Beat Bugs, a Netflix original series for kids, incorporates more than 50
songs from the Lennon/McCartney ‘Northern Songs’ catalog and features
covers by world-leading music artists.
The Beatles catalog is among the most protected in pop music when it
comes to licensing their songs for commercial use through Sony/ATV Music
Publishing.
So when Netflix announced that its new animated
children’s series, “Beat Bugs,” which begins streaming in 11-minute
episodes on Wednesday, would not only feature Fab Four songs but more
than a whopping 50 of them, people wondered how show creator Josh Wakely
managed that musical miracle.
Turns out all he needed was love, and a lot of patience.
“I
was wildly naive,” Wakely said. The Australian writer-director-producer
had no idea that it would be such a long process — three years in total —
to secure the rights to classic songs such as “Eleanor Rigby,” “Hello,
Goodbye,” “Getting Better” and “Blackbird.”
Wakely said most potential backers loved his concept of a musical
magical mystery tour of the backyard, full of mischief and life lessons,
led by a quintet of human kid characters and their insect friends.
“And
then I’d say, ‘All I need to do is get the rights to the Beatles’
songs’” Wakely recounted to reporters at the Television Critics Assn.
press tour. “And they’d look at me like I was a little bit crazy; and I
guess I was.”
Quitting, he said in a separate interview, was not an option,
however. “There were points where I certainly should’ve given up, and
everyone was instructing me to give up, but I just could see so clearly
what it could be that I just couldn’t let it go.”
His tenacity also led to an all-star roster of musicians who lend
their voices to the Beatles songs heard in the series’ 26-episode first
season, including Sia, the Shins, late night “Carpool Karaoke” maestro
James Corden, Regina Spektor and Chris Cornell of Temple of the Dog and
Soundgarden, which seems fitting.
Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder
performs as Jasper, a grasshopper who takes the insects on a “Magical
Mystery Tour,” and Pink sings “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” as Lucy
the dragonfly — a character with kaleidoscope eyes, naturally. The
soundtrack will be released through Apple Music.
Vedder was, Wakely said, “a childhood hero of mine” and among many
artists he feels fortunate to have worked with on the show. In fact,
when Vedder returned his call, he wondered if he was being punked: “I
was like, either it’s someone who is doing an extraordinarily good Eddie
Vedder impersonation, or this is a great moment in my life.”
Wakely
says the three years to secure the music rights and another three to
craft the show itself were well worth the time. He thinks that both
parents who know the music and kids just learning it will be drawn to
the songs, whose appeal crosses generations.
“I think people will
be talking about this music in the way they talk about Shakespeare in
400 years,” Wakely said. “It’s so perfectly designed that it can be
reinterpreted in this way.”
The show, whose first season’s 26
episodes are just now being seen by Netflix viewers, has already been
approved for a second season, which will begin in November.
Wakely has yet to hear any feedback from surviving Beatles Paul
McCartney and Ringo Starr, but he is hopeful “Beat Bugs” will find its
way to them.
“They’re still such active artists," Wakely pointed
out. “So they are going on and doing their own thing, but I look forward
to them engaging with it.”
One person already engaging with
Wakely’s next project is Smokey Robinson, who is working with the
animator on the tentatively titled “Motown,” which is built on the music
of that vaunted label.
“He embraced it wholeheartedly,” the show
creator said of Robinson. The Rock and Roll Hall of Famer cottoned to
Wakely’s vision of a young, shy kid from Detroit with the power to enter
street murals and graffiti to see a different side of the world.
That
project is in the early stages, said Wakely, but he is equally
passionate about it: His first concert was Stevie Wonder and he
honeymooned at the “Hitsville, U.S.A” Motown museum. In the winter.
“I
craft the song and the story and then I think, ‘Who would be good for
that? Jennifer Hudson, Stevie Wonder or Pharrell?’ And then I’d go and
approach them.”
Although both catalogs obviously have a finite number of songs, Wakely isn’t worried about running out of material.
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