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[crowd cheering]
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-[♪ "Help!" playing]
-♪ …not so self-assured ♪
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♪ Now, I find I've changed my mind ♪
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♪ I've opened up the doors ♪
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♪ Help me if you can, I'm feeling down ♪
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♪ And I do appreciate you being 'round… ♪
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[♪ music concludes]
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The Beatles made a statement
in all the newspapers
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that they're getting more better
than, uh, Jesus himself
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and the Ku Klux Klan,
being a religious order,
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is gonna come out here
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the night that they appear
at the Coliseum here,
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and we're gonna demonstrate with, uh…
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different ways and tactics
to stop this performance.
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The Klan is gonna come out here,
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because we're the only organization
that will come out,
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and make a stop to these accusations.
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This is nothing but blasphemy.
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I mean, early in 1966,
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John gave an interview to Maureen Cleave,
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do you remember her?
Of the Evening Standard,
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in which he made
the chance remark saying,
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"'We are-- Je-- The Beatles
are more popular than Jesus Christ."
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I have prepared a statement,
which I will read, which has had
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John Lennon's absolute approval
this afternoon,
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uh, with myself, by telephone,
uh, and this is as follows…
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"The quote which John Lennon made
to a London columnist
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more than three months ago,
has been quoted
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and represented entirely out of context."
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He said, "Oh, I don't know
what's wrong with the Church.
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At the moment, the Beatles
are bigger than Jesus Christ,"
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you know, like, they're not
building Jesus enough.
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They ought to do more
like gospel and all this stuff.
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Well, that was taken
out of context over in America.
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The repercussions were big.
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I mean, there was…
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particularly in what they call
the Bible Belt,
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you know, these, um…
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down in the South there,
they were having a field day,
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and, you know, we've got this footage
as well, of the disc jockey saying,
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"Come and bring your Beatle trash
and deposit it here."
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Don't forget to take your Beatle records
and your Beatle paraphernalia
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to any one of our 14 pick-up points
in Birmingham, Alabama,
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and turn 'em in this week, if possible.
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[George] So, there was, you know,
all this big palaver going on,
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and I think we did a press conference
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where John basically,
under the pressure of, um,
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the cameras and the press,
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and, uh, you know, just the stress
of having to deal with this thing
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that he, in effect, had caused.
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If it had said, "We're more, uh--
Television is more popular than Jesus,"
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I might have got away with it.
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-[laughter]
-You know?
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But as I just happened
to be talking to a friend,
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I used the word "Beatles"
as a remote thing, not as what I think,
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as Beatles as though those other Beatles,
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like other people see us.
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I just said, "They are having more in--
more influence on kids and things
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than anything else, including Jesus."
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But I said it in that way,
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which was the wrong way,
yeah, yeah. Mm-hmm.
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[interviewer] Well, some teenagers
have said that--
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have repeated your statement,
said, "The Beatles…
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I like the Beatles
more than Jesus Christ."
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What do you think about that?
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Well, originally, I was, um…
I was pointed out that fact
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in reference to England,
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that we meant more to kids than Jesus did,
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or religion, at that time.
I wasn't knocking it or putting it down,
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I was just saying it as a fact,
and it sort of--
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It is true, esp-- more for England
than here, you know?
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But I'm not saying that
we're better, or greater,
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or comparing us
with Jesus Christ as a person,
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or God as a thing, or whatever it is.
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You know, I just said
what I said and it was wrong,
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or was taken wrong, and now it's all this.
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[♪ "I'm Only Sleeping" playing]
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♪ When I wake up early in the morning ♪
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♪ Lift my head, I'm still yawning ♪
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♪ When I'm in the middle of a dream ♪
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♪ Stay in bed, float upstream ♪
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♪ Float upstream ♪
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♪ Please don't wake me,
no, don't shake me ♪
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♪ Leave me where I am ♪
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♪ I'm only sleeping ♪
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♪ Everybody seems to think I'm lazy ♪
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♪ I don't mind, I think they're crazy ♪
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♪ Running everywhere at such a speed ♪
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♪ Till they find there's no need ♪
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♪ There's no need ♪
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♪ Please don't spoil my day,
I'm miles away ♪
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♪ And after all, I'm only sleeping ♪
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[♪ music concludes]
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[John] People always got the image
I was anti-Christ or anti-religious.
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I'm not at all.
I'm a most religious fellow.
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All along this time,
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there were also death threats
they were getting.
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I mean, it wasn't long
since President Kennedy
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had been assassinated.
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And I remember going
to one of their concerts
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at the Red Rock stadium, uh,
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where I climbed up on one of the gantries
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overlooking the stage with Brian,
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and looked down at the boys below me
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during the-- during the performance,
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and the amphitheater
at Red Rocks is such that
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you could have a sniper on the hill
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who'd pick off any of those fellows
at any time, no problem.
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And I was very aware of this,
and so was Brian, and so were the boys.
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You know, I was always on that…
on a high riser,
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and I had a cop, plainclothes policeman,
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sitting there with me.
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Now, I was worried. It's the first time--
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It's one of the times
I was really worried,
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'cause I had the cymbals
a bit like this, you know, so--
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give me a bit of protection.
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You know, usually they're
like this, but I had 'em up.
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But this guy-- And then
I started getting hysterical,
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because I thought, "Well, you know,
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if someone in the audience has
a pop at me, what is this guy gonna do?
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I mean, is he gonna catch the bullet?
What is he gonna do?"
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You know? And I… I just found this…
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It was getting funnier
and funnier all the time.
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And this guy was just sitting there.
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There were some people that
would set off firecrackers in the hall,
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and you'd think one of the others
had got shot, or something.
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[John] But on stage, I always…
I always feel safe, you know.
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I just feel as though I'm all right when…
when I'm plugged in
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and I don't feel as though they'll get me.
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Now, tell me the truth,
are you really a Beatles fan,
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or are you here
because it's the right thing to do?
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Oh, I love the Beatles.
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[reporter] I bet there's a group
you like better now?
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No, I don't like any group
better than the Beatles.
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[reporter] Honestly, aren't the Beatles
on their way out?
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I don't think so.
I think they're still strong.
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Well, that's really surprising,
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because I thought
we only played there once. [laughs]
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You mean we played Shea Stadium twice?
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You know, I'll get…
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It was just getting all blended here.
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Okay, I don't ever remember
going there twice.
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How was it?
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Last year, not an empty seat
in Shea Stadium.
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This year, thousands.
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Perhaps 15 or 20,000 empty seats
in this arena that holds 56,000.
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Oh, dear, what a failure.
We only sold 50,000?
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Miserable.
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See, we were… we were dying,
dying on our feet out there.
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Yeah, and… and there was big news
about that, you know.
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"They've only sold 50,000 seats!"
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[laughs] You know?
"It's all over for the Beatles!"
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[reporter] I bet there's another group
you like better now
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-than the Beatles. Is there?
-There is.
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-[reporter] Which one?
-Herman and the Hermits.
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[reporter] Tell me the truth now,
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which group do you like better
than the Beatles?
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The Beatles all the time. I love them!
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[reporter] Tell me this, how long
do you think the Beatles can last?
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Well, I wish they'd last forever.
They could bring happiness to everybody.
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How long do you think they're gonna last?
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As long as they keep playing,
they'll last.
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Even going back to '65,
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that's when I was saying,
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"I don't wanna do this anymore.
I don't like this," you know,
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these ticker-tape parades
that they were trying to do
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and the… You know, I mean,
it was that, um…
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It was nice to be popular,
but when you saw the size of it,
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it was just ridiculous. It was dangerous.
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It felt dangerous, you know,
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because everybody
was out of hand and out of line,
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-even the cops were out of line, you know.
-[♪ "Run For Your Life" playing]
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They were all just caught up in the mania.
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You know, it was like
they were in this big movie,
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and it was like we were the ones
trapped in the middle of it
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while everybody else was going mad.
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So, for a year or… or so, you know,
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I'd been saying,
"Let's not do this anymore."
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And then, anyway, it played itself out.
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But by '66, everybody
was feeling that that's it,
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you know, we've gotta, um, stop this.
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I don't think anyone
didn't wanna stop touring,
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uh, probably…
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Paul would've gone on longer
than George and I.
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But you'll have to ask Paul about that.
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00:09:02,080 --> 00:09:04,160
Yeah, I'd been trying to say,
"Ah, no, you know,
187
00:09:04,240 --> 00:09:05,880
touring's good and it keeps us sharp,
188
00:09:05,960 --> 00:09:08,520
and we need touring,
and musicians need to play,"
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you know, I'd… "Keep music live!"
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I'd been sort of a bit that attitude.
191
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Well, finally,
I agreed with them, you know,
192
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and it was like, "Oh, you were right."
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You know, I think it was George
and John who were particularly against it,
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you know, particularly got fed up.
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[John] We might have been waxworks
for half…
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for half the… you know,
what the good we did there.
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You know, nobody heard anything,
198
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or not even, you know,
a basic beat, I don't think.
199
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They were too busy tearing each other up.
200
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[George] We were just tired,
you know. It had been…
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00:09:34,600 --> 00:09:35,600
uh, how many?
202
00:09:35,680 --> 00:09:40,440
four years for us,
of legging around, you know,
203
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screaming in this mania.
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00:09:42,720 --> 00:09:44,560
You know, we were tired, we needed a rest.
205
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By the time we got to Candlestick Park,
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I think we… we knew now,
"Yeah, sure," you know,
207
00:09:49,480 --> 00:09:52,160
this wasn't, uh… this wasn't fun anymore.
208
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I think that was the main point.
209
00:09:53,480 --> 00:09:56,600
And, you know, we'd…
we'd always try to keep--
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You've got to, really,
try and keep some fun in it
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00:09:59,280 --> 00:10:01,960
for yourself in anything you do, you know?
212
00:10:02,040 --> 00:10:04,080
So, by then it was like,
"Yeah, well, don't tell anyone,
213
00:10:04,160 --> 00:10:05,840
but this is probably our last gig."
214
00:10:05,920 --> 00:10:08,880
[George] I certainly felt that
that was it, you know,
215
00:10:08,960 --> 00:10:11,240
that we weren't gonna tour again
like that.
216
00:10:11,960 --> 00:10:14,400
I never really projected into the future.
217
00:10:15,000 --> 00:10:17,720
I was just thinking,
"This is gonna be such a relief
218
00:10:18,800 --> 00:10:24,040
to… you know, to not have to go
and go through that madness."
219
00:10:24,560 --> 00:10:26,400
[Paul] I don't remember having
a negative feeling
220
00:10:26,480 --> 00:10:28,240
about the band, but about touring.
221
00:10:28,320 --> 00:10:30,720
But you always forget the bad bits anyway.
222
00:10:30,800 --> 00:10:32,520
So, I generally, about the band,
223
00:10:32,600 --> 00:10:34,400
remember it being quite good.
224
00:10:34,480 --> 00:10:37,560
[John] You know, I'm just sorry
for the people that can't see us live.
225
00:10:38,080 --> 00:10:39,840
You know, sometimes
you haven't missed anything,
226
00:10:39,920 --> 00:10:41,280
-because you… you wouldn't have heard us…
-[♪ music concludes]
227
00:10:41,360 --> 00:10:43,120
…but sometimes I think
you might have enjoyed it.
228
00:10:43,200 --> 00:10:44,520
I'm sorry for them, yeah.
229
00:10:45,640 --> 00:10:47,000
[♪ "For No One" playing]
230
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♪ Your day breaks, your mind aches ♪
231
00:10:49,120 --> 00:10:53,560
♪ You find that all her words
of kindness linger on ♪
232
00:10:53,640 --> 00:10:56,440
♪ When she no longer needs you ♪
233
00:10:58,120 --> 00:11:01,040
♪ She wakes up, she makes up ♪
234
00:11:01,120 --> 00:11:05,800
♪ She takes her time
and doesn't feel she has to hurry ♪
235
00:11:05,880 --> 00:11:08,440
♪ She no longer needs you ♪
236
00:11:08,520 --> 00:11:12,120
♪ And in her eyes you see nothing ♪
237
00:11:12,760 --> 00:11:15,880
♪ No sign of love behind the tears ♪
238
00:11:15,960 --> 00:11:17,920
♪ Cried for no one ♪
239
00:11:18,480 --> 00:11:22,000
♪ A love that should have lasted years ♪
240
00:11:24,400 --> 00:11:27,240
♪ You stay home, she goes out ♪
241
00:11:27,320 --> 00:11:31,200
♪ She says that long ago
she knew someone ♪
242
00:11:31,280 --> 00:11:34,640
♪ But now he's gone,
she doesn't need him ♪
243
00:11:36,280 --> 00:11:39,160
♪ Your day breaks, your mind aches ♪
244
00:11:39,240 --> 00:11:42,800
♪ There will be times
when all the things she said ♪
245
00:11:42,880 --> 00:11:46,320
♪ Will fill your head,
you won't forget her ♪
246
00:11:46,800 --> 00:11:50,160
♪ And in her eyes you see nothing ♪
247
00:11:50,800 --> 00:11:55,720
♪ No sign of love behind
the tears cried for no one ♪
248
00:11:56,520 --> 00:12:00,160
♪ A love that should have lasted years ♪
249
00:12:00,480 --> 00:12:02,400
[♪ music concludes]
250
00:12:02,480 --> 00:12:05,560
[Brian Epstein] The Beatles were then
just four lads
251
00:12:05,640 --> 00:12:08,360
on that rather dimly-lit stage.
252
00:12:11,920 --> 00:12:15,520
You know, you're saying, like,
we were getting worse and worse as a band,
253
00:12:15,600 --> 00:12:17,480
while all those people were screaming.
254
00:12:17,560 --> 00:12:19,680
It was lovely that they liked us, but…
255
00:12:19,760 --> 00:12:21,200
we couldn't hear to play.
256
00:12:21,280 --> 00:12:23,440
So, the only place we could develop
was in the studio
257
00:12:23,520 --> 00:12:25,400
-where we could hear ourselves.
-But also, we were losing interest
258
00:12:25,480 --> 00:12:27,840
-to play on stage. Was just no fun.
-And I think the most important thing
259
00:12:27,920 --> 00:12:29,200
was the safety aspect,
260
00:12:29,280 --> 00:12:32,120
'cause soon after that,
it became terrorism,
261
00:12:32,200 --> 00:12:33,720
and all that kind of stuff.
262
00:12:33,800 --> 00:12:36,640
When we were going,
there was only us and two people.
263
00:12:37,160 --> 00:12:38,800
We said all those things that happened,
264
00:12:38,880 --> 00:12:42,200
like people threatening Ringo,
or threatening us,
265
00:12:42,280 --> 00:12:43,480
or saying the plane…
266
00:12:43,560 --> 00:12:45,240
Snipping bits of hair off
and stuff, and all that.
267
00:12:45,320 --> 00:12:47,360
…the plane was gonna crash,
hurricanes hitting,
268
00:12:47,440 --> 00:12:49,920
-race riots, student riots.
-[Paul] Wings on fire.
269
00:12:50,000 --> 00:12:52,480
There was always something
that we pulled into town.
270
00:12:52,560 --> 00:12:54,760
There was always some big thing going on,
271
00:12:54,840 --> 00:12:56,840
and we'd come in the middle
with this mania,
272
00:12:56,920 --> 00:12:59,240
and then it'd just be like chaos.
273
00:13:00,480 --> 00:13:03,840
So, it was just becoming
too difficult, um, you know,
274
00:13:03,920 --> 00:13:05,560
on the nervous system, that's what I felt.
275
00:13:05,640 --> 00:13:07,600
And remember, when we'd all decided it,
276
00:13:07,680 --> 00:13:10,040
we said, "Well, how…
what are we gonna do, like, announce it?
277
00:13:10,120 --> 00:13:13,200
'The Beatles have given up touring'?"
We said, "No. Just don't say anything."
278
00:13:13,280 --> 00:13:15,640
[John] But I was really too scared
to walk away.
279
00:13:15,720 --> 00:13:18,320
I was thinking, "Well, this is
like the end really, you know.
280
00:13:18,400 --> 00:13:19,960
There's no more touring."
281
00:13:20,040 --> 00:13:23,360
And I was dead nervous,
so I… I said "yes" to Dick Lester,
282
00:13:23,440 --> 00:13:24,840
that I would make this movie with him.
283
00:13:24,920 --> 00:13:27,880
I went to Almería, Spain,
for six weeks just to…
284
00:13:27,960 --> 00:13:29,880
because I didn't know
what to do, you know.
285
00:13:29,960 --> 00:13:32,400
What do you do when you don't tour?
There's no life.
286
00:13:32,480 --> 00:13:34,480
Well, our officer calls me up,
and he says to me,
287
00:13:34,560 --> 00:13:36,280
he says, "Musketeer Gripweed?"
288
00:13:36,920 --> 00:13:39,360
He was a tall chap.
Some would call him weedy.
289
00:13:39,440 --> 00:13:41,880
I did. He said to me, and bear in mind,
290
00:13:41,960 --> 00:13:44,440
we were some few hundred miles
behind enemy lines,
291
00:13:44,520 --> 00:13:46,760
he said, "Green, green, green."
So, I did.
292
00:13:48,240 --> 00:13:50,960
[Neil Aspinall]
Ringo came to… to Spain,
293
00:13:51,040 --> 00:13:54,240
right, to Almería,
when John and I were down there.
294
00:13:54,320 --> 00:13:56,720
Yeah, I went and hung out
'cause he was lonely.
295
00:13:57,600 --> 00:14:00,880
And, you know, we really
supported each other a lot,
296
00:14:00,960 --> 00:14:04,960
and so, you know, he was out
there being this… this actor.
297
00:14:05,040 --> 00:14:07,040
You know, John was doing
How I Won the War.
298
00:14:07,120 --> 00:14:10,040
So, I went to India.
And I think I went for about six weeks.
299
00:14:10,120 --> 00:14:12,960
-And, uh, it was a fantastic time.
-[♪"Raga Charu Keshi" playing]
300
00:14:13,040 --> 00:14:15,600
[George] I just would go out
and look at temples
301
00:14:15,680 --> 00:14:18,840
and go shopping, and,
you know, we traveled all over.
302
00:14:18,920 --> 00:14:21,000
We went to various places.
303
00:14:21,600 --> 00:14:23,760
And eventually, we went up to Kashmir,
304
00:14:23,840 --> 00:14:28,240
and stayed on these houseboats
up in the middle of the Himalayas.
305
00:14:28,320 --> 00:14:31,120
It was incredible, you know,
I'd wake up in the morning,
306
00:14:31,200 --> 00:14:35,840
this little, um, Kashmiri fella
would bring us tea and biscuits,
307
00:14:35,920 --> 00:14:38,360
and then I could hear Ravi
in the next room,
308
00:14:38,440 --> 00:14:40,360
he'd be doing his practice,
309
00:14:40,840 --> 00:14:44,280
-and that was incredible times for me.
-[♪ music concludes]
310
00:14:44,360 --> 00:14:47,040
George, like he said,
was doing the Indian stuff,
311
00:14:47,120 --> 00:14:50,120
and-- and what was Paul doing?
I don't know what he was doing.
312
00:14:50,200 --> 00:14:52,160
[♪ "The Family Way"
(Incidental Music) playing]
313
00:14:52,240 --> 00:14:54,920
[Paul] To me, you know, if you are blessed
314
00:14:55,000 --> 00:14:57,280
with the ability to sort of write music…
315
00:14:57,840 --> 00:15:02,200
like, film scores were kind
of an interesting diversion.
316
00:15:02,280 --> 00:15:05,200
And George Martin, being able to write
317
00:15:05,280 --> 00:15:07,720
and being able to orchestrate
and being pretty good at that,
318
00:15:08,240 --> 00:15:11,320
um, I think got an offer
through the Boulting brothers…
319
00:15:11,400 --> 00:15:12,560
[♪ music concludes]
320
00:15:12,680 --> 00:15:15,480
…to-- for him and me to do some
film music for The Family Way.
321
00:15:15,560 --> 00:15:17,960
So, I had a look at the film.
I thought it was a great film. I still do.
322
00:15:18,040 --> 00:15:20,280
It's a very powerful, emotional,
323
00:15:20,360 --> 00:15:23,600
soppy, but good film,
I think, for its time.
324
00:15:23,680 --> 00:15:28,160
We actually even got an Ivor Novello Award
for the "Best Film Song" that year
325
00:15:28,240 --> 00:15:30,120
for a thing called "Love in the Open Air".
326
00:15:30,200 --> 00:15:34,200
[♪ "Love In The Open Air" playing]
327
00:15:59,120 --> 00:16:00,840
[♪ music concludes]
328
00:16:03,680 --> 00:16:05,200
[interviewer] Hey, can I have a word?
329
00:16:05,280 --> 00:16:06,520
-Yeah.
-[interviewer chuckles]
330
00:16:06,600 --> 00:16:09,440
Are the Beatles gonna go
their own ways in 1967?
331
00:16:09,920 --> 00:16:12,360
We could be, uh, you know,
on our own or together.
332
00:16:12,440 --> 00:16:15,000
We're always involved with each other,
whatever we're doing, really.
333
00:16:15,080 --> 00:16:18,360
Could you ever see a time when,
in fact, you weren't working together?
334
00:16:19,120 --> 00:16:21,320
I could see us working
not together for a period,
335
00:16:21,400 --> 00:16:23,320
but we'd always get together
for one reason or another.
336
00:16:23,400 --> 00:16:24,720
Like, I mean, you… [scoffs]
337
00:16:24,800 --> 00:16:26,960
You need other people for ideas as well,
338
00:16:27,040 --> 00:16:29,960
but you know, um, we all get along fine.
339
00:16:30,040 --> 00:16:31,160
Will you… will you be…
340
00:16:31,240 --> 00:16:33,400
will you be doing films
on your own next year?
341
00:16:33,480 --> 00:16:35,280
Uh, no, I don't wanna make a career of it.
342
00:16:35,360 --> 00:16:38,440
I did it just 'cause I felt like
doing it, and if some--
343
00:16:38,520 --> 00:16:41,000
And Dick Lester asked me,
and I said "yes".
344
00:16:41,520 --> 00:16:44,240
And I wouldn't have done it
if the others hadn't liked it, you know.
345
00:16:44,320 --> 00:16:46,400
But they said, "Fine,
'cause we were on holiday anyway."
346
00:16:46,480 --> 00:16:49,120
[interviewer] Do you foresee a time when,
in fact, the Beatles won't be together,
347
00:16:49,200 --> 00:16:51,560
-and that you'll all be on your own?
-No, no.
348
00:16:51,640 --> 00:16:53,440
[interviewer] Do you get--
Have you got tired of each other?
349
00:16:53,520 --> 00:16:55,840
-No. [chuckles] No.
-[interviewer] No?
350
00:16:55,920 --> 00:16:57,520
Have you got anything lined up
on your own?
351
00:16:57,600 --> 00:16:58,800
-Film parts, for example?
-No…
352
00:16:58,880 --> 00:17:02,080
Um, well, there may be one
if we don't do one together
353
00:17:02,160 --> 00:17:03,160
early next year.
354
00:17:03,640 --> 00:17:06,600
To say-- See, I'm sort of out of it there,
355
00:17:06,680 --> 00:17:08,640
because with John and Paul,
they can still write
356
00:17:08,720 --> 00:17:11,000
even though we're sort of
not working together,
357
00:17:11,080 --> 00:17:14,320
and George can, you know,
learn his sitar and do things like that.
358
00:17:14,400 --> 00:17:16,600
-And I've just been sitting 'round.
-[interviewer] Getting bored?
359
00:17:16,680 --> 00:17:18,760
Uh, no. Getting fat. [chuckles]
360
00:17:18,840 --> 00:17:20,280
[interviewer] Do you think that,
in the New Year,
361
00:17:20,360 --> 00:17:22,320
that you're gonna be going
your own ways instead of
362
00:17:22,400 --> 00:17:24,160
-being in the group? No?
-No, no.
363
00:17:24,240 --> 00:17:26,800
-No. Definitely not.
-[interviewer] What about another word?
364
00:17:26,880 --> 00:17:28,240
-Can I just have a brief word with you?
-Yeah.
365
00:17:28,320 --> 00:17:30,000
[interviewer] If you never toured again,
would it worry you?
366
00:17:31,000 --> 00:17:33,560
Uh… I dunno. No, I don't think so.
367
00:17:33,640 --> 00:17:34,880
-[interviewer] Wouldn't worry you?
-But…
368
00:17:34,960 --> 00:17:37,760
Because the only thing about
that, you see, is that, uh…
369
00:17:38,240 --> 00:17:42,840
performance for us… see,
it's… it's gone downhill, performance,
370
00:17:42,920 --> 00:17:45,360
'cause we can't develop when
no one can hear us, you know what I mean?
371
00:17:45,440 --> 00:17:48,280
So, for us to perform is,
uh, it's difficult,
372
00:17:48,360 --> 00:17:50,800
-gets difficult each time. More difficult.
-You mean they don't listen to you,
373
00:17:50,880 --> 00:17:52,720
and therefore you don't want to do that?
374
00:17:52,800 --> 00:17:55,680
Oh, yeah, we wanna do it,
but, uh, if we're not listened to,
375
00:17:55,760 --> 00:17:57,440
then… and we can't even hear ourselves,
376
00:17:57,520 --> 00:18:00,440
then we can't improve in that.
We can't get any better.
377
00:18:00,520 --> 00:18:04,000
But it meant we could get into
the studio and start with, uh,
378
00:18:04,080 --> 00:18:06,800
"Strawberry Fields" and "Penny Lane"
and that, and then Pepper.
379
00:18:06,880 --> 00:18:08,320
Were they the first ones out,
do you remember?
380
00:18:08,400 --> 00:18:10,160
I don't know. Where they?
I mean, I seem to remember
381
00:18:10,240 --> 00:18:13,720
that was like what happened
once we'd get full-time into the studio,
382
00:18:13,800 --> 00:18:15,880
and… and saying, at the time,
383
00:18:15,960 --> 00:18:18,680
"Now, our performance is that record."
384
00:18:18,760 --> 00:18:22,280
And that new record started
with "Strawberry Fields".
385
00:18:23,440 --> 00:18:25,720
And that was going to be
what became Pepper.
386
00:18:25,800 --> 00:18:28,680
It wasn't Pepper. No one heard of Pepper.
387
00:18:28,760 --> 00:18:32,000
But it was gonna be a record
that was gonna be made in the studio,
388
00:18:32,080 --> 00:18:35,360
and they… it was gonna be songs
which they had written,
389
00:18:35,440 --> 00:18:37,440
which couldn't be performed live.
390
00:18:37,520 --> 00:18:41,480
They were designed to be,
um, studio productions.
391
00:18:42,160 --> 00:18:43,480
And that was the difference.
392
00:18:43,560 --> 00:18:45,960
Well, "Strawberry Fields"
is a song that John had,
393
00:18:46,040 --> 00:18:48,680
because he used to live next door
to this place called Strawberry Fields,
394
00:18:48,760 --> 00:18:51,360
which was a Salvation Army place for kids.
395
00:18:51,440 --> 00:18:54,120
And he used to bunk over,
and it was his little magic garden
396
00:18:54,200 --> 00:18:55,360
to sort of play in.
397
00:18:55,440 --> 00:18:57,360
So, whenever I went
to visit him, he'd sort of say,
398
00:18:57,440 --> 00:18:59,120
"Hey, you know, there…"
and we'd go past, and he'd say,
399
00:18:59,200 --> 00:19:01,560
"This is Strawberry Fields,"
and he'd give me the gen on it.
400
00:19:01,640 --> 00:19:03,320
[John] "Strawberry Fields"
I wrote when I was making
401
00:19:03,400 --> 00:19:06,240
How I Won the War in Almería, Spain.
402
00:19:06,320 --> 00:19:08,720
It's a, um, Salvation Army home…
403
00:19:09,840 --> 00:19:13,120
that was near the house
I lived in with my auntie in the suburbs,
404
00:19:13,760 --> 00:19:16,480
although I took the name as a…
as an image.
405
00:19:16,560 --> 00:19:19,320
We had this thing called
a Mellotron that we, uh,
406
00:19:19,400 --> 00:19:21,880
did the intro of "Strawberry Fields" on.
407
00:19:21,960 --> 00:19:24,280
This, in fact, is one of them.
We had flutes on there,
408
00:19:24,800 --> 00:19:26,000
and, uh…
409
00:19:27,080 --> 00:19:28,240
this was the intro.
410
00:19:28,320 --> 00:19:31,040
[♪ plays "Strawberry Fields Forever"]
411
00:19:39,640 --> 00:19:45,240
♪ Let me take you down
'cause I'm going to ♪
412
00:19:45,320 --> 00:19:48,640
-[♪ "Strawberry Fields Forever" playing]
-♪ Strawberry Fields ♪
413
00:19:51,120 --> 00:19:53,280
♪ Nothing is real ♪
414
00:19:54,720 --> 00:19:57,560
♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪
415
00:19:59,120 --> 00:20:02,360
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
416
00:20:03,880 --> 00:20:08,320
♪ Living is easy with eyes closed ♪
417
00:20:09,480 --> 00:20:12,600
♪ Misunderstanding all you see ♪
418
00:20:14,680 --> 00:20:17,440
♪ It's getting hard to be someone ♪
419
00:20:17,520 --> 00:20:18,920
♪ But it all works out ♪
420
00:20:20,080 --> 00:20:23,440
♪ It doesn't matter much to me ♪
421
00:20:25,800 --> 00:20:30,880
♪ Let me take you down
'cause I'm going to ♪
422
00:20:31,440 --> 00:20:34,280
♪ Strawberry Fields ♪
423
00:20:36,280 --> 00:20:38,760
♪ Nothing is real ♪
424
00:20:39,680 --> 00:20:42,400
♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪
425
00:20:43,600 --> 00:20:46,440
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
426
00:20:50,600 --> 00:20:55,280
♪ No one, I think, is in my tree ♪
427
00:20:56,280 --> 00:20:59,400
♪ I mean, it must be high or low ♪
428
00:21:01,360 --> 00:21:03,960
♪ That is, you can't, you know, tune in ♪
429
00:21:04,040 --> 00:21:05,680
♪ But it's all right ♪
430
00:21:06,520 --> 00:21:09,840
♪ That is, I think it's not too bad ♪
431
00:21:11,720 --> 00:21:16,720
♪ Let me take you down
'cause I'm going to ♪
432
00:21:17,280 --> 00:21:19,960
♪ Strawberry Fields ♪
433
00:21:22,160 --> 00:21:24,400
♪ Nothing is real ♪
434
00:21:25,480 --> 00:21:28,200
♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪
435
00:21:29,400 --> 00:21:32,240
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
436
00:21:36,600 --> 00:21:41,280
♪ Always, no, sometimes, think it's me ♪
437
00:21:42,280 --> 00:21:45,360
♪ But, you know,
I know when it's a dream ♪
438
00:21:47,360 --> 00:21:50,000
♪ I think, er, no, I mean, er, yes ♪
439
00:21:50,080 --> 00:21:52,200
♪ But it's all wrong ♪
440
00:21:52,280 --> 00:21:55,480
♪ That is, I think I disagree ♪
441
00:21:57,680 --> 00:22:02,880
♪ Let me take you down
'cause I'm going to ♪
442
00:22:03,520 --> 00:22:06,400
♪ Strawberry Fields ♪
443
00:22:08,160 --> 00:22:11,000
♪ Nothing is real ♪
444
00:22:12,080 --> 00:22:14,560
♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪
445
00:22:15,840 --> 00:22:18,880
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
446
00:22:20,280 --> 00:22:23,320
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
447
00:22:24,240 --> 00:22:27,400
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
448
00:22:29,760 --> 00:22:32,280
[♪ music continues]
449
00:22:45,400 --> 00:22:47,160
[Paul] And then, you know,
the nice thing is then
450
00:22:47,240 --> 00:22:50,400
a lot of our stuff then started
to get a little bit more surreal.
451
00:22:50,960 --> 00:22:53,480
And then "Penny Lane" was
a little bit more surreal too,
452
00:22:53,560 --> 00:22:55,040
-although a sort of cleaner thing.
-[♪ music concludes]
453
00:22:55,120 --> 00:22:57,600
I was into-- I remember saying
to George Martin I wanted, like,
454
00:22:57,680 --> 00:22:59,440
a very clean recording.
455
00:22:59,920 --> 00:23:02,320
I was into, um, "clean" sounds,
456
00:23:02,400 --> 00:23:04,800
maybe Beach Boy-y
kind of things, at that point.
457
00:23:05,280 --> 00:23:07,320
But, you know,
"the fireman with his hourglass",
458
00:23:07,400 --> 00:23:10,920
and all of that sort of stuff,
um, was us trying to get into
459
00:23:11,000 --> 00:23:12,800
a bit of art, a bit of surrealism,
460
00:23:12,880 --> 00:23:15,560
and they were all based on real things.
461
00:23:15,640 --> 00:23:17,720
But I mean, whereas
there was a barber called--
462
00:23:17,800 --> 00:23:20,440
What was he called? Bioletti?
Something like that.
463
00:23:20,960 --> 00:23:22,160
Um, a little barber.
464
00:23:22,240 --> 00:23:24,120
I think he's still there,
actually, in Penny Lane.
465
00:23:24,200 --> 00:23:27,120
And he had these pictures
that all the barbers have
466
00:23:27,200 --> 00:23:28,880
of the haircut you can have
if you ask for,
467
00:23:28,960 --> 00:23:32,160
"I'll have Number Three there,"
you know. Um, and--
468
00:23:32,240 --> 00:23:33,280
Only, instead of saying,
469
00:23:33,360 --> 00:23:36,000
"The barber with pictures
of haircuts in his windows",
470
00:23:36,560 --> 00:23:39,360
you know, then it was--
you'd change it 'round to, uh,
471
00:23:39,440 --> 00:23:41,600
"Every head he's had
the pleasure to know".
472
00:23:41,680 --> 00:23:44,680
"A barber showing photographs",
like it's an exhibition.
473
00:23:44,760 --> 00:23:48,440
It was all just twisting it
to a little bit slightly more artsy angle.
474
00:23:48,520 --> 00:23:51,680
[John] Penny Lane is not only
a street, but it's a district.
475
00:23:51,760 --> 00:23:54,880
I lived in Penny Lane
in a street called Newcastle Road,
476
00:23:54,960 --> 00:23:58,000
so I was the only actual person
that lived in Penny Lane.
477
00:23:58,560 --> 00:23:59,640
[♪ "Penny Lane" playing]
478
00:23:59,720 --> 00:24:02,720
♪ In Penny Lane
there is a barber showing photographs ♪
479
00:24:02,800 --> 00:24:06,400
♪ Of every head he's had
the pleasure to know ♪
480
00:24:07,360 --> 00:24:10,800
♪ And all the people that come and go ♪
481
00:24:11,520 --> 00:24:13,560
♪ Stop and say hello ♪
482
00:24:15,960 --> 00:24:19,560
♪ On the corner
is a banker with a motor car ♪
483
00:24:20,160 --> 00:24:23,800
♪ The little children laugh at him
behind his back ♪
484
00:24:24,480 --> 00:24:28,080
♪ And the banker never wears a mac ♪
485
00:24:28,680 --> 00:24:32,960
♪ In the pouring rain, very strange ♪
486
00:24:33,040 --> 00:24:39,000
♪ Penny Lane is in my ears
and in my eyes ♪
487
00:24:41,920 --> 00:24:46,640
♪ There, beneath the blue suburban skies ♪
488
00:24:46,720 --> 00:24:49,960
♪ I sit, and meanwhile back ♪
489
00:24:50,040 --> 00:24:53,640
♪ In Penny Lane
there is a fireman with an hourglass ♪
490
00:24:53,720 --> 00:24:57,200
♪ And in his pocket
is a portrait of the Queen ♪
491
00:24:58,120 --> 00:25:01,480
♪ He likes to keep his fire engine clean ♪
492
00:25:02,560 --> 00:25:04,520
♪ It's a clean machine ♪
493
00:25:07,240 --> 00:25:09,920
[♪ music continues]
494
00:25:23,600 --> 00:25:29,760
♪ Penny Lane is in my ears
and in my eyes ♪
495
00:25:33,560 --> 00:25:37,280
♪ A four of fish and finger pies ♪
496
00:25:37,360 --> 00:25:40,360
♪ In summer, meanwhile back ♪
497
00:25:40,440 --> 00:25:43,960
♪ Behind the shelter
in the middle of the roundabout ♪
498
00:25:44,600 --> 00:25:47,960
♪ The pretty nurse
is selling poppies from a tray ♪
499
00:25:48,920 --> 00:25:53,040
♪ And though she feels
as if she's in a play ♪
500
00:25:53,120 --> 00:25:55,200
♪ She is, anyway ♪
501
00:25:57,520 --> 00:26:01,120
♪ In Penny Lane the barber shaves
another customer ♪
502
00:26:01,560 --> 00:26:04,960
♪ We see the banker sitting,
waiting for a trim ♪
503
00:26:05,840 --> 00:26:09,080
♪ And then the fireman rushes in ♪
504
00:26:09,960 --> 00:26:14,400
♪ From the pouring rain, very strange ♪
505
00:26:14,480 --> 00:26:20,400
♪ Penny Lane is in my ears
and in my eyes ♪
506
00:26:23,440 --> 00:26:28,000
♪ There, beneath the blue suburban skies ♪
507
00:26:28,080 --> 00:26:31,160
♪ I sit, and meanwhile back ♪
508
00:26:31,240 --> 00:26:36,920
♪ Penny Lane is in my ears
and in my eyes ♪
509
00:26:40,280 --> 00:26:45,240
♪ There, beneath the blue suburban skies ♪
510
00:26:47,560 --> 00:26:49,560
-♪ Penny Lane ♪
-[♪ music concludes]
511
00:26:49,640 --> 00:26:51,800
[Brian Matthew] And right now,
we're going to say hello
512
00:26:51,880 --> 00:26:54,560
-to John Lennon and Paul McCartney.
-[John and Paul] Look out! Look out!
513
00:26:54,640 --> 00:26:56,160
[Brian Matthew]
Now, that number, Penny Lane,
514
00:26:56,240 --> 00:26:58,480
failed to make No. 1
in Britain, fellas.
515
00:26:58,560 --> 00:27:00,200
Did you feel at all put out by that?
516
00:27:00,280 --> 00:27:02,320
[Paul] No. It's--
I don't know. The main thing is,
517
00:27:02,400 --> 00:27:07,840
it's fine if you're kept sort of
from being number one by, uh,
518
00:27:07,920 --> 00:27:10,280
-sort of a record like "Release Me"…
-[♪ "Release Me" playing]
519
00:27:10,360 --> 00:27:12,560
…'cause, uh, you're not trying
to do the same kind of thing
520
00:27:12,640 --> 00:27:14,560
as "Release Me"
is trying to do, you know.
521
00:27:14,640 --> 00:27:17,360
So, that's a completely
different scene altogether,
522
00:27:17,440 --> 00:27:18,920
that kind of thing. Uh…
523
00:27:19,000 --> 00:27:20,240
[Brian Matthew] But you have a little…
524
00:27:20,320 --> 00:27:21,720
[Paul] So, it do--
doesn't really matter anyway.
525
00:27:21,800 --> 00:27:23,040
[Brian Matthew]
But you have in the past said,
526
00:27:23,120 --> 00:27:25,040
or at least been recorded as having said,
527
00:27:25,120 --> 00:27:27,280
that in the event of a record
not going to No. 1,
528
00:27:27,360 --> 00:27:29,160
you'd seriously think about
packing it all in.
529
00:27:29,240 --> 00:27:30,440
Do you feel like that?
530
00:27:30,520 --> 00:27:32,080
It was a relief.
531
00:27:33,080 --> 00:27:35,960
Uh, you know, everything we did just went
straight to No. 1.
532
00:27:36,040 --> 00:27:37,960
And, of course,
then you have that pressure,
533
00:27:38,040 --> 00:27:40,480
and I… I believe we had,
like, seven on the row,
534
00:27:40,560 --> 00:27:42,000
-I'm… I'm not really sure.
-[♪ music concludes]
535
00:27:42,080 --> 00:27:44,680
It was something, six or seven,
uh, was out, was in,
536
00:27:44,760 --> 00:27:46,440
was out, was one, you know.
537
00:27:47,000 --> 00:27:51,400
So, actually, uh, within the group,
it… it took the pressure off.
538
00:27:51,480 --> 00:27:53,440
[Brian Matthew] The thing is, I mean,
you've obviously reached the stage
539
00:27:53,520 --> 00:27:56,560
where you don't have to write
any more songs for any reason at all
540
00:27:56,640 --> 00:27:59,400
-other than you like doing it, so…
-[Paul] But it's always been like that,
541
00:27:59,480 --> 00:28:00,720
-that's the good thing.
-[Brian Matthew] Yeah?
542
00:28:00,800 --> 00:28:03,240
[Paul] That's the-- You know,
'cause it has been a hobby…
543
00:28:03,320 --> 00:28:05,080
-[Brian Matthew] Mm-hmm.
-…and it still is, you know.
544
00:28:05,160 --> 00:28:06,880
[Brian Matthew] Can you,
without giving away any trade secrets,
545
00:28:06,960 --> 00:28:10,000
tell us anything about the numbers
that you're engaged on at the moment?
546
00:28:10,080 --> 00:28:13,880
Well, really, it was Paul
who'd been on a train journey,
547
00:28:13,960 --> 00:28:16,320
or a plane journey, with Mal Evans,
548
00:28:17,120 --> 00:28:21,720
and come up with this idea of Sgt. Pepper,
and he was just kind of…
549
00:28:21,800 --> 00:28:25,520
To… To me, we were just in the studio
to make the next record,
550
00:28:25,600 --> 00:28:28,560
and he was going on
about this idea of, um,
551
00:28:29,400 --> 00:28:31,400
you know, some fictitious band.
552
00:28:32,000 --> 00:28:34,840
[Paul] At the time, there were lots of
those sort of bands that were,
553
00:28:34,920 --> 00:28:37,440
you know-- Laughing Joe
and his Medicine Band,
554
00:28:37,520 --> 00:28:41,360
"Thank you! Wham! Bam! Ma'am!"
kind of group names, you know.
555
00:28:41,440 --> 00:28:44,920
Colonel Tucker's Medicinal Brew
and Compound.
556
00:28:45,000 --> 00:28:47,480
So, I just thought, "Oh well,
you know, if there was a band,
557
00:28:47,560 --> 00:28:49,240
what would be a mad name for it?"
558
00:28:49,320 --> 00:28:50,680
[♪ "Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band" playing]
559
00:28:50,800 --> 00:28:54,080
♪ Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band! ♪
560
00:28:54,160 --> 00:28:57,320
It was basically Paul's idea
to… to call Pepper--
561
00:28:57,400 --> 00:29:00,480
He came in and said, you know,
he had this song,
562
00:29:01,000 --> 00:29:03,040
-[♪ music concludes]
-"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band",
563
00:29:03,120 --> 00:29:06,560
and he… he… he was kind of
identifying it with the band,
564
00:29:06,640 --> 00:29:08,200
the Beatles, themselves.
565
00:29:08,760 --> 00:29:12,080
And the… the…
I think we recorded the song first,
566
00:29:12,160 --> 00:29:15,440
and then the idea came to make it into a…
567
00:29:15,520 --> 00:29:17,360
an idea for the album,
568
00:29:17,920 --> 00:29:21,480
which was also triggered
by Neil, Neil Aspinall,
569
00:29:22,120 --> 00:29:23,880
who said at that time…
570
00:29:23,960 --> 00:29:27,240
"Why don't we have Sgt. Pepper
as the compère?
571
00:29:27,320 --> 00:29:29,560
You know, he comes on
at the beginning of the show,
572
00:29:29,640 --> 00:29:31,880
he introduces the band, right?"
573
00:29:31,960 --> 00:29:34,120
And then at the end of every Beatles show,
574
00:29:34,200 --> 00:29:36,560
Paul always used to say, "It's, uh…"
575
00:29:37,160 --> 00:29:39,880
You know, "It's time to go,"
you know, "We've gotta go to bed,"
576
00:29:39,960 --> 00:29:41,120
and, uh, you know,
577
00:29:41,200 --> 00:29:42,840
"This is our last number," you know.
578
00:29:42,920 --> 00:29:44,840
Do the last number and go.
579
00:29:44,920 --> 00:29:46,760
And, uh, I said to… to Paul,
580
00:29:46,840 --> 00:29:50,000
"Why doesn't Sgt. Pepper come on
at the end of the album,
581
00:29:50,080 --> 00:29:52,880
and say, you know,
'Well, that's it, we've gotta go,'
582
00:29:52,960 --> 00:29:55,440
you know,
'Here's our last number,' right,
583
00:29:55,520 --> 00:29:57,840
and, uh, send the album on tour
584
00:29:57,920 --> 00:29:59,760
instead of the band, right?"
585
00:29:59,840 --> 00:30:02,320
So, uh, we liked that idea.
586
00:30:02,400 --> 00:30:06,720
It was gonna be, uh, a "show" album.
587
00:30:06,800 --> 00:30:09,280
I mean, it was Sgt. Pepper
and his Lonely Hearts Club Band,
588
00:30:09,360 --> 00:30:11,000
and all these other acts.
589
00:30:11,080 --> 00:30:15,320
And it was gonna all run,
you know, like a rock opera.
590
00:30:15,920 --> 00:30:18,800
And, uh, we got as far
as, uh, Sgt. Pepper,
591
00:30:18,880 --> 00:30:21,720
and then Billy Shears. [chuckles]
592
00:30:21,800 --> 00:30:24,200
"A Little Help From My Friends",
and then everyone said,
593
00:30:24,280 --> 00:30:26,760
"Oh, sod it! Let's just do tracks."
594
00:30:27,280 --> 00:30:29,760
So, it started out with its own, you know…
595
00:30:29,840 --> 00:30:32,200
that it was gonna be
something totally different.
596
00:30:32,280 --> 00:30:35,160
But it still then kept the title,
597
00:30:35,800 --> 00:30:37,160
and… and… like, uh,
598
00:30:37,240 --> 00:30:40,080
also the feel that it's…
it's all connected.
599
00:30:40,560 --> 00:30:42,240
[John] It's called
the first "concept" album.
600
00:30:42,320 --> 00:30:43,440
It doesn't go anywhere.
601
00:30:43,520 --> 00:30:47,320
"Mr. Kite!", all my contributions
have abs-- absolutely nothing
602
00:30:47,400 --> 00:30:50,120
to do with this idea
of Sgt. Pepper and his band.
603
00:30:50,200 --> 00:30:53,360
But it works 'cause we said it worked,
and that's how it appeared.
604
00:30:53,440 --> 00:30:56,720
[♪ "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts
Club Band" playing]
605
00:31:03,400 --> 00:31:05,600
♪ It was twenty years ago today ♪
606
00:31:06,080 --> 00:31:08,560
♪ Sergeant Pepper taught
the band to play ♪
607
00:31:08,640 --> 00:31:11,120
♪ They've been going in and out of style ♪
608
00:31:11,200 --> 00:31:13,640
♪ But they're guaranteed
to raise a smile ♪
609
00:31:13,720 --> 00:31:16,200
♪ So, may I introduce to you ♪
610
00:31:16,280 --> 00:31:19,000
♪ The act you've known
for all these years? ♪
611
00:31:19,080 --> 00:31:24,080
♪ Sergeant Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band ♪
612
00:31:24,160 --> 00:31:26,800
[crowd cheering, applauding]
613
00:31:29,080 --> 00:31:35,480
♪ Billy Shears ♪
614
00:31:35,560 --> 00:31:37,680
[♪ "With A Little Help
From My Friends" playing]
615
00:31:37,760 --> 00:31:41,400
♪ What would you think
if I sang out of tune? ♪
616
00:31:41,480 --> 00:31:45,000
♪ Would you stand up and walk out on me? ♪
617
00:31:46,400 --> 00:31:50,160
♪ Lend me your ears
and I'll sing you a song ♪
618
00:31:50,240 --> 00:31:53,480
♪ And I'll try not to sing out of key ♪
619
00:31:54,120 --> 00:31:57,960
♪ Oh, I get by with
a little help from my friends ♪
620
00:31:58,480 --> 00:32:02,320
♪ Mm, I get high with
a little help from my friends ♪
621
00:32:02,840 --> 00:32:07,040
♪ Mm, gonna try with
a little help from my friends ♪
622
00:32:07,480 --> 00:32:08,920
[♪ music concludes]
623
00:32:09,160 --> 00:32:11,880
[John] It starts out with Sgt. Pepper
and introduces Billy Shears,
624
00:32:11,960 --> 00:32:14,360
and that's the end,
apart from the so-called reprise.
625
00:32:14,440 --> 00:32:16,880
Otherwise, every other song
could have been on any other album.
626
00:32:16,960 --> 00:32:18,720
"Mr. Kite!" could have gone anywhere.
627
00:32:18,800 --> 00:32:20,160
[♪ "Being For The Benefit
Of Mr. Kite!" playing]
628
00:32:20,240 --> 00:32:22,040
♪ For the benefit of Mister Kite ♪
629
00:32:22,120 --> 00:32:25,560
♪ There will be a show tonight
on trampoline ♪
630
00:32:28,640 --> 00:32:30,760
♪ The Hendersons will all be there ♪
631
00:32:30,840 --> 00:32:32,840
♪ Late of Pablo Fanque's fair ♪
632
00:32:32,920 --> 00:32:34,000
♪ What a scene ♪
633
00:32:34,760 --> 00:32:37,280
♪ Over men and horses, hoops and garters ♪
634
00:32:37,360 --> 00:32:40,400
♪ Lastly through a hogshead of real fire ♪
635
00:32:41,000 --> 00:32:45,080
♪ In this way, Mister K.
will challenge the world ♪
636
00:32:49,840 --> 00:32:53,920
♪ The celebrated Mister K.
performs his feat on Saturday ♪
637
00:32:54,000 --> 00:32:55,360
♪ At Bishopsgate ♪
638
00:32:58,520 --> 00:33:00,640
♪ The Hendersons will dance and sing ♪
639
00:33:00,720 --> 00:33:02,680
♪ As Mister Kite flies through the ring ♪
640
00:33:02,760 --> 00:33:03,840
♪ Don't be late ♪
641
00:33:04,960 --> 00:33:07,160
♪ Messrs K. and H. assure the public ♪
642
00:33:07,240 --> 00:33:10,320
♪ Their production
will be second to none ♪
643
00:33:10,840 --> 00:33:12,920
♪ And, of course, Henry the Horse ♪
644
00:33:13,000 --> 00:33:14,880
♪ Dances the waltz! ♪
645
00:33:17,800 --> 00:33:20,600
[Ringo] We were really spending
a long time in the studio,
646
00:33:21,120 --> 00:33:24,320
and we were still doing
the basic tracks like we always did,
647
00:33:25,560 --> 00:33:29,200
and then it would take weeks
for the overdubs.
648
00:33:29,280 --> 00:33:31,400
And also the great thing
about this band was,
649
00:33:31,480 --> 00:33:35,040
whoever had the idea, that was okay.
650
00:33:35,120 --> 00:33:37,560
Whoever had the best idea,
it didn't matter who,
651
00:33:37,640 --> 00:33:39,200
that's the one we'd use.
652
00:33:40,080 --> 00:33:41,600
[♪ music concludes]
653
00:33:41,680 --> 00:33:44,040
[Paul] For instance, "Day in the Life",
John and I sat down,
654
00:33:44,120 --> 00:33:47,680
and he had, um, this opening verse,
655
00:33:47,760 --> 00:33:50,400
I think he'd got the idea,
or-- or-- or we then took
656
00:33:50,480 --> 00:33:52,200
the idea from like
the Daily Mirror, or something.
657
00:33:52,840 --> 00:33:55,200
[John] So, it had two stories,
one was the Guinness child
658
00:33:55,280 --> 00:33:56,880
that killed himself in a car,
659
00:33:57,520 --> 00:33:59,000
that was the main headline story.
660
00:33:59,080 --> 00:34:03,480
Uh, on the next page was about
4,000 holes in Blackburn, Lancashire.
661
00:34:03,560 --> 00:34:04,960
[Paul] So, the-- the-- the…
662
00:34:05,040 --> 00:34:06,480
[in Lancashire accent]
…Blackburn, Lancashire…
663
00:34:06,560 --> 00:34:08,640
[in normal accent]
…the holes, Albert Hall,
664
00:34:08,720 --> 00:34:10,680
all just sort of--
just got mixed, you know.
665
00:34:10,760 --> 00:34:12,880
Just a little poetic jumble
that sounded nice.
666
00:34:13,600 --> 00:34:16,560
And we've got
the rehearsal take, Take 1,
667
00:34:16,640 --> 00:34:18,560
the very first time we heard it,
668
00:34:18,640 --> 00:34:22,200
um, with John giving
a few instructions to people,
669
00:34:22,280 --> 00:34:24,280
as usual, just before he starts it.
670
00:34:24,800 --> 00:34:25,880
[crew member] Is the mic not too...?
671
00:34:25,960 --> 00:34:27,920
[John] Grab the mic
on the piano, and quite low,
672
00:34:28,000 --> 00:34:30,480
just-- Just keep it
beside maracas, you know.
673
00:34:30,560 --> 00:34:33,800
John was singing while
he was playing his acoustic guitar.
674
00:34:33,880 --> 00:34:37,400
Paul was on piano.
George was playing maracas, I think,
675
00:34:37,480 --> 00:34:39,360
and certainly Ringo was on bongos.
676
00:34:40,160 --> 00:34:41,520
John counts in by saying,
677
00:34:41,600 --> 00:34:43,680
"Sugar plum fairy, sugar plum fairy."
678
00:34:43,760 --> 00:34:45,720
[John speaks indistinctly]
679
00:34:47,800 --> 00:34:50,760
[John] Sugar plum fairy, sugar plum fairy.
680
00:34:50,840 --> 00:34:53,960
[♪ "A Day In The Life" playing]
681
00:35:03,680 --> 00:35:07,880
♪ I read the news today, oh boy ♪
682
00:35:09,720 --> 00:35:12,280
♪ About a lucky man… ♪
683
00:35:12,360 --> 00:35:14,240
Even in this early take,
684
00:35:14,320 --> 00:35:18,400
he has a voice
which sends shivers down the spine.
685
00:35:18,480 --> 00:35:20,160
♪ …was rather sad ♪
686
00:35:21,800 --> 00:35:25,080
♪ Well, I just had to laugh ♪
687
00:35:27,720 --> 00:35:31,080
♪ I saw the photograph ♪
688
00:35:33,720 --> 00:35:36,440
[Paul] It was mainly a John song,
and he had the, uh…
689
00:35:36,520 --> 00:35:38,320
♪ I read the news today, oh boy ♪
690
00:35:38,400 --> 00:35:40,520
And he'd taken a lot of it
from a newspaper.
691
00:35:40,600 --> 00:35:44,120
And then I had another bit, um…
692
00:35:44,200 --> 00:35:47,040
♪ Woke up, fell out of bed,
dragged a comb across my head ♪
693
00:35:47,120 --> 00:35:49,560
That was a little bit I had,
but it wasn't doing anything.
694
00:35:50,040 --> 00:35:52,440
And so we thought, "Well, that'd be good.
We could put that in the middle."
695
00:35:52,520 --> 00:35:54,320
And we got the concept
of sort of building it
696
00:35:54,400 --> 00:35:56,080
a little bit like a sort of mini operetta.
697
00:35:56,160 --> 00:35:59,080
[♪ "A Day In The Life" continues]
698
00:36:00,400 --> 00:36:03,360
♪ Woke up, fell out of bed ♪
699
00:36:03,440 --> 00:36:05,800
♪ Dragged a comb across my head ♪
700
00:36:07,560 --> 00:36:10,960
♪ Found my way downstairs
and drank a cup ♪
701
00:36:11,040 --> 00:36:13,840
♪ And, looking up, I noticed I was late ♪
702
00:36:14,720 --> 00:36:16,480
[George Martin] John said,
"Well, let's shove it in the middle
703
00:36:16,560 --> 00:36:18,680
and see if we can't
connect them up in some way."
704
00:36:19,400 --> 00:36:20,880
-[♪ music concludes]
-We connected them
705
00:36:21,000 --> 00:36:23,320
with a series of empty bars
706
00:36:23,520 --> 00:36:26,440
on either side of Paul's sec--
section before we came back
707
00:36:26,520 --> 00:36:28,160
into John's as a reprise,
708
00:36:28,800 --> 00:36:33,080
and we knew we had to fill
those bars with something sensational,
709
00:36:33,160 --> 00:36:34,880
and we didn't know
what it was going to be yet.
710
00:36:35,480 --> 00:36:37,240
And in order to keep the 24 bars
711
00:36:37,320 --> 00:36:39,680
so that everybody knew
when to come back in again,
712
00:36:39,760 --> 00:36:42,600
dear old Mal Evans stood
by the piano counting the bars.
713
00:36:42,680 --> 00:36:48,240
-[♪ piano playing]
-[Mal Evans] …seven, eight, nine, ten.
714
00:36:48,320 --> 00:36:50,160
[George Martin] And just to add
further weight to it,
715
00:36:50,240 --> 00:36:54,040
he set off an alarm clock at the end of it
to trigger everybody back into it again.
716
00:36:54,760 --> 00:36:57,720
-[♪ piano continues]
-[Mal Evans] …17, 18…
717
00:36:57,800 --> 00:37:00,320
-19, 20!
-[alarm clock ringing]
718
00:37:00,520 --> 00:37:01,600
[♪ music concludes]
719
00:37:01,720 --> 00:37:04,120
They told me they wanted
an orchestral climax
720
00:37:04,200 --> 00:37:05,800
to fill these empty bars,
721
00:37:05,880 --> 00:37:09,880
a giant orgasm of sound,
rising from nothing at all
722
00:37:09,960 --> 00:37:11,520
to the most incredible noise.
723
00:37:12,040 --> 00:37:13,520
And this is what we came up with.
724
00:37:14,320 --> 00:37:17,520
[♪ orchestral cacophony playing]
725
00:37:20,760 --> 00:37:24,240
[♪ volume gradually increases]
726
00:37:34,840 --> 00:37:36,720
[♪ music climaxes]
727
00:37:36,800 --> 00:37:38,280
[♪ "A Day In The Life" playing]
728
00:37:38,360 --> 00:37:41,720
And with that, we joined up
the two parts of the song.
729
00:37:41,800 --> 00:37:43,280
The moment I remember best
730
00:37:43,360 --> 00:37:45,960
outside of, say, him bringing the song,
731
00:37:46,040 --> 00:37:48,400
it was obviously a gorgeous song
when he brought it.
732
00:37:48,480 --> 00:37:51,320
And I say, I was a big fan of John's.
You've got to remember that, you know?
733
00:37:51,400 --> 00:37:54,920
It wouldn't just be, "Oh, yes,
a professional person will write this."
734
00:37:55,000 --> 00:37:58,240
It'd be like, "Oh, yeah…
I can't wait to get my hands on this."
735
00:37:58,320 --> 00:38:00,360
And we'd… we'd…
I'd learn the chords off him,
736
00:38:00,440 --> 00:38:01,920
and we'd develop it.
737
00:38:02,000 --> 00:38:05,640
Um, but the moment I remember
was when, um,
738
00:38:06,480 --> 00:38:08,840
we got to a little bit
that he didn't have,
739
00:38:08,920 --> 00:38:10,760
where we sort of said…
740
00:38:10,840 --> 00:38:15,320
♪ I'd love to turn you on ♪
741
00:38:15,400 --> 00:38:17,440
And we, like, looked at each other,
thinking like… [inhales sharply]
742
00:38:17,520 --> 00:38:19,320
"We know what we're doing here, don't we?"
743
00:38:19,400 --> 00:38:21,720
We were actually saying
for the first time ever, like,
744
00:38:21,800 --> 00:38:24,560
words like "turn you on",
you know, and-- which had--
745
00:38:24,640 --> 00:38:26,200
which was in the culture anyway,
746
00:38:26,280 --> 00:38:28,840
but no one had actually
said it on record yet.
747
00:38:28,920 --> 00:38:32,320
And there was a little sort of look
of recog-- recognition between us, like,
748
00:38:32,960 --> 00:38:35,000
"Do it. Do it. Get it down!"
749
00:38:35,520 --> 00:38:39,480
-[♪ "A Day In The Life" continues]
-♪ I read the news today, oh boy ♪
750
00:38:41,480 --> 00:38:45,640
♪ Four thousand holes
in Blackburn, Lancashire ♪
751
00:38:47,760 --> 00:38:51,440
♪ And though the holes were rather small ♪
752
00:38:53,240 --> 00:38:55,680
♪ They had to count them all ♪
753
00:38:55,760 --> 00:39:00,320
♪ Now they know how many holes
it takes to fill the Albert Hall ♪
754
00:39:01,280 --> 00:39:07,360
♪ I'd love to turn you on ♪
755
00:39:07,440 --> 00:39:13,120
♪ Four, five, six, seven ♪
756
00:39:13,200 --> 00:39:17,520
♪ Eight, nine, ten ♪
757
00:39:17,600 --> 00:39:24,040
♪ 11, 12, 13, 14, 15… ♪
758
00:39:24,120 --> 00:39:26,440
[♪ orchestral cacophony playing]
759
00:39:33,240 --> 00:39:36,600
The big, grand pianos
at the end. I was very into…
760
00:39:36,680 --> 00:39:37,800
-[♪ music concludes]
-If you… if you listen on--
761
00:39:37,880 --> 00:39:40,120
[♪ resonating chord]
762
00:39:40,200 --> 00:39:41,800
Uh… If you stick a mic on that,
763
00:39:41,880 --> 00:39:44,960
that'll go on
for about a minute and a half.
764
00:39:45,760 --> 00:39:47,080
Shall we listen?
765
00:39:47,160 --> 00:39:49,320
No, well, we, you know,
we haven't got time.
766
00:39:49,400 --> 00:39:51,120
It's still there,
and that'll go on forever.
767
00:39:51,200 --> 00:39:53,000
And that was just one of
the little things that fascinated me,
768
00:39:53,080 --> 00:39:55,560
so I kind of brought that
to the session. I said, "How about--"
769
00:39:55,640 --> 00:39:57,840
Still there. Can you hear it?
Bring the mic in.
770
00:39:57,920 --> 00:39:59,800
And if you bring the mic in
and in and in…
771
00:39:59,880 --> 00:40:01,160
-[♪ resonating chord]
-…it's still there.
772
00:40:01,240 --> 00:40:02,920
So, you know, I did this thing,
773
00:40:03,000 --> 00:40:05,480
so-- so-- so we got everyone
on grand pianos all doing a big…
774
00:40:05,560 --> 00:40:08,280
[♪ loud piano chord plays]
775
00:40:09,640 --> 00:40:12,040
[♪ chord fades gradually]
776
00:40:16,040 --> 00:40:19,240
[Ringo] So, you know, the sleeve came,
and we wanted to dress up,
777
00:40:19,320 --> 00:40:21,880
and we wanted to be
these people, you know,
778
00:40:21,960 --> 00:40:24,400
the Peppers. [chuckles]
779
00:40:24,480 --> 00:40:27,120
And, uh, you know,
had to get suits, and, you know,
780
00:40:27,200 --> 00:40:30,120
it was Flower Power, I mean,
coming into its fullest.
781
00:40:30,800 --> 00:40:33,520
You know, that's… that's what it was.
782
00:40:33,600 --> 00:40:35,960
And anyway, you know,
then, uh, Mal and I
783
00:40:36,040 --> 00:40:39,560
just went to all the different libraries
and got prints and, uh,
784
00:40:40,320 --> 00:40:44,160
Peter Blake blew 'em up
and tinted them and, uh, made the collage.
785
00:40:44,240 --> 00:40:46,160
[♪ "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts
Club Band" playing]
786
00:40:46,240 --> 00:40:50,080
♪ Sergeant Pepper's Lonely,
Sergeant Pepper's Lonely ♪
787
00:40:50,160 --> 00:40:54,520
♪ Hearts Club ♪
788
00:40:54,600 --> 00:40:56,200
♪ Band ♪
789
00:40:57,400 --> 00:40:58,840
♪ Whoo! ♪
790
00:41:00,640 --> 00:41:02,360
And if you look closely
at the album cover,
791
00:41:02,440 --> 00:41:04,840
you'll see two people who are flying
792
00:41:04,920 --> 00:41:07,080
and two who aren't. [chuckles]
793
00:41:07,160 --> 00:41:08,520
That's just a little in-joke.
794
00:41:08,600 --> 00:41:09,920
[interviewer laughs]
795
00:41:10,000 --> 00:41:12,360
Two of them didn't share it
with two others.
796
00:41:12,440 --> 00:41:15,440
And I remember the weekend
it was, um, released,
797
00:41:16,000 --> 00:41:18,680
getting, like, a telegram off people
like, sort of, James Fox,
798
00:41:18,760 --> 00:41:21,000
"Long Live Sgt. Pepper!"
799
00:41:21,080 --> 00:41:24,240
And, you know, people would
come 'round and say, "Great album, man."
800
00:41:24,320 --> 00:41:26,440
So, it got very noticed as sort of…
801
00:41:26,520 --> 00:41:29,480
It was like you were making it
for us, our crowd.
802
00:41:29,560 --> 00:41:32,720
It sort of linked up
with Mary Quant and miniskirts
803
00:41:32,800 --> 00:41:34,120
and all that kind of thing.
804
00:41:34,200 --> 00:41:35,880
And dope, to a certain extent.
805
00:41:35,960 --> 00:41:38,440
You know, the… the freedom of sex,
806
00:41:38,520 --> 00:41:40,280
the freedom of-- of, um,
807
00:41:40,360 --> 00:41:42,200
soft drugs like marijuana and so on.
808
00:41:42,680 --> 00:41:45,280
Um, I suppose it was all
a bit exciting and it…
809
00:41:45,360 --> 00:41:46,920
I think it did reflect its time.
810
00:41:47,000 --> 00:41:49,920
And the biggest single
sort of tribute for me was that,
811
00:41:50,000 --> 00:41:51,920
uh, it was released on the Friday,
812
00:41:52,000 --> 00:41:54,200
and on the Sunday we went
to the Saville Theatre
813
00:41:54,280 --> 00:41:57,360
which, uh, Brian Epstein, uh, rented on--
814
00:41:57,440 --> 00:42:00,640
and ran some rock shows
'cause nothing ever happened on a Sunday,
815
00:42:00,720 --> 00:42:04,120
and Jimi Hendrix opened
with "Sgt. Pepper",
816
00:42:04,200 --> 00:42:06,400
and he'd only had since
the Friday to-- to learn it.
817
00:42:06,480 --> 00:42:08,720
♪ So may I introduce to you ♪
818
00:42:08,800 --> 00:42:10,680
♪ The one and only Billy Shears ♪
819
00:42:11,200 --> 00:42:14,200
♪ Sergeant Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band ♪
820
00:42:14,280 --> 00:42:16,240
Pepper… Of course,
we're looking back on Pepper,
821
00:42:16,320 --> 00:42:19,480
it was quite an icon,
it was the record of that time,
822
00:42:19,560 --> 00:42:22,160
and it probably did change
the face of recording,
823
00:42:22,240 --> 00:42:23,560
but we didn't do it consciously.
824
00:42:23,640 --> 00:42:25,160
It wasn't like nine months in the studio.
825
00:42:25,240 --> 00:42:27,880
It was nine months over a period
and we'd do a section, and then stop,
826
00:42:27,960 --> 00:42:30,440
and then come back in,
if I can remember it right.
827
00:42:31,080 --> 00:42:33,840
And, uh, I liked to just get in and out.
828
00:42:33,920 --> 00:42:35,440
You know, I get a bit bored.
829
00:42:35,520 --> 00:42:38,200
It's a fine album,
but I did learn to play chess on it,
830
00:42:38,760 --> 00:42:42,080
because I'd have so much
spare time, you know.
831
00:42:42,160 --> 00:42:45,480
We'd do the basic track,
and then we'd put other stuff on,
832
00:42:45,560 --> 00:42:48,600
and then the percussion
would be overdubbed later.
833
00:42:48,680 --> 00:42:50,120
-[♪ "Within You Without You" playing]
-I had a few moments
834
00:42:50,240 --> 00:42:51,240
in there that I enjoyed,
835
00:42:51,320 --> 00:42:54,080
but generally, I didn't really
like that album much.
836
00:42:54,160 --> 00:42:56,960
My heart was still in India, you know?
837
00:42:57,440 --> 00:43:02,560
I mean, that was the big thing for me,
when that-- it happened in '66.
838
00:43:03,600 --> 00:43:05,560
Uh, it was the--
839
00:43:05,640 --> 00:43:09,080
After that, everything else
seemed like hard work.
840
00:43:09,160 --> 00:43:10,240
You know, it was a job.
841
00:43:10,320 --> 00:43:13,360
It was like doing something
I didn't really, uh, want to do.
842
00:43:13,440 --> 00:43:17,800
I was losing interest
in being "fab" at that point.
843
00:43:17,880 --> 00:43:20,600
[John] It wasn't that spectacular,
I mean, when you look back on it.
844
00:43:20,680 --> 00:43:22,560
I mean, like anything, it was great then.
845
00:43:22,640 --> 00:43:25,560
But, uh, people just had
this dream about Pepper,
846
00:43:25,640 --> 00:43:27,200
-and it was good for then, you know.
-[♪ music concludes]
847
00:43:27,280 --> 00:43:31,560
I was very cross that the BBC,
in their infinite wisdom,
848
00:43:31,640 --> 00:43:34,360
decided to ban some of the tracks
and they wouldn't play it.
849
00:43:34,440 --> 00:43:36,160
They wouldn't play "A Day In The Life".
850
00:43:36,240 --> 00:43:38,120
Why? I don't know, but they wouldn't.
851
00:43:38,200 --> 00:43:39,960
And they wouldn't play
"Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds"
852
00:43:40,040 --> 00:43:41,840
because this rumor went round that
853
00:43:41,920 --> 00:43:43,920
it was all connected with drugs, and, uh,
854
00:43:44,000 --> 00:43:47,400
"Lucy In The Sky" actually stood for LSD,
which wasn't true.
855
00:43:48,120 --> 00:43:50,800
And that it was, uh, a--
an album which actually
856
00:43:51,440 --> 00:43:54,000
was promoting the use of drugs
amongst the young.
857
00:43:54,080 --> 00:43:56,120
[♪ "Lucy In The Sky
With Diamonds" playing]
858
00:43:56,200 --> 00:43:59,960
♪ Lucy in the sky with diamonds ♪
859
00:44:00,040 --> 00:44:02,680
[George Martin]
I was aware of them smoking pot.
860
00:44:02,760 --> 00:44:05,760
I wasn't aware that they did
anything really serious.
861
00:44:06,320 --> 00:44:10,280
Um, in fact, I was so innocent
that I actually took John up
862
00:44:10,360 --> 00:44:13,480
onto the roof when he was having
a… an LSD trip,
863
00:44:13,560 --> 00:44:15,280
not knowing what it was.
864
00:44:15,360 --> 00:44:17,120
[John] I never took it in the studio.
865
00:44:17,200 --> 00:44:19,920
Once I did, accidentally.
I thought I was taking some uppers
866
00:44:20,480 --> 00:44:23,000
and, uh, I-- I was not in
a state of handling it,
867
00:44:23,080 --> 00:44:26,320
you know, but I took it.
And then I just-- I just, you know,
868
00:44:26,840 --> 00:44:29,840
I was so scared on the mic,
you know. I said, "What was it?"
869
00:44:29,920 --> 00:44:32,160
You know, I said, "I feel ill."
I thought I felt ill. And--
870
00:44:33,920 --> 00:44:36,040
And I was goin'--
I thought I was goin' cracked, you know.
871
00:44:36,120 --> 00:44:38,200
And then I-- I said,
"I must get some air."
872
00:44:38,280 --> 00:44:39,680
And they all took me upstairs on the roof,
873
00:44:39,760 --> 00:44:42,360
and George Martin was looking
at me funny, you know.
874
00:44:42,440 --> 00:44:45,360
And then it dawned on me,
"I must have taken acid!"
875
00:44:45,440 --> 00:44:47,440
[George Martin] So, the only place
I could take him to get fresh air
876
00:44:47,520 --> 00:44:48,640
was on the roof.
877
00:44:48,760 --> 00:44:49,760
[♪ music concludes]
878
00:44:49,840 --> 00:44:52,080
And we went up there
and it was a wonderful starry night,
879
00:44:52,160 --> 00:44:54,520
and he looked up,
went to the edge of the, uh,
880
00:44:54,600 --> 00:44:57,920
about 18-inch parapet
and looked up at the stars,
881
00:44:58,000 --> 00:45:00,800
and said, "Isn't-- Aren't they fantastic?"
882
00:45:01,360 --> 00:45:02,680
And, of course, to him,
883
00:45:02,760 --> 00:45:05,400
they would have been
especially fantastic, I suppose.
884
00:45:05,480 --> 00:45:09,040
Um, they were just
little stars to me at the time.
885
00:45:09,120 --> 00:45:13,240
♪ Lucy in the sky with diamonds ♪
886
00:45:14,480 --> 00:45:18,480
♪ Lucy in the sky with diamonds ♪
887
00:45:19,440 --> 00:45:23,840
♪ Lucy in the sky with diamonds ♪
888
00:45:24,520 --> 00:45:25,880
[♪ music fades]
889
00:45:25,960 --> 00:45:31,040
[Ringo] I feel to this day that, you know,
we did take certain substances,
890
00:45:32,640 --> 00:45:36,600
uh, but never to a great extent
at the sessions.
891
00:45:37,880 --> 00:45:40,160
At-- You know, we took a little,
892
00:45:40,240 --> 00:45:44,960
but whenever we'd overdid our intake,
893
00:45:46,400 --> 00:45:49,360
-the music we made was absolutely shit.
-[♪ music concludes]
894
00:45:49,440 --> 00:45:53,200
And we… You know,
we'd go home real happy with the tape,
895
00:45:53,280 --> 00:45:56,000
and we'd play it when we got home, and…
896
00:45:56,080 --> 00:45:57,880
you'd play it the next day, and…
897
00:45:57,960 --> 00:46:01,400
it was just every time
we'd come back to record again,
898
00:46:02,000 --> 00:46:05,520
we'd all look at each other and say,
"Well, we have to do that again,"
899
00:46:05,600 --> 00:46:07,960
because, you know, it… didn't work.
900
00:46:08,040 --> 00:46:10,440
It didn't work for the…
for the Beatles, uh, to be…
901
00:46:11,160 --> 00:46:13,400
too deranged when making music.
902
00:46:13,480 --> 00:46:16,040
[John] Now, the point about
the whole drug scene was,
903
00:46:16,120 --> 00:46:18,520
the press asked Paul,
904
00:46:19,600 --> 00:46:21,960
"Have you taken LSD?"
This is how it all came out,
905
00:46:22,040 --> 00:46:24,240
otherwise we didn't say
a word about it, you know?
906
00:46:24,320 --> 00:46:27,160
I mean, it was just a--
a personal thing, right?
907
00:46:27,240 --> 00:46:28,440
But I did talk to him beforehand,
908
00:46:28,520 --> 00:46:30,160
and I said, "Look, you know
what's gonna happen here.
909
00:46:30,240 --> 00:46:33,280
I'm gonna get the blame
for telling everyone 'I take drugs'."
910
00:46:33,360 --> 00:46:35,640
I said, "But you're the people
who are gonna--
911
00:46:35,720 --> 00:46:37,640
to distribute this thing."
912
00:46:38,120 --> 00:46:39,360
I said, "I'll tell you," I said,
913
00:46:39,440 --> 00:46:41,160
"but if you've got any worries about this
914
00:46:41,240 --> 00:46:43,600
having an effect on kids,
then you don't show it."
915
00:46:44,240 --> 00:46:46,000
[interviewer] Do you think
you have now encouraged
916
00:46:46,080 --> 00:46:47,840
your fans to take drugs?
917
00:46:47,920 --> 00:46:49,840
I don't think it'll make
any difference, you know.
918
00:46:49,920 --> 00:46:52,120
I don't think my fans
are gonna take drugs
919
00:46:52,200 --> 00:46:53,560
just 'cause I did, you know.
920
00:46:53,640 --> 00:46:56,200
But the thing is, that's not
the point anyway, you know.
921
00:46:56,280 --> 00:46:58,080
I was asked whether I had or not.
922
00:46:58,840 --> 00:47:01,680
And then from then on,
the whole bit about w--
923
00:47:01,760 --> 00:47:04,840
how far it's gonna go
and how many people it's gonna encourage
924
00:47:04,920 --> 00:47:08,320
is up to the newspapers
and up to you, you know, on television.
925
00:47:08,400 --> 00:47:11,160
I mean, you're spreading this
now at this moment.
926
00:47:11,240 --> 00:47:12,840
This is going into all the homes,
927
00:47:12,920 --> 00:47:14,720
you know, in Britain,
928
00:47:14,800 --> 00:47:16,760
and I'd rather it didn't, you know.
929
00:47:16,840 --> 00:47:18,120
But you're asking me the question.
930
00:47:18,200 --> 00:47:20,320
You want me to be honest.
I'll be honest, you know.
931
00:47:20,400 --> 00:47:22,680
I don't know, it just seemed strange to me
932
00:47:22,760 --> 00:47:26,400
because we'd been trying
to get him to take it for about 18 months,
933
00:47:27,040 --> 00:47:28,960
and then it just seemed funny that one day
934
00:47:29,040 --> 00:47:31,560
he's on the television
talking all about it.
935
00:47:33,440 --> 00:47:36,200
The problem was
it then gave the press a field day,
936
00:47:37,160 --> 00:47:39,560
to be on all our cases, you know?
937
00:47:40,200 --> 00:47:42,520
I personally didn't think
it was any of their business,
938
00:47:43,480 --> 00:47:46,560
uh, but, you know, once he said it, uh,
939
00:47:47,440 --> 00:47:49,080
you know, whoever said anything
in the Beatles,
940
00:47:49,160 --> 00:47:51,520
the other three
had to deal with it, you know,
941
00:47:51,600 --> 00:47:55,840
which we did in… with all love,
because, you know, we loved each other.
942
00:47:55,920 --> 00:47:58,640
[♪ "All You Need Is Love" playing]
943
00:48:03,680 --> 00:48:05,760
[John] We're sorry, you know,
but there's plenty of people in England
944
00:48:05,840 --> 00:48:09,000
who haven't seen us unless they get--
we do a world telly show
945
00:48:09,080 --> 00:48:11,320
and everybody watches at once
through a satellite.
946
00:48:11,400 --> 00:48:13,280
That's the only way everybody'd see us.
947
00:48:13,360 --> 00:48:16,640
[George] It was supposedly
the very first satellite hook-up
948
00:48:16,720 --> 00:48:18,120
around the world.
949
00:48:19,560 --> 00:48:21,200
And I don't know
how many millions of people,
950
00:48:21,280 --> 00:48:24,320
but it was supposed to be some
phenomenal amount of people,
951
00:48:24,840 --> 00:48:28,800
and it was probably
the very earliest technology
952
00:48:28,880 --> 00:48:31,720
-that enabled that kinda satellite link.
-[♪ music concludes]
953
00:48:31,800 --> 00:48:35,320
It was a commission that was--
Brian suddenly wa-- whirled in and said,
954
00:48:35,400 --> 00:48:38,720
"We are to represent Britain
in this round-the-world hook-up
955
00:48:38,800 --> 00:48:40,920
and you've got to…
you've gotta write a song."
956
00:48:41,000 --> 00:48:44,480
And it was a challenge.
Um, it was within two weeks,
957
00:48:44,560 --> 00:48:46,640
I think, we had to get it together.
958
00:48:46,720 --> 00:48:48,600
And then we learned it was going to be,
959
00:48:49,160 --> 00:48:53,280
for that time, uh, a phenomenal figure
of over 200 million people watching.
960
00:48:53,360 --> 00:48:56,320
And I don't know if the song
was written before that,
961
00:48:57,120 --> 00:48:59,480
because we were making
an album at the time,
962
00:48:59,560 --> 00:49:03,120
so there was kind of
lots of songs in circulation.
963
00:49:04,320 --> 00:49:07,240
Paul may know more about that.
Over to you, Paul.
964
00:49:07,920 --> 00:49:09,760
Um, I'm not sure.
965
00:49:09,840 --> 00:49:12,280
It was John's song, mainly.
966
00:49:12,360 --> 00:49:15,520
Um, I don't think
it was written specially for it,
967
00:49:16,280 --> 00:49:19,760
but it was one of the songs
we had and… and…
968
00:49:19,840 --> 00:49:22,920
I don't know. Actually, George Martin
might have a bit better idea on that.
969
00:49:25,360 --> 00:49:28,200
It was certainly tailored to it
once we had it.
970
00:49:28,280 --> 00:49:31,520
But I've got a feeling it was just one
of John's songs that was coming there.
971
00:49:31,600 --> 00:49:33,920
We went down to Olympic Studios in Barnes
972
00:49:34,480 --> 00:49:36,400
and, uh, recorded it, uh…
973
00:49:37,360 --> 00:49:40,000
Um, and then it became the song.
974
00:49:40,080 --> 00:49:41,920
They said,
"Ah, this is the one we should use."
975
00:49:42,000 --> 00:49:43,960
I don't actually think
it was written for it.
976
00:49:44,560 --> 00:49:46,720
Yeah, they wrote it specifically for that.
977
00:49:46,800 --> 00:49:48,000
And we all dressed up again.
978
00:49:48,080 --> 00:49:50,160
See, we were getting into--
We loved dressing up!
979
00:49:50,240 --> 00:49:51,920
[laughs]
980
00:49:52,000 --> 00:49:53,360
And we had another suit.
981
00:49:53,440 --> 00:49:56,480
But mine was so bloody heavy
'cause, you know,
982
00:49:56,560 --> 00:49:59,800
Simon and Marijke
from The Fool was the company,
983
00:50:00,320 --> 00:50:03,320
and I had all this beading on,
as we'll cut to right now,
984
00:50:04,280 --> 00:50:06,600
and, uh, it just weighed a ton.
985
00:50:06,680 --> 00:50:09,520
It was a fabulous time,
musically and spiritually.
986
00:50:10,280 --> 00:50:13,280
We decided to get, um…
987
00:50:13,360 --> 00:50:17,000
some people in who looked
like the Love Generation.
988
00:50:17,080 --> 00:50:20,320
And I think if you look close
on the floor, I know there's--
989
00:50:20,400 --> 00:50:22,160
Mick Jagger's there,
990
00:50:22,240 --> 00:50:24,800
but there's also Eric Clapton, I believe,
991
00:50:24,880 --> 00:50:30,040
in full psychedelic regalia
and permed hair,
992
00:50:30,120 --> 00:50:31,600
sitting right there.
993
00:50:31,680 --> 00:50:34,120
And there was an orchestra that was live,
and the singing was live
994
00:50:34,200 --> 00:50:36,720
and certain of audience, and so on.
995
00:50:36,800 --> 00:50:39,320
And we knew it was going to be
a live television show.
996
00:50:39,400 --> 00:50:41,160
And just at the la--
And there was also a camera
997
00:50:41,240 --> 00:50:43,680
in the control room on us doing our bits.
998
00:50:44,880 --> 00:50:46,880
And just about 30 seconds
to go on the air,
999
00:50:46,960 --> 00:50:48,280
and there was a phone call,
1000
00:50:48,360 --> 00:50:51,360
and it was the producer
of the show on to me, saying,
1001
00:50:51,960 --> 00:50:54,680
"I'm afraid I've lost
all contact with the… with the studio.
1002
00:50:54,760 --> 00:50:57,080
You're gonna have to relay
instructions to them,
1003
00:50:57,160 --> 00:50:59,520
'cause we're going on air
any moment now!"
1004
00:50:59,600 --> 00:51:01,160
And I thought, "My God!
1005
00:51:01,240 --> 00:51:03,720
If you're gonna make a fool of yourself,
you might as well do it properly
1006
00:51:03,800 --> 00:51:05,960
in front of 200 million people!"
1007
00:51:07,720 --> 00:51:10,040
The man upstairs pointed his finger,
1008
00:51:10,120 --> 00:51:12,040
and that's it. We did it. One take.
1009
00:51:12,120 --> 00:51:14,040
[crew member] One, two, three.
1010
00:51:14,120 --> 00:51:17,280
[♪ "All You Need Is Love" playing]
1011
00:51:22,320 --> 00:51:25,600
♪ Love, love, love ♪
1012
00:51:26,840 --> 00:51:30,040
♪ Love, love, love ♪
1013
00:51:31,120 --> 00:51:34,440
♪ Love, love, love ♪
1014
00:51:40,880 --> 00:51:43,400
♪ There's nothing you can do
that can't be done ♪
1015
00:51:45,120 --> 00:51:47,680
♪ Nothing you can sing
that can't be sung ♪
1016
00:51:49,320 --> 00:51:52,680
♪ Nothing you can say
but you can learn how to play the game ♪
1017
00:51:53,480 --> 00:51:54,880
♪ It's easy ♪
1018
00:51:58,320 --> 00:52:01,000
♪ Nothing you can make
that can't be made ♪
1019
00:52:02,640 --> 00:52:05,480
♪ No one you can save
that can't be saved ♪
1020
00:52:06,760 --> 00:52:10,400
♪ Nothing you can do
but you can learn how to be you in time ♪
1021
00:52:10,880 --> 00:52:12,240
♪ It's easy ♪
1022
00:52:15,640 --> 00:52:17,960
♪ All you need is love ♪
1023
00:52:20,360 --> 00:52:22,640
♪ All you need is love ♪
1024
00:52:25,080 --> 00:52:28,400
♪ All you need is love, love ♪
1025
00:52:29,680 --> 00:52:31,520
♪ Love is all you need ♪
1026
00:52:32,720 --> 00:52:35,600
♪ Love, love, love ♪
1027
00:52:36,800 --> 00:52:39,720
♪ Love, love, love ♪
1028
00:52:40,840 --> 00:52:43,760
♪ Love, love, love ♪
1029
00:52:49,960 --> 00:52:52,280
♪ All you need is love ♪
1030
00:52:54,240 --> 00:52:56,760
-♪ Whoo! ♪
-♪ All you need is love ♪
1031
00:52:56,880 --> 00:52:57,960
♪ Yeah! ♪
1032
00:52:58,920 --> 00:53:02,480
♪ All you need is love, love ♪
1033
00:53:03,760 --> 00:53:05,520
♪ Love is all you need ♪
1034
00:53:06,520 --> 00:53:07,560
♪ Love ♪
1035
00:53:07,640 --> 00:53:10,160
♪ There's nothing you can know
that isn't known ♪
1036
00:53:11,240 --> 00:53:14,120
♪ Nothing you can see that isn't shown ♪
1037
00:53:15,280 --> 00:53:18,360
♪ There's nowhere you can be
that isn't where you're meant to be ♪
1038
00:53:19,080 --> 00:53:20,560
♪ It's easy ♪
1039
00:53:23,880 --> 00:53:26,160
♪ All you need is love ♪
1040
00:53:28,400 --> 00:53:30,760
♪ All you need is love ♪
1041
00:53:33,000 --> 00:53:36,360
♪ All you need is love, love ♪
1042
00:53:37,560 --> 00:53:39,360
♪ Love is all you need ♪
1043
00:53:41,000 --> 00:53:43,200
♪ All you need is love ♪
1044
00:53:43,280 --> 00:53:45,000
♪ All together now ♪
1045
00:53:45,600 --> 00:53:47,720
♪ All you need is love ♪
1046
00:53:47,800 --> 00:53:49,400
♪ Everybody ♪
1047
00:53:50,080 --> 00:53:53,120
♪ All you need is love, love ♪
1048
00:53:54,560 --> 00:53:56,360
♪ Love is all you need ♪
1049
00:53:57,200 --> 00:53:59,160
♪ Love is all you need
Love is all you need ♪
1050
00:53:59,240 --> 00:54:01,360
♪ Love is all you need
Love is all you need ♪
1051
00:54:01,440 --> 00:54:03,680
♪ Love is all you need
Love is all you need ♪
1052
00:54:03,760 --> 00:54:05,920
♪ Love is all you need
Love is all you need ♪
1053
00:54:06,000 --> 00:54:08,240
♪ Love is all you need
Love is all you need ♪
1054
00:54:08,320 --> 00:54:10,400
♪ Love is all you need
Love is all you need ♪
1055
00:54:10,480 --> 00:54:12,280
♪ Love is all you need
Love is all… ♪
1056
00:54:12,360 --> 00:54:14,280
Because the mood of the time,
1057
00:54:14,360 --> 00:54:17,920
it seemed to be a great idea
to do that song
1058
00:54:18,000 --> 00:54:22,560
because while everybody else
was showing people knitting in Canada
1059
00:54:22,640 --> 00:54:26,040
and Irish clog dancers in Venezuela,
1060
00:54:26,120 --> 00:54:28,760
we thought, "Well,
we'll just sing 'All You Need Is Love'
1061
00:54:28,840 --> 00:54:34,000
because it's a kind of
subtle bit of PR for, um, God."
1062
00:54:34,680 --> 00:54:36,280
♪ Love is all you need ♪
1063
00:54:36,360 --> 00:54:39,280
♪ She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah ♪
1064
00:54:39,360 --> 00:54:40,880
♪ Love is all you need ♪
1065
00:54:40,960 --> 00:54:43,000
♪ She loves you, yeah, yeah… ♪
1066
00:54:43,080 --> 00:54:44,520
[♪ music fades]
1067
00:54:45,920 --> 00:54:47,640
[♪ "Strawberry Fields Forever" playing]
1068
00:54:47,720 --> 00:54:50,440
♪ Living is easy with eyes closed ♪
1069
00:54:51,440 --> 00:54:54,520
♪ Misunderstanding all you see ♪
1070
00:54:56,400 --> 00:54:58,960
♪ It's getting hard to be someone ♪
1071
00:54:59,040 --> 00:55:00,640
♪ But it all works out ♪
1072
00:55:01,400 --> 00:55:04,560
♪ It doesn't matter much to me ♪
1073
00:55:06,120 --> 00:55:10,360
♪ No one, I think, is in my tree ♪
1074
00:55:11,640 --> 00:55:14,760
♪ I mean, it must be high or low ♪
1075
00:55:16,600 --> 00:55:19,080
♪ That is, you can't, you know, tune in ♪
1076
00:55:19,160 --> 00:55:20,960
♪ But it's all right ♪
1077
00:55:21,800 --> 00:55:24,880
♪ That is, I think it's not too bad ♪
1078
00:55:26,960 --> 00:55:29,320
♪ Let me take you down ♪
1079
00:55:29,400 --> 00:55:35,000
♪ 'Cause I'm going to Strawberry Fields ♪
1080
00:55:37,360 --> 00:55:39,720
♪ Nothing is real ♪
1081
00:55:40,800 --> 00:55:43,840
♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪
1082
00:55:44,840 --> 00:55:47,680
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
1083
00:55:49,160 --> 00:55:53,040
♪ Always, no, sometimes, think it's me ♪
1084
00:55:54,480 --> 00:55:57,400
♪ But you know I know when it's a dream ♪
1085
00:55:59,440 --> 00:56:01,920
♪ I think, er, no, I mean, er, yes ♪
1086
00:56:02,000 --> 00:56:03,680
♪ But it's all wrong ♪
1087
00:56:04,480 --> 00:56:07,320
♪ That is, I think I disagree ♪
1088
00:56:09,520 --> 00:56:11,880
♪ Let me take you down ♪
1089
00:56:11,960 --> 00:56:17,440
♪ 'Cause I'm going to Strawberry Fields ♪
1090
00:56:19,840 --> 00:56:22,080
♪ Nothing is real ♪
1091
00:56:23,240 --> 00:56:26,520
♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪
1092
00:56:27,280 --> 00:56:30,160
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
1093
00:56:31,680 --> 00:56:34,440
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
1094
00:56:36,160 --> 00:56:39,280
♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪
1095
00:56:42,960 --> 00:56:46,680
[♪ music continues]
1096
00:57:18,000 --> 00:57:19,120
[♪ music concludes]
92544
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