being rich and successful? Be boring! Strange as it seems, the evidence is strong. And this week, Ashley and Mike talk about why the trend is catching on. There’s also a look at the true-crime story that has gripped France, as well as a London apartment with an asking price of $241 million. Plus, noted director and writer Michael Lindsay-Hogg stops by to share his memories of the great life lived by actor Norman Lloyd. You’ll find all this and much more in this week’s Morning Meeting. Listen by clicking Play below. But be sure to subscribe at Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you don’t miss an episode. View on Air Mail

Something About the Beatles
200: A Conversation with Ethan Russell (part two)

Something About the Beatles

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2020 93:23


For SATB's 200th episode (more or less), we're doing something special: returning with guest photographer/writer Ethan Russell, one of this most storied individuals in rock history through his iconic visual documentation of The Beatles, the Rolling Stones and The Who, to name three (scores more as well). Ethan was the official rock photographer of the Rock 'n' Roll Circus, the Let It Be sessions, the final Beatles group photo shoot, as well as behind tons of other classic images, most of which have been gathered up and published in his latest book, Photographs - a singular monograph of superlative visuals presented in stunning quality. It's available only at his website: www.ethanrussell.com  I spoke with Ethan last year and this follow on covers more details of his work with the Fabs: his impressions of them individually - of Yoko - of the Let It Be project and Michael Lindsay-Hogg, as well as of Peter Jackson (of whose upcoming work Ethan got a peek). Ethan came of age in San Francisco and went to London in 1967 - within a year he was in the orbit of the top British acts of the day. As a chronicler of the times, his work and observations are impeccable.   

Something About the Beatles
200: A Conversation with Ethan Russell (part two)

Something About the Beatles

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2020 93:23


For SATB's 200th episode (more or less), we're doing something special: returning with guest photographer/writer Ethan Russell, one of this most storied individuals in rock history through his iconic visual documentation of The Beatles, the Rolling Stones and The Who, to name three (scores more as well). Ethan was the official rock photographer of the Rock 'n' Roll Circus, the Let It Be sessions, the final Beatles group photo shoot, as well as behind tons of other classic images, most of which have been gathered up and published in his latest book, Photographs - a singular monograph of superlative visuals presented in stunning quality. It's available only at his website: www.ethanrussell.com  I spoke with Ethan last year and this follow on covers more details of his work with the Fabs: his impressions of them individually - of Yoko - of the Let It Be project and Michael Lindsay-Hogg, as well as of Peter Jackson (of whose upcoming work Ethan got a peek). Ethan came of age in San Francisco and went to London in 1967 - within a year he was in the orbit of the top British acts of the day. As a chronicler of the times, his work and observations are impeccable.   

'Paul Or Nothing' Podcast
"Let It Be/The Beatles Get Back" PART 2/2: Paul or Nothing Film Review: Episode 8

'Paul Or Nothing' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2020 96:34


Greetings one and all, to another installment/episode/chapter of "Paul or Nothing", where we will be picking where we left off at the end of our last episode. Of course, this means me, and my devilishly funny guest Dylan Sevey, will be chitting the chat about both "Let It Be" (dir, by Michael Lindsay-Hogg), and "The Beatles: Get Back" (dir, by Peter Jackson).If you are typically someone who skips my intro segments, please stick around for the email segment as it may spark some interesting debates. Please enjoy. Hare Krishna. Peace and love.   Check out me and Dylan on my rival show "2:Legs" - https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-zk4bu-e0fc4e?utm_campaign=w_share_ep&utm_medium=dlink&utm_source=w_share If you haven't seen the blog, check it out at www.paulmccartneypod.wordpress.com where you can see loads of episodes start out life as a random blog post, before being resculpted into the quality content you are here for today!  If you want to support the show, check out our Patreon page at www.patreon.com/mccartneypodcast To get in contact with the show, drop us an email at paulmccartneypod@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter for all Macca updates by searching @mccartneypod.  Hosted by Sam Whiles.

'Paul Or Nothing' Podcast
"Let It Be/The Beatles Get Back" PART 1/2: Paul or Nothing Film Review: Episode #8.

'Paul Or Nothing' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2020 95:06


Welcome Paul Bearers to another film review edition of the "Paul or Nothing" podcast. This time we will be discussing both documentary films that focus on The Beatles Let It Be sessions. Firstly, we will be talking about "Let It Be (1970)", dir by Michael Lindsay Hogg, and secondly, we will be discussing the upcoming remake/reboot/white wash, called "The Beatles: Get Back", dir by Peter Jackson (Lord of the Rings, King Kong). My guest today is renowned Nashville musician and general badass, Mr. Dylan Sevey. I have a couple of lengthy interviews coming up, and I've decided to be pragmatic and split the episodes up into two parts. I'm gonna do this regular upload thing if it kills me! Please enjoy. Hare Krishna. Peace and love.   Check out me and Dylan on my rival show "2:Legs" - https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-zk4bu-e0fc4e?utm_campaign=w_share_ep&utm_medium=dlink&utm_source=w_share If you haven't seen the blog, check it out at www.paulmccartneypod.wordpress.com where you can see loads of episodes start out life as a random blog post, before being resculpted into the quality content you are here for today!  If you want to support the show, check out our Patreon page at www.patreon.com/mccartneypodcast To get in contact with the show, drop us an email at paulmccartneypod@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter for all Macca updates by searching @mccartneypod.  Hosted by Sam Whiles.

Things We Said Today Beatles Radio
Things We Said Today #319 –  Steve Matteo on ‘Let It Be’ - the album, the film and his book

Things We Said Today Beatles Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2020 102:04


In this episode, Ken Michaels, Allan Kozinn and Darren DeVivo are joined by Steve Matteo, the author of the excellent book ‘Let It Be,’ published in 2004 as part of the ‘33 1/3’ series on classic albums. In writing the book, Matteo had interviewed many of the people involved, from EMI engineers to the director Michael Lindsay-Hogg and some of his technical crew, and we discuss some of the insights he offers in his concise study of the Beatles’ penultimate (but last-released) album and its afterlife.As always, we welcome your thoughts about this episode of the show or any other episode. We invite you to send your comments about this or any of our other shows to our email address thingswesaidtodayradioshow@gmail.com, join our "Things We Said Today Beatles Fans" Facebook page and comment there, tweet us at @thingswesaidfab or catch us each on Facebook and give us your thoughts. And we thank you very much for listening. You can hear and download our show on Podbean, the Podbean app and iTunes and stream us through the Tune In Radio app and from our very own YouTube page.  Our shows appear every two weeks. Please be sure and write a (good, ideally!) review of our show on our iTunes page. If you subscribe to any of our program providers, you'll get the first word as soon as a new show is available. We don't want you to miss us. Our download numbers have been continually rising, as more people discover us and it's all because of you. So we thank you very much for your support!

Le fil Pop
Michael Lindsay-Hogg et Violaine Huisman

Le fil Pop

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2019 53:26


durée : 00:53:26 - Popopop - par : Antoine de Caunes - Antoine de Caunes reçoit le réalisateur et artiste britannique Michael Lindsay-Hogg. En deuxième partie, Violaine Huisman nous présentera son deuxième roman "Rose désert". - invités : Violaine Huissman, Michael Lindsay-Hogg - Violaine HUISSMAN, Michael LINDSAY-HOGG - réalisé par : Ghislain Fontana

Swinging Through The Sixties: The Beatles and Beyond
Episode #17 – ‘Twickenham Mind Games – George Walks, Yoko Wants a Mic'

Swinging Through The Sixties: The Beatles and Beyond

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2019


What John Lennon described as "the most miserable sessions on earth" were recalled by George Harrison as "the low of all time". Yet, while such statements may have accurately reflected their respective mindsets, they also helped fuel widespread misconceptions about The Beatles’ January ’69 ‘Get Back’ project that evolved into the ‘Let It Be’ film and album. The fragmented, shoddily-edited Michael Lindsay-Hogg-directed ‘documentary’ has also played a significant role in spreading the negativity, as have certain self-acclaimed experts’ uninformed opinions because of their failure to listen to all of the tapes. For, therein lies a very different, far more rewarding story that will likely be revealed in Peter Jackson's new version of the movie. Regardless, that’s what Richard Buskin and Allan Kozinn (pinch-hitting for Erik Taros) focus on here: the many ups as well as the downs that took place at Twickenham Film Studios in the run-up to George temporarily quitting the group—and the project then relocating to The Beatles’ own Apple facility. In so doing, Richard and Allan not only examine the long as well as short-term causes for the disharmony—including the personalities involved and their invariably fascinating, often-enlightening interactions; they also provide a fly-on-the-wall perspective on the thoughts and discussions that helped shape the Fab Four’s still-reverberating artistic decisions.

NADA MÁS QUE MÚSICA
Nada más que música - The Beatles "El canto del cisne"

NADA MÁS QUE MÚSICA

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2019 38:20


Habíamos dejado al grupo saboreando las mieles del éxito de su Sgt. Pepper’s pero… éste éxito abrió la caja de los truenos y ya nada fue igual. John andaba con su nueva pareja, la artista conceptual Yoko Ono, y Paul pronto rompería lazos con el pasado y se enamoraría de la fotógrafa Linda Eastman. En 1968, tras el lanzamiento de su discográfica Appel, se habían convertido en un monstruo y antes de que este monstruo les devorara, quisieron recuperar sus propias identidades. Se reunieron para grabar, pero John y Paul ya no trabajaron juntos. Cada uno aportaba sus propias canciones (George hacía lo mismo) y las grababan como grupo, nada más. En este caldo de cultivo, nada propicio, se cocieron los últimos álbumes de la banda. El primero, Magical Mystery Tour, que era la banda sonora de su próxima película, apareció como un doble EP de seis temas a principios de diciembre de 1967. En los Estados Unidos las seis canciones aparecieron en un LP titulado de la misma manera, en el que se incluyeron también los temas de sus últimos sencillos. Allmusic, que es una guía de referencia para los aficionados, decía que las canciones contenidas en el Magical Mystery Tour americano eran: « «enormes, gloriosas e innovadoras». Pero amigos, no siempre se acierta y, aunque el álbum estableció un nuevo récord en sus primeras tres semanas de venta inicial en los Estados Unidos, la película, Magical Mystery Tour, dirigida básicamente por McCartney, les trajo la primera crítica negativa por parte de la prensa del Reino Unido, con artículos bastante duros. El Daily Express la calificó de «una indudable basura» y la describió como «una sucesión de imágenes sin editar mostrando a un grupo de gente subiendo y bajando de un autobús y viajando todo el tiempo». El Daily Mail la calificó como «un proyecto vanidoso», mientras que The Guardian la calificó como «una especie de juego de fantasía moral sobre la grosería, la calidez y la estupidez de la audiencia». Les fue tan rotundamente mal que fue cancelada en Estados Unidos. Hay en este disco, en la edición americana, una canción editada también en sencillo sobre la que merece la pena detenerse, es Strawberry Field. Strawberry Field era el nombre de un orfanato del Ejército de Salvación, muy cerca de la casa de John Lennon en Woolton, un suburbio de Liverpool. Lennon y sus amigos de la infancia solían jugar en el jardín arbolado que se encontraba detrás de la casa. Allí, en ese jardín, todos los veranos se celebraba un fiesta donde el niño Lennon se lo pasaba en grande escuchando la música de la banda del Ejercito de Salvación. Él mismo dijo que esta canción refleja la nostalgia y el recuerdo de aquellos primeros años vividos en Liverpool. A pesar de que se está refiriendo a lugares reales, también se detectan fuertes connotaciones surrealistas y psicodélicas. El productor George Martin dijo que cuando escuchó por primera vez la canción, pensó en un «mundo de sueños brumoso e impresionista». Para Lennon el periodo de tiempo en el que compuso la canción fue, por decirlo de alguna manera, complicado. A la controvertida frase «somos más populares que Jesucristo» y el desaire a Imelda Marcos, tenemos que añadir que el matrimonio de Lennon con Cynthia Powell estaba fallando y que había comenzado a consumir LSD de forma habitual. Con todo, la canción es preciosa. Entre tanto, apareció lo que sería el álbum The Beatles, un doble LP popularmente conocido como el White Album —Álbum Blanco— debido a su funda totalmente blanca. En contraposición a las anteriores fundas o cubiertas, el Álbum Blanco —publicado con el plus del diseño minimalista de Richard Hamilton— contrastaba con anteriores diseños de las cubiertas de estilo pop-art como los que realizaba Peter Blake. La inspiración creativa para este álbum llegó de la mano de su nuevo gurú Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. El caso es que el grupo participó en un «curso-guía» de tres meses de meditación transcendental que se convirtió en uno de sus períodos más creativos, produciendo allí un gran número de canciones, incluyendo la mayor parte de las treinta grabadas para el álbum. Pero pronto se cayeron del guindo: Ringo se marchó después de diez días de estancia allí, comparando aquel lugar con un campamento familiar de verano, y McCartney finalmente se aburrió con el comportamiento de sus compañeros en aquel lugar y se fue un mes después. A Lennon y Harrison les tuvieron que abrir los ojos gente de su entorno. Al constatar la manipulación a la que estaban siendo sometidos, Lennon quedó convencido y se fue abruptamente, llevándose a Harrison y al resto de la comitiva consigo. McCartney dijo: «Hemos cometido un error. Pensábamos que había algo más en el Maharishi de lo que realmente había». Durante las sesiones de grabación para el álbum, que se extendieron desde fines de mayo hasta mediados de octubre de 1968, las diferencias y los desacuerdos comenzaron a dividirlos. Ringo los dejó por un tiempo, lo que hizo que siguiesen adelante con McCartney tocando la batería en varios temas. El romance de Lennon con la artista vanguardista Yoko Ono contribuyó a crearles tensiones, haciendo que Lennon perdiese el interés en escribir canciones con McCartney. Desobedeciendo el acuerdo que ellos mismos establecieron de no llevar parejas al estudio, Lennon insistió en llevar a Ono a todas las sesiones de grabación, situación que no le agradaba a Harrison. También era cada vez más despectivo con los aportes creativos de McCartney, al que empezó a identificar como «autor de música para abuelitas», calificando la canción «Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da» como «música-basura para abuelitas». Recordando las sesiones del White Album, Lennon ofreció un abreviado resumen de la historia que había vivido con sus compañeros a partir de ese momento, diciendo: «Es como si sacaras cada tema de ahí y lo convirtieras en todo mío y todo de Paul [...] solamente yo con músicos de acompañamiento por un lado y Paul igualmente por otro; y me lo pasé bien. Entonces fue cuando nos disolvimos». McCartney también recordó que las sesiones marcaron los comienzos de la ruptura, diciendo: «Hasta ese momento, el mundo era un problema, pero nosotros no lo éramos», lo cual siempre había sido «la mejor cosa de The Beatles». Publicado en noviembre, el White Album fue el primer álbum de The Beatles editado por Apple Records. El sello discográfico era una de las divisiones de la empresa Apple Corps, formada por el grupo a su regreso de la India. El álbum tuvo más de dos millones de pedidos anticipados, vendiendo casi cuatro millones de copias en los Estados Unidos en poco más de un mes, y sus temas dominaron las listas de las emisoras de radio estadounidenses. A pesar de su popularidad, el doble álbum no tuvo, en los primeros días, una buena acogida. La crítica osciló entre la confusión y el desencanto. Finalmente, la opinión general de la crítica se decantó a favor del White Album, y en 2003 la revista Rolling Stone lo consideró el décimo mejor álbum de todos los tiempos. Esta es una de las mejores aportaciones de Harrison al album. Para ese entonces, el interés por las letras de The Beatles estaba tomando un aspecto más serio. Cuando la canción de Lennon «Revolution» se había publicado en un sencillo, como anticipo del White Album, su mensaje parecía claro: «libera tu mente» y «no cuentes conmigo» para cualquier conversación sobre la destrucción como medio para alcanzar un fin. En un año caracterizado por protestas estudiantiles que se extendían desde Varsovia hasta París y Chicago, la respuesta de la izquierda radical fue mordaz. Sin embargo, la versión de la canción en el White Album, «Revolution 1», añadía una palabra extra: «count me out... in» (traducible por: «no cuentes conmigo..., cuenta conmigo»), lo que implicaba un cambio de ideas desde la publicación del sencillo. De hecho, la cronología se había invertido: la ambigua versión del álbum se había grabado antes, pero algunos creyeron que The Beatles ahora decían que la violencia política podía ser, a pesar de todo, justificable. El LP Yellow Submarine apareció finalmente en enero de 1969. Contenía sólo cuatro de sus canciones inéditas, junto a la pista del título, ya aparecida en Revolver; una canción editada en sencillo en 1967; y siete piezas instrumentales compuestas por George Martin e interpretadas con su orquestada. Debido a la escasez de música nueva que la agrupación proporcionaba, Allmusic sugirió que quizás el álbum «no fuese esencial», salvo por el tema «It's All Too Much» de Harrison, «la joya de las nuevas canciones [...] resplandecida por un mellotron envolvente, una percusión increíble, y un feedback de guitarra fastuoso [...] una excursión virtuosa en la por otra parte confusa psicodelia reinante». Aunque Let It Be fue el último álbum que lanzaron, la mayor parte de su contenido fue grabado antes de Abbey Road. Inicialmente llamado Get Back, Let It Be se originó de una idea que Martin atribuye a McCartney: preparar nuevo material e interpretarlo por primera vez en un concierto, grabarlo para un nuevo álbum y filmar sus sesiones de grabación. En este caso, mucho del contenido del disco vino del trabajo en estudio, muchas horas de las cuales fueron capturadas en película por el director Michael Lindsay-Hogg. Martin dijo que los ensayos y la grabación para el proyecto, que ocuparon gran parte de enero de 1969, «no fue en absoluto una experiencia feliz. Fue una época en la que las relaciones entre los miembros de The Beatles estaban en su punto más bajo». Agravado por las relaciones entre McCartney y Lennon, Harrison abandonó los ensayos durante una semana. Regresó con el teclista Billy Preston, que participó en los últimos diez días de las sesiones del álbum y que fue acreditado en el sencillo «Get Back», el único músico en recibir tal reconocimiento en una grabación oficial de The Beatles. Pensando en la localización para realizar el concierto, a los miembros de la banda se les agotaron todas las ideas, rechazando, entre otros escenarios, un barco en el río Támesis, el desierto de Túnez y el Coliseo de Roma. Finalmente, acompañados por Preston, llevaron a cabo y filmaron la actuación en la azotea del edificio de Apple Corps en el 3 de Savile Row, Londres, el 30 de enero de 1969. Pero había que hacer el disco. Martin se sorprendió cuando McCartney se puso en contacto con él y le pidió que produjera un nuevo álbum, ya que las sesiones de Get Back habían sido —según el productor— «una experiencia desagradable» y que había «pensado que era el final del camino para todos nosotros [...] se habían convertido en personas desagradables - para ellos mismos como para las demás personas.» Las sesiones de grabación de Abbey Road se iniciaron a finales de febrero de 1969. El 4 de julio, mientras iba progresando el trabajo en el álbum, apareció el primer sencillo de un miembro de The Beatles en solitario: «Give Peace a Chance» de Lennon, acompañado por la Plastic Ono Band. El día que terminaron de grabar «I Want You (She's So Heavy)», de Abbey Road, el 20 de agosto, fue la última vez que los cuatro Beatles estuvieron juntos en el mismo estudio. Lennon anunció su retirada de la formación el 20 de septiembre de 1969, pero se llegó a un acuerdo por el cual no se haría ningún anuncio público hasta que no se resolvieran algunos asuntos legales aún pendientes. Lanzado seis días después de la declaración de Lennon, Abbey Road vendió cuatro millones de copias en dos meses y encabezó las listas del Reino Unido durante once semanas. Su segundo corte, la balada «Something», se publicó también como sencillo, la primera y única composición de Harrison en aparecer como un lado A en los sencillos de The Beatles. Abbey Road recibió críticas muy variadas: Allmusic considera que es «un oportuno canto de cisne para el grupo» con «algunas de las mejores armonías que pueden ser oídas en cualquier disco de rock». Por otro lado, MacDonald, un importante crítico de la época, lo resaltó como «errático y, a menudo hueco»: «Si no hubiera sido por la aportación de McCartney, Abbey Road carecería de la semblanza de unidad y coherencia que hace que parezca mejor de lo que es». Martin lo colocó como su favorito entre todos los álbumes de The Beatles y Lennon dijo que era «competente», pero «no tenía vida en él», tildando a las aportaciones de Paul como más música de abuelas. El 3 de enero de 1970 se grabó la última nueva canción de The Beatles, «I Me Mine», de Harrison, para el aún incompleto álbum Get Back. No había participado Lennon, que se encontraba entonces en Dinamarca. Para completar el álbum, ahora retitulado Let It Be, dieron las cintas de grabación de Get Back al productor estadounidense Phil Spector. Conocido por su característico muro de sonido, Spector había producido recientemente el sencillo en solitario de Lennon «Instant Karma!». Además de remezclar el material de Get Back, Spector editó, empalmó y sobregrabó varias de las pistas que The Beatles habían concebido como grabaciones «en vivo». McCartney estaba insatisfecho con el tratamiento que Spector le dio al material, y particularmente con la orquestación en «The Long and Winding Road», que involucró a un un coro y una orquesta de treinta y cuatro músicos. Por ello, intentó sin éxito detener el lanzamiento del álbum en la versión de Phil Spector. Finalmente, McCartney anunció públicamente la separación del grupo el 10 de abril de 1970, una semana antes de la publicación de su primer álbum en solitario. El 8 de mayo se lanzó el álbum Let It Be, y la película documental del mismo título le siguió más tarde. En la ceremonia de los Premios Óscar del siguiente año ganaría el Óscar a la mejor banda sonora. Pero los Beatles ya no eran un éxito seguro. The Sunday Telegraph la calificó como «una película muy mala, pero tierna al mismo tiempo, sobre la ruptura de esta tranquila, perfecta, y a veces atemporal familia de compañeros». Let It Be es el único álbum de The Beatles que ha recibido reseñas negativas, incluso hostiles. Paul McCartney presentó una demanda para la disolución de The Beatles el 31 de diciembre de 1970. Las disputas legales continuaron mucho tiempo después de la ruptura, y la disolución de la asociación no surtiría efecto hasta 1975. Esta versión de Don’t let me down es la del concierto en la terraza. Al final, cada uno de ellos recuperó su individualidad, y por primera vez en su vida, pudieron ser ellos mismos en lugar de ser un Beatle. Y entonces, como si el manto mágico que siempre les había protegido se esfumase de golpe, descubrimos que John era un grosero que se compadecía de si mismo, que Paul era malicioso y transmitia tensión por donde pasaba, que George, con sus barbas y su postura de loto era un pedante redomado y un roñoso y que Ringo, que se bebía el Nilo, cantaba country sensiblero acodado en la barra. Pero es que siempre habían intentado decírnoslo y, al final, no tuvimos más remedio que aceptarlo: solo eran cuatro seres humanos que hacían muy buena música. Y esto, queridos oyentes, es el fin. The End, The Beatles. Hasta aquí llegaron los Beatles y hasta aquí hemos llegado nosotros en el día de hoy. El final del mito dio paso a otros muchos músicos que, con el mismo genio, con el mismo talento, nos han proporcionado momentos musicales memorables y de los que nos ocuparemos. Eso si, ellos fueron los primeros. Amigos oyentes, disfrutad de la semana lo máximo posible y el próximo día os espero a todos aquí, en vuestra casa, en Radio La Granja. Hasta entonces… Buenas vibraciones!!!

NADA MÁS QUE MÚSICA
Nada más que música - The Beatles "El canto del cisne"

NADA MÁS QUE MÚSICA

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2019 38:20


Habíamos dejado al grupo saboreando las mieles del éxito de su Sgt. Pepper’s pero… éste éxito abrió la caja de los truenos y ya nada fue igual. John andaba con su nueva pareja, la artista conceptual Yoko Ono, y Paul pronto rompería lazos con el pasado y se enamoraría de la fotógrafa Linda Eastman. En 1968, tras el lanzamiento de su discográfica Appel, se habían convertido en un monstruo y antes de que este monstruo les devorara, quisieron recuperar sus propias identidades. Se reunieron para grabar, pero John y Paul ya no trabajaron juntos. Cada uno aportaba sus propias canciones (George hacía lo mismo) y las grababan como grupo, nada más. En este caldo de cultivo, nada propicio, se cocieron los últimos álbumes de la banda. El primero, Magical Mystery Tour, que era la banda sonora de su próxima película, apareció como un doble EP de seis temas a principios de diciembre de 1967. En los Estados Unidos las seis canciones aparecieron en un LP titulado de la misma manera, en el que se incluyeron también los temas de sus últimos sencillos. Allmusic, que es una guía de referencia para los aficionados, decía que las canciones contenidas en el Magical Mystery Tour americano eran: « «enormes, gloriosas e innovadoras». Pero amigos, no siempre se acierta y, aunque el álbum estableció un nuevo récord en sus primeras tres semanas de venta inicial en los Estados Unidos, la película, Magical Mystery Tour, dirigida básicamente por McCartney, les trajo la primera crítica negativa por parte de la prensa del Reino Unido, con artículos bastante duros. El Daily Express la calificó de «una indudable basura» y la describió como «una sucesión de imágenes sin editar mostrando a un grupo de gente subiendo y bajando de un autobús y viajando todo el tiempo». El Daily Mail la calificó como «un proyecto vanidoso», mientras que The Guardian la calificó como «una especie de juego de fantasía moral sobre la grosería, la calidez y la estupidez de la audiencia». Les fue tan rotundamente mal que fue cancelada en Estados Unidos. Hay en este disco, en la edición americana, una canción editada también en sencillo sobre la que merece la pena detenerse, es Strawberry Field. Strawberry Field era el nombre de un orfanato del Ejército de Salvación, muy cerca de la casa de John Lennon en Woolton, un suburbio de Liverpool. Lennon y sus amigos de la infancia solían jugar en el jardín arbolado que se encontraba detrás de la casa. Allí, en ese jardín, todos los veranos se celebraba un fiesta donde el niño Lennon se lo pasaba en grande escuchando la música de la banda del Ejercito de Salvación. Él mismo dijo que esta canción refleja la nostalgia y el recuerdo de aquellos primeros años vividos en Liverpool. A pesar de que se está refiriendo a lugares reales, también se detectan fuertes connotaciones surrealistas y psicodélicas. El productor George Martin dijo que cuando escuchó por primera vez la canción, pensó en un «mundo de sueños brumoso e impresionista». Para Lennon el periodo de tiempo en el que compuso la canción fue, por decirlo de alguna manera, complicado. A la controvertida frase «somos más populares que Jesucristo» y el desaire a Imelda Marcos, tenemos que añadir que el matrimonio de Lennon con Cynthia Powell estaba fallando y que había comenzado a consumir LSD de forma habitual. Con todo, la canción es preciosa. Entre tanto, apareció lo que sería el álbum The Beatles, un doble LP popularmente conocido como el White Album —Álbum Blanco— debido a su funda totalmente blanca. En contraposición a las anteriores fundas o cubiertas, el Álbum Blanco —publicado con el plus del diseño minimalista de Richard Hamilton— contrastaba con anteriores diseños de las cubiertas de estilo pop-art como los que realizaba Peter Blake. La inspiración creativa para este álbum llegó de la mano de su nuevo gurú Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. El caso es que el grupo participó en un «curso-guía» de tres meses de meditación transcendental que se convirtió en uno de sus períodos más creativos, produciendo allí un gran número de canciones, incluyendo la mayor parte de las treinta grabadas para el álbum. Pero pronto se cayeron del guindo: Ringo se marchó después de diez días de estancia allí, comparando aquel lugar con un campamento familiar de verano, y McCartney finalmente se aburrió con el comportamiento de sus compañeros en aquel lugar y se fue un mes después. A Lennon y Harrison les tuvieron que abrir los ojos gente de su entorno. Al constatar la manipulación a la que estaban siendo sometidos, Lennon quedó convencido y se fue abruptamente, llevándose a Harrison y al resto de la comitiva consigo. McCartney dijo: «Hemos cometido un error. Pensábamos que había algo más en el Maharishi de lo que realmente había». Durante las sesiones de grabación para el álbum, que se extendieron desde fines de mayo hasta mediados de octubre de 1968, las diferencias y los desacuerdos comenzaron a dividirlos. Ringo los dejó por un tiempo, lo que hizo que siguiesen adelante con McCartney tocando la batería en varios temas. El romance de Lennon con la artista vanguardista Yoko Ono contribuyó a crearles tensiones, haciendo que Lennon perdiese el interés en escribir canciones con McCartney. Desobedeciendo el acuerdo que ellos mismos establecieron de no llevar parejas al estudio, Lennon insistió en llevar a Ono a todas las sesiones de grabación, situación que no le agradaba a Harrison. También era cada vez más despectivo con los aportes creativos de McCartney, al que empezó a identificar como «autor de música para abuelitas», calificando la canción «Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da» como «música-basura para abuelitas». Recordando las sesiones del White Album, Lennon ofreció un abreviado resumen de la historia que había vivido con sus compañeros a partir de ese momento, diciendo: «Es como si sacaras cada tema de ahí y lo convirtieras en todo mío y todo de Paul [...] solamente yo con músicos de acompañamiento por un lado y Paul igualmente por otro; y me lo pasé bien. Entonces fue cuando nos disolvimos». McCartney también recordó que las sesiones marcaron los comienzos de la ruptura, diciendo: «Hasta ese momento, el mundo era un problema, pero nosotros no lo éramos», lo cual siempre había sido «la mejor cosa de The Beatles». Publicado en noviembre, el White Album fue el primer álbum de The Beatles editado por Apple Records. El sello discográfico era una de las divisiones de la empresa Apple Corps, formada por el grupo a su regreso de la India. El álbum tuvo más de dos millones de pedidos anticipados, vendiendo casi cuatro millones de copias en los Estados Unidos en poco más de un mes, y sus temas dominaron las listas de las emisoras de radio estadounidenses. A pesar de su popularidad, el doble álbum no tuvo, en los primeros días, una buena acogida. La crítica osciló entre la confusión y el desencanto. Finalmente, la opinión general de la crítica se decantó a favor del White Album, y en 2003 la revista Rolling Stone lo consideró el décimo mejor álbum de todos los tiempos. Esta es una de las mejores aportaciones de Harrison al album. Para ese entonces, el interés por las letras de The Beatles estaba tomando un aspecto más serio. Cuando la canción de Lennon «Revolution» se había publicado en un sencillo, como anticipo del White Album, su mensaje parecía claro: «libera tu mente» y «no cuentes conmigo» para cualquier conversación sobre la destrucción como medio para alcanzar un fin. En un año caracterizado por protestas estudiantiles que se extendían desde Varsovia hasta París y Chicago, la respuesta de la izquierda radical fue mordaz. Sin embargo, la versión de la canción en el White Album, «Revolution 1», añadía una palabra extra: «count me out... in» (traducible por: «no cuentes conmigo..., cuenta conmigo»), lo que implicaba un cambio de ideas desde la publicación del sencillo. De hecho, la cronología se había invertido: la ambigua versión del álbum se había grabado antes, pero algunos creyeron que The Beatles ahora decían que la violencia política podía ser, a pesar de todo, justificable. El LP Yellow Submarine apareció finalmente en enero de 1969. Contenía sólo cuatro de sus canciones inéditas, junto a la pista del título, ya aparecida en Revolver; una canción editada en sencillo en 1967; y siete piezas instrumentales compuestas por George Martin e interpretadas con su orquestada. Debido a la escasez de música nueva que la agrupación proporcionaba, Allmusic sugirió que quizás el álbum «no fuese esencial», salvo por el tema «It's All Too Much» de Harrison, «la joya de las nuevas canciones [...] resplandecida por un mellotron envolvente, una percusión increíble, y un feedback de guitarra fastuoso [...] una excursión virtuosa en la por otra parte confusa psicodelia reinante». Aunque Let It Be fue el último álbum que lanzaron, la mayor parte de su contenido fue grabado antes de Abbey Road. Inicialmente llamado Get Back, Let It Be se originó de una idea que Martin atribuye a McCartney: preparar nuevo material e interpretarlo por primera vez en un concierto, grabarlo para un nuevo álbum y filmar sus sesiones de grabación. En este caso, mucho del contenido del disco vino del trabajo en estudio, muchas horas de las cuales fueron capturadas en película por el director Michael Lindsay-Hogg. Martin dijo que los ensayos y la grabación para el proyecto, que ocuparon gran parte de enero de 1969, «no fue en absoluto una experiencia feliz. Fue una época en la que las relaciones entre los miembros de The Beatles estaban en su punto más bajo». Agravado por las relaciones entre McCartney y Lennon, Harrison abandonó los ensayos durante una semana. Regresó con el teclista Billy Preston, que participó en los últimos diez días de las sesiones del álbum y que fue acreditado en el sencillo «Get Back», el único músico en recibir tal reconocimiento en una grabación oficial de The Beatles. Pensando en la localización para realizar el concierto, a los miembros de la banda se les agotaron todas las ideas, rechazando, entre otros escenarios, un barco en el río Támesis, el desierto de Túnez y el Coliseo de Roma. Finalmente, acompañados por Preston, llevaron a cabo y filmaron la actuación en la azotea del edificio de Apple Corps en el 3 de Savile Row, Londres, el 30 de enero de 1969. Pero había que hacer el disco. Martin se sorprendió cuando McCartney se puso en contacto con él y le pidió que produjera un nuevo álbum, ya que las sesiones de Get Back habían sido —según el productor— «una experiencia desagradable» y que había «pensado que era el final del camino para todos nosotros [...] se habían convertido en personas desagradables - para ellos mismos como para las demás personas.» Las sesiones de grabación de Abbey Road se iniciaron a finales de febrero de 1969. El 4 de julio, mientras iba progresando el trabajo en el álbum, apareció el primer sencillo de un miembro de The Beatles en solitario: «Give Peace a Chance» de Lennon, acompañado por la Plastic Ono Band. El día que terminaron de grabar «I Want You (She's So Heavy)», de Abbey Road, el 20 de agosto, fue la última vez que los cuatro Beatles estuvieron juntos en el mismo estudio. Lennon anunció su retirada de la formación el 20 de septiembre de 1969, pero se llegó a un acuerdo por el cual no se haría ningún anuncio público hasta que no se resolvieran algunos asuntos legales aún pendientes. Lanzado seis días después de la declaración de Lennon, Abbey Road vendió cuatro millones de copias en dos meses y encabezó las listas del Reino Unido durante once semanas. Su segundo corte, la balada «Something», se publicó también como sencillo, la primera y única composición de Harrison en aparecer como un lado A en los sencillos de The Beatles. Abbey Road recibió críticas muy variadas: Allmusic considera que es «un oportuno canto de cisne para el grupo» con «algunas de las mejores armonías que pueden ser oídas en cualquier disco de rock». Por otro lado, MacDonald, un importante crítico de la época, lo resaltó como «errático y, a menudo hueco»: «Si no hubiera sido por la aportación de McCartney, Abbey Road carecería de la semblanza de unidad y coherencia que hace que parezca mejor de lo que es». Martin lo colocó como su favorito entre todos los álbumes de The Beatles y Lennon dijo que era «competente», pero «no tenía vida en él», tildando a las aportaciones de Paul como más música de abuelas. El 3 de enero de 1970 se grabó la última nueva canción de The Beatles, «I Me Mine», de Harrison, para el aún incompleto álbum Get Back. No había participado Lennon, que se encontraba entonces en Dinamarca. Para completar el álbum, ahora retitulado Let It Be, dieron las cintas de grabación de Get Back al productor estadounidense Phil Spector. Conocido por su característico muro de sonido, Spector había producido recientemente el sencillo en solitario de Lennon «Instant Karma!». Además de remezclar el material de Get Back, Spector editó, empalmó y sobregrabó varias de las pistas que The Beatles habían concebido como grabaciones «en vivo». McCartney estaba insatisfecho con el tratamiento que Spector le dio al material, y particularmente con la orquestación en «The Long and Winding Road», que involucró a un un coro y una orquesta de treinta y cuatro músicos. Por ello, intentó sin éxito detener el lanzamiento del álbum en la versión de Phil Spector. Finalmente, McCartney anunció públicamente la separación del grupo el 10 de abril de 1970, una semana antes de la publicación de su primer álbum en solitario. El 8 de mayo se lanzó el álbum Let It Be, y la película documental del mismo título le siguió más tarde. En la ceremonia de los Premios Óscar del siguiente año ganaría el Óscar a la mejor banda sonora. Pero los Beatles ya no eran un éxito seguro. The Sunday Telegraph la calificó como «una película muy mala, pero tierna al mismo tiempo, sobre la ruptura de esta tranquila, perfecta, y a veces atemporal familia de compañeros». Let It Be es el único álbum de The Beatles que ha recibido reseñas negativas, incluso hostiles. Paul McCartney presentó una demanda para la disolución de The Beatles el 31 de diciembre de 1970. Las disputas legales continuaron mucho tiempo después de la ruptura, y la disolución de la asociación no surtiría efecto hasta 1975. Esta versión de Don’t let me down es la del concierto en la terraza. Al final, cada uno de ellos recuperó su individualidad, y por primera vez en su vida, pudieron ser ellos mismos en lugar de ser un Beatle. Y entonces, como si el manto mágico que siempre les había protegido se esfumase de golpe, descubrimos que John era un grosero que se compadecía de si mismo, que Paul era malicioso y transmitia tensión por donde pasaba, que George, con sus barbas y su postura de loto era un pedante redomado y un roñoso y que Ringo, que se bebía el Nilo, cantaba country sensiblero acodado en la barra. Pero es que siempre habían intentado decírnoslo y, al final, no tuvimos más remedio que aceptarlo: solo eran cuatro seres humanos que hacían muy buena música. Y esto, queridos oyentes, es el fin. The End, The Beatles. Hasta aquí llegaron los Beatles y hasta aquí hemos llegado nosotros en el día de hoy. El final del mito dio paso a otros muchos músicos que, con el mismo genio, con el mismo talento, nos han proporcionado momentos musicales memorables y de los que nos ocuparemos. Eso si, ellos fueron los primeros. Amigos oyentes, disfrutad de la semana lo máximo posible y el próximo día os espero a todos aquí, en vuestra casa, en Radio La Granja. Hasta entonces… Buenas vibraciones!!!

Beatles News Briefs
62 - New McCartney release, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Russ Gibb interviews

Beatles News Briefs

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2019 11:08


Beatles News Briefs is back! (As John Lennon wrote, "Life is what happens when you're busy making other plans.") In this edition, we talk about Paul McCartney's new "Egypt Station" repackage, plus feature two interview clips. One is from a recent interview with Michael Lindsay-Hogg, director of "Let It Be," on the upcoming new "Let It Be" film. Also, we go into the archives for a clip of the late Russ Gibb (R.I.P.) talking about the Paul Is Dead hoax from an interview we did with him. Thanks for listening and please subscribe if you don't already!

Arts and Music (Video)
Beatles Revolutions - Let It Be

Arts and Music (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2019 47:22


The Beatles' final concert, their late-era conflicts, and the complicated history of director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s Let It Be documentary all arise in this discussion between musician Alan Parsons and Music Professor David Novak (UC Santa Barbara). Parsons was a teenage sound engineer at Abbey Road studios when he was assigned to record audio for the Beatles as they worked through this iconic album. Novak draws Parsons into dialogue about recording equipment, studio layouts, and the musical personalities of each member of the band. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 34489]

Arts and Music (Audio)
Beatles Revolutions - Let It Be

Arts and Music (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2019 47:22


The Beatles' final concert, their late-era conflicts, and the complicated history of director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s Let It Be documentary all arise in this discussion between musician Alan Parsons and Music Professor David Novak (UC Santa Barbara). Parsons was a teenage sound engineer at Abbey Road studios when he was assigned to record audio for the Beatles as they worked through this iconic album. Novak draws Parsons into dialogue about recording equipment, studio layouts, and the musical personalities of each member of the band. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 34489]

Film and Television (Audio)
Beatles Revolutions - Let It Be

Film and Television (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2019 47:22


The Beatles' final concert, their late-era conflicts, and the complicated history of director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s Let It Be documentary all arise in this discussion between musician Alan Parsons and Music Professor David Novak (UC Santa Barbara). Parsons was a teenage sound engineer at Abbey Road studios when he was assigned to record audio for the Beatles as they worked through this iconic album. Novak draws Parsons into dialogue about recording equipment, studio layouts, and the musical personalities of each member of the band. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 34489]

Film and Television (Video)
Beatles Revolutions - Let It Be

Film and Television (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2019 47:22


The Beatles' final concert, their late-era conflicts, and the complicated history of director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s Let It Be documentary all arise in this discussion between musician Alan Parsons and Music Professor David Novak (UC Santa Barbara). Parsons was a teenage sound engineer at Abbey Road studios when he was assigned to record audio for the Beatles as they worked through this iconic album. Novak draws Parsons into dialogue about recording equipment, studio layouts, and the musical personalities of each member of the band. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 34489]

UC Santa Barbara (Audio)
Beatles Revolutions - Let It Be

UC Santa Barbara (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2019 47:22


The Beatles' final concert, their late-era conflicts, and the complicated history of director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s Let It Be documentary all arise in this discussion between musician Alan Parsons and Music Professor David Novak (UC Santa Barbara). Parsons was a teenage sound engineer at Abbey Road studios when he was assigned to record audio for the Beatles as they worked through this iconic album. Novak draws Parsons into dialogue about recording equipment, studio layouts, and the musical personalities of each member of the band. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 34489]

UC Santa Barbara (Video)
Beatles Revolutions - Let It Be

UC Santa Barbara (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2019 47:22


The Beatles' final concert, their late-era conflicts, and the complicated history of director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s Let It Be documentary all arise in this discussion between musician Alan Parsons and Music Professor David Novak (UC Santa Barbara). Parsons was a teenage sound engineer at Abbey Road studios when he was assigned to record audio for the Beatles as they worked through this iconic album. Novak draws Parsons into dialogue about recording equipment, studio layouts, and the musical personalities of each member of the band. Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 34489]

Beatles News Briefs
48 - Beatles News Briefs Extra! - Rooftop Concert 50th Anniversary Special

Beatles News Briefs

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2019 55:51


A packed show as Contributing Editor Candy Leonard ("Beatleness") and Steve Marinucci look back at the Beatles' Rooftop Concert, celebrating its 50th anniversary this week, with special interviews with Michael Lindsay-Hogg, director of "Let It Be", and Ken Mansfield, author of "The Roof," who was then the liaison for Apple Records between the U.S. and UK and was among those on the Apple rooftop that great night. Send your comments to beatlesnewsdesk@gmail.com. (Stay tuned for a brief add-on after the show is finished with the news of the new "Let It Be" film recorded after the show was originally uploaded.)

UnderScore
Interview: Alan Snelling

UnderScore

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2018


It is our immense pleasure to share our conversation with Audio Engineer/Composer Alan Snelling. [Excerpts of this interview were included in our arc of episodes devoted to the score to STAR WARS - we are delighted to be sharing the full extent of our conversation with you on today’s podcast].Alan began his career in the late seventies as the assistant to audio engineer Eric Tomlinson at Anvil Studios in Denham, England, where he shortly became involved in such landmark projects as Star Wars, Alien, and Superman (to name but a few). In our delightful and long-ranging chat, Snelling recounts unforgettable stories from the recording sessions of these treasured films. Along the way, we'll encounter the likes of George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, Richard Donner, Jerry Goldsmith, Hans Zimmer, and the composer who left perhaps the greatest impact on Snelling and Tomlinson - John Williams. Alan is an incredible craftsman, phenomenal storyteller, and an incredibly generous human being; experiencing his wisdom is a true privilege. Enjoy! Listen to Interview: Alan Snelling Return of the Jedi (1983) - John Williams - 20th Century Fox (Richard Marquand, dir.)  -The Return of the JediThe Empire Strikes Back (1980) - John Williams - 20th Century Fox (Irvin Kershner, dir.)  -Lando's PalaceThe Great Train Robbery (1978) - Jerry Goldsmith - United Artists (Michael Crichton, dir.)  -No Respectable GentlemanStar Wars (1977) - John Williams - 20th Century Fox (George Lucas, dir.)  -The Land of the Sandpeople  -Inner City  -Main Title  -Rescue of the Princess  -Cantina Band  -The Desert and the Robot Auction  -The Princess AppearsDracula (1979) - John Williams - The Mirisch Corporation (John Badham, dir.)  -To ScarboroughThe Empire Strikes Back (1980) - John Williams - 20th Century Fox (Irvin Kershner, dir.)  -The Training of a Jedi KnightRaiders of the Lost Ark (1981) - John Williams - Paramount Pictures (Steven Spielberg, dir.)  -A Thought for Marion / To NepalBrideshead Revisited (1981) - Geoffrey Burgon - Granada Television (Charles Sturridge, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, dir.)  -Julia's ThemeLadyhawke (1985) - Andrew Powell - Warner Bros./20th Century Fox (Richard Donner, dir.)  -Phillipe Describes Isabeau Star Wars (1977) - John Williams - 20th Century Fox (George Lucas, dir.)  -The Throne Room and End TitleThe Empire Strikes Back (1980) - John Williams - 20th Century Fox (Irvin Kershner, dir.)  -The Wampa's Lair / Vision of Obi-Wan/Snowspeeders Take Flight  -Jedi Master Revealed / Mynock Cave  -The Imperial MarchE.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1984) - John Williams - Warner Bros (Richard Donner, dir.)  -The DepartureSuperman (1978) - John Williams - Warner Bros (Richard Donner, dir.)  -Leaving Home [5M3]  -Prelude / Main Title March  -Can You Read My Mind (Alternate Instrumental)  -The Flying SequenceA Pinprick of Light (2018) - Alan Snelling - Stranger Than Paradise Prod. (Kasra Karimi, dir.)  -Manfred's Room Alan Snellinghttp://www.up4loud.com/https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0811074■ ■ ■For score reductions, additional links and more,the discussion continues at: www.underscorepodcast.com---------------------------------------------------------------------to support the show, please visit www.patreon.com/underscorepodcast 

Yesterday and Today
Episode 28 – Beatles ’69 pt1

Yesterday and Today

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2018 80:58


It’s a new year and the Beatles are back in the studio. Mere weeks following the release of their titanic eponymous double album (now colloquially dubbed “the white album” after it’s all-white outer packaging) the band was once again called together with another big idea from Paul. The goal? To rehearse a brand new album of new songs, film the rehearsal and then perform the album in some sort of live setting. That process would be broadcast as a tv special and the live performance of the new material would be released as the next album. Michael Lindsay-Hogg was signed on to direct, who not only had a history with the Beatles themselves but whom had just recently worked with John on the Rolling Stones Rock’n’Roll circus. It was yet another grand undertaking by a band that was standing on the brink of complete fracture following the tumultuous year prior. As George put it, “I just spent 6 months producing an album of this fella Jackie Lomax, and hangin’ out with Bob Dylan and the Band, in Woodstock, and havin' a great time, and for me to come back into the 'winter of discontent' with the Beatles, in Twickenham, was very unhealthy and unhappy.” To compensate, these very early days of January 1969 find John, Paul, George and Ringo endlessly jamming on their 50’s rock “comfort food”, avoiding the inevitable... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

We're Not Afraid of the Dark
The Tale of the Magician’s Assistant or The Tale of the Sexual Innuendos w/ Bombs Away Podcast

We're Not Afraid of the Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2018 53:00


Warning: all episodes usually contain a high amount of strong language, drug/alcohol references, adult jokes, and other material that may be concerning to some listeners.Be sure to check out Jon Young’s Bombs Away podcast: http://www.bombsawayshow.com/Jon’s FB https://www.facebook.com/bombsawayshowThe crew talks about the production of their movie Hookman 2Jon returns in the Tale of Old Man CorcoranThe series is currently available in the United States on Amazon, YouTube, and several other sites.Intro theme is by glassdevaney: https://soundcloud.com/glassdevaney/are-you-afraid-of-the-darkOutro song is by Maddtown: https://soundcloud.com/maddtown/are-you-afraid-of-the-darkProduced by Modulation Studios. Contact: werenotafraidofthedark@gmail.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/werenotafraidofthedark/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/werenotafraidofthedark/Are You Afraid Of The Dark? “The Tale of the Magician’s Assistant” (TV Episode 1993)”. IMDB. Accessed January 20, 2018. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0514428/Are You Afraid of the Dark? “The Tale of the Magician’s Assistant” Season 2, episode 11. Directed by Ron Oliver. Written by Cassandra Schafhausen. Originally aired September 11, 1993 on Nickelodeon. https://youtu.be/yYR439GX7NABrad Silberling, dir. Casper (1995). Universal Pictures, Amblin Entertainment, The Harvey Entertainment Company. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0112642/Durham, Adam & Young, Jonathan, dirs. Hookman 2 (2013). Modulation Studios. Tri-B Productions. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1828200glassdevaney. Are You Afraid of the Dark? Instrumental cover. 2012. https://soundcloud.com/glassdevaney/are-you-afraid-of-the-darkJohn Fawcett, dir. Ginger Snaps (2000). Copperheart Entertainment, Water Pictures, Motion International. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0210070/Katt Shea, Robert Mandel, dirs. Carrie 2: The Rage (1999). United Artists, Red Bank Films. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0144814/McRobb, Will, Mittenthal, Robert, & Viscardi, Chris. KaBlam! (1996-2000) Flying Mallet Productions, Nickelodeon Production. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0122353/Mel Brooks, dir. Young Frankenstein (1974). Gruskoff/Venture Films, Crossbow Productions, Jouer Limited. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072431/Michael Lindsay-Hogg, dir. Ivana Trump’s For Love Alone (1996). RHI Entertainment. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0164029/Mike Judge, creator. Beavis and Butthead (1993-2011). Film Roman Productions, J.J. Sedelmaier Productions, Judgemental Films Inc. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105950/Mr. Skin. "Karen Elkin Nude - Naked Pics and Sex Scenes at Mr. Skin." Mrskin. Accessed January 19, 2018. https://www.mrskin.com/karen-elkin-nude-c7322.Raimi, Sam, dir. The Evil Dead (1981). Renaissance Pictures. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083907/Riversa, Jose & Schaefer, Karl, creators. Eerie, Indiana (1991-1992). Cosgrove/Meurer Productions, Hearsts Entertainment Productions, Unreality. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101088/Ron Oliver, dir. Are You Afraid Of The Dark? Season 2, episode 11, “The Tale of the Magician’s Assistant.” Aired on September 11, 1993, on Nickelodeon. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0514428/Robert Kurtzman, dir. Wishmaster (1997). Image Organization, Pierre David. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120524/Robert Zemeckis, dir. The Polar Express (2004). Castle Rock Entertainment, Shangri-La Entertainment, Playtone. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0338348/Spielberg, Steven, dir. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). Paramount Pictures, Lucasfilm. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082971/

We're Not Afraid of the Dark
The Tale of the Magician’s Assistant or The Tale of the Sexual Innuendos w/ Bombs Away Podcast

We're Not Afraid of the Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2018 53:00


Warning: all episodes usually contain a high amount of strong language, drug/alcohol references, adult jokes, and other material that may be concerning to some listeners.Be sure to check out Jon Young’s Bombs Away podcast: http://www.bombsawayshow.com/Jon’s FB https://www.facebook.com/bombsawayshowThe crew talks about the production of their movie Hookman 2Jon returns in the Tale of Old Man CorcoranThe series is currently available in the United States on Amazon, YouTube, and several other sites.Intro theme is by glassdevaney: https://soundcloud.com/glassdevaney/are-you-afraid-of-the-darkOutro song is by Maddtown: https://soundcloud.com/maddtown/are-you-afraid-of-the-darkProduced by Modulation Studios. Contact: werenotafraidofthedark@gmail.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/werenotafraidofthedark/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/werenotafraidofthedark/Are You Afraid Of The Dark? “The Tale of the Magician’s Assistant” (TV Episode 1993)”. IMDB. Accessed January 20, 2018. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0514428/Are You Afraid of the Dark? “The Tale of the Magician’s Assistant” Season 2, episode 11. Directed by Ron Oliver. Written by Cassandra Schafhausen. Originally aired September 11, 1993 on Nickelodeon. https://youtu.be/yYR439GX7NABrad Silberling, dir. Casper (1995). Universal Pictures, Amblin Entertainment, The Harvey Entertainment Company. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0112642/Durham, Adam & Young, Jonathan, dirs. Hookman 2 (2013). Modulation Studios. Tri-B Productions. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1828200glassdevaney. Are You Afraid of the Dark? Instrumental cover. 2012. https://soundcloud.com/glassdevaney/are-you-afraid-of-the-darkJohn Fawcett, dir. Ginger Snaps (2000). Copperheart Entertainment, Water Pictures, Motion International. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0210070/Katt Shea, Robert Mandel, dirs. Carrie 2: The Rage (1999). United Artists, Red Bank Films. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0144814/McRobb, Will, Mittenthal, Robert, & Viscardi, Chris. KaBlam! (1996-2000) Flying Mallet Productions, Nickelodeon Production. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0122353/Mel Brooks, dir. Young Frankenstein (1974). Gruskoff/Venture Films, Crossbow Productions, Jouer Limited. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072431/Michael Lindsay-Hogg, dir. Ivana Trump’s For Love Alone (1996). RHI Entertainment. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0164029/Mike Judge, creator. Beavis and Butthead (1993-2011). Film Roman Productions, J.J. Sedelmaier Productions, Judgemental Films Inc. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105950/Mr. Skin. "Karen Elkin Nude - Naked Pics and Sex Scenes at Mr. Skin." Mrskin. Accessed January 19, 2018. https://www.mrskin.com/karen-elkin-nude-c7322.Raimi, Sam, dir. The Evil Dead (1981). Renaissance Pictures. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083907/Riversa, Jose & Schaefer, Karl, creators. Eerie, Indiana (1991-1992). Cosgrove/Meurer Productions, Hearsts Entertainment Productions, Unreality. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101088/Ron Oliver, dir. Are You Afraid Of The Dark? Season 2, episode 11, “The Tale of the Magician’s Assistant.” Aired on September 11, 1993, on Nickelodeon. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0514428/Robert Kurtzman, dir. Wishmaster (1997). Image Organization, Pierre David. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120524/Robert Zemeckis, dir. The Polar Express (2004). Castle Rock Entertainment, Shangri-La Entertainment, Playtone. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0338348/Spielberg, Steven, dir. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). Paramount Pictures, Lucasfilm. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082971/