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Articles related to "Brian Epstein"
The Beatles Arrival in America 1964 The start of Beatlemania when the Beatles arrive in New York for appearances on television and live concerts. the beatles in america 1964 • beatlemania • brian epstein • the british invasion • capitol records feb 1964 beatle publicity campaign
The Beatles Success Story in 1964 The songs,the albums the movies and other accomplishments of the Beatles during 1964. beatles 1964 • british invasion • fab four • hard day's night • beatlemania
The Beatles: The Early Years in Europe The Beatles group member's background and their success in England. the beatles 1960s music • british invasion • beatlemania spreads to europe • john lennon • paul mccartney
The British Invasion in 1960s Pop Music A look at some of the groups and singers, besides the Beatles, who comprised the British Invasion in America. the beatles • other british rock groups • brian epstein • british groups • 1964-1966 british invasion
Do a Fab Beatles Tour of London A pocket walking guide leads Beatles fans in the footsteps of John, Paul, George and Ringo, including Abbey Road, Apple in Savile Row, and to McCartney's London home. beatles london walk • fab four guided walk book • sir paul mccartney's london home • abbey road pedestrian crossing and recording studi • ringo starr
Fab Four Adds to the Beatles Discography? Beatlemania has not erupted again but Beatles fans had a pleasant surprise with the appearance of Revolution 1, Take 20, an unreleased track from The White Album. fab four • revolution 1 • the beatles discography • revolution 9 • beatlemania
Teen Idols Circa 1964-1966 An examination of teen idols from 1964-1966, who they were, and some of the ways they were marketed and promoted teen idols 1960s • beatles • british invasion • mia farrow • mod look
Bafta TV Nominees / Battle of the Britcoms Finals The Bafta TV nominees have been announced bafta • awards • british television
Beatles First Album and its Different Versions Released in March 1963 in the UK, Please Please Me was the Beatles' first album. In America the album was known as The Early Beatles and had a different track listing. beatles • first album • debut album • please please me • difference to american version
British Bad Boy Joe Orton Did this lewd scribe take his dead mum's dentures, switching them for props in his black comedy Entertaining Mr.Sloane? Joe Orton: the playwright who "got away with it". prick up your ears • entertaining mr sloane • loot • what the butler saw • kenneth halliwell
Robyn Hitchcock Says "Goodnight Oslo" England's Robyn Hitchcock follows up the release of two box set collections with Goodnight Oslo, a reunion with The Venus 3. rem guitar player peter buck • the decemberists colin meloy guests • the soft boys underwater moonlight • tryptisol librium carbitol • goodnight oslo by robyn hitchcock
And the Winners Are ..(Bafta and Battle of the Britcom Results) Winners of this years BAFTA TV Awards and the British Television @ Suite 101 Battle of the Britcoms Finals. bafta • fawlty towers • blackadder • only fools and horses • father ted
Beatlerama Canada 1994 - Cynthia Powell Lennon Cynthia Lennon in candid conversation about Yoko Ono, son Julian Lennon, John Lennon's universal appeal and her favorite Beatles song. cynthia powell lennon • julian lennon • john lennon • yoko ono • pauline sutcilffe
Most Popular Beatles Songs Beatlemania may have grown too fast for a group of highly individualistic and creative young musicians who burst onto the global pop music scene. most popular beatles songs • beatlemania • beatles first royalty agreement • top requested beatle hits songs • most requested beatle singles from 1965 to 1970
Prick Up Your Ears by John Lahr John Lahr's 1978 biography tells the wildly entertaining and compelling story of the incomparable 1960's British playwright Joe Orton, who was murdered at the age of 34. prick up your ears by john lahr • biography of joe orton • kenneth halliwell • theatre stories • british playwrights
The British Invasion, Part I We're back to history this week with a look at the British Invasion. Basically, all British groups wanted to break through to the States, because that was rock's biggest market. They also wanted to go because the music that inspired them to become musicians came from there. America was a sort of rock paradise, where the music that was still offensive in England was now accepted by all. Many tried to release records through large American labels, all were refused. Those who tried to release them through independents were generally crushed. It seemed as if the States wanted nothing to do with the Brits and that it was an impenetrable music industry. The Beatles, however, would change all that... british invasion • 1963 • 1964 • rock and roll • rock history
The Brits and rock: Rockers (1963-64, Part II) We continue our look at rock in the United Kingdom this week with a look at the other side of England's youth: the Rockers. In essence, two groups of teens dominated the English rock industry, the Mods and the Rockers. Being distinct in nearly all of their nuances, these two also preferred distinctly different groups. The Rockers adopted the Teddy Boy styles that had captured the youth before them, and, for most Rockers, the music that they received from across the ocean, rock and roll. beatles • john lennon • paul mccartney • george harrison • ringo starr
Bee Gees Biography Barry, Maurice, and Robin Gibb, better known as the Bee Gees, stormed through the disco era captivating all that heard their beautiful falsetto voices. barry gibb • maurice gibb • robin gibb • the bee gees • bee gees biography
British Invasion: Part II We continue the British Invasion this week with a look at who followed the Beatles into America. The American market was one of the hardest to break into, but once the Beatles had landed, the doors were open for those who had become famous in the UK to enter rock's home grounds. "The biggest thing the Beatles did was to open the American market to all British artists," said Arthur Howes, planner of the early Beatles' tours of England. "Nobody had been able to get in before the Beatles. They alone did it. I had brought over lots of American stars, but nobody had gone over there." The All-American sound of local radio stations dissapated to reveal a new force, primarily guitar bands that wrote, sang, and played all their own pieces. The mass-production of bubble-gum pop songs was to nearly come to an end, and certainly was over in the hearts of the teens. british invasion • beatles • freddie and the dreamers • herman's hermits • dave clark five |
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