Thursday 24 June 2021

JACKSON FOUND "GREAT STUFF" FOR HIS DOCUMENTARY “THE BEATLES: GET BACK"


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
A funny thing happened when Peter Jackson blew the dust off a pile of old Beatles film reels and audio tapes.
The New Zealand filmmaker, director of “The Lord of the Rings” and “The Hobbit” trilogies, set out to find the magic the Fab Four in January 1969, for a back-to-basics film and album project titled “Get Back” (it would later be known as “Let It Be”).

Jackson was given access to some 56 hours of unseen film and 140 hours of archived audio tapes from the shambolic “Get Back/Let It Be” sessions and discovered that what was more like a party. This could rewrite musical history.

Jackson said he found “great stuff” for his documentary miniseries “The Beatles: Get Back.” Running six hours in total, and including the uncut version of the band’s final live performance, it’s scheduled for a three-night run on the Disney Plus streaming service in November.

This runs contrary to the dispiriting evidence of Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s making-of doc “Let It Be,” released to movie theatres in spring 1970 as the Beatles were angrily splitting up — their scowls and arguments were up on the big screen for all to see and hear, along with some great music they somehow managed to make. The accompanying “Let It Be” album became their sonic epitaph.

Jackson learned that John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr had been in more of a playful mood than a mournful one during their infamous January ’69 sessions, but a lot of the fun stuff hadn’t made the final cut of “Let It Be.”

“I was relieved to discover the reality is very different to the myth,” Jackson said in a news release.

“Sure, there’s moments of drama, but none of the discord this project has long been associated with. Watching John, Paul, George and Ringo work together, creating now-classic songs from scratch, is not only fascinating — it’s funny, uplifting and surprisingly intimate.”
To prove it, late last year he released a five-minute montage of clips from his doc, which was originally intended to be a two-hour feature film.
 
“Hopefully it will put a smile on your face in these rather bleak times that we’re in at the moment,” Jackson said, introducing the montage.
The Beatles are seen clowning around in the studio, joined by family members and friends. There’s even a scene of a happily chatting Yoko Ono and Linda McCartney, the respective wives of Lennon and McCartney, disproving rumours of enmity between the two.

Surviving Beatles Paul and Ringo give a big thumbs up to the project. McCartney said he’s “really happy” with Jackson’s reclamation work, which “shows the truth about the Beatles recording together.” Starr added: “There was a lot of joy and I think Peter will show that.”


 
The Oscar-winning Jackson has a great track record as a storyteller and reclaimer of history. Besides his acclaimed Tolkien trilogies, he’s also lauded for his First World War documentary “They Shall Not Grow Old,” released in 2018, which transformed ancient B&W film of soldiers and combat into vivid colour cinema.

“Let It Be” has never been officially released on DVD, Blu-ray or streaming services, but it’s not hard to find a bootleg rip of the 1980s-era VHS version online.)
John and George were particularly vocal about their disdain for it and the recording sessions the film documented. John called his month before Lindsay-Hogg’s probing cameras as “Hell … the most miserable sessions of all time.” George agreed, declaring them “the low of all time.”
At McCartney’s urging, the band had decided to make a combination documentary and concert for a TV broadcast. They wanted to get back to their rock ’n’ roll roots — hence the tune “Get Back” that the sessions were originally titled for.
 
Filmmaker Lindsay-Hogg employed the cinéma vérité style that was then in vogue, eschewing a script or interviews.

The band also idled away many hours covering favourite tunes by such admired fellow artists as Bob Dylan, Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash, some of which could make a great spinoff album from Jackson’s doc.
George at one point left the sessions, and also the Beatles, but his departure wasn’t caught on camera. He agreed to return to both only if the filming was shifted to the Beatles’ Apple Corps headquarters on Savile Row in downtown London. George brought with him the talented keyboard player Billy Preston, whom the band had met years earlier when he toured with Little Richard.
The change of venue and Preston’s enthusiasm were a tonic for the Beatles, so much so that the band warmed to the idea of doing an impromptu live concert on the Apple HQ rooftop, after considering and rejecting such grander schemes as performing in the Sahara Desert or aboard a cruise ship.


 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The date was Jan. 30, 1969, when the wind was blowing and the temperature was 7 Celsius — John and Ringo borrowed their wives’ coats to ward off the chill. The band performed a lunch hour set for 42 minutes, including a searing take of John’s “Don’t Let Me Down,”  (Roughly half of the concert was in “Let It Be.” Jackson said he’ll show it all in “The Beatles: Get Back.”)
It would prove to be the Beatles’ final live performance as a band and it might have gone longer. But as “Let It Be” shows in one of its few moments of levity, the concert was stopped during a performance of “Get Back” by London police, who were responding to noise complaints below from some very serious business people, who considered the noise an affront to commerce and their ears.

An amused and delighted Lennon offered a comical farewell to the band’s audience, up on the roof and down on the street, as he prepared to leave the makeshift stage: “I’d like to say thank you on behalf of the group and ourselves, and I hope we passed the audition.”

They certainly did — the Beatles are bigger than ever — although “Let It Be” makes you wonder if they were happy to have made it through their decade together. Peter Jackson’s “The Beatles: Get Back” looks to remove all doubt about that. 
 
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