- From Faith Current: “The Sacred Ordinary: St. Peter’s Church Hall” - May 1, 2023
- A brief (?) hiatus - April 22, 2023
- Something Happened - March 6, 2023
In August 2016, a whole lifetime ago, Devin, Nancy and I looked at the vast pile of writing on this site and asked each other, “Which posts still hold up? Which ones do we like best?” So we read back and back and back, and put together a list, which I’m going to append to the end of this post.
The pile has only grown larger since then. To be honest, I’ve never really been satisfied with how we surface old material on Hey Dullblog; the posts at the bottom are simply an algorithm—does anybody click on them? To make things worse, I’ve been terrible about tagging posts, so there’s really no efficient way to find all the posts about, say, Brian Epstein, much less all the ones that mention Nat Weiss. With 775 posts, the housekeeping snarl becomes more daunting by the year.
But these recent posts about Beatles podcasts make me think that the appetite for Fab-related deep-dives is actually growing, and this is borne out by our site traffic, which is the largest it’s ever been. So here’s our list of Dullblog’s Greatest Hits from the site’s beginning in 2008 to mid-2016. Enjoy.
What Sexy Sadie Did
The Dizz Gillespie Story
Book Review: The Beatles’ Second Album
My Night of Rutlesmania
The Vision of Joe Orton
John, Paul, George, Ringo – and George? (with comments)
I’ve just seen a face … I think
Thoughts on “Paperback Writer”
Review of Living in the Material World (interview with Shirley Wicevich)
McCartney as the Dickens of Rock
The Argonaut Folly (Part 3)
Lines for George
Keep Em Out vs Let Em In: An Angle on Lennon and McCartney
The Beatles as Wicked-Looking Innovators
John in “Nether-Nether Land”?
Rundgren v. the Beatles
RAM (Paul McCartney Archive Collection)
McCartney’s Songs of Empathy
Fool’s Goldman: Reliving The Lives of John Lennon
The Forgotten Beatles
Time-Lapse Photography
Wings Over an Alternate Universe
I’ve Just Seen (Part of) a Face: McCartney on The Colbert Report
Book Review: Beatles vs. Stones
Harry Nilsson: The Shadow Beatle
What if Brian Epstein Lived?
Three Ways: Beatles Write About Landscapes
Bad Alternate Beatles History
Literary Approaches to the Beatles: or, the Difference Between a book and a Record
McCartney and Thackeray: “Queenie Eye” and Vanity Fair
Cries and Whispers, Crashes and Flutters: 10 Favorite Beatles Musical Micro-moments
Starrtime: Defining Moments from Ringo’s Non-Beatles Movies (parts 1 and 2)
“Revolution #9” as One of the Top 5 Beatles Songs? Get Real.
“Understanding Fuddy-Duddy Beatles Haters”
John Lennon and Attachment Disorder
Chaos and Creation in the Backyard: Or, Music to Confront a Small-Scale Void By
The Beatles and History
“I’m So Tired”: Responsive Notes on the Phenomenon of Beatles Fatigue
Merch, Mind Games, and the Serious Proximity Buzz
“I Hope We Passed the Audition”: How The Beatles’ Encounter with Abbey Road Studios Changed the World
Let It Be: A Missed Opportunity
Kiss as the Anti-Beatles
Jude Southerland Kessler’s Lennon Books: Not Nonfiction
The Black Album: Solo Beatles According to Ethan Hawke
Thoughts on the Python Reunion (and the Beatles)
Joshua Wolf Shenk on Lennon/McCartney (3 takes)
McCartney at Candlestick Park
Interview with Tom Doyle (Man on the Run)
Interview with Luca Perasi (McCartney Recording Sessions)
Fab Foto Fakes: Photoshopping Beatles History
Plastic Ono Band: Threat or Menace?
George and Ringo: The Brothers Fab
The Beatles and National Lampoon: Magical Misery Tour
John and Paul, Friends and Rivals
“Hello Goodbye”: The First Crack
Comments and the Spam Filter
My Yoko Problem . . . and Yours?
Allen Klein
The Meaning of Fun: The Paul is Dead Rumor
Was John Lennon Bipolar?
Explaining Beatlemania via Sex at Dawn
The Beatles’ Swan Song
Lester Bangs’ Anti-Beatles Sermon
Sgt Pepper and Psychedelic Utopianism
Interview with Chip Madinger (Lennonology)
Long list! I think I already read half of it, I’ll take a look at the rest. Thank you.
.
P.D. “My Night of Rutlesmania” is one of my favorites.
They look like silent film comedians in that photo.
Yes! That’s why I used it.
Paul tells a story about that photo in some Beatles book, and I’d never seen it myself. My God! What must parents have thought, in 1963? Easily more outrageous than the hair. Also, excellent collection of greatest hits.
I have seen photos of Eddie Cochran’s last UK tour (George Harrison followed it to study his guitar technique) and Eddie wore eyeliner.
I’ve read pretty much every Dullblog post (this is more of a confession than a boast). My method was simple: I’d read through a page’s worth of posts. Then I’d hit the “Older” button. Then I’d read all that page’s posts. Then I’d hit the “Older” button again. I found that the more I did this the more posts I was able to read, so I kept doing it. It worked like a charm until one day I looked to my left and there was no more “Older” button. I deduced from this that there were no more posts left, and that this was because I’d read them all. I realise this method has limited use for people who don’t have as much time on their hands as I did in 2016.
P. S. Hoping to get more active on the site again soon, work was manic towards the end of last year and so far 2020 has been one long detox involving, among other things, spending less time online. But the things I want to say are many and their Beatles relevance is much. Can’t keep ’em down forever.
“I was a bad influence on the Beatles”
James Taylor boarded a flight to London shortly after New Year’s Day 1968. His friend had given him the number of Peter Asher, the brother of McCartney’s then girlfriend Jane Asher; he had just been hired as a talent scout for the Beatles’ new label. Asher liked Taylor’s demo and arranged an audition with McCartney and Harrison. “I was very nervous. But I was also, you know, on fire,” he laughs. “In my sort of mellow, sensitive way.” He played his song Something In the Way She Moves (a line Harrison pinched for the opening line of his song Something) and they signed him then and there to make his eponymous first album. At the time, the Beatles were making the White Album. “We intersected in the studio a lot,” says Taylor. “They were leaving as I was coming in. I often came in early and would sit in the control room and listen to them recording – and hear playbacks of what they had just cut.” Did you hang out together? “Yeah,” he says. I ask if the band was unravelling by that point. “Well, it was a slow unraveling, but it was also an extremely creative unravelling.”
Heroin and other opiates were very available and very cheap in London at the time. “I picked up pretty soon after I got here,” he says. “I started by …” he pauses. “I shouldn’t go into this kind of stuff. It’s not an AA meeting.” Then he continues. “But you used to be able to buy something called Collis Browne’s Chlorodyne, which was an old-fashioned medication. Essentially, it was a tincture of opium, so you’d drink a couple of bottles and you could take the edge off.” Was it hard to kick the habit, given the circles he was moving in? “Well, I was a bad influence to be around the Beatles at that time, too.” Why? “Because I gave John opiates.” Did you introduce him to them? “I don’t know,” he says. Lennon, by many accounts, picked up a heroin habit in 1968 that contributed to an unhealable rift in the band.
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/feb/17/james-taylor-i-was-a-bad-influence-on-the-beatles-lennon-love-and-a-life-in-song
The Beatles HELP! trailer re-edited as an action/thriller film:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KxeLM8IqDao
That? Was funny. Fan creativity never ceases to amaze me. Thank you for linking it!
https://screenrant.com/beatles-get-back-documentary-release-date-peter-jackson/
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