Beatles’ 1966 ‘Jesus’ press conference tape up for grabs

London, May 12 (ANI): An audio recording of the Beatles from 1966, in which John Lennon is asked about his comment that the band was more popular than Jesus, is expected to sell for about 13,400 pounds at auction.

Auction house Bonhams & Butterfields said the 14 minute reel-to-reel tape recording was the only known surviving audio record of the 1966 press conference by the Fab Four at the King Edward Hotel in Toronto.

Bonhams said journalists also had lots of questions about Lennon’s controversial “Jesus” remark months earlier, and that Vietnam and the generation gap were also discussed.

The press conference was well reported at the time but there is no known television or audio record.

“We do know what they said that day. We have just never heard it,” the Telegraph quoted Margaret Barrett, director of entertainment memorabilia at Bonhams & Butterfields, as saying.

She said the tapes were made by a young photojournalist and Beatles fan who attended the press conference.

“He tried to sell them in 1966, but no-one thought they were important,” Barrett stated.

The two reels lay in a drawer for over 40 years but now carry an estimated price of 13,400 pounds to 16,750 pounds and are among the most expensive items at the June 13 auction in Los Angeles. (ANI)

Zombie Beetles to soon light cinema screens

London, May 11 (ANI): The Beatles will soon be making it to the silver screen as zombies – the movie adaptation of the book “Paul Is Undead” will see the Fab Four being cast as flesh-eaters.

According to leading film blog Deadline, film Company Double Feature – whose bosses have produced hits like Pulp Fiction and Erin Brockovich – has bagged the rights to the book by author Alan Goldsher.

The book portrays John Lennon as a zombie who kills his bandmate Paul McCartney and the rest of the group come back as the undead.

They kill and eat the brains of fans even as they try to evade their nemesis, zombie killer Mick Jagger.

“I am a huge Beatles fan like the rest of the world and Alan”s mash-up, which really showcases his love of music history and his appreciation of the zombie world, is a fun, funny read,” the Mirror quoted Stacey Sher of Double Feature, as saying.

She added: “How can you not love a book where Jesus agrees with zombie John Lennon, that the Beatles are in fact bigger than him?” (ANI)

Liam Gallagher to make a film on Beatles’ drug years

London, May 8 (ANI): Former Oasis singer Liam Gallager is set to make a movie on Beatles and their drug years.

Gallagher, who is a huge fan of the band, has bought the screen rights to the book The Longest Cocktail Party – the diary of Abbey Road regular Richard DiLello, who worked with the Fab Four between 1967 and 1970.

In the book, DiLello talks about the break up of Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and George Harrison in 1970. It tells of stoned conversations and how the band had regular access to illegal drugs, reports The Daily Star.

Gallagher is still searching for a screenwriter and director, as well as actors to portray the band.

Liam and partners at Revolution Films will launch the project during the Cannes Film Festival, which starts next week. (ANI)

Unseen Beatles photos go on display

London, April 28 (ANI): A collection of unseen photos of The Beatles just before they rose to fame is to go on display.

The 37 shots of the Fab Four on a tour with Helen Shapiro in 1963 were unearthed after languishing in an attic for almost 50 years.

Photographer/journalist Paul Berriff discovered the pics at his home in north England.

“I started to root around in my attic and I found this box of about 800 negs (negatives), and in it were shots of these old pop groups in ”63. I was absolutely knocked out when I saw the quality and realised I should do something with them,” the Daily Express quoted Berriff as saying.

Berriff took the pics after the boy band gave him unlimited access on tour when he was a teenage snapper – just months before Beatlemania gripped the world.

The photog had stored the negatives at his home, along with hundreds of other images of musicians in the 1960s.

The photos, which chronicle the band members rehearsing onstage, smoking in their dressing room, and relaxing with drinks and snacks backstage, will go on display at London”s Menier Gallery on Apr 28, (10). (ANI)

John Lennon fans uncover his hidden LSD stash area

London, April 19 (ANI): John Lennon fans believe they have uncovered an area in the late Beatle”s Surrey home where he hid his stash of LSD almost four decades ago.

Builders digging up the lawn of Lennon”s old house, Kenwood, have discovered the remains of a leather holdall containing numerous large broken glass bottles, reports the Sun.

It is believed Lennon buried a large cache of drugs in his garden in 1967 when the Fab Four decided to give up drugs in favour of transcendental meditation.

However, when the band returned from India, Lennon thought he had made a hasty decision. He tried to dig up the drugs but never found them.

But now Lennon devotees are convinced that these bottles contained the drugs, even though the truth cannot be found as the only bottle found intact had a cracked cork, thus it was empty. (ANI)

John Lennon fans uncover his hidden LSD stash area

London, April 19 (ANI): John Lennon fans believe they have uncovered an area in the late Beatle”s Surrey home where he hid his stash of LSD almost four decades ago.

Builders digging up the lawn of Lennon”s old house, Kenwood, have discovered the remains of a leather holdall containing numerous large broken glass bottles, reports the Sun.

It is believed Lennon buried a large cache of drugs in his garden in 1967 when the Fab Four decided to give up drugs in favour of transcendental meditation.

However, when the band returned from India, Lennon thought he had made a hasty decision. He tried to dig up the drugs but never found them.

But now Lennon devotees are convinced that these bottles contained the drugs, even though the truth cannot be found as the only bottle found intact had a cracked cork, thus it was empty. (ANI)

Dame Vera Lynn becomes world’s oldest living artist to have No. 1 album

London, September 14 (ANI): Dame Vera Lynn has piped The Beatles and Bob Dylan in becoming the oldest living artist in the world to have a number one album.

The 92-year-old, whose career flourished during World War II when she was nicknamed “The Forces’ Sweetheart”, toppled artists including the Arctic Monkeys and the Kings of Leon after her album We’ll Meet Again – The Very Best of Vera Lynn topped the charts.

Her album left behind the much-hyped remastered editions of The Beatles’, who were at the 5th, 6th, 9th, 10th, 21st, 24th, 29th, 31st, 33rd, 37th and 38th spots, according to the Official Charts Company.

“I am extremely surprised and delighted, and a big ‘thank you’ to all my fans for putting me there,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

HMV’s Gennaro Castaldo laid the blame of the Fab Four losing the title on the delay in the sale of their albums.

He said: “We’ve seen huge demand for the remastered Beatles albums since Wednesday, but sales have been spread across all the releases, especially the box sets.

“The fact they were only out for four days also seems to have counted against their prospects of a number one.

“This has left the door open for Dame Vera, whose album has been selling consistently in recent weeks and has been steadily growing in demand, to top this week’s chart.

“It’s a really lovely surprise, that nobody could have imagined a few weeks ago, and it’s ironic that it’s taken one revered British icon to block the historic return of another to the top of the charts.” (ANI)

Macca says Beatles overindulged in drugs

Washington, Sept 11 (ANI): Former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney is amazed he and his band mates survived the excessive drug habit they had in their heyday.

The singer admits that the Fab Four overindulged in drugs, often falling asleep during recording sessions.

“(We were) overdoing substances and really getting crazy, as we all were… (We’d be) falling asleep – the kinda thing when you can hardly get your head off the pillow. You go, ‘Woah, I’d better get my head off this pillow,’” McCartney was quoted by Contactmusic as saying in the U.S. news show Entertainment Tonight.

However, the 67-year-old star also confessed it was during on such drug session that he wrote the Beatles classic Let It Be.

He said: “I had a dream, where my mother, who had been dead, by then, 10 years came to me in the dream and was very sort of helpful and very calming, and it was lovely just to see her… and she said, ‘Don’t worry about it… Let it be.’

“I went, ‘OK’, and I felt so good… and I woke up and wrote Let It Be. I thought, ‘That’s a good idea for a song.’” (ANI)

‘The Beatles’ may still net £1bln by Christmas

London, Sep 8 (ANI): It’s almost 40 years since ‘The Beatles’ split, and yet the British band is set to earn the biggest amount ever this year, and could even net 1billion pounds by Christmas.

The Beatles comeback will start with remastered versions of 13 of late John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and late George Harrison’s studio albums.

The 170-pound box set is the first upgrade to the Beatles’ back catalogue since the music was released on CD 22 years ago, and it’s the first time every track is available in stereo.

A Beatles In Mono box is also set to go on sale the same day for 200 pounds, and, on September 9, the Fab Four will also make their video game debut in ‘The Beatles: Rock Band’.

The 50 pounds game lets players perform in a virtual Beatles band with 45 songs to choose from, and the series of games has already raked in 600 million pounds, with the Beatles edition cited to be the most popular yet.

As well as a huge selection of songs, it also recreates iconic moments in the band’s history from their first gig at the Cavern Club to the zebra crossing at Abbey Road and the record company rooftop where they staged their famous 1969 concert.

Experts believe the game will introduce a whole new generation of music fans to the Beatles, keeping the cash rolling in for decades to come.

“By encouraging players to become part of the band, the marketing people are introducing timeless pieces to a younger audience,” the Mirror quoted brand expert Jonathan Gabay as saying.

“But they’ve gone further still with nostalgic, highly detailed backgrounds. This will appeal to the older market, which will relish the old eras of the Swinging Sixties and psychedelic Seventies.

“So, in one masterstroke, they address failing sales of CDs as well as grabbing a new generation of Beatlemaniacs. They have been very shrewd,” he said.

The next stage in the Beatles masterplan is putting their tracks on iTunes.

A long-running legal dispute between Apple computers and Beatles firm Apple Corps, which is jointly owned by Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and the estates of John Lennon and George Harrison, has stopped their music from being available online.

However, XBox games console owners will now be able to download All You Need Is Love, making it the first ever-digital Beatles song, followed by The Abbey Road, Rubber Soul and Sgt Pepper’s albums.

And music business analysts believe the entire Beatles’ back catalogue will then be made available on iTunes, possibly in time for next Christmas.

Marketing strategist Michael Bayler says the excitement over the new Beatles releases, downloads, and game are testament to very shrewd management.

“Up to now, the Beatles’ copyright protection has been tight. For many years, the answer for using their music to promote goods was ‘No’,” Bayler said.

“If the music is harder to come by, the value will go up. If the Beatles music was everywhere, there would be a significant drop in the perceived value of the catalogue because of over-exposure.

“There is a perception of exclusivity with the Beatles which means they are still in demand and these developments will be hugely successful.

“Put it this way, if the Beatles’ music had been on every tampon, car and shampoo advert around the world for the last 30 years, how much impact would the album reissue or Rock Band game have? Not much.

“The very scarcity of The Beatles means that there’s a pent-up demand, which means that when they do come out the take-up is huge.

“There’s going to be recognition that music income isn’t coming from where it used to come from. It’s not just about radio play and CDs any more. If you’re looking to maintain your superstar status there, forget about it.

“Music sales have been severely reduced, so for The Beatles to continue as aggressively as they have been, they need to seek alternative avenues.

“The sales of games like Rock Band are phenomenal. And I think these decisions by The Beatles and those in charge of their back catalogue will do very well indeed,” he added. (ANI)

Beatles come alive – in video game avatar

London, Sept 2 (ANI): The Beatles are back with a bang. The Fab Four will now be seen in a video game titled The Beatles: Rock Band.

John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr have been digitally recreated in the game, reports The Daily Star.

The game is scheduled to be out on Wii, Playstation 3 and Xbox 360 on September 9.

Gaming experts believe the charisma of the Beatles could help revive the fortunes of the sagging computer game industry.

A digitally remastered version of the legendary band will also be re-released on the same day. (ANI)

Here’s your chance to win ‘The Beatles’ first contract

London, July 2 (ANI): If you are a die-hard Beatles fan, here’s a chance for you to win the first contract signed by the Fab Four-all you have to do is to guess the estimated price of the document today. n the newly launched competition, contestants have to pay 10 pounds to guess the value of the contract.

And the winner would get to take the highly prized document home, reports the Telegraph.

The fab four’s prospective manager, Brian Epstein, offered to sign the band after he was blown away watching them perform in Liverpool’s Cavern Club.

John Lennon, George Harrison, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr signed the contract in 1962.

The contract bears a mistake where Lennon wrote his name in the wrong part, and it was also signed by some band members’ parents, due to their young ages.

However, the agreement has only changed hands a couple of times over the decades and was acquired for The Imagine Corporation at Christie’s auction house.

Currently insured for 500,000 pounds, the documents is regarded as an irreplaceable piece of musical heritage.

Competition entrants will have to pay 10 pounds for the chance to estimate the contract’s value, as estimated by a panel of experts, if it had been put up for auction in April 2008 at a London auction house.

The winner, who will be announced in around six weeks time, has to match the panel’s estimated value.

One can enter the competition by visiting imagine.uk.com. (ANI)

Crime leaders Kray Twins schemed to take over as The Beatles’ managers

London, June 21 (ANI): The Kray Twins schemed to take over as The Beatles’ managers, it has emerged.

It has also been revealed that Reginald ‘Reggie’ Kray and Ronald ‘Ronnie’ Kray, the foremost organised crime leaders dominating London’s East End during the 1950s and 1960s, asked Glasgow crimelord Arthur Thompson for advice on their plan.

The astonishing tale of how John, Paul, George and Ringo were almost taken over by the twin brothers is set to hit the big screen. Two TV soap stars have been lined up to play the killers.

And the flick’s scriptwriter has revealed how Reggie and Ronnie schemed to take over as the Fab Four’s managers.

“The twins respected Arthur Thompson over his business dealings. And during their only visit to Glasgow they told him they were thinking of managing The Beatles,” the News of the World quoted Colin Fry, 65, who knew the Krays for 25 years, as saying.

The meeting between the three feared crime bosses took place in the early 1960s in the now-demolished Cockatoo Bar in Govanhill.

At the end of their discussions, the Krays stunned the Glasgow Godfather by telling him they were taking over Beatles manager Brian Epstein’s music empire.

It is believed they had been planning to blackmail the fabulously rich pop guru into handing over his business.

“Ronnie and Reggie had been introduced to Epstein one evening at a gay club in London. At the time he was managing The Beatles, who were making colossal amounts of money,” Colin said.

“It was suspected they had evidence he was having a gay affair with a musician. He was keen to keep his sexuality secret.

“So he was told that the Krays were taking The Beatles off him,” Colin added.

However, the twins were talked out of their takeover plan by their Scottish colleague.

“Thompson warned them off and pointed out that if they were linked to The Beatles it would destroy the band’s career. So when the Krays got back to London they just settled for blackmailing poor Brian for cash,” Colin said. (ANI)

Harrison’s letter about Beatles’ hatred of jelly babies pelting up for grabs

London, May 15 (ANI): A letter that late Beatles member George Harrison had written to a fan, detailing that the band hated being pelted with jelly babies on stage, is expected to sell for 800 pounds at auction next month.

After Harrison revealed that he loved eating the sweets, the band was often bombarded with them.

However, in the letter Harrison wrote in 1963 to Lynn Smith, then a 15-year-old schoolgirl, he revealed how the Fab Four hated them.

“We don’t like jelly babies, so think how we feel standing on stage trying to dodge the stuff. Besides it is dangerous,” the Mirror quoted him as having written.

“I was ecstatic when he wrote back,” Smith, from Salisbury, Wilts, added. (ANI)

Broad eyes Ashes glory

London, May 12 (ANI): England fast bowler Stuard Broad aims to join James Anderson and fire England to Ashes glory this summer.

Pace ace Broad is determined to make the most of being handed the new ball in Test cricket.

Fab four Steve Harmison, Matthew Hoggard, Andrew Flintoff and Simon Jones fronted the bowling attack when England beat Australia in this country four years ago to win the Ashes. But that quartet are now out of favour or injured.

Broad and Lancashire star Anderson have been England’s chosen opening pair for the past two Tests against West Indies and are set to continue that relationship at Chester-le-Street on Thursday.

Broad, 22, said: “I was given the new ball against South Africa last year and really want to make it my own. I have always bowled with the new ball for Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire and it is something I have really cherished. It puts pressure on you to take wickets but that is something I enjoy.

“Jimmy and I have played a lot of cricket together now and we talk about deliveries all the time. When Chris Gayle was driving me in the first innings at Lord’s, Jimmy told me to try a couple of overs of just attempting to hit him in the belly button. That was designed to tie him up a bit and luckily one of them swung back a bit and got him out,” The Sun quoted Broad, as saying.

“Communication is key in Test cricket because whoever adapts the quickest seems to prosper,” he added.

England’s clash with West Indies this week is their last Test before the Ashes series against the Aussies gets underway in Cardiff on July 8. (ANI)

Rare Beatles pics published in new book

London, Apr 4 (ANI): Photographs showing British group ‘The Beatles’ at the height of their fame have been published in a new book.

The pictures, taken during the time they held the top five positions in the US singles chart in 1964, show the extent of the band’s popularity and the mania that enveloped them both in the US and the UK at the time.

Photographer Curt Gunther, who had been given access to the Fab Four both on stage and behind the scenes, had clicked the pictures.

He has now published some of the images in a book titled ‘Forty Five Years On: Remembering The Day The Beatles Conquered America’.

Included in the set of black and white photographs was a picture showing fans scrambling onto the stage in front of Paul McCartney and George Harrison. (ANI)

Macca, Ringo Starr reunite to teach youngsters meditation

London, April 2 (ANI): Sir Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr will come together on stage to teach meditation to youngsters.

The surviving Beatles will be seen in a live Internet broadcast from New York on April 3 to promote the spiritual method amongst young people.

The legendary musicians had journeyed to India with their band mates in 1967 to learn transcendental meditation from their then guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.

But according to Fab Four biographer Keith Badman, the pair was said to be less enthusiastic than their fellow rockers George Harrison and John Lennon.

“Ringo left early, basically because he hated the food. Paul followed,” the Daily Express quoted Badman as saying.

“Ironically, it was John and George who were most keen on meditation,” he added. (ANI)

Lennon’s half-sister faces legal action from U.S. author over biopic

London, March 26 (ANI): John Lennon’s half-sister Julia Baird, 62, and the makers of a new biopic on the late Beatle’s childhood face possible legal action from American author Geoffrey Giuliano.

The writer has penned several books on the Fab Four, apart from collaborating with Julia for the biography ‘John Lennon, My Brother’, published in the late Eighties.

While Julia wrote a second book titled ‘Imagine This: Growing Up With My Brother John Lennon’ in 2007 without Giuliano, the author claims that the tome is based on his previous research into the musician’s life.

He claims that half of Julia’s earnings from the upcoming biopic ‘Nowhere Boy’ should be given to him, and plans to pursue his case in the courts.

The movie stars Kristin Scott-Thomas as John’s aunt Mimi and Anne-Marie Duff as his mother Julia.

Giuliano claims that he persuaded Julia to work on the Lennon book shortly after they first met at a 1986 Beatles convention in Liverpool.

“In doing my own research, I filled in a lot of blanks for her. More than half the material in the book is a result of my research,” the Daily Express quoted him as saying.

He even claims that the new material that appeared in Julia’s subsequent, more recent book on Lennon, including the fraught relationship between Mimi and their mother Julia, was a result of his original findings.

“Aadditional information in Imagine This was uncovered by me in my original research. I was the person who conceptualised the original book,” he says.

Julia’s publishers were unavailable for comment. (ANI)