35 Burst results for "Beatles"

Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
A highlight from Ep.118 - Rewind to 1967: The Year That Changed Music Forever
"Well here we are episode 118 I think I think I forgot to list a few this might be like episode 120 or 121 I don't know I guess that's a good thing when you do so many you lose count anyway on this episode we're gonna be talking about the year in music 1967 and as usual I have the wrecking two in the house Mark Smith and Lou Colicchio of the music relish show very interesting yeah a lot happened sit back relax it's gonna be another two and a half hour podcast but we love it enjoy the show the KLFB studio presents milk rate and turntables a music discussion podcast hosted by Scott McLean now let's talk music enjoy the show yes let's talk music thank you Amanda for that wonderful introduction as usual welcome back my friends to the show that never ends welcome to the podcast you know the name I'm not gonna say it was streaming live right now over Facebook YouTube X formerly known as Twitter twitch D live and again I always I don't know how many other things and this podcast will be heard on every podcast platform yeah yeah 1967 so it was quite a year think you're in for a little little ride tonight yeah and you know who wasn't born in night oh he was three in 1967 marksmen from the music relish show good evening I was two years from being on this earth so you weren't even really thought of no you thought of it 67 think of that think of that yeah you weren't even thought of you weren't even like a sparkle in as they say in your father's eye there might have been the beginning of a sparkle who knows so let me see I'm looking at my is my screen still fuzzy on my end but I'm not even seeing it on YouTube right now I'm seeing it's live but I just got the image of the vinyl really yeah what the hell wait wait wait wait yeah no it's on it's on I see it I see it but my screen looks fuzzy right yeah that's how I'm seeing you from my end yeah what the hell let me check something here hold on okay let's do a little in show my you know that smooth little March of colors next to you when you open up the show yeah happy it's all like gone really weird I'm looking at this right let's go back to this see what happens I'm supposed to be in 1080 and I'm looking at it right now now you're sharp you just got sharp it goes back and forth it's a strange see like hearing yourself huh I guess I don't know what do a refresh here I'm playing it right Tom Benwald says it looks good patty says it's blurry that was in the beginning and it looks like it's sharp now so it goes back and forth you're starting to get blurry again it's strange got any storms down there no this this would this will drive me crazy now this is it's not supposed to be like this come on it's like a Grateful Dead show warts and all rice we're talking about 1967 there's no digital so it was still waiting for Luda come on so you know I'm going to do I hate doing this but I'm going to do it to you buddy what's that no don't cut me I'm not cutting you I'm gonna I'm gonna hit a refresh which might take me off the screen so the show is yours for about I don't know 60 seconds let's see what happens here let's see reload I'm gonna reload it so I'm going off the screen I guess it's time to advertise the music roll show with my friend Perry and my friend Lou we discuss opera we have fun how am I now you look better look yeah yeah looks better yep and I just advertised my podcast is that the opera I'll pay you I'll give you the money later on then I lose my this is like okay here we go you look better though all right good yeah good you know me I the technical stuff drives me crazy especially you know it's not only sound it has to be oh it's this is a live stream so it has to look yeah good and you don't want to drop out in the middle of the show no like me and Lou do once in a while race right let's see is the chat working let's see now I'm not seeing any I'm not seeing any comments so let me try this well sorry for the podcast listeners but I gotta get this shit right hey it's okay I should be seeing I should be seeing comments because people have already made three comments you over here maybe they're bored and they don't want to comment anymore no it's there it should be showing up on my screen over here right we know that my boss you busting balls only Bono does that let's see public so it should be getting huh this is crazy seven minutes in and I'm here we haven't done anything yet let me see send comment test I just sent a text to message I see I see you as I see mine okay good we're good we're good let me switch over to my other account and do the same thing I just want to make sure yes just our audience is bored they don't want to comment actually this is all Lou's fault yeah yeah always the you know I would probably lost the other comments is because I rebooted so hmm all right well you know what we're gonna start without Lou right as I say that as I say that does he have what does he what do you let's get the full screen nose is that why you were late you had to clean your nose and he's back in Paris again you brown nose er I've been a bad dog my laptop and he's back in pair you left here in Paris you must have left it back in the United States I did I left on the plane how you doing Lou I'm doing alright how are you guys doing well I just had a little technical difficulty and we blamed you because you weren't here so you left me alone and I had to talk opera with myself talked opera yeah rigoletto did you talk about rigoletto this time I'm just really boring you know I'm like all right this is why this is a two and a half hour podcast some of us have to work tomorrow all right here we go let's jump right into 1967 musical events in 1967 and the year kicks off right away with a bomb a bomb on January 4th the doors release can arguably one of the greatest debut records ever arguably if you had a top 25 greatest debut that albums would have to be in the top 10 it would have to be yeah you know if you had a top 50 that would have to be in the top 10 right even if you don't like them you have to say that was so ahead of its time oh it's so different nothing out there was like the needle and all you hear it kicks I mean fucking what a way to start an album it's a heavy song it with a bossa nova beat yeah I mean that's pretty clever yeah 67 so you know bossa nova was pretty hip again John Densmore over underrated underrated underappreciated I think you are you are so correct you know never gets the the the consideration that I I don't know you can't put him in greatest of all time but could he be okay if there's a top there's a top 25 drummer top 25 drummers is he in it good question and in rock we'll just say in rock I think he could be I could see him making so I don't know if he's a universal pick but I could see him on some list I mean he's something you'd have to think about like you said like it doesn't get noticed so much you know yeah yeah or it I mean although his drumming wasn't shy I mean he's jazzy as hell I heard um writers on the storm yesterday and his adjustment playing is great in his adjustments during the shows just for that yeah yeah the unpredictability of you know how the how the song was gonna go right because they could rehearse it all they want once Morrison got into that zone well in the drama keeps the beat right yeah yeah the drummer has to stay up with that yeah and played to the clown so to speak right you know and my my problem is if some of the clowns don't have the beat you know at one point they've got to give in like I said Morrison or even Dylan they'll set the tone but they've got to be steady themselves you know it's yeah otherwise it's just erratic but you know yeah guy like Dan's more I mean I had skill I had a lot of a lot of technical ability right feel yes cool so obviously his drums always sounded good yeah on the earlier on the other records even you know three years worth of music whatever I guess I would be who produced some Jack Holtzman was the producer did a good job Jekyll or now wait so no what was it Paul Rothchild yes yes yes I'm sorry Holtzman was he on the record company yeah yeah was that it was that chrysalis or chrysalis I think or just like yes that's a lecture a lecture weren't they on chrysalis though also I thought they were yeah maybe maybe chrysalis was a subsidiary but uh yeah Jack Holtzman's son is Adam Holtzman he's a keyboardist right now he plays with here we go Stephen Wilson but he does a little blog on Facebook and he talks about growing up and he was like six years old and his father brought him to a club to see the tour Wow at six years old he just talks about like yeah it's a great little blog Wow all right and four days later on January 8th Elvis Presley turned 32 on January 14th the human be in right the human be e -i -n human being takes place in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park polo fields with spoken words from Timothy Leary Allen Ginsberg Gary Snyder in others live music was provided by Jefferson Airplane the Grateful Dead Big Brother in the holding company and Quicksilver Messenger Service speeches from Jerry Rubin and others were also given at the event although it's one band there I liked yeah Quicksilver Messenger Service who was it on January 15th 1967 who is your favorite poet of all them I know you're not asking me Arthur Rimbaud who influenced Jim Morrison good answer good answer way to bring that first opening segment rough full circle we're getting better Scott we're good now you guys get a lot of good trust me I'm getting a lot of good feedback so let's keep it at that I don't want you son ask for more money and on January 15th 1967 the Rolling Stones appear on the Ed Sullivan show at Ed Sullivan's request finish it he asked them to let's spend sing let's spend some time together is that the one there you go yeah and then he told him a really big shoe I hate to do this I mean I come back on penalty box I don't say just he beat my record okay look he just got on the show after late and these are either he's stuck he's frozen put the dog nose back on where'd it go are you throw it at the camera like your headphones on January 16th 1967 the monkeys begin work on headquarters the first album to give them complete artistic and technical control over their material and it was fucking horrible fucking horrible what were they thinking they know they were thinking the egos got too big they thought they were the music well the argument can be made that you know Mike Nesmith did write different drum yeah so he could write songs but I don't think he was a pop songwriter you know headquarters and they try to be all fucking like 60 ish and shit they weren't looking for pop were they they're trying to be like more psychedelic yeah I think so there were their channel on the Beatles with those quirky little yeah with anti -grizzelles on that I don't know some weird shit I'll tell you what though I don't care about it myself but it was surely a harpsichord on it because that's what all those records had they had to have a harpsichord and I have the book this the 100 best -selling records of the 60s the monkeys got a they've had quite a few albums on there oh they do yeah they were they were but I mean I thought it was just a condensed period of the show which it probably was but it's still I mean they've got I mean most of their albums sold really well yeah yeah ah you like the show what's it is like the show I did I still like it I still love it I love that that that's so that humor is great like dumbed down brilliantly done though humor yeah way was what they were supposed to act like that yeah you know what I mean there was no like these guys are bad actors they knew exactly how to do that they pulled it off great it was campy it was great for its time it's still great to watch now yeah I do think that banana splits were a better band yeah that's I'll give you the banana splits were a kick -ass band yeah yeah kick -ass man did you see the movie recently came out it's a horror movie with the banana splits the banana splits movie it's a horror movie yeah yeah it takes place in an amusement park and they're they're robotic and in Dyson and slicing baby Dyson and slicing I have to say oh man that's yeah okay yeah Dyson and slicing it's good it's kids again campy movie but I couldn't not watch it yeah I have to say I'm sure Fleagle is a total psychopath well I'm not gonna give you any and no no no spoilers here those was it just Dyson and slicing on January 17 1967 the daily mail newspaper reports four thousand potholes in Blackburn Lancashire and Guinness air Tara Brown is killed in a car wreck these articles inspire lyrics for a day in the life a day in the life yes on January 22nd 1967 Simon and Garfunkel give live can't give a live concert at Phil harmonic Phil harmonic call in New York City some of this concert is released on October 4th 1997 on their box set old friends but most is not released until July 2002 that's some more okay January 29th mantra rock dance the quote ultimate high of the hippie era is organized at the Avalon Ballroom in San Francisco featuring Janis Joplin grateful dead big brother in the holding company for three Moby grape quirky that would've been interesting that's the best man that's the best as though for they're almost like the MC five kind of I think they were just kind of but they're they're a San Francisco band and beat poet once again Allen Ginsberg shows up to do his spoken word I heard he was a member of NAMBLA I wouldn't the National Association of Marlon Brando look -alikes I heard I'd someone I remember he actually he was a sponsor of NAMBLA but anyway on January 30th 1967 the Beatles shoot a promotional film for the forthcoming single strawberry fields forever at Noel Park in Seven Oaks have you seen it I have seen it I haven't seen it in a long time it's really cool yeah yeah it's kind of dark speaking of dark on February 3rd 1967 UK record producer Joe Meek murders is it his landlady and then commits suicide by shooting himself in the head in Holloway North in London it's kind of dark didn't he produce sleepwalk yes letter Telstar some early we talked we did it bit of a genius really yeah let's see February 7th Mickey Dolan's no let me stop February 6th Mike Nesmith and Mickey Dolan's of the monkeys fly into London Dolan sees till death do us part on British TV and uses the term Randy's scouse grit from the program for the title of the monkeys next single release Randy's scouse grit not releasing it is an offensive term Britain's British census forced the title to be changed to alternate title and then the next day Mickey Dolan's meets Paul McCartney at his home in st.

The Doug Collins Podcast
From Ohio to Country: How Frank Meyers Found His Southern Roots
"Us a little bit about yourself, though, growing up, Ohio, native. Talk a little bit about that, and then how you got into really country music, because you know, if you look at it, it's a lot of the old song from crystal news shows up. Didn't realize you had northern Ohio plays. Didn't think he's going to be a country guy. How do you get how did you get country out of Ohio? Well, you know, my family is from Kentucky, my dad was from Kentucky, my mother is from actually, she was born. And raised over in east Tennessee. And so they met to Dayton Ohio during the big boom, the industrial boom back in the day, and my dad was a champion fiddle player and guitar player and singer and he had a voice like Jim Reeves and my grandmother was a 5 string banjo player in the style of grandpa Jones. And so I grew up in a musical family. I mean, I heard music totally from when I popped out and I left home. So I started playing guitar about 9. My dad was of course a big country fan. Drove Jones, buck Owens, del Reeves, Jim Reeves, Eddie Arnold, you know, all of that. And my sister was a big Motown fan, so I heard a lot growing up. You know, I remember in first grade watching The Beatles on Ed Sullivan Show. Oh, there you go. So I grew up in the probably the best musical time you could ever grow up. As far as diversity and the stylists and things that we're in the music business back then, there were everybody was a stylist for the most part and there was no pro tools. There were no computers helping the singers out back then. You had to be able to sing and

AP News Radio
Al Jaffee, longtime Mad magazine cartoonist, dead at 102
"Al jaffee mad magazine's cartoonist who worked until he was 99 has now died at age a 102. Jaffe died Monday in Manhattan from multiple organ failure according to his granddaughter for decades virtually every issue of mad magazine featured new material by the cartoonist. His collected foldings taking on everyone in his unmistakably broad visual style from The Beatles to TMZ. Jaffe was also known for snappy answers to stupid questions delivering exactly what the title promised. And he also helped change the culture, his parodies of advertisements included future real-life products, like automatic re dialing, a computer spell checker, and graffiti proved surfaces. Julie Walker, New York.

The Eric Metaxas Show
Pat Boone Has Always Been a Beacon of Wholesomeness
"Fascinating that at that young age, you were presented as this image of a wholesomeness and already in the 50s. Look, this is just the way of the world. The dark side is always attractive. And people don't understand what they're getting into. You know, you kind of think like, wow, Elvis Presley, the idea that he died of a drug overdose bloated Iraq at age 42. It breaks your heart. How many of those people they trod that path? And they died so young whether they were talking to Jimi Hendrix or anybody, any name, you know, Jim Morrison. I mean, on and on and on and on and you represent it obviously something very, very different. And The Rolling Stones and even The Beatles, if they were experimenting with drugs, they were very wealthy, and they could go to Switzerland and then have their blood transfused. Yes, Keith Richards famously had to get a blood transfusion because he was so loaded up with drugs. He's like, not a problem. I'll just go to some clinic in Switzerland, and we'll take care of that. Yeah, but kids were dying by the thousands following examples with the drugs that they couldn't afford to have their blood transfused. And people weren't even making well, there was a connection, but I mean, you know, you couldn't blame them for just sinking in their songs and living their lives the way they wanted to. But the fallout from it was too bad. It was very unfortunate. And of course, here I was had four daughters living in Beverly Hills and going to church regularly and riding bestselling books of Christian principles. And yet having rock and roll records at the same time. And so I was okay.

The Eric Metaxas Show
Pat Boone Has Met Everyone, From Elvis to the Queen
"I'm talking to pat Boone. Yes, the patent. I could get any guy named pat Boone, but no, we took the trouble to track down the real pat Boone. Who has boy pat? You've met anyone I can think of. You have stories with The Beatles. You did business with The Beatles in the 60s. I did business with The Beatles. You met the queen twice. Yes, yes, twice, and the second time was very embarrassing. I think I did I tell you about this. You did and how many times did you walk on the moon? Be honest. Well, only once in my dreams. And it was scary, so I didn't it was a nightmare. You sung about the moon. You've met many astronauts. I mean, look, you've just met about everybody. I mean, everybody that was on the dais at the Dean Martin rose, the greatest program of all time. You've met most of those people. Yeah, and they've all made jokes about me too, and not on the roast. But just in their shows. And then they're well, because you became. You became that guy, you know, that we wanted to make fun of something wholesome we'd make fun of pat Boone. And what's the line where Dean Martin or somebody says that I shook papon's hand in my whole my whole right side sobered up? Big laugh because the audiences knew what he was talking about. Eric from the very beginning of my career where Elvis was, you know, my opening act and we've talked about that because I already had 3 million selling hits before we met and he only had one record and it was a sock hop in Cleveland. He was a punk. He was a punk, you took him out of the gutter. Is that what you're saying? No. But it was all like that. But he was considered the rebel.

AP News Radio
Volkswagen recalls Beetles to replace Takata air bags
"There's a recall on Volkswagen beetles. Because of airbag inflators. Volkswagen is announcing the recall of some 42,000 beetles in the U.S. and Canada, which have potentially dangerous takata airbags. The model years affected our 2015 and 2016. The inflators can explode and hurl shrapnel inside a vehicle because chemicals use can deteriorate over time. Dealers will be replacing the driver's airbag in The Beatles with letters going out to owners in February. At least 33 people have died worldwide because of exploding takata airbags. I'm Jackie

Awards Chatter
"beatles" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"The most famous living New Zealander, he is a writer director and producer whose films many made in collaboration with his life partner Fran Walsh include 1990 fours heavenly creatures, the landmark Lord of the Rings trilogy spanning 2001 through 2003, the 2005 remake of King Kong, The Hobbit trilogy spending 2012 through 2014, the feature length 2018 documentary they shall not grow old. And most recently, the 2022 Disney+ documentary series, The Beatles get back, which draws upon 57 hours of footage and 140 hours of audio, most of it never before seen or heard, to chronicle the 22 days leading up to the fab four's final public performance in January of 1969. He's a nominee for 9 Oscars, three of which resulted in wins, and the winner of four Bafta Awards, a critics choice award, a Golden Globe Award, a director's Guild Award, to producers Guild Awards, and an Emmy for 2008s Eric Clapton crossroads guitar festival, Chicago. He is now nominated for another Emmy, best directing for a documentary or nonfiction program for The Beatles, get back, which itself is nominated for best documentary or nonfiction series. Sir, Peter Jackson. Over the course of our conversation, the 60 year old and I discussed how a kid from Wellington fell in love with the movies and began making films of his own, many, from the earliest days with a focus on visual effects, how a filmmaker who broke into the business making splatter horror films and whose only studio film before The Lord of the Rings had been a box office flop, came to be entrusted with that project's not one, but three very expensive films. Why he has in recent years, somewhat lost his desire to make narrative films and has instead gravitated toward documentaries, which require him to pour over and restore archival footage that most people have never seen before, what he makes of the current state of the film industry, and of Amazon's upcoming nearly half $1 billion TV version of The Lord of the Rings, plus much more. And so without further ado, let's go to that conversation.

The Mason Minute
Mass Appeal (MM #3955)
"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason over the last few years, I've been following along with the discussion that says there is no such thing as mass appeal anymore, especially when it comes to music, television, movies, things like that. It's not possible to have mass appeal, because nothing reaches the masses anymore. No TV show will ever reach the ratings heights of the last episode of mash. No band will ever be as big as The Beatles. I'm sure you could argue all in the 1980s, Michael Jackson, but you have to look at the different course of time. When The Beatles came to America, it changed the world literally. And when you look at television and movies and music and entertainment and the world we live in, we have so many options these days. We have so many things that we can be focused on, even people in your own house don't necessarily have the same interests you anymore. That's not a bad thing. It's just the way the world has changed. Is it gone forever is the big question, and that's where the debate continues. Some say yes, some say no, I'll be honest with you. I don't see where it comes back.

The Mason Minute
Mass Appeal (MM #3955)
"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason over the last few years, I've been following along with the discussion that says there is no such thing as mass appeal anymore, especially when it comes to music, television, movies, things like that. It's not possible to have mass appeal, because nothing reaches the masses anymore. No TV show will ever reach the ratings heights of the last episode of mash. No band will ever be as big as The Beatles. I'm sure you could argue all in the 1980s, Michael Jackson, but you have to look at the different course of time. When The Beatles came to America, it changed the world literally. And when you look at television and movies and music and entertainment and the world we live in, we have so many options these days. We have so many things that we can be focused on, even people in your own house don't necessarily have the same interests you anymore. That's not a bad thing. It's just the way the world has changed. Is it gone forever is the big question, and that's where the debate continues. Some say yes, some say no, I'll be honest with you. I don't see where it comes back.

The Mason Minute
Mass Appeal (MM #3955)
"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason over the last few years, I've been following along with the discussion that says there is no such thing as mass appeal anymore, especially when it comes to music, television, movies, things like that. It's not possible to have mass appeal, because nothing reaches the masses anymore. No TV show will ever reach the ratings heights of the last episode of mash. No band will ever be as big as The Beatles. I'm sure you could argue all in the 1980s, Michael Jackson, but you have to look at the different course of time. When The Beatles came to America, it changed the world literally. And when you look at television and movies and music and entertainment and the world we live in, we have so many options these days. We have so many things that we can be focused on, even people in your own house don't necessarily have the same interests you anymore. That's not a bad thing. It's just the way the world has changed. Is it gone forever is the big question, and that's where the debate continues. Some say yes, some say no, I'll be honest with you. I don't see where it comes back.

Cinemavino
"beatles" Discussed on Cinemavino
"This has been sanctioned. Yeah, by The Hobbit guy. Yes. You know, it's because The Beatles have the tightest stranglehold over their mythology of any group ever. It is like extremely tight. In more than anybody else, it's like, what goes out? Prince has a pretty tight rain on a lot of his stuff. Yes. He does. Yes, RIP. And that's true. It's like, but it's kind of like scaling with Nevada where it's like The Beatles mythology is much bigger. Prince is huge. But with The Beatles, it's like they have the most valuable catalog of music and they have the most valuable mythology. Well, I think from a business standpoint, The Beatles really set the groundwork for a lot of musicians that came after them. Yes. Prior to them, musicians were sort of an afterthought for business wise. Yeah. They were just a commodity to be used by record labels. They were another commodity, yeah. Yeah. And so The Beatles, once they sort of became as big as they were, you saw them build Apple corp, build their mythos, essentially. And then run their business like a business, own themselves. And not let somebody else dictate what was going to happen with The Beatles. And you don't see that with many other artists because they don't get that big. But when they were the first group on that level to write their own music, they were the first musicians to take control of their own catalog. Yeah, it's kind of like Hollywood in that era. In the 1950s, actors, actresses were just playing guards to be thrown around and put in the movies, paid dirt cheap and treated like shit. Yeah. Well, that was the studio system in Hollywood was like you were under contract. If you're under Warner Brothers, you work for Warner Brothers and that was it. And you took the projects you were given. If you were a singer and a singer in that time period, it's like whoever you're producer, your manager, they would look at like lieburn stoler or let the tin pan alley type people. And they would find you songs to record. You know, it's like, oh, this is written by so on its own tons of this. Is your song now? That was Elvis. That was all the big name people. Even people like Judy Garland and Frank Sinatra, it's like they would have people that they would songwriting people that they would reach to and get songs from them. Yeah. The Beatles were the first people who were like, we ride our own songs. That was an early battle. They fought with George Martin when he was trying to do the same thing and find them songs to record. They said, no, we have our own stuff. And we want to do it. They're revolutionary in that way. They were first like you said they broke that ground. And they set the stage of future groups who say we want to do whether it's Led Zeppelin or U2 or whoever. It's like we do our stuff. We don't cover. Yeah, so. And then we still got in sync. Kind of did both. I think they had some songwriters but they also had a lot of farm of people who wrote them songs. Yeah. They still kind of follow in the classic like pop star. Oh, yeah. The boy band me those. Never stop never stopping. We're going to take a quick break and then we'll come back and we're going to talk some more beetles. We'll talk the rooftop. So episode three. So stay tuned. If you're interested in starting your very own podcast, blueberry is one of.

Cinemavino
"beatles" Discussed on Cinemavino
"But he's my favorite like other side character that shows up. I'm just like, anytime he shows up, he's my Kendrick Perkins of the funder. He's a glue guy. Fuck, yeah, here he comes. He's just. He looks like a big teddy bear. I like that. Yeah. Yeah. But yeah, that was my favorite part. It was just seeing Paul at the piano and then coming up with those tunes. I'm like, holy shit. And then the other one was George Harrison showing up and he was like, oh yeah, I rode the song. He was playing ivy mine. It's just like, oh yeah, I wrote this last night. This is one of my favorite obscure Beatles songs that doesn't get enough love, I feel. Yeah. And I'm like, oh, yeah, I love this one. And then John's just bagging on it. It's like, oh, I do like what we do here. I was like, we're a rocker. Man. You know, get the net. It's probably a rock and roll. And it hasn't been invented yet, John. Yeah, hot insult. All right, that's me. I thought it was kind of cool to see the business side of things. I mean, everything that you guys said, absolutely true, seeing their musical process was incredible. But seeing kind of the beginning threads of Apple as a company, not Apple apple, but apple core. Apple core of talking about, oh, we just purchased the right to 4000 of these songs and we're going to start printing sheet music. And I think one of them is just like, why would we print sheet music? And they're like, no, no, trust me. This is going to be huge. He's like, who wants what teachers? He's like so congratulations. Looking back at that now, it's like, oh my God, this is huge. The start of how music became so ubiquitous. And to think that there was a time that that one, that wasn't a thing. And two, they were ahead of it. I was incredible. And just hearing their business manager talk about just the points, it's like, yeah, there's no wonder that Ringo and Paul McCartney are both worth. What, $800 million? Yeah. They're loaded. Just super loud. And it started right here. It wasn't just the music. They knew that the music wasn't going to be the only thing to sustain them. They knew there to diversify and kind of strike while the iron was hot. And it's cool to see it happening in live action and hearing all those conversations happening away from the music. Yeah. But then at the same time, getting to see Paul kind of direct the business a little bit and seeing that John and George just kind of not be as involved in it, then be off on the side and be creative artistic types..

Infinite Rewind
"beatles" Discussed on Infinite Rewind
"This album was predominantly written on acoustic guitars, but even with the minimalist approach in a lot of the songs on this album, I think the pairing of their songwriting abilities and their composition, even just on a simplistic level is very beautiful. So I brought that from previous Beatles album and I definitely while listening to the white album. Totally agree. I think that when I listen to The Beatles out here, I'm always impressed by how beautiful they can make something that's out of something so simple. And there's definitely in most songs like a positive attitude a positive vibe and I think it's just comes just by how crisp everything sounds totally I agree with where I will let it's like the interwoven songwriting and composition. Being able to I think you just said and I totally agree that you capturing an emotion like a raw motion within the music. To me it's just such a clear, clean, crisp fashion. It's like bam, it's in front of you. It's not like you have to go searching for it. It's there from start to finish. Yeah, that was really evident throughout this album. This was definitely a Beatles album that just seemed like it was it wasn't as poppy. I mean, there's definitely songs in this album that captured that old beetle's essence of that pop energy. But this seemed to take it was definitely more creative. Yet, still Beatles, all the same. So yeah, it was to me all the, to me with all I recognized The Beatles. It was just clearly to me. There was no fooling here. This was a people's album. Oh, yeah. You weren't confused. You're like, might be voice to men, but let's play this out a little bit. Right. Yeah, I think The Beatles have this magical ability to sonically show how the sum is greater than the individual parts. And there are so many moments in The Beatles discography where you just feel like it's not just Ringo here. It's not just Paul. It's not just John collectively they're able to give you this beautiful fusion, this beautiful unity where sometimes you can't really pick apart exactly who's doing what, but you just feel this sensation of wow, they are really expanding here, and it all sounds very cohesive. And I really, really appreciate it. I look for those moments. I remember the very first time I listened to The Beatles, the first time I ever heard was here comes the sun..

HOT45CLASSICROCK PODCAST
"beatles" Discussed on HOT45CLASSICROCK PODCAST
"The answer to this is for me question is drawn that it was the first beatle to get married. That's a sergeant proportionally hearts club band. I think August 1966, The Beatles permanently retired from tearing and pursuing individual interests for those three months during a return to London and November Paul McCartney had an idea first long walling on single in February 1967 and left off the LP. Sergeant pepper was recorded as a musicologist as an early concept album that advanced the roles of some composition incentive for soccer to imagery record sleeves in the produce of popular music. It's considered one of the first art rockies pro generator producers rock in the state of the 1916 one four Grammy Awards. Including album of the year the first rocky received its honor and 2000 recording registry while library cars and top several quarters industries falls for the best album of all time including those problems for our own sun magazine. Everybody is one of the best songs of all time in the UK's bestselling studio album with word in 32 million comparable as of 2011. They saw me as The Beatles also known as album. It's their 9th studio album. Release on February 22nd, 1968. At the May 1968, The Beatles returned to EMR studios. To commit to recording sessions at Austin's home mid October, after a series of various problems, including the producer George Martin, taking on and on holiday, we're going to start with the two weeks afterwards. 24 times certified platinum by the RIA disproves down to the last two albums. Which is your submarine? When you saw January 13th, 1969, that will only contain 6 songs. You also top 5 in the UK and U.S. charts. And now finally we have our last slide, which is abroad. We saw the September 26th, 1969. It was Romania and commercial success with the hit singles something and come together. That was one of the bestselling albums. Including a bow tie part of a certification where the RIAA does your turning into my podcast, hopefully I'll enjoy it. Be sure to say it's Internet for today's episode we'll be talking about the easy talk..

HOT45CLASSICROCK PODCAST
"beatles" Discussed on HOT45CLASSICROCK PODCAST
"The summer of love while the owl's reception achieved for cultural legitimization of pop music, her recognition for the medium as a genuine art form. Recording was completed on 21st of April. The car was supposed to be those posing in front of a Tableau or celebrities and historical figures was designed. Peter Blake and Jan haworth in front of music worked with the trivia question. Here's a question. Who was the first Beatles to get married?.

HOT45CLASSICROCK PODCAST
"beatles" Discussed on HOT45CLASSICROCK PODCAST
"We are drawn to another keyboard in the guitar. You know, Paul McCartney on the base, George Harrison off on the guitar. Yeah, we're going to start in terms of discussion. They're considered one of the greatest bands of all time. They're all from Liverpool England. They built their reputation by playing small clubs in local and Hamburg. Brian Epstein the manager of both of them said professional artists. It went through an overdrive, including Pete best before I go started going in 1962. The pioneers were recording. It's already an artistic presentation. They were rooted in scaffolding 1950 rock and roll George Martin their producer guided and developed a reporting, including their first hit, but we do. Which was produced in late 1960. By early 1964, The Beatles were leading the British division of the United States pop barkey breaking newer solid director. There are also influential in the 1960s Potter culture movement. And played an important role in that. They see whether our days in 1964. From 1965 onwards, they produced the problems with credit complexity. Including albums, such as rubble soil in 1955 and revolver in 1966 and sergeant pepper's only harsh glove in 1967. They enjoy George Porter of course and starts with the white album, which was released in 1968 and Abbey Road in 1969. They all floated far greater Republican Christian soccer Delia drugs and the eastern spirituality. After the group's breakup of 1972, further in George the south was individual artists, but it was strong and killed in 1980 and George Harrison died of a lung cancer in 2001. And we were starting and probably musically active. We don't feel the greatest selling music out of all time. They won 7 Grammy Awards, including four BRIT Awards. In 1968, they found an Alba corps, which was the multimedia corporation that continues to oversee projects. Related to the rich success. There were ducks into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988. When Time Magazine named them among Swedish most important 100 people, now they gave a brief history of their vans. Odds are going to talk about each album starting first and starting off with the music hearing question. So here's a question. What was the last time that John Lennon.

The Adam Carolla Show
1st All-Civilian SpaceX Crew Launches Into Orbit
"There at it. Elon musk space. Company made history wednesday after its first all civilian mission launched from cape canaveral florida. The mission is called inspiration for sent. Four civilians into orbit Got a geo. Scientists a us air force vet a physician's assistant who was also a cancer. Survivor and jared isaac men. He's the billionaire. Who purchased the flight to help raise money for childhood cancer. They'll be flying about one hundred miles higher than the international space station. They'll carry out some experiments you about balance and testing. Their blood will be there for three days. They're expected to splash down in the atlantic on saturday and they're not docking anywhere so they took the like basically the the sun roof off. You usually have that closed because that's dachshunds. So now they have this giant window above them and they're just like us overeating now. Yeah they went up this morning. We sorry yesterday yesterday.

AP News Radio
Lennon Interview to Schoolboys, Songs, to Auction in Denmark
"A cassette tape with a thirty three minute audio recording of a John Lennon interview useful a school newspaper report we auctioned in Denmark later this month off a century ago full Danish teenagers interviewed them the recording including on a power on publish song by the late Beatle one of the team's remembers that it was the height of the Vietnam War and the Cold War that him and his wife Yoko Ono had a message of peace he says and that was important to us the teams managed to get an old jeans but lemon where he played and sung with no give peace a chance and a new one radio piece the items the tape twenty three still photos and a copy of the school paper estimated to be worth at least thirty one thousand dollars I'm Charles de Ledesma

ESPN FC
USMNT Survive Qualifier Scare, Defeating Honduras 4-1
"Hello come into espn. F c k murray and ali marino. Here with you in the studio we are also joined by jurgen klinsmann. Casey keller and ian darke to to look back on the us men's win over honduras for one finished but it really was a tale of two halves. I'll start with you again. How worried we were in the first half it looked as was going to be a disaster was a little bit. Nervous at halftime really beyond. It didn't look so good. But then obviously the second half was to remain as they kind of the equalizer. They've threw themselves into that game day. They're really fought for every single ball. Every engine the field of a feisty there but going into that one against one battle adjusted to the circumstances day zula and then one day. They got their goal. The equalizer they really then controlling a game and dominating greg to meet the right adjustments for the second half that brought you brought in the right people as well you know it worked out just perfectly and a ended up in a tremendous big win and i think that calms everybody down. Now it was well-deserved. They really can enjoy that moment because to win in honduras in such a place. Some beatles. Zula is very rare. So so you've got to take that all in and congratulations to them was awesome

ESPN FC
USMNT’s Comeback After a Horrible Start in Honduras Sets Important Marker
"The us men's win over honduras for one finished but it really was a tale of two halves. I'll start with you again. How worried we were in the first half it looked as was going to be a disaster was a little bit. Nervous at halftime really beyond. It didn't look so good. But then obviously the second half was to remain as they kind of the equalizer. They've threw themselves into that game day. They're really fought for every single ball. Every engine the field of a feisty there but going into that one against one battle adjusted to the circumstances day zula and then one day. They got their goal. The equalizer they really then controlling a game and dominating greg to meet the right adjustments for the second half that brought you brought in the right people as well you know it worked out just perfectly and a ended up in a tremendous big win and i think that calms everybody down. Now it was well-deserved. They really can enjoy that moment because to win in honduras in such a place. Some beatles. Zula is very rare. So so you've got to take that all in and congratulations to them was awesome

Planet LP
Episode 29 Drew Harrison On Sounding Like John Lennon
"Look just like them. You know because because because we're we do so much trying to sound like them hamburg energy musical authenticity. That's kind of our credo and hamburg energy is rock and roll and that was the day of the clubs just passionate out reckless abandoned with the four four time signature and a backbeat. Just go but you do have to study and you do have to listen to songs and you have to listen to them over and over again over time you get it and there's one other thing that that i think is kind of important i don't try to go. I'll get all up in the way that stuff and play that. I try to just without sounding so self-important singing like john lennon. That's after all it's about catching the bird in his voice. And i had that burr well You know there's this little just a scream like sorry about that. I was impressed level. That could be my ringtone have already

AP News Radio
Brit Charged in Terror Beheadings Scheduled to Plead Guilty
"A British national accused of torturing and beheading American and European hostages in Syria is scheduled to enter a guilty plea in a U. S. courtroom this week Alexander Ayman Coty one of the four members of an Islamic state group cells referred to as the Beatles by their captives because of their British accents has filed a request to change his plea to guilty in a federal court just outside of Washington DC Cody and another suspect are being held in the U. S. charged with the deaths of American journalist James Foley and Steven Sotloff and aid workers Kayla Mueller and Peter kassig as well as other captives in twenty eighteen he told the Associated Press he thought the hostages deaths were a mistake I didn't see any benefit and that it was something that was sad and regrettable the other suspect reached a plea deal a third member of the group is jailed in Turkey and the fourth scene on graphic videos was killed in a drone strike in twenty fifteen Jackie Quinn Washington

Entrepreneur on FIRE
Follow Your Dream with Robert Miller
"Robert say what's up to fire nation and share something that you believe about becoming successful that most people disagree with. Hey j. l. d. and what's up to fire nation. Look i believe that you can be successful at any age and at any time in your life and most people would disagree with that. They think that if you don't succeed when you're young that's it game over. Well i'm a musician. And i had a youthful dream to become a rock star but life got in the way like it does for so many of us. My dream faded away not just for a few years but for a few decades but i finally jumped into the deep end of the pool and it was the best thing that i ever did in fire nation. We're going to do a deep dive on that story because so many of you including myself by the way are going to resonate with is you're gonna pull value bombs inspiration motivation because today is all about following your dream fire nation by listening to the story of somebody who finally followed his dream and what that looks like so as you kind of mentioned earlier roberts you were a child in as he child your dream was to become a rockstar. Share that dream with us. While you're absolutely right. I was born into a family where my father played music and i was taught from an early age that i was going to be a musician and they started me on piano and i didn't love trumpet. Because that was my father's instrument. And then my world changed in the nineteen sixties when this little band from liverpool came around and played on the ed sullivan show and i'm talking of course about the beatles. Everybody wanted to be a musician at that point. And certainly i did too and i formed a little band with mike. You know my friends and started to play. And i switched to base because i had already learned how to play the treble cleft from the trumpet and somebody had to play the bass. And that's how. I became a bass player

KIRO Radio 97.3 FM
How Choosing a New Host Got Messy at ‘Jeopardy!’
"You live under a rock. You probably know there is drama over the new host of the game show Jeopardy. A slew of guest host took the helm of the show as it tried to fill the shoes of the late host Alex Trebek. This week, it announced that producer Mike Richards will be the main host and actress Mayan Bialik will host a special episodes. But many fans were like Mm. Because they wanted to see director author literary advocate and Star Trek actor Levar Burton get the job before his audition week set, some say suspiciously during the Olympics, Burton gushed about his excitement. I've been a fan of jeopardy for all of my life, and when this opportunity came by, I could not pass it up. Social Media raved about his performance. Welcome Mat Donna and Brian. Let's play Jeopardy! Here are your categories. Name that Beatles, too. But Twitter caught fire. When Richards and Bialik were announced with comments running from Megan McCain's Why couldn't they just give it to Levar Burton? Like literally? Everyone on the planet wanted to geometric sleeps? How did jeopardy goes so out of its way Not to give llevar a job burden has been gracious tweeting. The outpouring of love and support from family, friends and fans alike has been incredible Bialik and a move not likely to endear her to his fans posted from her bet on Instagram that she's a fan too. And if you don't like me as the new host of Jeopardy, I'm sorry. I love Levar Burton. I've worked with him on Big Bang theory. I really have great respect for everybody who guest hosted and, um I think it's really amazing that it's a woman host of jeopardy. I think of a woman, so it's really exciting. It's very big Deal. Jeopardy's 38 season begin September 13th

The Old Man's Podcast
A highlight from Episode 205; Watching out for stupid and dealing with the "Pop-in"
"Welcome everyone to the podcast phenomenon. Known as the old man's podcast. I am that old man who am i. Dr strep is one of my titles. Although my daughter's quite fond of telling me yeah your doctor but you can't help anybody. That's pretty harsh isn't it. Well she's wrong. I can't help people. And i helped people sue this podcast i entertain an i inform and i'm happy you're here for both of those things. I'm an old guy. I'll admit it. And what old guys do best is tell stories. based on her life experience. What could be more fun than at nothing. I dare say so here. You are ready for thought-provoking wisdom and fun so let's discuss what's coming up on this episode of the old man's podcast on my mind is the pop in. Maybe you've experienced pump and people before we talk about the pop in. I have a tip for you. It's an entertainment tip. You maybe know about this that you might got so stay. Tuned got a good tip for you on entertainment. There's not so funny thing. I've been noticing. I wanted to tell you about it. I have a pep talk about making mistakes. Allah albert einstein quote. The feinstein can make mistakes. Anybody can so. That's what's coming up on this episode of the old man's podcast.

Conversations
"beatles" Discussed on Conversations
"Millionaire tycoon marries teenage could journalist so i was banned by murdoch for three years. So bob rudge's never appeared in either the straighten all they mira and out the papers. He had show on television six years and came up as late night. Variety with tommy tikos orchestra. I radio shows listed simply as music at a sunday writer called has a chapman wrote appeal. The about Showbusiness told never to mention my name. Had the daily writer called matt white who also wrote the best show business. Never mentioned my name so rupert murdoch after you've made a reference to him getting married to want to journalists that meant you were not mentioned by name in any of these publications absolutely and the three is not having any publicity was bad for business and my career and one day. We met a woman and she was aware of my problem. And this woman said. I think a little note of apology or fix it. I can fix it for you. I saw that reading. Wanted to apologize. So i had a writer who read that book of rock and roll with me for denison brand. He wrote an apology. That was sort of an apology. And i should have riven. Murdoch's letter hit now moved to england when he wrote back and said your apologies accepted. Doc is in the nineteen seventies. You did a centerfold for cleo magazine. How are you talked into that bob. Afraid you'd ask me about that. I've ever been shamed. Well i wasn't getting a lot of publicity. And i think the editor of clear magazine had asked me. This was ought to buttress. Believe is now the chair of the abc. That's true and funnily enough. I decided that i would do it. My wife approved the fighter. We took up at the fine. We still have up in queensland. But i needed publicity. I'm ashamed today. That i did. It seemed of worked to help me contain my ratings and contain listeners. The family think. I didn't know what one of my teenage daughters was riding horses around the farm while it was done with a girlfriend i was feeling very embarrassed about it. All my wife is feeling very generous. Didn't mind my doing. It should've put. I often said that my wife went to add calories and i went to the football. She's far more intellectual. I am so it appeared but everybody was doing it in those days. It was some of the people you've most enjoyed interviewing over the one of the highlights interviews of my career. And i must admit over the years i played a little too often was in one thousand. Nine hundred fifty. Nine winner is quite unique. Still any radio people to go overseas. I don't know how. I managed that. But i met doris day. Doris had been making more films than anybody else. And she actually. Was there making pillow. Talk with rock hudson and she introduced me to her manager. Here's her third husband. She was very proud of him at seven years later. He died and he'd stolen all of her money lifter. Nothing but debts tax bills et cetera. And i've always remembered that and i've always remembered fondly my interview with dr stay. I also got to interview louis. Armstrong when he was assigned to him what do i call you louis or lewis. An easy call made using the alight. But call me. You had listeners through your very long extraordinarily long radio career. Who stuck with you for life..

Conversations
"beatles" Discussed on Conversations
"Millionaire tycoon marries teenage could journalist so i was banned by murdoch for three years. So bob rudge's never appeared in either the straighten all they mira and he out the papers. He had show on television six years and came up as late night. Variety with tommy tikos orchestra. I radio shows listed simply as music at a sunday writer called has a chapman wrote appeal. The about Showbusiness told never to mention my name. Had the daily writer called matt white who also wrote the best show business. Never mentioned my name so rupert murdoch after you've made a reference to him getting married to want to journalists that meant you were not mentioned by name in any of these publications absolutely and the three is not having any publicity was bad for business and my career and one day. We met a woman and she was aware of my problem. And this woman said. I think a little note of apology or fix it. I can fix it for you. I saw that reading. Wanted to apologize. So i had a writer who read that book of rock and roll with me for denison brian. He wrote an apology. That was sort of an apology. And i should have riven. Murdoch's letter hit now moved to england when he wrote back and said your apologies accepted. Doc is in the nineteen seventies. You did a centerfold for cleo magazine. How are you talked into that bob. Afraid you'd ask me about that. I've ever been shamed. Well i wasn't getting a lot of publicity. And i think the editor of clear magazine had asked me. This was ought to buttress. Believe is now the chair of the abc. That's true and funnily enough. I decided that i would do it. My wife approved the fighter. We took up at the fine. We still have up in queensland. But i needed publicity. I'm ashamed today. That i did. It seemed of worked to help me contain my ratings and contain listeners. The family think. I didn't know what what one of my teenage daughters was riding horses around the farm while it was done with a girlfriend. I was feeling very embarrassed about it. All my wife is feeling very generous. Didn't mind my doing. It should've put. I often said that my wife went to add calories and i went to the football. She's far more intellectual. I am so it appeared but everybody was doing it in those days. It was some of the people you've most enjoyed interviewing over the one of the highlights interviews of my career. And i must admit over the years i played a little too often was in one thousand. Nine hundred fifty. Nine winner is quite unique. Still any radio people to go overseas. I don't know how. I managed that. But i met doris day. Doris had been making more films than anybody else. And she actually. Was there making pillow. Talk with rock hudson and she introduced me to her manager. Here's her third husband. She was very proud of him at seven years later. He died and he'd stolen all of her money lifter. Nothing but debts tax bills et cetera. And i've always remembered that and i've always remembered fondly my interview with dr stay. I also got to interview louis. Armstrong when he was assigned to him. What do i call you. Louis or lewis. Id's it call made using the alight. But call me. You had listeners through your very long extraordinarily long radio career. Who stuck with you for life..

Conversations
"beatles" Discussed on Conversations
"He. We were about nine so-called good guys and we really went rolling or is just tremendous in online and on the abc. Listen this is conversations with breach advisor you can subscribe to the conversations podcast to find out more just head to abc dot net dot edu slash conversations. So we get to nine hundred sixty four and the beatles. The beatles were booked to come to. Australia is just before. They'd cracked the united states when they were booked to come to australia. How aware we you of the beatles. Did you know all of them when you asked to cover the tulip bulb. Well we'd been playing the record. I'd had a few hits. But i'd nice to return to you e. and i kept that a secret now winter the management at to him and said i gotta give three months of solid aleve and managers said That's a pity. I singing of sending you to england to come up with the beatles. Mmediately changed my mind but didn't realize from moment with lane.

Conversations
"beatles" Discussed on Conversations
"Store so you went to england. I flew to england and lew grade a big promoter. There gave us a car to drive around in and ringo washington but the other three were so I went to amsterdam with a first of my beatle mania trips and teenager jumping in the water everywhere and almost getting squeezed by the boats. Teenagers were jumping into the canals. And that was the beginning of it. Then we went to hong kong to manila. And instead we sidetracked to down and ref- you'll the plane arrived there. Two o'clock in the morning and paul said he'd come down with me and we go to the terminal. Suddenly people emerge everywhere. Two o'clock in the morning darwin. Yes i must've heard something and the abc mustard too so they send out there man in darwin and when he comes out and says the beatles of just arrived in australia for the first time. We're about to meet them. He comes up to poland's which want to you survey denver. Then he said richer like cigarettes is did yes. I had a cigarette then. He turned to john which won a you. John lennon his manage greeting not know which one's a witch..

Conversations
"beatles" Discussed on Conversations
"This is an abc podcast last week. Matt 'sound engineer nine piled into a car and we drive up to a grand opening house on a hill in sydney's leafy north shore to the family home of bob. Rogers bob rogers is now. And he's only ninety s. He retired mean a few years ago. Bob is the longest running radio presents a in the world. He was on the seven decades. And i think anyone's ever got a big record. When bob started broadcasting john curtain was prime minister and a stroh was still at war. Bob's radio career took him all over australia from hobart to brisbane and then to sydney where his radio show sat at the very top of the writings for years and years he presented australia's first top forty show and found ways to get hold of the latest records out of america by hook or by crook in nine hundred sixty four. Bob was sent to london to follow the beatles as they made their way to australia for their one and only australian tour. He befriended the beatles particularly john and paul and spent weeks hanging out with them. Every day throughout all the madness and hysteria of beatle mania bob has hosted tv shows he's been sect at least three times for swearing on and he kept this news coming back for more for an astonishing seven decades on air. Matinee will welcomed into bob's house by his daughter. Justin and jerry. In bob's been married for seventy one years. We recorded this conversation in bob's study. Let me start at the beginning. Tell me about way you grew up where your earliest youth was spent. I was born and bred on a soldier. Settlement in victoria from a country town called donald and my father and mother were both from england that arrived here in nineteen nine teen and they were given this opportunity to have soldiers settlement three hundred and forty acres. Now i know that most people start talking about their old age talk about how their early days were poverty stricken. I saw some poverty. It was very poor living conditions. Lock bump well. My mother lived the first two years in the tent while my father had to clear the land and fence all place so for two years at least there was no income. We had no car and no windmill. We did not get a windmill which was more important..

Can We Health You?
"beatles" Discussed on Can We Health You?
"Db seventy nine but we're talking about two thousand. We're occurrence are current and so we all know that the two remaining beatles paul and ringo are still alive today yes.

Pantheon
"beatles" Discussed on Pantheon
"Of words are. That's that's where i'm going right now. That's okay is honestly the rolling stones. I was going to dock rolling stones points to the point of losing to the beatles. And this question for me. Okay except that the timeline is all right muddy water song. Then rolling stones name their banned in nineteen sixty. Two bob dylan writes like rolling stone in nineteen sixty five one hundred percent. He knows that bans exists. No way that's not true. And then nine hundred sixty seven you get the first episode of rolling stone magazine. So i these. The culture spent the sixties just pounding the absolute hell out of the rolling stone gathers no moss imagery it. It was obviously very Pliable well rolling stone to me to me. Throwing stones is a cool man. Named only did i was basically going to dock them if they named their band. That after bob dylan and rolling stone magazine but i knew in my heart before even researching that that wasn't going to be the case abandoned naming himself after something from a song that inspired them at that. I don't even that's great to me. That's that's totally.

Pantheon
"beatles" Discussed on Pantheon
"So interested in listening to some of that early stone style pre nineteen four stuff with them. So my question to you is since we're in argumentative debate of space and since we don't have much rolling stones stuff to deal with in this pre pre nineteen sixty four time period. What which which beatles album do you like better. that came out in sixty three with the beatles. Please please me please please me see i'm gonna. I'm gonna disagree. Please please me is probably more memorable has some more memorable songs on there. But i actually think with. The beatles is a better more mature album. Yeah i think in sixty four and then obviously in sixty five. Those albums are like they're maturing so quickly like they're all they're they're leaps and bounds above this to me like this music. Is these people have a sense of melody beyond comprehension. It's like how they write all these songs. How you end up with two people. And then have george harrison later writing to and then even ringo like how you have all these same people in the same band writing. These songs is just insane but that said like the dichotomy between them and the rolling stones right now is. Is it a huge gap between the two because one is sort of riffing out real cool blues covers and one is writing the most sort of like saccharin candy music. And you.

Pantheon
"beatles" Discussed on Pantheon
"Legit. Yes what's like you're just describing to someone they're pre sixty four career like what was that like. Where were they. i mean. Sixty three is definitely the year's the beatles kind of exploded onto the scene. And i think you read the story of the beatles they are obviously In hamburg germany before they kind of hit it famous. And they were kind of doing that touring circuit and and kind of getting their chops together and a lot of these songs that they were playing with the beatles. You know with. Please please me their first album Some of these songs are covers but a lot of these are originals. I think the rolling stones for a little bit longer were kind of playing more blues standards. And i'm probably not as well versed in the early years of the rolling stones and the formation of a of them. If if anyone has a really good book on the rolling stones that lays all that out. I'd love to read it. But i i think it's fair to say to some extent that without the beatles in their success we may have never heard the rolling stones and i was. I was reading up leading this that in nine hundred sixty three so this is pretty sixty four. The guy andrew album finds the rolling stones and this is a guy who had worked of marketing. Managing like on the periphery of the beatles and basically like saw the rolling stones playing. They're like pretty. I mean basically covering like very awesome blues music but at the day. You're still discovering. Blues music and picked up the rolling stones was like the lead singer of sex magnet. These guys just have like there's just energy here. There's something to do here. Straight up helped boot out the piano player who was like an older looking man and other looking man who did buck you. Grandpa get the hell outta here. Yeah and then and said that you can't have six members in a band because like teenage kids. Just look into like get turned on. Can't can't count past five and basically like said like i'm gonna make a bad boy beatles. I'm gonna make like a thing that. I watched a little documentary. I watched like talking about like a tough sexually. Suggestive flipside to the beatles. Which honestly did the guy did it. We did it in the interesting part of that story is the fact that the rolling stones fulfilled. You know the the. It was like a boy ban in that sense of you know when we were growing up and there was this sort of idea of like. Yeah just like go to the mall. Unlike fine five good looking guys teach him how to dance and like you have like a super successful pop group and it wasn't too far from that. I think the surprising part is that both of these bands and and keith richards. And mick jagger became such amazing songwriters. And i mean there's this whole period. It's sort of survivorship bias. Because i'm there were hundreds of other bands that i'm sure people even adjacent to the beatles for like yes these guys will be the no one's ever heard of them And and so speaking of people that got kicked out of the band. I don't know that we're ever going to get to this or or Or that necessarily be included in some of the later years that we're going to cover..

Pantheon
"beatles" Discussed on Pantheon
"We're calling this podcast. I'm justin cox and my friend ryan pages here. You'll hear from him to second a quick disclaimer before we jump into this thing. Is that like baked into structure of this. Podcast is that it's gonna make some people angry because we know people of these two bands and we love these bands and were basically debating who had the better year each year. Doesn't that doesn't mean that i think the rolling stones had a bad year on year that i'm representing the beatles or vice versa. But you know we're we're gonna commit to the cause. Go all in on it so ryan. Dmz to that. Yeah stat if you if you do get angry about it good because that means you care And that's that's the one thing i'll say about this. Music is that we do care about exactly and your local library and various streaming services have many documentaries and books about both of these bands that can give you every little perfect accurate factcheck detail. This is not going to be that. This is an exercise in like the way human beings talk about music and fans talk about music and it's like an insane run these two huge important bands kind of having this overlapping prime of their career. And we're gonna talk about it but we we are not music historians By any stretch of the imagination and that my background with these bands. The amount of research. I've done as i once half watched the beatles anthology while i was at work at a video store and i've watched the youtube video of the rolling stones rock and roll circus about eight hundred times so i don't know if that makes me an expert on these two bands but i'm gonna say it. Does your expert my eyes and i hope to earn that status as we go. What what else say. In addition to that is like we are listening extensively to this music before each week and thinking about it and everything and so we'll will make good use of your time with that. I wanna ask you a question ryan. Let's see curse this. You have no idea. This is coming. But i'm already feeling argumentative. Don't cheat but what. What's the most highly streamed beatles song on spotify. Take don't t don't she. Most i won't i won't look Okay i'm gonna guess let it be nope it's here comes the sun at five hundred miles of it. Million plays rolling stones rolling stones. You can't always get what you want. It's painted black at four hundred and ninety eight. Black is the number..