Podcasts about Rylance

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Best podcasts about Rylance

Latest podcast episodes about Rylance

Replay Value
Dunkirk (2017) | Ep. 521

Replay Value

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2023 91:26


Seeing home doesn't help brothers Phil & Warren get there after they survive a deep dive into Christopher Nolan's war action thriller blockbuster “Dunkirk”. Topics include: Nolan's inspiration & making the movie (4:50), stars of the picture (18:25), stats & accolades (27:35), best scenes & lines (37:10), Judge Bob's recasting court (53:00), and the films legacy & lore (1:19:55), plus much more.

Secret Artists with Annie McGrath

Content Warning: stalking (34:30-49:00 approx)Beth Rylance does art and chats to Annie McGrath. Secret Artists is a podcast hosted by comedian and artist, Annie McGrath. Each week her guest selects a subject which inspires them to create an artwork... It could be an object, a place, a person, an animal... Whilst drawing and painting, Annie and her guest enjoy a nice chat. Often silly. Sometimes serious. Mainly relaxing.https://supporter.acast.com/secretartistsTo see them painting, close ups of the "works of art" and more behind the scenes go to the Secret Artists Instagram:@secretartpodTwitter:@secretartpod#:#secretartistspodMore Annie:www.amcgrath.artTwitter:@AnnieMcTweetAnnie's Art:@mcgrath.artAnnie's Life:@mcgrath.annieMore Beth:InstagramTwitterBeth's blog about being stalkedTurtle Canyon Comedy:www.turtlecanyoncomedy.comTwitter:@turtlecanyoncomInstagram:@turtlecanyoncomOther Turtle Canyon Comedy podcastsUp Your FootfallGhastly WomenCongrats on the new...The Comedy Walking TourSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/secretartists. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Track Brewing Co Presents - The Thirst Time
S3 - E 14 - The Thirst Time - James Rylance - Ideal Day Brewery

Track Brewing Co Presents - The Thirst Time

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 75:19


On this weeks Episode of The Thirst Time, we sit down with James Rylance of Ideal Day Brewery. Now, James has been working in the industry for sometime, including a stretch at the very beginning of a little known Brewery called Beavertown. But now he is starting his own project, down in Cornwall with sustainability at the heart of it. Hope you enjoy this one! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs
Episode 159: “Itchycoo Park”, by the Small Faces

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022


Episode 159 of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at “Itchycoo Park” by the Small Faces, and their transition from Mod to psychedelia. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a twenty-five-minute bonus episode available, on "The First Cut is the Deepest" by P.P. Arnold. 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/ Resources As so many of the episodes recently have had no Mixcloud due to the number of songs by one artist, I've decided to start splitting the mixes of the recordings excerpted in the podcasts into two parts. Here's part one and part two. I've used quite a few books in this episode. The Small Faces & Other Stories by Uli Twelker and Roland Schmit is definitely a fan-work with all that that implies, but has some useful quotes. Two books claim to be the authorised biography of Steve Marriott, and I've referred to both -- All Too Beautiful by Paolo Hewitt and John Hellier, and All Or Nothing by Simon Spence. Spence also wrote an excellent book on Immediate Records, which I referred to. Kenney Jones and Ian McLagan both wrote very readable autobiographies. I've also used Andrew Loog Oldham's autobiography Stoned, co-written by Spence, though be warned that it casually uses slurs. P.P. Arnold's autobiography is a sometimes distressing read covering her whole life, including her time at Immediate. There are many, many, collections of the Small Faces' work, ranging from cheap budget CDs full of outtakes to hundred-pound-plus box sets, also full of outtakes. This three-CD budget collection contains all the essential tracks, and is endorsed by Kenney Jones, the band's one surviving member. And if you're intrigued by the section on Immediate Records, this two-CD set contains a good selection of their releases. ERRATUM-ISH: I say Jimmy Winston was “a couple” of years older than the rest of the band. This does not mean exactly two, but is used in the vague vernacular sense equivalent to “a few”. Different sources I've seen put Winston as either two or four years older than his bandmates, though two seems to be the most commonly cited figure. Transcript For once there is little to warn about in this episode, but it does contain some mild discussions of organised crime, arson, and mental illness, and a quoted joke about capital punishment in questionable taste which may upset some. One name that came up time and again when we looked at the very early years of British rock and roll was Lionel Bart. If you don't remember the name, he was a left-wing Bohemian songwriter who lived in a communal house-share which at various times was also inhabited by people like Shirley Eaton, the woman who is painted gold at the beginning of Goldfinger, Mike Pratt, the star of Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased), and Davey Graham, the most influential and innovative British guitarist of the fifties and early sixties. Bart and Pratt had co-written most of the hits of Britain's first real rock and roll star, Tommy Steele: [Excerpt: Tommy Steele, "Rock with the Caveman"] and then Bart had gone solo as a writer, and written hits like "Living Doll" for Britain's *biggest* rock and roll star, Cliff Richard: [Excerpt: Cliff Richard, "Living Doll"] But Bart's biggest contribution to rock music turned out not to be the songs he wrote for rock and roll stars, and not even his talent-spotting -- it was Bart who got Steele signed by Larry Parnes, and he also pointed Parnes in the direction of another of his biggest stars, Marty Wilde -- but the opportunity he gave to a lot of child stars in a very non-rock context. Bart's musical Oliver!, inspired by the novel Oliver Twist, was the biggest sensation on the West End stage in the early 1960s, breaking records for the longest-running musical, and also transferred to Broadway and later became an extremely successful film. As it happened, while Oliver! was extraordinarily lucrative, Bart didn't see much of the money from it -- he sold the rights to it, and his other musicals, to the comedian Max Bygraves in the mid-sixties for a tiny sum in order to finance a couple of other musicals, which then flopped horribly and bankrupted him. But by that time Oliver! had already been the first big break for three people who went on to major careers in music -- all of them playing the same role. Because many of the major roles in Oliver! were for young boys, the cast had to change frequently -- child labour laws meant that multiple kids had to play the same role in different performances, and people quickly grew out of the roles as teenagerhood hit. We've already heard about the career of one of the people who played the Artful Dodger in the original West End production -- Davy Jones, who transferred in the role to Broadway in 1963, and who we'll be seeing again in a few episodes' time -- and it's very likely that another of the people who played the Artful Dodger in that production, a young lad called Philip Collins, will be coming into the story in a few years' time. But the first of the artists to use the Artful Dodger as a springboard to a music career was the one who appeared in the role on the original cast album of 1960, though there's very little in that recording to suggest the sound of his later records: [Excerpt: Steve Marriott, "Consider Yourself"] Steve Marriott is the second little Stevie we've looked at in recent episodes to have been born prematurely. In his case, he was born a month premature, and jaundiced, and had to spend the first month of his life in hospital, the first few days of which were spent unsure if he was going to survive. Thankfully he did, but he was a bit of a sickly child as a result, and remained stick-thin and short into adulthood -- he never grew to be taller than five foot five. Young Steve loved music, and especially the music of Buddy Holly. He also loved skiffle, and managed to find out where Lonnie Donegan lived. He went round and knocked on Donegan's door, but was very disappointed to discover that his idol was just a normal man, with his hair uncombed and a shirt stained with egg yolk. He started playing the ukulele when he was ten, and graduated to guitar when he was twelve, forming a band which performed under a variety of different names. When on stage with them, he would go by the stage name Buddy Marriott, and would wear a pair of horn-rimmed glasses to look more like Buddy Holly. When he was twelve, his mother took him to an audition for Oliver! The show had been running for three months at the time, and was likely to run longer, and child labour laws meant that they had to have replacements for some of the cast -- every three months, any performing child had to have at least ten days off. At his audition, Steve played his guitar and sang "Who's Sorry Now?", the recent Connie Francis hit: [Excerpt: Connie Francis, "Who's Sorry Now?"] And then, ignoring the rule that performers could only do one song, immediately launched into Buddy Holly's "Oh Boy!" [Excerpt: Buddy Holly, "Oh Boy!"] His musical ability and attitude impressed the show's producers, and he was given a job which suited him perfectly -- rather than being cast in a single role, he would be swapped around, playing different small parts, in the chorus, and occasionally taking the larger role of the Artful Dodger. Steve Marriott was never able to do the same thing over and over, and got bored very quickly, but because he was moving between roles, he was able to keep interested in his performances for almost a year, and he was good enough that it was him chosen to sing the Dodger's role on the cast album when that was recorded: [Excerpt: Steve Marriott and Joyce Blair, "I'd Do Anything"] And he enjoyed performance enough that his parents pushed him to become an actor -- though there were other reasons for that, too. He was never the best-behaved child in the world, nor the most attentive student, and things came to a head when, shortly after leaving the Oliver! cast, he got so bored of his art classes he devised a plan to get out of them forever. Every art class, for several weeks, he'd sit in a different desk at the back of the classroom and stuff torn-up bits of paper under the floorboards. After a couple of months of this he then dropped a lit match in, which set fire to the paper and ended up burning down half the school. His schoolfriend Ken Hawes talked about it many decades later, saying "I suppose in a way I was impressed about how he had meticulously planned the whole thing months in advance, the sheer dogged determination to see it through. He could quite easily have been caught and would have had to face the consequences. There was no danger in anybody getting hurt because we were at the back of the room. We had to be at the back otherwise somebody would have noticed what he was doing. There was no malice against other pupils, he just wanted to burn the damn school down." Nobody could prove it was him who had done it, though his parents at least had a pretty good idea who it was, but it was clear that even when the school was rebuilt it wasn't a good idea to send him back there, so they sent him to the Italia Conti Drama School; the same school that Anthony Newley and Petula Clark, among many others, had attended. Marriott's parents couldn't afford the school's fees, but Marriott was so talented that the school waived the fees -- they said they'd get him work, and take a cut of his wages in lieu of the fees. And over the next few years they did get him a lot of work. Much of that work was for TV shows, which like almost all TV of the time no longer exist -- he was in an episode of the Sid James sitcom Citizen James, an episode of Mr. Pastry's Progress, an episode of the police drama Dixon of Dock Green, and an episode of a series based on the Just William books, none of which survive. He also did a voiceover for a carpet cleaner ad, appeared on the radio soap opera Mrs Dale's Diary playing a pop star, and had a regular spot reading listeners' letters out for the agony aunt Marje Proops on her radio show. Almost all of this early acting work wa s utterly ephemeral, but there are a handful of his performances that do survive, mostly in films. He has a small role in the comedy film Heavens Above!, a mistaken-identity comedy in which a radical left-wing priest played by Peter Sellers is given a parish intended for a more conservative priest of the same name, and upsets the well-off people of the parish by taking in a large family of travellers and appointing a Black man as his churchwarden. The film has some dated attitudes, in the way that things that were trying to be progressive and antiracist sixty years ago invariably do, but has a sparkling cast, with Sellers, Eric Sykes, William Hartnell, Brock Peters, Roy Kinnear, Irene Handl, and many more extremely recognisable faces from the period: [Excerpt: Heavens Above!] Marriott apparently enjoyed working on the film immensely, as he was a fan of the Goon Show, which Sellers had starred in and which Sykes had co-written several episodes of. There are reports of Marriott and Sellers jamming together on banjos during breaks in filming, though these are probably *slightly* inaccurate -- Sellers played the banjolele, a banjo-style instrument which is played like a ukulele. As Marriott had started on ukulele before switching to guitar, it was probably these they were playing, rather than banjoes. He also appeared in a more substantial role in a film called Live It Up!, a pop exploitation film starring David Hemmings in which he appears as a member of a pop group. Oddly, Marriott plays a drummer, even though he wasn't a drummer, while two people who *would* find fame as drummers, Mitch Mitchell and Dave Clark, appear in smaller, non-drumming, roles. He doesn't perform on the soundtrack, which is produced by Joe Meek and features Sounds Incorporated, The Outlaws, and Gene Vincent, but he does mime playing behind Heinz Burt, the former bass player of the Tornadoes who was then trying for solo stardom at Meek's instigation: [Excerpt: Heinz Burt, "Don't You Understand"] That film was successful enough that two years later, in 1965 Marriott came back for a sequel, Be My Guest, with The Niteshades, the Nashville Teens, and Jerry Lee Lewis, this time with music produced by Shel Talmy rather than Meek. But that was something of a one-off. After making Live It Up!, Marriott had largely retired from acting, because he was trying to become a pop star. The break finally came when he got an audition at the National Theatre, for a job touring with Laurence Olivier for a year. He came home and told his parents he hadn't got the job, but then a week later they were bemused by a phone call asking why Steve hadn't turned up for rehearsals. He *had* got the job, but he'd decided he couldn't face a year of doing the same thing over and over, and had pretended he hadn't. By this time he'd already released his first record. The work on Oliver! had got him a contract with Decca Records, and he'd recorded a Buddy Holly knock-off, "Give Her My Regards", written for him by Kenny Lynch, the actor, pop star, and all-round entertainer: [Excerpt: Steve Marriott, "Give Her My Regards"] That record wasn't a hit, but Marriott wasn't put off. He formed a band who were at first called the Moonlights, and then the Frantiks, and they got a management deal with Tony Calder, Andrew Oldham's junior partner in his management company. Calder got former Shadow Tony Meehan to produce a demo for the group, a version of Cliff Richard's hit "Move It", which was shopped round the record labels with no success (and which sadly appears no longer to survive). The group also did some recordings with Joe Meek, which also don't circulate, but which may exist in the famous "Teachest Tapes" which are slowly being prepared for archival releases. The group changed their name to the Moments, and added in the guitarist John Weider, who was one of those people who seem to have been in every band ever either just before or just after they became famous -- at various times he was in Johnny Kidd and the Pirates, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, Family, Eric Burdon and the Animals, and the band that became Crabby Appleton, but never in their most successful lineups. They continued recording unsuccessful demos, of which a small number have turned up: [Excerpt: Steve Marriott and the Moments, "Good Morning Blues"] One of their demo sessions was produced by Andrew Oldham, and while that session didn't lead to a release, it did lead to Oldham booking Marriott as a session harmonica player for one of his "Andrew Oldham Orchestra" sessions, to play on a track titled "365 Rolling Stones (One For Every Day of the Year)": [Excerpt: The Andrew Oldham Orchestra, "365 Rolling Stones (One For Every Day of the Year)"] Oldham also produced a session for what was meant to be Marriott's second solo single on Decca, a cover version of the Rolling Stones' "Tell Me", which was actually scheduled for release but pulled at the last minute. Like many of Marriott's recordings from this period, if it exists, it doesn't seem to circulate publicly. But despite their lack of recording success, the Moments did manage to have a surprising level of success on the live circuit. Because they were signed to Calder and Oldham's management company, they got a contract with the Arthur Howes booking agency, which got them support slots on package tours with Billy J Kramer, Freddie and the Dreamers, the Kinks, and other major acts, and the band members were earning about thirty pounds a week each -- a very, very good living for the time. They even had a fanzine devoted to them, written by a fan named Stuart Tuck. But as they weren't making records, the band's lineup started changing, with members coming and going. They did manage to get one record released -- a soundalike version of the Kinks' "You Really Got Me", recorded for a budget label who rushed it out, hoping to get it picked up in the US and for it to be the hit version there: [Excerpt: The Moments, "You Really Got Me"] But the month after that was released, Marriott was sacked from the band, apparently in part because the band were starting to get billed as Steve Marriott and the Moments rather than just The Moments, and the rest of them didn't want to be anyone's backing band. He got a job at a music shop while looking around for other bands to perform with. At one point around this time he was going to form a duo with a friend of his, Davy Jones -- not the one who had also appeared in Oliver!, but another singer of the same name. This one sang with a blues band called the Mannish Boys, and both men were well known on the Mod scene in London. Marriott's idea was that they call themselves David and Goliath, with Jones being David, and Marriott being Goliath because he was only five foot five. That could have been a great band, but it never got past the idea stage. Marriott had become friendly with another part-time musician and shop worker called Ronnie Lane, who was in a band called the Outcasts who played the same circuit as the Moments: [Excerpt: The Outcasts, "Before You Accuse Me"] Lane worked in a sound equipment shop and Marriott in a musical instrument shop, and both were customers of the other as well as friends -- at least until Marriott came into the shop where Lane worked and tried to persuade him to let Marriott have a free PA system. Lane pretended to go along with it as a joke, and got sacked. Lane had then gone to the shop where Marriott worked in the hope that Marriott would give him a good deal on a guitar because he'd been sacked because of Marriott. Instead, Marriott persuaded him that he should switch to bass, on the grounds that everyone was playing guitar since the Beatles had come along, but a bass player would always be able to find work. Lane bought the bass. Shortly after that, Marriott came to an Outcasts gig in a pub, and was asked to sit in. He enjoyed playing with Lane and the group's drummer Kenney Jones, but got so drunk he smashed up the pub's piano while playing a Jerry Lee Lewis song. The resulting fallout led to the group being barred from the pub and splitting up, so Marriott, Lane, and Jones decided to form their own group. They got in another guitarist Marriott knew, a man named Jimmy Winston who was a couple of years older than them, and who had two advantages -- he was a known Face on the mod scene, with a higher status than any of the other three, and his brother owned a van and would drive the group and their equipment for ten percent of their earnings. There was a slight problem in that Winston was also as good on guitar as Marriott and looked like he might want to be the star, but Marriott neutralised that threat -- he moved Winston over to keyboards. The fact that Winston couldn't play keyboards didn't matter -- he could be taught a couple of riffs and licks, and he was sure to pick up the rest. And this way the group had the same lineup as one of Marriott's current favourites, Booker T and the MGs. While he was still a Buddy Holly fan, he was now, like the rest of the Mods, an R&B obsessive. Marriott wasn't entirely sure that this new group would be the one that would make him a star though, and was still looking for other alternatives in case it didn't play out. He auditioned for another band, the Lower Third, which counted Stuart Tuck, the writer of the Moments fanzine, among its members. But he was unsuccessful in the audition -- instead his friend Davy Jones, the one who he'd been thinking of forming a duo with, got the job: [Excerpt: Davy Jones and the Lower Third, "You've Got a Habit of Leaving"] A few months after that, Davy Jones and the Lower Third changed their name to David Bowie and the Lower Third, and we'll be picking up that story in a little over a year from now... Marriott, Lane, Jones, and Winston kept rehearsing and pulled together a five-song set, which was just about long enough to play a few shows, if they extended the songs with long jamming instrumental sections. The opening song for these early sets was one which, when they recorded it, would be credited to Marriott and Lane -- the two had struck up a writing partnership and agreed to a Lennon/McCartney style credit split, though in these early days Marriott was doing far more of the writing than Lane was. But "You Need Loving" was... heavily inspired... by "You Need Love", a song Willie Dixon had written for Muddy Waters: [Excerpt: Muddy Waters, "You Need Love"] It's not precisely the same song, but you can definitely hear the influence in the Marriott/Lane song: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "You Need Loving"] They did make some changes though, notably to the end of the song: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "You Need Loving"] You will be unsurprised to learn that Robert Plant was a fan of Steve Marriott. The new group were initially without a name, until after one of their first gigs, Winston's girlfriend, who hadn't met the other three before, said "You've all got such small faces!" The name stuck, because it had a double meaning -- as we've seen in the episode on "My Generation", "Face" was Mod slang for someone who was cool and respected on the Mod scene, but also, with the exception of Winston, who was average size, the other three members of the group were very short -- the tallest of the three was Ronnie Lane, who was five foot six. One thing I should note about the group's name, by the way -- on all the labels of their records in the UK while they were together, they were credited as "Small Faces", with no "The" in front, but all the band members referred to the group in interviews as "The Small Faces", and they've been credited that way on some reissues and foreign-market records. The group's official website is thesmallfaces.com but all the posts on the website refer to them as "Small Faces" with no "the". The use  of the word "the" or not at the start of a group's name at this time was something of a shibboleth -- for example both The Buffalo Springfield and The Pink Floyd dropped theirs after their early records -- and its status in this case is a strange one. I'll be referring to the group throughout as "The Small Faces" rather than "Small Faces" because the former is easier to say, but both seem accurate. After a few pub gigs in London, they got some bookings in the North of England, where they got a mixed reception -- they went down well at Peter Stringfellow's Mojo Club in Sheffield, where Joe Cocker was a regular performer, less well at a working-man's club, and reports differ about their performance at the Twisted Wheel in Manchester, though one thing everyone is agreed on is that while they were performing, some Mancunians borrowed their van and used it to rob a clothing warehouse, and gave the band members some very nice leather coats as a reward for their loan of the van. It was only on the group's return to London that they really started to gel as a unit. In particular, Kenney Jones had up to that point been a very stiff, precise, drummer, but he suddenly loosened up and, in Steve Marriott's tasteless phrase, "Every number swung like Hanratty" (James Hanratty was one of the last people in Britain to be executed by hanging). Shortly after that, Don Arden's secretary -- whose name I haven't been able to find in any of the sources I've used for this episode, sadly, came into the club where they were rehearsing, the Starlight Rooms, to pass a message from Arden to an associate of his who owned the club. The secretary had seen Marriott perform before -- he would occasionally get up on stage at the Starlight Rooms to duet with Elkie Brooks, who was a regular performer there, and she'd seen him do that -- but was newly impressed by his group, and passed word on to her boss that this was a group he should investigate. Arden is someone who we'll be looking at a lot in future episodes, but the important thing to note right now is that he was a failed entertainer who had moved into management and promotion, first with American acts like Gene Vincent, and then with British acts like the Nashville Teens, who had had hits with tracks like "Tobacco Road": [Excerpt: The Nashville Teens, "Tobacco Road"] Arden was also something of a gangster -- as many people in the music industry were at the time, but he was worse than most of his contemporaries, and delighted in his nickname "the Al Capone of pop". The group had a few managers looking to sign them, but Arden convinced them with his offer. They would get a percentage of their earnings -- though they never actually received that percentage -- twenty pounds a week in wages, and, the most tempting part of it all, they would get expense accounts at all the Carnaby St boutiques and could go there whenever they wanted and get whatever they wanted. They signed with Arden, which all of them except Marriott would later regret, because Arden's financial exploitation meant that it would be decades before they saw any money from their hits, and indeed both Marriott and Lane would be dead before they started getting royalties from their old records. Marriott, on the other hand, had enough experience of the industry to credit Arden with the group getting anywhere at all, and said later "Look, you go into it with your eyes open and as far as I was concerned it was better than living on brown sauce rolls. At least we had twenty quid a week guaranteed." Arden got the group signed to Decca, with Dick Rowe signing them to the same kind of production deal that Andrew Oldham had pioneered with the Stones, so that Arden would own the rights to their recordings. At this point the group still only knew a handful of songs, but Rowe was signing almost everyone with a guitar at this point, putting out a record or two and letting them sink or swim. He had already been firmly labelled as "the man who turned down the Beatles", and was now of the opinion that it was better to give everyone a chance than to make that kind of expensive mistake again. By this point Marriott and Lane were starting to write songs together -- though at this point it was still mostly Marriott writing, and people would ask him why he was giving Lane half the credit, and he'd reply "Without Ronnie's help keeping me awake and being there I wouldn't do half of it. He keeps me going." -- but for their first single Arden was unsure that they were up to the task of writing a hit. The group had been performing a version of Solomon Burke's "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love", a song which Burke always claimed to have written alone, but which is credited to him, Jerry Wexler, and Bert Berns (and has Bern's fingerprints, at least, on it to my ears): [Excerpt: Solomon Burke, "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love"] Arden got some professional writers to write new lyrics and vocal melody to their arrangement of the song -- the people he hired were Brian Potter, who would later go on to co-write "Rhinestone Cowboy", and Ian Samwell, the former member of Cliff Richard's Drifters who had written many of Richard's early hits, including "Move It", and was now working for Arden. The group went into the studio and recorded the song, titled "Whatcha Gonna Do About It?": [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "Whatcha Gonna Do About It?"] That version, though was deemed too raucous, and they had to go back into the studio to cut a new version, which came out as their first single: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "Whatcha Gonna Do About It?"] At first the single didn't do much on the charts, but then Arden got to work with teams of people buying copies from chart return shops, bribing DJs on pirate radio stations to play it, and bribing the person who compiled the charts for the NME. Eventually it made number fourteen, at which point it became a genuinely popular hit. But with that popularity came problems. In particular, Steve Marriott was starting to get seriously annoyed by Jimmy Winston. As the group started to get TV appearances, Winston started to act like he should be the centre of attention. Every time Marriott took a solo in front of TV cameras, Winston would start making stupid gestures, pulling faces, anything to make sure the cameras focussed on him rather than on Marriott. Which wouldn't have been too bad had Winston been a great musician, but he was still not very good on the keyboards, and unlike the others didn't seem particularly interested in trying. He seemed to want to be a star, rather than a musician. The group's next planned single was a Marriott and Lane song, "I've Got Mine". To promote it, the group mimed to it in a film, Dateline Diamonds, a combination pop film and crime caper not a million miles away from the ones that Marriott had appeared in a few years earlier. They also contributed three other songs to the film's soundtrack. Unfortunately, the film's release was delayed, and the film had been the big promotional push that Arden had planned for the single, and without that it didn't chart at all. By the time the single came out, though, Winston was no longer in the group. There are many, many different stories as to why he was kicked out. Depending on who you ask, it was because he was trying to take the spotlight away from Marriott, because he wasn't a good enough keyboard player, because he was taller than the others and looked out of place, or because he asked Don Arden where the money was. It was probably a combination of all of these, but fundamentally what it came to was that Winston just didn't fit into the group. Winston would, in later years, say that him confronting Arden was the only reason for his dismissal, saying that Arden had manipulated the others to get him out of the way, but that seems unlikely on the face of it. When Arden sacked him, he kept Winston on as a client and built another band around him, Jimmy Winston and the Reflections, and got them signed to Decca too, releasing a Kenny Lynch song, "Sorry She's Mine", to no success: [Excerpt: Jimmy Winston and the Reflections, "Sorry She's Mine"] Another version of that song would later be included on the first Small Faces album. Winston would then form another band, Winston's Fumbs, who would also release one single, before he went into acting instead. His most notable credit was as a rebel in the 1972 Doctor Who story Day of the Daleks, and he later retired from showbusiness to run a business renting out sound equipment, and died in 2020. The group hired his replacement without ever having met him or heard him play. Ian McLagan had started out as the rhythm guitarist in a Shadows soundalike band called the Cherokees, but the group had become R&B fans and renamed themselves the Muleskinners, and then after hearing "Green Onions", McLagan had switched to playing Hammond organ. The Muleskinners had played the same R&B circuit as dozens of other bands we've looked at, and had similar experiences, including backing visiting blues stars like Sonny Boy Williamson, Little Walter, and Howlin' Wolf. Their one single had been a cover version of "Back Door Man", a song Willie Dixon had written for Wolf: [Excerpt: The Muleskinners, "Back Door Man"] The Muleskinners had split up as most of the group had day jobs, and McLagan had gone on to join a group called Boz and the Boz People, who were becoming popular on the live circuit, and who also toured backing Kenny Lynch while McLagan was in the band. Boz and the Boz People would release several singles in 1966, like their version of the theme for the film "Carry on Screaming", released just as by "Boz": [Excerpt: Boz, "Carry on Screaming"] By that time, McLagan had left the group -- Boz Burrell later went on to join King Crimson and Bad Company. McLagan left the Boz People in something of a strop, and was complaining to a friend the night he left the group that he didn't have any work lined up. The friend joked that he should join the Small Faces, because he looked like them, and McLagan got annoyed that his friend wasn't taking him seriously -- he'd love to be in the Small Faces, but they *had* a keyboard player. The next day he got a phone call from Don Arden asking him to come to his office. He was being hired to join a hit pop group who needed a new keyboard player. McLagan at first wasn't allowed to tell anyone what band he was joining -- in part because Arden's secretary was dating Winston, and Winston hadn't yet been informed he was fired, and Arden didn't want word leaking out until it had been sorted. But he'd been chosen purely on the basis of an article in a music magazine which had praised his playing with the Boz People, and without the band knowing him or his playing. As soon as they met, though, he immediately fit in in a way Winston never had. He looked the part, right down to his height -- he said later "Ronnie Lane and I were the giants in the band at 5 ft 6 ins, and Kenney Jones and Steve Marriott were the really teeny tiny chaps at 5 ft 5 1/2 ins" -- and he was a great player, and shared a sense of humour with them. McLagan had told Arden he'd been earning twenty pounds a week with the Boz People -- he'd actually been on five -- and so Arden agreed to give him thirty pounds a week during his probationary month, which was more than the twenty the rest of the band were getting. As soon as his probationary period was over, McLagan insisted on getting a pay cut so he'd be on the same wages as the rest of the group. Soon Marriott, Lane, and McLagan were all living in a house rented for them by Arden -- Jones decided to stay living with his parents -- and were in the studio recording their next single. Arden was convinced that the mistake with "I've Got Mine" had been allowing the group to record an original, and again called in a team of professional songwriters. Arden brought in Mort Shuman, who had recently ended his writing partnership with Doc Pomus and struck out on his own, after co-writing songs like "Save the Last Dance for Me", "Sweets For My Sweet", and "Viva Las Vegas" together, and Kenny Lynch, and the two of them wrote "Sha-La-La-La-Lee", and Lynch added backing vocals to the record: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "Sha-La-La-La-Lee"] None of the group were happy with the record, but it became a big hit, reaching number three in the charts. Suddenly the group had a huge fanbase of screaming teenage girls, which embarrassed them terribly, as they thought of themselves as serious heavy R&B musicians, and the rest of their career would largely be spent vacillating between trying to appeal to their teenybopper fanbase and trying to escape from it to fit their own self-image. They followed "Sha-La-La-La-Lee" with "Hey Girl", a Marriott/Lane song, but one written to order -- they were under strict instructions from Arden that if they wanted to have the A-side of a single, they had to write something as commercial as "Sha-La-La-La-Lee" had been, and they managed to come up with a second top-ten hit. Two hit singles in a row was enough to make an album viable, and the group went into the studio and quickly cut an album, which had their first two hits on it -- "Hey Girl" wasn't included, and nor was the flop "I've Got Mine" -- plus a bunch of semi-originals like "You Need Loving", a couple of Kenny Lynch songs, and a cover version of Sam Cooke's "Shake". The album went to number three on the album charts, with the Beatles and the Rolling Stones in the number one and two spots, and it was at this point that Arden's rivals really started taking interest. But that interest was quelled for the moment when, after Robert Stigwood enquired about managing the band, Arden went round to Stigwood's office with four goons and held him upside down over a balcony, threatening to drop him off if he ever messed with any of Arden's acts again. But the group were still being influenced by other managers. In particular, Brian Epstein came round to the group's shared house, with Graeme Edge of the Moody Blues, and brought them some slices of orange -- which they discovered, after eating them, had been dosed with LSD. By all accounts, Marriott's first trip was a bad one, but the group soon became regular consumers of the drug, and it influenced the heavier direction they took on their next single, "All or Nothing". "All or Nothing" was inspired both by Marriott's breakup with his girlfriend of the time, and his delight at the fact that Jenny Rylance, a woman he was attracted to, had split up with her then-boyfriend Rod Stewart. Rylance and Stewart later reconciled, but would break up again and Rylance would become Marriott's first wife in 1968: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "All or Nothing"] "All or Nothing" became the group's first and only number one record -- and according to the version of the charts used on Top of the Pops, it was a joint number one with the Beatles' double A-side of "Yellow Submarine" and "Eleanor Rigby", both selling exactly as well as each other. But this success caused the group's parents to start to wonder why their kids -- none of whom were yet twenty-one, the legal age of majority at the time -- were not rich. While the group were on tour, their parents came as a group to visit Arden and ask him where the money was, and why their kids were only getting paid twenty pounds a week when their group was getting a thousand pounds a night. Arden tried to convince the parents that he had been paying the group properly, but that they had spent their money on heroin -- which was very far from the truth, the band were only using soft drugs at the time. This put a huge strain on the group's relationship with Arden, and it wasn't the only thing Arden did that upset them. They had been spending a lot of time in the studio working on new material, and Arden was convinced that they were spending too much time recording, and that they were just faffing around and not producing anything of substance. They dropped off a tape to show him that they had been working -- and the next thing they knew, Arden had put out one of the tracks from that tape, "My Mind's Eye", which had only been intended as a demo, as a single: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "My Mind's Eye"] That it went to number four on the charts didn't make up for the fact that the first the band heard of the record coming out at all was when they heard it on the radio. They needed rid of Arden. Luckily for them, Arden wasn't keen on continuing to work with them either. They were unreliable and flakey, and he also needed cash quick to fund his other ventures, and he agreed to sell on their management and recording contracts. Depending on which version of the story you believe, he may have sold them on to an agent called Harold Davison, who then sold them on to Andrew Oldham and Tony Calder, but according to Oldham what happened is that in December 1966 Arden demanded the highest advance in British history -- twenty-five thousand pounds -- directly from Oldham. In cash. In a brown paper bag. The reason Oldham and Calder were interested was that in July 1965 they'd started up their own record label, Immediate Records, which had been announced by Oldham in his column in Disc and Music Echo, in which he'd said "On many occasions I have run down the large record companies over issues such as pirate stations, their promotion, and their tastes. And many readers have written in and said that if I was so disturbed by the state of the existing record companies why didn't I do something about it.  I have! On the twentieth of this month the first of three records released by my own company, Immediate Records, is to be launched." That first batch of three records contained one big hit, "Hang on Sloopy" by the McCoys, which Immediate licensed from Bert Berns' new record label BANG in the US: [Excerpt: The McCoys, "Hang on Sloopy"] The two other initial singles featured the talents of Immediate's new in-house producer, a session player who had previously been known as "Little Jimmy" to distinguish him from "Big" Jim Sullivan, the other most in-demand session guitarist, but who was now just known as Jimmy Page. The first was a version of Pete Seeger's "The Bells of Rhymney", which Page produced and played guitar on, for a group called The Fifth Avenue: [Excerpt: The Fifth Avenue, "The Bells of Rhymney"] And the second was a Gordon Lightfoot song performed by a girlfriend of Brian Jones', Nico. The details as to who was involved in the track have varied -- at different times the production has been credited to Jones, Page, and Oldham -- but it seems to be the case that both Jones and Page play on the track, as did session bass player John Paul Jones: [Excerpt: Nico, "I'm Not Sayin'"] While "Hang on Sloopy" was a big hit, the other two singles were flops, and The Fifth Avenue split up, while Nico used the publicity she'd got as an entree into Andy Warhol's Factory, and we'll be hearing more about how that went in a future episode. Oldham and Calder were trying to follow the model of the Brill Building, of Phil Spector, and of big US independents like Motown and Stax. They wanted to be a one-stop shop where they'd produce the records, manage the artists, and own the publishing -- and they also licensed the publishing for the Beach Boys' songs for a couple of years, and started publicising their records over here in a big way, to exploit the publishing royalties, and that was a major factor in turning the Beach Boys from minor novelties to major stars in the UK. Most of Immediate's records were produced by Jimmy Page, but other people got to have a go as well. Giorgio Gomelsky and Shel Talmy both produced tracks for the label, as did a teenage singer then known as Paul Raven, who would later become notorious under his later stage-name Gary Glitter. But while many of these records were excellent -- and Immediate deserves to be talked about in the same terms as Motown or Stax when it comes to the quality of the singles it released, though not in terms of commercial success -- the only ones to do well on the charts in the first few months of the label's existence were "Hang on Sloopy" and an EP by Chris Farlowe. It was Farlowe who provided Immediate Records with its first home-grown number one, a version of the Rolling Stones' "Out of Time" produced by Mick Jagger, though according to Arthur Greenslade, the arranger on that and many other Immediate tracks, Jagger had given up on getting a decent performance out of Farlowe and Oldham ended up producing the vocals. Greenslade later said "Andrew must have worked hard in there, Chris Farlowe couldn't sing his way out of a paper bag. I'm sure Andrew must have done it, where you get an artist singing and you can do a sentence at a time, stitching it all together. He must have done it in pieces." But however hard it was to make, "Out of Time" was a success: [Excerpt: Chris Farlowe, "Out of Time"] Or at least, it was a success in the UK. It did also make the top forty in the US for a week, but then it hit a snag -- it had charted without having been released in the US at all, or even being sent as a promo to DJs. Oldham's new business manager Allen Klein had been asked to work his magic on the US charts, but the people he'd bribed to hype the record into the charts had got the release date wrong and done it too early. When the record *did* come out over there, no radio station would play it in case it looked like they were complicit in the scam. But still, a UK number one wasn't too shabby, and so Immediate Records was back on track, and Oldham wanted to shore things up by bringing in some more proven hit-makers. Immediate signed the Small Faces, and even started paying them royalties -- though that wouldn't last long, as Immediate went bankrupt in 1970 and its successors in interest stopped paying out. The first work the group did for the label was actually for a Chris Farlowe single. Lane and Marriott gave him their song "My Way of Giving", and played on the session along with Farlowe's backing band the Thunderbirds. Mick Jagger is the credited producer, but by all accounts Marriott and Lane did most of the work: [Excerpt: Chris Farlowe, "My Way of Giving"] Sadly, that didn't make the top forty. After working on that, they started on their first single recorded at Immediate. But because of contractual entanglements, "I Can't Make It" was recorded at Immediate but released by Decca. Because the band weren't particularly keen on promoting something on their old label, and the record was briefly banned by the BBC for being too sexual, it only made number twenty-six on the charts. Around this time, Marriott had become friendly with another band, who had named themselves The Little People in homage to the Small Faces, and particularly with their drummer Jerry Shirley. Marriott got them signed to Immediate, and produced and played on their first single, a version of his song "(Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me?": [Excerpt: The Apostolic Intervention, "(Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me?"] When they signed to Immediate, The Little People had to change their name, and Marriott suggested they call themselves The Nice, a phrase he liked. Oldham thought that was a stupid name, and gave the group the much more sensible name The Apostolic Intervention. And then a few weeks later he signed another group and changed *their* name to The Nice. "The Nice" was also a phrase used in the Small Faces' first single for Immediate proper. "Here Come the Nice" was inspired by a routine by the hipster comedian Lord Buckley, "The Nazz", which also gave a name to Todd Rundgren's band and inspired a line in David Bowie's "Ziggy Stardust": [Excerpt: Lord Buckley, "The Nazz"] "Here Come the Nice" was very blatantly about a drug dealer, and somehow managed to reach number twelve despite that: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "Here Come the Nice"] It also had another obstacle that stopped it doing as well as it might. A week before it came out, Decca released a single, "Patterns", from material they had in the vault. And in June 1967, two Small Faces albums came out. One of them was a collection from Decca of outtakes and demos, plus their non-album hit singles, titled From The Beginning, while the other was their first album on Immediate, which was titled Small Faces -- just like their first Decca album had been. To make matters worse, From The Beginning contained the group's demos of "My Way of Giving" and "(Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me?", while the group's first Immediate album contained a new recording of  "(Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me?", and a version of "My Way of Giving" with the same backing track but a different vocal take from the one on the Decca collection. From this point on, the group's catalogue would be a complete mess, with an endless stream of compilations coming out, both from Decca and, after the group split, from Immediate, mixing tracks intended for release with demos and jam sessions with no regard for either their artistic intent or for what fans might want. Both albums charted, with Small Faces reaching number twelve and From The Beginning reaching number sixteen, neither doing as well as their first album had, despite the Immediate album, especially, being a much better record. This was partly because the Marriott/Lane partnership was becoming far more equal. Kenney Jones later said "During the Decca period most of the self-penned stuff was 99% Steve. It wasn't until Immediate that Ronnie became more involved. The first Immediate album is made up of 50% Steve's songs and 50% of Ronnie's. They didn't collaborate as much as people thought. In fact, when they did, they often ended up arguing and fighting." It's hard to know who did what on each song credited to the pair, but if we assume that each song's principal writer also sang lead -- we know that's not always the case, but it's a reasonable working assumption -- then Jones' fifty-fifty estimate seems about right. Of the fourteen songs on the album, McLagan sings one, which is also his own composition, "Up the Wooden Hills to Bedfordshire". There's one instrumental, six with Marriott on solo lead vocals, four with Lane on solo lead vocals, and two duets, one with Lane as the main vocalist and one with Marriott. The fact that there was now a second songwriter taking an equal role in the band meant that they could now do an entire album of originals. It also meant that their next Marriott/Lane single was mostly a Lane song. "Itchycoo Park" started with a verse lyric from Lane -- "Over bridge of sighs/To rest my eyes in shades of green/Under dreaming spires/To Itchycoo Park, that's where I've been". The inspiration apparently came from Lane reading about the dreaming spires of Oxford, and contrasting it with the places he used to play as a child, full of stinging nettles. For a verse melody, they repeated a trick they'd used before -- the melody of "My Mind's Eye" had been borrowed in part from the Christmas carol "Gloria in Excelsis Deo", and here they took inspiration from the old hymn "God Be in My Head": [Excerpt: The Choir of King's College Cambridge, "God Be in My Head"] As Marriott told the story: "We were in Ireland and speeding our brains out writing this song. Ronnie had the first verse already written down but he had no melody line, so what we did was stick the verse to the melody line of 'God Be In My Head' with a few chord variations. We were going towards Dublin airport and I thought of the middle eight... We wrote the second verse collectively, and the chorus speaks for itself." [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "Itchycoo Park"] Marriott took the lead vocal, even though it was mostly Lane's song, but Marriott did contribute to the writing, coming up with the middle eight. Lane didn't seem hugely impressed with Marriott's contribution, and later said "It wasn't me that came up with 'I feel inclined to blow my mind, get hung up, feed the ducks with a bun/They all come out to groove about, be nice and have fun in the sun'. That wasn't me, but the more poetic stuff was." But that part became the most memorable part of the record, not so much because of the writing or performance but because of the production. It was one of the first singles released using a phasing effect, developed by George Chkiantz (and I apologise if I'm pronouncing that name wrong), who was the assistant engineer for Glyn Johns on the album. I say it was one of the first, because at the time there was not a clear distinction between the techniques now known as phasing, flanging, and artificial double tracking, all of which have now diverged, but all of which initially came from the idea of shifting two copies of a recording slightly out of synch with each other. The phasing on "Itchycoo Park" , though, was far more extreme and used to far different effect than that on, say, Revolver: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "Itchycoo Park"] It was effective enough that Jimi Hendrix, who was at the time working on Axis: Bold as Love, requested that Chkiantz come in and show his engineer how to get the same effect, which was then used on huge chunks of Hendrix's album. The BBC banned the record, because even the organisation which had missed that the Nice who "is always there when I need some speed" was a drug dealer was a little suspicious about whether "we'll get high" and "we'll touch the sky" might be drug references. The band claimed to be horrified at the thought, and explained that they were talking about swings. It's a song about a park, so if you play on the swings, you go high. What else could it mean? [Excerpt: The Small Faces, “Itchycoo Park”] No drug references there, I'm sure you'll agree. The song made number three, but the group ran into more difficulties with the BBC after an appearance on Top of the Pops. Marriott disliked the show's producer, and the way that he would go up to every act and pretend to think they had done a very good job, no matter what he actually thought, which Marriott thought of as hypocrisy rather than as politeness and professionalism. Marriott discovered that the producer was leaving the show, and so in the bar afterwards told him exactly what he thought of him, calling him a "two-faced", and then a four-letter word beginning with c which is generally considered the most offensive swear word there is. Unfortunately for Marriott, he'd been misinformed, the producer wasn't leaving the show, and the group were barred from it for a while. "Itchycoo Park" also made the top twenty in the US, thanks to a new distribution deal Immediate had, and plans were made for the group to tour America, but those plans had to be scrapped when Ian McLagan was arrested for possession of hashish, and instead the group toured France, with support from a group called the Herd: [Excerpt: The Herd, "From the Underworld"] Marriott became very friendly with the Herd's guitarist, Peter Frampton, and sympathised with Frampton's predicament when in the next year he was voted "face of '68" and developed a similar teenage following to the one the Small Faces had. The group's last single of 1967 was one of their best. "Tin Soldier" was inspired by the Hans Andersen story “The Steadfast Tin Soldier”, and was originally written for the singer P.P. Arnold, who Marriott was briefly dating around this time. But Arnold was *so* impressed with the song that Marriott decided to keep it for his own group, and Arnold was left just doing backing vocals on the track: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "Tin Soldier"] It's hard to show the appeal of "Tin Soldier" in a short clip like those I use on this show, because so much of it is based on the use of dynamics, and the way the track rises and falls, but it's an extremely powerful track, and made the top ten. But it was after that that the band started falling apart, and also after that that they made the work generally considered their greatest album. As "Itchycoo Park" had made number one in Australia, the group were sent over there on tour to promote it, as support act for the Who. But the group hadn't been playing live much recently, and found it difficult to replicate their records on stage, as they were now so reliant on studio effects like phasing. The Australian audiences were uniformly hostile, and the contrast with the Who, who were at their peak as a live act at this point, couldn't have been greater. Marriott decided he had a solution. The band needed to get better live, so why not get Peter Frampton in as a fifth member? He was great on guitar and had stage presence, obviously that would fix their problems. But the other band members absolutely refused to get Frampton in. Marriott's confidence as a stage performer took a knock from which it never really recovered, and increasingly the band became a studio-only one. But the tour also put strain on the most important partnership in the band. Marriott and Lane had been the closest of friends and collaborators, but on the tour, both found a very different member of the Who to pal around with. Marriott became close to Keith Moon, and the two would get drunk and trash hotel rooms together. Lane, meanwhile, became very friendly with Pete Townshend, who introduced him to the work of the guru Meher Baba, who Townshend followed. Lane, too, became a follower, and the two would talk about religion and spirituality while their bandmates were destroying things. An attempt was made to heal the growing rifts though. Marriott, Lane, and McLagan all moved in together again like old times, but this time in a cottage -- something that became so common for bands around this time that the phrase "getting our heads together in the country" became a cliche in the music press. They started working on material for their new album. One of the tracks that they were working on was written by Marriott, and was inspired by how, before moving in to the country cottage, his neighbours had constantly complained about the volume of his music -- he'd been particularly annoyed that the pop singer Cilla Black, who lived in the same building and who he'd assumed would understand the pop star lifestyle, had complained more than anyone. It had started as as fairly serious blues song, but then Marriott had been confronted by the members of the group The Hollies, who wanted to know why Marriott always sang in a pseudo-American accent. Wasn't his own accent good enough? Was there something wrong with being from the East End of London? Well, no, Marriott decided, there wasn't, and so he decided to sing it in a Cockney accent. And so the song started to change, going from being an R&B song to being the kind of thing Cockneys could sing round a piano in a pub: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "Lazy Sunday"] Marriott intended the song just as an album track for the album they were working on, but Andrew Oldham insisted on releasing it as a single, much to the band's disgust, and it went to number two on the charts, and along with "Itchycoo Park" meant that the group were now typecast as making playful, light-hearted music. The album they were working on, Ogden's Nut-Gone Flake, was eventually as known for its marketing as its music. In the Small Faces' long tradition of twisted religious references, like their songs based on hymns and their song "Here Come the Nice", which had taken inspiration from a routine about Jesus and made it about a drug dealer, the print ads for the album read: Small Faces Which were in the studios Hallowed be thy name Thy music come Thy songs be sung On this album as they came from your heads We give you this day our daily bread Give us thy album in a round cover as we give thee 37/9d Lead us into the record stores And deliver us Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake For nice is the music The sleeve and the story For ever and ever, Immediate The reason the ad mentioned a round cover is that the original pressings of the album were released in a circular cover, made to look like a tobacco tin, with the name of the brand of tobacco changed from Ogden's Nut-Brown Flake to Ogden's Nut-Gone Flake, a reference to how after smoking enough dope your nut, or head, would be gone. This made more sense to British listeners than to Americans, because not only was the slang on the label British, and not only was it a reference to a British tobacco brand, but American and British dope-smoking habits are very different. In America a joint is generally made by taking the dried leaves and flowers of the cannabis plant -- or "weed" -- and rolling them in a cigarette paper and smoking them. In the UK and much of Europe, though, the preferred form of cannabis is the resin, hashish, which is crumbled onto tobacco in a cigarette paper and smoked that way, so having rolling or pipe tobacco was a necessity for dope smokers in the UK in a way it wasn't in the US. Side one of Ogden's was made up of normal songs, but the second side mixed songs and narrative. Originally the group wanted to get Spike Milligan to do the narration, but when Milligan backed out they chose Professor Stanley Unwin, a comedian who was known for speaking in his own almost-English language, Unwinese: [Excerpt: Stanley Unwin, "The Populode of the Musicolly"] They gave Unwin a script, telling the story that linked side two of the album, in which Happiness Stan is shocked to discover that half the moon has disappeared and goes on a quest to find the missing half, aided by a giant fly who lets him sit on his back after Stan shares his shepherd's pie with the hungry fly. After a long quest they end up at the cave of Mad John the Hermit, who points out to them that nobody had stolen half the moon at all -- they'd been travelling so long that it was a full moon again, and everything was OK. Unwin took that script, and reworked it into Unwinese, and also added in a lot of the slang he heard the group use, like "cool it" and "what's been your hang-up?": [Excerpt: The Small Faces and Professor Stanley Unwin, "Mad John"] The album went to number one, and the group were justifiably proud, but it only exacerbated the problems with their live show. Other than an appearance on the TV show Colour Me Pop, where they were joined by Stanley Unwin to perform the whole of side two of the album with live vocals but miming to instrumental backing tracks, they only performed two songs from the album live, "Rollin' Over" and "Song of a Baker", otherwise sticking to the same live show Marriott was already embarrassed by. Marriott later said "We had spent an entire year in the studios, which was why our stage presentation had not been improved since the previous year. Meanwhile our recording experience had developed in leaps and bounds. We were all keenly interested in the technical possibilities, in the art of recording. We let down a lot of people who wanted to hear Ogden's played live. We were still sort of rough and ready, and in the end the audience became uninterested as far as our stage show was concerned. It was our own fault, because we would have sussed it all out if we had only used our brains. We could have taken Stanley Unwin on tour with us, maybe a string section as well, and it would have been okay. But we didn't do it, we stuck to the concept that had been successful for a long time, which is always the kiss of death." The group's next single would be the last released while they were together. Marriott regarded "The Universal" as possibly the best thing he'd written, and recorded it quickly when inspiration struck. The finished single is actually a home recording of Marriott in his garden, including the sounds of a dog barking and his wife coming home with the shopping, onto which the band later overdubbed percussion, horns, and electric guitars: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "The Universal"] Incidentally, it seems that the dog barking on that track may also be the dog barking on “Seamus” by Pink Floyd. "The Universal" confused listeners, and only made number sixteen on the charts, crushing Marriott, who thought it was the best thing he'd done. But the band were starting to splinter. McLagan isn't on "The Universal", having quit the band before it was recorded after a falling-out with Marriott. He rejoined, but discovered that in the meantime Marriott had brought in session player Nicky Hopkins to work on some tracks, which devastated him. Marriott became increasingly unconfident in his own writing, and the writing dried up. The group did start work on some new material, some of which, like "The Autumn Stone", is genuinely lovely: [Excerpt: The Small Faces, "The Autumn Stone"] But by the time that was released, the group had already split up. The last recording they did together was as a backing group for Johnny Hallyday, the French rock star. A year earlier Hallyday had recorded a version of "My Way of Giving", under the title "Je N'Ai Jamais Rien Demandé": [Excerpt: Johnny Hallyday, "Je N'Ai Jamais Rien Demandé"] Now he got in touch with Glyn Johns to see if the Small Faces had any other material for him, and if they'd maybe back him on a few tracks on a new album. Johns and the Small Faces flew to France... as did Peter Frampton, who Marriott was still pushing to get into the band. They recorded three tracks for the album, with Frampton on extra guitar: [Excerpt: Johnny Hallyday, "Reclamation"] These tracks left Marriott more certain than ever that Frampton should be in the band, and the other three members even more certain that he shouldn't. Frampton joined the band on stage at a few shows on their next few gigs, but he was putting together his own band with Jerry Shirley from Apostolic Intervention. On New Year's Eve 1968, Marriott finally had enough. He stormed off stage mid-set, and quit the group. He phoned up Peter Frampton, who was hanging out with Glyn Johns listening to an album Johns had just produced by some of the session players who'd worked for Immediate. Side one had just finished when Marriott phoned. Could he join Frampton's new band? Frampton said of course he could, then put the phone down and listened to side two of Led Zeppelin's first record. The band Marriott and Frampton formed was called Humble Pie, and they were soon releasing stuff on Immediate. According to Oldham, "Tony Calder said to me one day 'Pick a straw'. Then he explained we had a choice. We could either go with the three Faces -- Kenney, Ronnie, and Mac -- wherever they were going to go with their lives, or we could follow Stevie. I didn't regard it as a choice. Neither did Tony. Marriott was our man". Marriott certainly seemed to agree that he was the real talent in the group. He and Lane had fairly recently bought some property together -- two houses on the same piece of land -- and with the group splitting up, Lane moved away and wanted to sell his share in the property to Marriott. Marriott wrote to him saying "You'll get nothing. This was bought with money from hits that I wrote, not that we wrote," and enclosing a PRS statement showing how much each Marriott/Lane

christmas god america tv jesus christ love american family time history black australia english europe art uk rock england france giving americans british french song australian ireland north bbc progress park reflections broadway wolf britain birds animals beatles universal mac cd mine oxford wood hang rolling stones manchester shadows pirates habit released rock and roll faces bang dublin david bowie patterns last dance stones goliath shortly diary depending shake factory djs bart wasn sellers cds moments disc lsd lynch pink floyd engine burke dixon outlaws bells meek sheffield led zeppelin pops johns dreamers screaming jimi hendrix steele motown beach boys west end hammond andy warhol pratt kinks deepest mick jagger bern cherokees spence marriott ogden calder rollin rod stewart mod mixcloud oddly tilt stoned al capone herd blah mods dodger tornadoes sam cooke keith richards pastry goldfinger booker t hermit rock music oh boy little people bohemian jimmy page caveman robert plant east end buddy holly prs sykes other stories bad company jerry lee lewis seamus phil spector my mind thunderbirds my way viva las vegas daleks oldham outcasts king crimson joe cocker humble pie national theatre drifters milligan peter frampton brian jones make it nme todd rundgren stax pete seeger peter sellers oliver twist moody blues mgs fifth avenue yellow submarine howlin cliff richard pete townshend johnny hallyday frampton cockney davy jones gordon lightfoot boz hey girl hollies laurence olivier keith moon john paul jones buffalo springfield decca unwin on new year bedfordshire mccoys ronnie wood all or nothing petula clark first cut john mayall dave clark eleanor rigby eric burdon small faces brian epstein gary glitter cilla black my generation solomon burke william hartnell live it up donegan move it spike milligan decca records allen klein lennon mccartney willie dixon townshend artful dodger ron wood green onions connie francis little walter gene vincent sonny boy williamson rhinestone cowboy brill building mitch mitchell god be anthony newley nazz bluesbreakers tin soldier joe meek glyn johns kim gardner hallyday college cambridge little jimmy living doll ronnie lane jeff beck group goon show rylance ronnies be my guest lonnie donegan everybody needs somebody you really got me cockneys steve marriott parnes jerry wexler sid james andrew loog oldham kenney jones billy j kramer long john baldry meher baba david hemmings lionel bart mike pratt robert stigwood doc pomus axis bold marty wilde moonlights bert berns sorry now graeme edge mancunians from the beginning lord buckley mclagan ian mclagan hans andersen brian potter eric sykes andrew oldham paolo hewitt dock green davey graham nothing all tilt araiza
2Fast 2Films
2FAST 2FILMS - ‘THE SON' & ‘BONES AND ALL'

2Fast 2Films

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2022 7:43


In this weeks episode of the world's-fastest-movie-review podcast Jackson and Mike review two new films!!! First ‘THE SON' A cautionary tale that follows a family as it struggles to reunite after falling apart. Starring  Hugh Jackman, Laura Dern, Vanessa Kirby, Zen McGrath, Hugh Quarshie, and Anthony Hopkins. Then a quick review of ‘BONES AND ALL' Love blossoms between a young woman on the margins of society and a disenfranchised drifter as they embark on a 3,000-mile odyssey through the backroads of America. Starring Taylor Russell, Timothée Chalamet and Mark Rylance.

Missing Persons Mysteries
THE INCREDIBLY STRANGE ABDUCTION OF AMY RYLANCE

Missing Persons Mysteries

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2022 11:13


► Join Steve Stockton as he discusses one of the strangest abductions and disappearances to ever come out of Australia - THE INCREDIBLY STRANGE ABDUCTION OF AMY RYLANCE!

Tales From The Dark
The UFO Abduction Of Amy Rylance

Tales From The Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2022 59:01


In this episode Brittani and Bob dive into the bizarre story of Amy Rylance who claims to have been abducted by aliens from her home in 2001.

Spooky Mountain
41. Abduction of Amy Rylance | The Sallie House

Spooky Mountain

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2022 80:26


A creepy episode for you this week! Steph gets into one of the most interesting UFO stories, at least within Australia- The Abduction of Amy Rylance. Jordi tells the detailed story of the haunted and terrifying Sallie house, one of America's most notorious haunted locations! Please leave us a review, rate or subscribe to which ever platform you use. MERCH: https://www.spookymountainpodcast.com/services-1 SUPPORT US: https://www.patreon.com/spookymountainpodcast https://www.buymeacoffee.com/spookymountain ALL LINKS: https://linktr.ee/spookymountainpodcast Thanks for listening to us!

UFO - Extraterrestrial Reality
The botched alien abduction of Amy Rylance

UFO - Extraterrestrial Reality

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2022 30:07


In 2001, a 22-year-old Australian woman named Amy Rylance was abducted by aliens in full view of her friend Petra Heller. Three hours after her disappearance, Rylance turned up 500 miles away from where she was abducted. Also, car mechanic Juan Manuel Sanchez of Mexico recently captured a series of stunning pictures of a flying saucer hovering above his home as a storm approached. Link to article about Amy Rylance: The Gundiah Mackay Alien Abduction (ufocasebook.com) Link to Quirk Zone video version of Mexico UFO story: Spectacular Flying Saucer UFO Caught on Camera in Mexico - YouTube Link to Vice article: Was This Viral UFO Photo a Hoax Generated By an AI? (vice.com) Link to article about the Sanchez flying saucer pictures: Incredibly clear photo 'shows 50ft disc-shaped UFO emerging from storm before vanishing into space' | The Sun Support this podcast: UFO - Extraterrestrial Reality • A podcast on Anchor Check out my YouTube channel: Quirk Zone - YouTube --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/james-quirk/support

UFO - Extraterrestrial Reality
The botched alien abduction of Amy Rylance

UFO - Extraterrestrial Reality

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2022 30:07


In 2001, a 22-year-old Australian woman named Amy Rylance was abducted by aliens in full view of her friend Petra Heller. Three hours after her disappearance, Rylance turned up 500 miles away from where she was abducted. Also, car mechanic Juan Manuel Sanchez of Mexico recently captured a series of stunning pictures of a flying saucer hovering above his home as a storm approached. Link to article about Amy Rylance: The Gundiah Mackay Alien Abduction (ufocasebook.com) Link to Quirk Zone video version of Mexico UFO story: Spectacular Flying Saucer UFO Caught on Camera in Mexico - YouTube Link to Vice article: Was This Viral UFO Photo a Hoax Generated By an AI? (vice.com) Link to article about the Sanchez flying saucer pictures: Incredibly clear photo 'shows 50ft disc-shaped UFO emerging from storm before vanishing into space' | The Sun Support this podcast: UFO - Extraterrestrial Reality • A podcast on Anchor Check out my YouTube channel: Quirk Zone - YouTube --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/james-quirk/support

Bullet Sponge
The Outfit | Peacock

Bullet Sponge

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 45:03


The Outfit is a 2022 American crime drama film directed by Graham Moore in his directorial debut from a screenplay by Moore and Johnathan McClain. The film stars an ensemble cast including Mark Rylance, Zoey Deutch, Johnny Flynn, Dylan O'Brien, Nikki Amuka-Bird, and Simon Russell Beale. The plot centers around an English tailor, or, as he prefers to be called, a "cutter", (Rylance) in Chicago whose primary customers are a family of vicious gangsters. The film had its world premiere at the 72nd Berlin International Film Festival on February 14, 2022, and was released in the United States on March 18, 2022, by Focus Features. The film received generally positive reviews from critics.

Lost and Found
Bridge of Spies

Lost and Found

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2022 2:47


Lost & Found- Bridge of Spies - episode 77Steven Spielberg is possibly one of the most popular filmmakers in the world. He has helmed critically acclaimed films across genres and formats for more than 60 years. However, there are few films that have slipped through the cracks in terms of mainstream popularity, and one such film is the 2015 Cold War drama film,  Bridge of Spies. This carefully crafted film tells the story of a Soviet spy standing trial in the US in 1960 during the Cold War. Revered English actor and playwright Mark Rylance essays the role of the stoic and unassuming KGB spy, Rudolf Abel. Rylance's character is a far cry from the swashbuckling and flamboyant fictional spies such as James Bond, Jack Reacher, Jason Bourne, or Ethan Hunt. In fact, Rudolf Abel could be mistaken for a polite middle-aged man leading a private life in the US. However, when his cover is blown, he stands trial at the US Supreme Court for espionage. A lawyer named James Donovan, essayed by Hollywood legend Tom Hanks, is tasked with the responsibility of negotiating a deal with the Soviets to exchange Abel for an American pilot, whose plane was shot down inside the Soviet Union. The film is based on true events and was praised for its authentic depiction of the nuances surrounding foreign diplomacy, geopolitics, and espionage. The film's sublime editing and engrossing screenplay aided by the brilliance of Mark Rylance and Tom Hanks make it a compelling watch. You can watch this film on Sony Liv, or you could also subscribe to OTTplay Premium to get Sony Liv along with other regional and international OTT platforms for the price  of one. Well that's the OTTplay Lost and Found for today , until the next episode it's your host Nikhil signing out.Aaj kya dekhoge OTTplay se poochoWritten by Ryan Gomez

Spooky Mountain
41. Abduction of Amy Rylance | The Sallie House

Spooky Mountain

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2022 80:26


A creepy episode for you this week! Steph gets into one of the most interesting UFO stories, at least within Australia- The Abduction of Amy Rylance.  Jordi tells the detailed story of the haunted and terrifying Sallie house, one of America's most notorious haunted locations!Please leave us a review, rate or subscribe to whichever platform you use. If you want to buy our merch:https://www.spookymountainpodcast.com/services-1This episode is also available on our YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxi10EEbaseUN0J2WGJN1MQIf you would like to follow us: www.spookymountainpodcast.comhttps://linktr.ee/spookymountainpodcastIf you would like to support us:Patreon -  https://www.patreon.com/spookymountainpodcastBuy Me A Coffee - https://www.buymeacoffee.com/spookymountainThanks for listening to us!

Wicked Awkward M@ssholes

Howdy motherfuckers! Yes, we're gross, no we don't need help....thanks.First off, what does Sarah J. Maas have to do with Jo's first time dissociating? Continue listening to find out... A Court of Thorne and RosesA Court of Mist and FuryA Court of Wings and RuinA Court of Frost and Starlightby Sara J. Maas. We follow Feyre as she adjust to life on the Faerie Lands of Prythian in the Spring Court under the reign of the handsome High Lord Tamlin. We soon follow her through her transition to the Night Court with High Lord Rhysand and his Court of Nightmares.Peaky Blinder season 5 is available on Netflix. Helen McCrory is life! IYKYK!!!The Boys season 3 is available on PrimeVideo. We're so excited for Jensen and his debut as Soldier Boy! Also, fuck Homelander!!!! Antony Starr, we're sure you're great, but SIR! NO!!We're sick for the gore and absolute audacity of this show, and we love it!The Outfit available for rent or purchase. Starring our boy Dylan O'Brien, Zoey Deutch, Mark Rylance. Directed by Graham Moore: An expert cutter (Rylance) must outwit a dangerous group of mobsters in order to survive a fateful night.

Beyond The Fame with Jason Fraley

WTOP Entertainment Reporter Jason Fraley chats with Oscar winner Mark Rylance about his new golf comedy "The Phantom of the Open," which opens in Washington D.C. movie theaters today. They discuss the incredible true story of Maurice Flitcroft, who in 1976 shot the worst round of golf ever at the British Open. They also discuss Rylance's career from "Bridge of Spies" to "Dunkirk" to "The Trial of the Chicago 7."

The Pixelated Paranormal Podcast
The Pixelated Paranormal Podcast #239: The Amy Rylance Abduction

The Pixelated Paranormal Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2022


Things have been crazy here in Pixelated Paranormal Land, the weather has been even crazier and we just realized that our 6 year anniversary isn't until next week. So on this episode, Shawn and Preston get together to discuss the recent tornado that touched down in Andover, KS and Shawn's trip to Frightmare Weekend, and then finish things off with an alien abduction from Australia. Cheers and enjoy the show. Voicemail: 913.662.3144 - Email: pixelatedparanormal[at]gmail[dot]com

Birthday Girls House Party
S05E17 Quiz Party with Beth Rylance

Birthday Girls House Party

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 73:57


We are joined by actor/comedian Beth Rylance for the ultimate quiz party! We chat quiz, we do quiz, we be quiz. QUIZ! Be a legend, get on our Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/birthdaygirlshouseparty Please subscribe, rate and review. XXX Music by Anne Chmelewsky: https://www.annechmelewsky.com Art work by Lucy Moore: https://www.lucymooreedinburgh.com

Back to the Movies with Nat and Ben

Steven Spielberg looms large of Hollywood. The boys have dedicated multiple episodes to him without ever covering one of his movies. But in 2015, Spielberg put out a late career masterpiece, an epic of decency and understanding, and there was no way Nat or Ben was going to miss a chance to throw it some love. Finally a titan get his due as Back to Movies unravels the web of cinematic intrigue that is Bridge of Spies.Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, and TikTokFollow Nat and Ben on LetterboxdEmail us at bttmpod@gmail.comAnd please, give us a 5-star review and share the podcast with your movie-loving friends! 

Champions of Risk
Susan Rylance on Growing Leadership Talent (Season 3 Episode 4)

Champions of Risk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2022 39:38 Transcription Available


People are the biggest asset of any company, but companies don't always provide their people with the greatest experiences or opportunities. As the VP of Growth and Search Practice Lead and Partner at Fahren, a digital leadership company, Susan Rylance has a unique vantage point into the leadership shifts needed to meet today's business environment. She shares her wisdom about next level leadership and teams, and her experiences helping businesses achieve their goals while building next generation teams.  Hear how she champions the Minority Business Growth Alliance, an alliance of volunteer professionals who support non-profits who serve minority businesses.Check out FahrenSupport the Minority Business Growth AllianceSign up for Champion You Group Coaching

The Progressive Rugby League Podcast
PRL 15 October 2021 - Toulouse Olympique Cracks Super League!! With TOXIII CEO Cédric Garcia and Mike Rylance

The Progressive Rugby League Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 50:31


Toulouse Olympique are officially a Super League club.And we have two guests to help us reflect on this sweet sounding sentence.Toulouse Olympique CEO Cédric Garcia joins us to chat about how it all unfolded, as well as the road ahead for the club.And the doyen of French Rugby League history and author of The Forbidden Game, Mike Rylance, helps us put this achievement into historical context.

ALIEN THEORISTS THEORIZING
Case File 191-The Amy Rylance/Gundiah Mackay Incident

ALIEN THEORISTS THEORIZING

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2021 86:03


In late 2001, Keith Rylance was woken from a dead sleep by the incoherent and frantic sounds of his business partner Petra Heller. Keith entered into his caravan's loungeroom to find objects normally on the center table scattered about the couch where he had last seen his wife, Amy, watching TV before he went to bed that night. After calming Petra down to a state in which she could put her thoughts together she would go on to tell him of the incredible sight she had just witnessed. A bright light piercing through the caravan window and enveloping her friend and Keith's wife Amy and moving her through the air. This event would leave the local police and the UFO investigators who responded to Keith's request for help scratching their heads to this very day. This case file, join the Theorists as they plunder another UFO story from down under in...The Amy Rylance/Gundiah Mackay Incident. Patreon, Socials, Website and everything ATT here: https://linktr.ee/alientheoristspodcast --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/alientheoriststheorizing/message

This Week in America with Ric Bratton
Episode 2176: SO YOU THINK YOU'VE MESSED UP? by Helen Rylance

This Week in America with Ric Bratton

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 22:06


SO YOU THINK YOU'VE MESSED UP? GOD HAS A PLAN AND A PURPOSE FOR YOU! by Helen Rylance This book draws back the curtain on Helen’s life and shows how God’s grace is always sufficient for each of us. It also reveals some of the ways the Lord’s love will not let go until he has completed what he began in us no matter what is stacked against us. Pastor Ian Humphreys had this to say. I have known Helen for a number of years. On first contact with her she appears to be a well integrated and confident woman and she is! However as this honest book reveals the path she has taken has been strewn with “many dangers, toils and snares.” Christ warned us ,”In this world you will have trouble.” (John 16:33) Many believers who undergo severe life trials find themselves broken or hardened by the heat of the oven of affliction. Helen is a living example of someone who has been refined in the furnace of tribulation. Furthermore she is somebody who can sympathise with others facing similar things. After more than fifty years of following the Lord. Helen believes that the Lord has always strengthened her, upheld her and empowered her by his Holy Spirit. While forgiving her for the times she got it wrong! A true testimony from Ruth, a woman in her forties. As I left prison I heard the Holy Spirit say look for a book with a gold key on the front. It will help turn your life around , I found it and it did!. THIS IS IT! Born at the beginning of world war two, my home birth was nearly a disaster, the placenta clung to my face almost smothering me. Then my Mother had a severe mental break down, resulting in her being hospitalised for the first six weeks of my life, while I was kept in a baby unit . The only time we came together was when an air raid was on, then we would hide in a shelter until the bombers had passed. Surprisingly I was the eldest of eight children, according to my Mother I was a mischievous child. By the time I was 10 years old I was told I was grown up, time to start work. I married at nineteen and some years later over a ten year period my two sons and a daughter were born. At this time I had not yet met Jesus. At twenty eight years of age I had an encounter with the Lord, was he real? was he here? I asked out loud as I washed the breakfast pots. To my surprise a sense of peace filled the kitchen and me! I knew the Lord was real, and to my surprise he immediately took away my desire for cigarettes and swearing.! So the miraculous became a very real part of my Christian life right from the start. As a young Christian I was introduced to missionaries who lived by faith. It was through them that my gift of faith was strengthened. Within months I was teaching and preaching the word of God. In addition to spending nearly twenty five years visiting Israel and seeking the Jews. I have written ten books. https://www.amazon.com/So-you-think-youve-messed-ebook/dp/B0949QLP1L/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&qid=1622247529&refinements=p_27%3AHelen++Rylance&s=digital-text&sr=1-1&text=Helen++Rylance www.WorkBookPress.com http://www.bluefunkbroadcasting.com/root/twia/helrylancewbp.mp3

UFO WARNING
AMY RYLANCE ABDUCTION

UFO WARNING

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 15:01


Listen in as we examine the Amy Rylance abduction down under from 2001.

Robots For Eyes Podcast
Eps 228. The Abduction Of Amy Rylance.

Robots For Eyes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2021 87:59


On the 5th of October 2001, 22 year old Amy Rylance vanished from her home in the small town of Gundiah. Approximately 2 hours later she was found wandering around a petrol station 500 miles away confused, dehydrated and disorientated. Her disappearance was witnessed by her friend Petra Heller and what she described happened comes straight out of the X-Files. Facebook/Instagram @robotsforeyespodcast Twitter @robotsforeyes podbelly.com elyucateco.com retrovague.com Code robots for 10% off  

Pretendship
Ugly People | Pretendship Ep. 52 w/ Thom Rylance

Pretendship

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2020 87:05


The Lottery Winners' frontman Thom Rylance finally visits the treehouse to keep us company today! He talks in depth about the band throughout the show, the music industry in 2020 and the future, problems with self-image, and proposing to his girlfriend Find The Lottery Winners at: https://www.facebook.com/thelotterywinners/ https://www.instagram.com/thelotterywinners https://www.thelotterywinners.co.uk/ Shaolin Pete: http://shaolinpete.com/ https://www.instagram.com/shaolinpete/ Pretendship on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2dANk38QBfG18gHyfDuHYW #Pretendship #podcast #TheLotteryWinners #LotteryWinners

Strictly Stalking
S1 / E35 A Delusional Romance: Stalking Beth Rylance

Strictly Stalking

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2020 63:40 Transcription Available


Beth Rylance was stalked by a stranger who tried to convince her that they were lovers. After graduating from University, Beth returned home and began receiving Twitter notifications from an older man she'd never met. He messaged her that he "missed her", wrote romantic blog posts about her, and posted videos he shot calling her his "woman". Beth blocked him, then he reached out to her friends pleading with them to get in touch with her. He discovered her address, showed up at her front door and refused to leave until he got to see her. Check Out Our Patreon: www.patreon.com/strictlystalking Instagram: Strictly Stalking - @strictlystalkingpod Jaimie Beebe - @feathergirl77 Jake Deptula - @jaked3000 For 20% OFF your first order at Athena Club, go to www.athenaclub.com and use promo code: STALKING Visit www.stitchfix.com/stalking to get 25%OFF your order when you keep everything in your Fix! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

If You're Happy, Do You Know It?

Beth takes an hour on one of the hottest days of 2020 to discuss staying happy whilst she attempts not to melt entirely in the heat, and we are forever grateful. Al and Beth talk about the futility of trying to stay productive, creative and career driven during a time of total chaos for the world. Find Beth on Instagram: @thebethrylance Find Beth on Twitter: @beth_rylance

Social News XYZ
Waiting for the Barbarians Review: Rylance Delivers a Good Performance in a Half-Interesting Film(Rating: **1/2)

Social News XYZ

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2020


Film: Waiting for the Barbarians Starring: Mark Rylance, Johnny Depp, Robert Pattinson  Director: Ciro Guerra Rating: **1/2 Reviewer: George Sylex Overview – J. M. Coetzee is a South African novelist who was granted the Nobel…

Duimpjeworstelen
026 // Kaj van Zoelen vs. Dunkirk // Duimpjeworstelen

Duimpjeworstelen

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2020 68:59


Britse soldaat, Frans kustplaatsje, wapperende pamfletten dalen neer. Alleen al het openingsshot van Dunkirk (2017) spreekt ontzettend tot de verbeelding. Het is het begin van een kleine twee uur aan oorlogsspektakel, een zorgvuldig opgebouwd stuk suspense: kunnen deze soldaten naar huis worden gehaald? Maar het is ook een film van Christopher Nolan, dus er moet met tijd worden gespeeld. Voor filmcriticus Kaj van Zoelen werkt de structuur vooral tegen de film. Er wordt maar gesprongen tussen de troepen op het strand, de boten die hen moeten gaan bevrijden en de luchtmacht die de operatie ondersteunt. Er wordt geknoeid met toon, met tijd en met locatie. En als je niet aan boord bent, trekt dit alles je uit de film. Vindt Kaj. Host Ruud laat zich echter makkelijk meevoeren door deze filmische trucs, en schakelt makkelijk mee tussen vertellingen ter land, ter zee en in de lucht. Anytime.  Verder gaat het ook over: immersieve filmervaringen, het bestuderen van de geschiedenis en de ontwikkeling van filmsmaak over de jaren. Links: 'Dunkirk Double Days: The Story of a Stand-in' op Frameland: https://frame.land/dunkirk-double-days-the-story-of-a-stand-in/ Wat Kaj inmiddels niet meer vindt van La Notte: https://www.filmtotaal.nl/recensie/10516 Hoe Kaj is bijgedraaid: http://www.salonindien.nl/2015/antonioni-herontdekken/ Extra links: Re-Watchables met Quentin Tarantino over Dunkirk: https://www.theringer.com/2019/12/30/21043344/dunkirk-with-quentin-tarantino-sean-fennessey-and-chris-ryan Like Stories of Old, Dunkirk herknipt als stille film: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DbIbchSteCI

You've Got Hanks
Bridge of Spies (2015) With Alex Starbuck

You've Got Hanks

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2019 69:55


Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg team up again, and I'm joined by my Twinzie, Alex Starbuck (@AlexRules9000), to talk about Bridge of Spies (2013). Mark Rylance and Tom Hanks are super charming in this true story set during the Cold War. We talk about everything, even the mysterious hidden love story between Tom's daughter and his assistant. Did you notice that? Let me know what you think about Bridge of Spies @youvegothanks.  — SHOW INFORMATIONInstagram: Instagram Twitter: Twitter Subscribe: Apple Podcasts Subscribe: Spotify

The Progressive Rugby League Podcast
PRL Book Club - The Struggle And The Daring with Mike Rylance

The Progressive Rugby League Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2019 49:47


Big Al and Johnno visit the home of legendary Rugby League author Mike Rylance to chat about the past, present and future of French Rugby League, and his latest book, The Struggle and The Daring.

Kokoda Track
Jaida Rylance Tackles the Track at 15yo

Kokoda Track

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2019 41:37


It's always interesting to get the perspective of different ages and stages of life from the people who trek the Kokoda Track and this week I sat down wuth 15yo Jayda who is the youngest person I've had on the show. I really enjoyed chatting with Jayda and getting her perspective on the entire Kokoda experience.   See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Rugby Reloaded
49. French Rugby League - The Struggle and The Daring with Mike Rylance

Rugby Reloaded

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2019 17:59


This week's 'Rugby Reloaded plus' chats with Mike Rylance about his new book 'The Struggle and The Daring', just published by Scratching Shed. We talk about the history of French rugby league, its fabulous origins, ban by Vichy, the post-war struggles, immortal sides of the 1950s, and its fall from grace. For more on the history of rugby and the other football codes, follow me on Twitter @collinstony and at www.rugbyreloaded.com

15 Minute Theatre
E23 - Othello

15 Minute Theatre

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2018 14:19


This week James and Vicki go to see ‘Othello’, James was up to his old tricks and left before the interval, so Vicki will be taking the lead.  But was it worth the ticket price of was this Shakespearean tragedy a tragedy?  Download the Podcast to find out! If you would like us to review your production, get in touch! You can email us at 15minutetheatre@gmail.com, follow us on Twitter, add us on Facebook, and please remember to rate and review us on ITunes.. Thanks for listening!

Back To One
Kayli Carter

Back To One

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2018 32:37


It’s difficult, right now, to find the words “Kayli Carter” without the word “breakthrough” nearby. The adjective refers to her brilliant performance in Tamara Jenkins’ PRIVATE LIFE, in which Carter unflappably shines next to her more seasoned co-stars Kathryn Hahn and Paul Giamatti. She talks about the chemistry she had with those three, and about her formative experience with Mark Rylance in the play “Nice Fish” (including a 60 minute audition!), plus how she’s perfectly fine with passing on parts that do not depict young women as fully formed characters.

Theatre News Weekly
Theatre News Weekly 12 June 2018

Theatre News Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2018 10:13


Featuring news of a new stage role for Mark Rylance, a new director at the Donmar Warehouse, a new season at the Old Vic theatre, a drop in UK theatre attendance, what the critics thought of Orlando Bloom in Killer Joe and Laura Linney in My Name Is Lucy Barton and the pick of this week's show openings.

Teachers on Fire
17 - Caterina Rylance: MS Languages Teacher

Teachers on Fire

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2018 11:49


In this episode of the Teachers on Fire podcast we speak with Caterina Rylance. Caterina is a middle school languages teacher and ESL coordinator at St. Theresa Catholic Middle School in Sherwood Park, AB, Canada. Still in her second year of teaching, Caterina talks about how her writing at survivingteaching.org became a healthy outlet for her to reflect on the mix of frustrations and victories that come with becoming an educator. A Ukrainian folk dancer on the side, Caterina shares about the joy she finds in learning new languages and bringing the rich diversity of other cultures into her classroom. She also describes a personal habit that contributes to her success and gives us some great recommendations for books to read, Twitter accounts to follow, an edtech tool to use in the classroom, and more. Follow Caterina on Twitter @CaterinaRylance, on Instagram @Miss.Rylance, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/SurvivingTeaching, and on her blog at survivingteaching.org. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/teachersonfire/support

The Actor and The Engineer Podcast

This week we talk about how Spielberg adapted Ernest Cline's best-selling novel that celebrates pop culture from the 80's into a popcorn movie for the 2010's.  Josh read the book and Paul didn't, so we are able to come at it from different angles.  Subscribe on iTunes or Apple Podcasts:  https://itun.es/i6gB67Y  Check out our Facebook page:  www.facebook.com/actorandengineer and follow us on twitter @actorengineer. 

Film Snuff
In Theaters: Ready Player One

Film Snuff

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2018 46:13


In this installment of our bonus segment "In Theaters," we give you our immediate reaction to seeing a new movie on the big screen. This time, we tackled the newest Stephen Spielberg film, "Ready Player One." We discuss what we thought of all of the constant '80s references, the incessant '80s references, and the grating '80s references. **NOTE: THIS EPISODE CONTAINS SPOILERS** Quick Facts Release date: Mar. 29, 2018 Runtime: 2 hours 19 minutes Starring: Tye Sheridan, Olivia Cooke, Ben Mendelsohn, Lena Waithe, T.J. Miller, Simon Pegg, Mark Rylance, Philip Zhao, Win Morisaki, Hannah John-Kamen, Ralph Ineson, Susan Lynch Directed by: Steven Spielberg Tell us what you think by chatting with us (@filmsnuff) on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, or by shooting us an email over at mailbag@filmsnuff.com. Visit our website at https://www.filmsnuff.com.

Acting Out
Ready Player One Review

Acting Out

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2018 32:18


The guys strapped on their VR Headsets and jumped into Spielberg's latest visual treat for this week's episode of the podcast! Chat with us on Twitter @ActingOutProds and let us know what you thought of the movie! Cheers!! Check out the guys on the social medias! Trev - @trevorlawless on Twitter and Instagram Dave - @dinksosmall on Instagram Shea - @SheaNorman on Twitter and @sheaclifforddravennorman on Instagram

Rumicast
Ready Player One

Rumicast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 80:33


Alright players, this week our two allergy-addled hosts bravely sniffle their way through Steven Speilberg's latest cinematic treat Ready Player One. Knowing full well it could take over the whole episode, the boys hold off on Rylance talk till the end and in the meantime discuss the relative highs and lows of this "pop-culture handjob". Next week we're doing The Stupids so make sure you're brushed up on your Tom Arnold!

Cinema Speak
Episode 95 - Ready Player One and Pacific Rim: Uprising

Cinema Speak

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 55:06


I plug into the Oasis and talk Steven Spielberg's Ready Player One. I also discuss Pacific Rim: Uprising and Colin Trevorrow returning to discuss Jurassic World 3. Follow the show on Twitter: @thecinemaspeak Intro: 0:00 - 5:02 Review - Ready Player One: 5:02 - 31:58 Review - Pacific Rim: Uprising: 31:58 - 38:48 News - Colin Trevorrow to direct Jurassic World 3: 38:48 - 42:00 This week in new releases/Outro: 42:00 - 44:57 Spoiler Discussion - Ready Player One: 44:57 - 55:05

Rumicast
The Others: Bridge Of Spies

Rumicast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2018 71:59


Heyoo, we're back with another one of our "Others". It's Tobias' turn this week and he's keeping us on the Spielberg Train with the relatively recent "Bridge Of Spies". There's a lot of Mark Rylance love in this ep and surprisingly little talk about the actual film. Instead we take some larger detours into Steven Spielberg's general filmography and make a pit stop in William Friedkin-ville.  Next week we're gonna tackle Netflix's latest release, Mute, directed by Zowie Bowie himself.  Enjoy.

Whatever This Is
William Fichtner Screws The Jetsons – 2.058

Whatever This Is

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2018 81:18


Grant and Kyle discuss their love of William Fichtner and Mark Rylance. They question why there's a need for a Jetson's reboot in the first place. They conclude that Grant's dad is a racist. Music from Tyler Forest-Hauser: tylerforesthauser.com whateverpod@gmail.com www.facebook.com/whateverpod www.twitter.com/whateverpod

CronoCine
CronoCine 1x06: Dunkerque (Dunkirk 2017, de Christopher Nolan)

CronoCine

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2017 270:43


¡Hola Cinéfilos! En el sexto episodio de CronoCine, os hablamos de Dunkerque (2017) del gran Christopher Nolan, para cerrar el ciclo espacio-temporal sobre cine ¨bélico¨. Nos transportamos a las playas de la pequeña ciudad costera en la Francia de 1940, para presenciar el desalojo de las tropas Inglesas sobre las que se cierra el cerca Alemán. Con un reparto coral en el que destacan Tom Hardy y Mark Rylance, y una gran banda sonora de Hans Zimmer,  el film está lleno de tensión y presentado con una cinematografía espectacular. Seguimos de estreno en CronoCine con el debut desde los ¨highlands¨ escoceses del nuevo colaborador Pablo Wallace. Traemos de vuelta como experto en temática histórica al Señor Lobo, que acompañará a los habituales Mario Wire y Gonzalo McFly. En dos primeros bloques SIN SPOILERS diseccionaremos a conciencia los pormenores de la producción, centrándonos en la cinematografía y su importancia dentro del desarrollo de una película. Por último haremos un repaso a conciencia acerca de la trama, analizando las partes más interesantes y recalcando sus puntos fuertes, pero sin olvidarnos de los débiles, esta vez sí, con todo lujo de spoilers.  En este episodio suena la BSO de CronoCine compuesta por el artista musical El Arias (podéis encontrar su música en Facebook y Soundcloud). Además en la primera y segunda pausa suenan, respectivamente, los temas Legionnaire y Crusader  del talentoso Scott Buckley (ambas bajo licencias Cretive Commons 4.0). 

CronoCine
CronoCine 1x06: Dunkerque (Dunkirk 2017, de Christopher Nolan)

CronoCine

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2017 270:43


¡Hola Cinéfilos! En el sexto episodio de CronoCine, os hablamos de Dunkerque (2017) del gran Christopher Nolan, para cerrar el ciclo espacio-temporal sobre cine ¨bélico¨. Nos transportamos a las playas de la pequeña ciudad costera en la Francia de 1940, para presenciar el desalojo de las tropas Inglesas sobre las que se cierra el cerca Alemán. Con un reparto coral en el que destacan Tom Hardy y Mark Rylance, y una gran banda sonora de Hans Zimmer,  el film está lleno de tensión y presentado con una cinematografía espectacular. Seguimos de estreno en CronoCine con el debut desde los ¨highlands¨ escoceses del nuevo colaborador Pablo Wallace. Traemos de vuelta como experto en temática histórica al Señor Lobo, que acompañará a los habituales Mario Wire y Gonzalo McFly. En dos primeros bloques SIN SPOILERS diseccionaremos a conciencia los pormenores de la producción, centrándonos en la cinematografía y su importancia dentro del desarrollo de una película. Por último haremos un repaso a conciencia acerca de la trama, analizando las partes más interesantes y recalcando sus puntos fuertes, pero sin olvidarnos de los débiles, esta vez sí, con todo lujo de spoilers.  En este episodio suena la BSO de CronoCine compuesta por el artista musical El Arias (podéis encontrar su música en Facebook y Soundcloud). Además en la primera y segunda pausa suenan, respectivamente, los temas Legionnaire y Crusader  del talentoso Scott Buckley (ambas bajo licencias Cretive Commons 4.0). 

The M&M Report
Episode 105: "Baby Driver" and "Dunkirk"

The M&M Report

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2017 35:06


Mark and Devin contemplate two works of auteur cinema from British directors: Edgar Wright's Baby Driver (0:00-17:55) and Christopher Nolan's Dunkirk (17:55-End). They also apologize for not podcasting about The Big Sick, which they both really liked. Sorry, The Big Sick.

The Actor and The Engineer Podcast

This week Christopher Nolan gives us an account of the British rescue mission of hundreds of thousands of men on the beach at Dunkirk during World War II.  He does it in true Nolan fashion (in 70MM!) by structuring the movie to focus on land, sea and air in different time frames.  We talk about why Tom Hardy would take this role, how Kenneth Branagh is great at delivering exposition and how Mark Rylance is a solid actor (as if you didn't know).  Subscribe on iTunes:  https://itun.es/i6gB67Y  Check out our Facebook page:  www.facebook.com/actorandengineer and follow us on twitter @actorengineer.

Cinema Speak
Episode 60 - Dunkirk

Cinema Speak

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2017 75:19


Charlie and I race against the clock to review Christopher Nolan's Dunkirk and decide if this film is the breath of fresh air that this summer has needed. We also discuss trailers for Guillermo del Toro's The Shape of Water and the upcoming adaptation of Stephen King's It. Follow the show on Twitter: @thecinemaspeak Intro: 0:00 - 6:09 Review - Dunkirk: 6:09 - 53:13 News - The Shape of Water trailer, It official trailer: 53:13 - 1:07:17 This week in new releases/Outro: 1:07:17 - 1:12:21 Spoiler Discussion - Twin Peaks (2017), episode 12: 1:12:21 - 1:15:18

Wikihospitals
Paul Rylance from JKM Care Solutions

Wikihospitals

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2017 20:49


At present, health information is only focused on individual patient records. But as the CTO of this startup points out, there is no point trying to manage sick people, if you don't have the hospital beds to put them in. JKM solutions are working on software that allows every care professional to see where hospital beds are available, in real time, from a simple web browser. For more information go to http://jkmcaresolutions.co.uk/bmf.htm

Griefcast with Cariad Lloyd
Ep.7 Beth Rylance

Griefcast with Cariad Lloyd

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2017 58:23


Cariad talks to actor and comedian Beth Rylance (School of Comedy, Plebs, Cardinal Burns) about the death of her mum. As ever they talk about grief, memories and what not to say to young children. You can tweet the show @thegriefcast, follow us on instagram @thegriefcast or email us thegriefcast@gmail.com because you are not alone. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

SpielbergPod - The Steven Spielberg Film Podcast

In this episode me and Kieran discuss the possible forthcoming films of Steven Spielberg. Along the way we discuss the likes of Ready Player One, Robopocalypse, some film starring Jennifer Lawrence, The Post, Indy 5 and all manner of weird and wonderful possible movies. We also plug our other show 'Easy Riders Raging Podcasts' about the films of the 1960s. A podcast well worth your time and attention.