Before the Beatles took America by storm, Paul, John, Ringo and George were featured on BBC radio programs 53 times. Those Beatles performances, recorded between 1962 and 1965, have now been released. Jeffrey Brown talks to Kevin Howlett of BBC about his laborious search for many of these live, early, pre-Beatlemania recordings.
Transcript
HARI SREENIVASAN: Finally tonight: Jeff Brown
takes a look at a newly released C.D. of very early Beatles
performances on BBC Radio, recorded in the days when almost no one in
this country had even heard of them.
JEFFREY BROWN: In the early 1960s, when the rest of
the world was just beginning to learn of the Beatles, they were already a
sensation at home in Britain, propelled by live appearances and, for
millions more, by radio broadcasts, a series of live-to-air performance
on the BBC.
Between 1962 and 1965, the Beatles performed 88 songs on
the BBC, many of them multiple times in hundreds of radio broadcasts.
In the worldwide Beatlemania that followed, those radio performances
were largely forgotten in Britain and mostly unheard of in the U.S.,
until 1994, when the first collection of BBC recordings was released.
Now a new album is out, this one capturing some 40 songs from those
early radio broadcasts, including several never before available on
record or disk. Many are by now long familiar Beatles standards
delivered with the energy and verve of the live performances the young
band was famous for.
Others are covers of then lesser known American titles, R&B
songs, country music, and early soul music. It's a playlist that
illustrates the strong eclectic influences that helped shape what became
known as the Beatles sound.
Kevin Howlett, a BBC Radio producer, is co-producer of the new album
and author of the companion book "The Beatles: The BBC Archives."
Kevin, welcome to you, sir.
So, everyone knows the Beatles, right? But this is a kind of unique
setting and moment. In a nutshell, what's been captured here?
KH, "The Beatles: The BBC Archives": Well, the great thing about this is, it is an alternative recording history.
We all know about the Beatles recording at Abbey Road Studios and
making wonderful records. But here we have another alternative recording
history, the Beatles at the BBC. And they did so many performances at
the BBC, 275 between 1962 and 1965.
JB: And this also represents a times that's maybe hard to imagine now, when the BBC played such a huge role in British life.
KH: Yes, the BBC in those days had a
monopoly of broadcasting. There were just three national channels for
the U.K. And that was all there was to listen to during the day. And we
didn't have wonderful fast -talking American deejays, like the New York
guys, Dan Ingram, Cousin Brucie, those kind of people.
So it was a very kind of a formal institution. And the Beatles really shook it up.
JB: So, they're already pop stars, but
they're also extremely young. It's fascinating and kind of fun to hear
them talking, as well as playing, their public personalities still
forming, in a sense.
KH: Yes, this is very early days for the
Beatles. It's 1963. They haven't broken internationally, but they're
gathering momentum in the U.K.
They're -- they're -- it is their breakthrough year, and they're
desperately trying to make it. And they will do anything to appear on
the BBC, because the BBC hardly played a record. You had to appear on
the BBC and play live to get your music out there. So, the Beatles were
determined to do that.
JB: And these are, in fact, performances. They're not recordings.
So part of the thrill of this is a kind of Beatles in the raw, right, playing even some familiar songs in different ways?
KH: Yes.
The wonderful thing about this legacy is that it's the Beatles, and
they're absolutely live most of the time, sometimes directly live on to
the air, not even recorded in advance. And they're playing some very
unusual material, cover versions that they did at Hamburg and in the
Cavern Club in Liverpool.
So you really see the kind of songs that they cut their teeth on. And
you hear wonderful live performances. It really proves they were a
fantastic live group. You know, they are really going for it. There's no
question of going back and starting again. They have to do it right.
And so you get that wonderful feeling of, this is it, boys, the lights
on. Don't make a mistake, because it will go out on air like that.
JB: You mentioned covers. There are a
number of covers of songs by other people, many that never made it on to
Beatles albums. So what do they tell you about the Beatles musical
tastes and their influences?
KH: Well, the Beatles were absolutely
vinyl fanatics. And in England at that time, you couldn't get ahold of
American rhythm and blues. Motown records, for example, were never
played on BBC Radio.
So the Beatles sought these records out and covered them. And I think
they had a great influence on the way that British people got into
American rhythm and blues and discovered Motown and artists like Arthur
Alexander.
And -- and the rock 'n' roll favorites, of course we hear, Chuck
Berry, Carl Perkins, but there are unusual performances of songs that
you never heard on the BBC at the time.
JB: And what about the process of collecting all this?
I gather it involves some real detective work. This -- it is kind of
amazing, but the BBC didn't keep a good archive of these sessions?
KH: Yes, I first investigated this material way back at the end of 1981.
And you could discover all the paperwork relating to the Beatles
radio programs, what songs they covered. But finding the tapes, that was
another matter. There was just one out of 53 musical performances in
the BBC archives. So I had to track them down from various sources.
And over the years, 30-odd years, I have been doing that and trying
to restore the Beatles BBC archive. And we're getting there. There are a
few still missing. But we're very lucky to have this wonderful legacy
now.
JB: Kevin Howlett is the co-producer of
"On Air: Live at the BBC Volume 2" and author of the companion book,
"The Beatles: The BBC Archives."
Thanks so much.
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