Home2020-09-10T14:10:51-07:00

Three Cheers for the Girls School Bus

By |January 21, 2020|Categories: Photos, solo, Uncategorized|Tags: , , , |

These dark days, I'll take opportunities to laugh wherever I can get them. On a recent trip to Indianapolis I saw this bus, and immediately imagined it as on its way to the imaginary, wink-wink-pornographic girls school Wings celebrated in song back in 1977. It was released as the B side of "Mull of Kintyre" and reached #33 on the U.S. charts. [...]

Dominic Sandbrook on the Early Seventies

By |January 20, 2020|Categories: 1973|

Not-so-Great Britain. Today I happened across something I think Dullblog readers might like: "The Weird World of Seventies Britain," a lecture by the Oxford historian Dominic Sandbrook. (You'll also dig it if, like me, you're a fan of "The Crown.") The details Sandbrook relates—cue Paul's "Power Cut”—are interesting and enjoyable. Spurred by our conversations about the British nightclub scene, I've gotten Sandbrook's [...]

Comments Off on Dominic Sandbrook on the Early Seventies

Best Post-Anthology Tracks?

By |January 18, 2020|Categories: bootlegs|

I was just prowling around on the internet -- as one does on a Saturday night -- and discovered a Lennon demo from December 1968 called "A Case of the Blues." It's a neat little scrap of a song. See what you think. Maybe all of you know it already? What are your favorite demos, outtakes, and alternate versions of Beatles songs [...]

Ethical Reflections on John/Paul

By |January 14, 2020|Categories: Beatle myth, Beatles fiction, fans, John and Paul, Linda McCartney, Uncategorized, Yoko Ono|

I’m writing this because the discussion on the “Were John and Paul Lovers?” post has been niggling at me for a while now. Though it was published more than six years ago, it's one of Hey Dullblog’s most viewed and most contentious posts. And because Michael Gerber and I read every comment as it goes through moderation, we're aware of movements on [...]

What are we doing here, anyway?

By |January 13, 2020|Categories: Uncategorized|

They don't even golf like you or I. I was responding to a comment regarding the podcast Another Kind of Mind, and the application of "emotional intelligence" to The Beatles, and as I wrote the water grew deep enough for me to want this to be its own post. I have long thought—since 1995 or so, when the Anthology finally belched out [...]

Swinging Through The Sixties Podcast

By |January 13, 2020|Categories: 1960, Podcasts|

The many faces (and bodies) of The Profumo Affair. Since everybody seemed to enjoy last week's post on Another Kind of Mind, a podcast offering some interesting new angles on Beatles analysis, I wanted to offer up another Beatle-related podcast I'd run across recently: Swinging Through The Sixties. Though the podcast is Beatle-tilted, it also has quite a bit of general Sixties [...]

Another Kind of Mind Podcast

By |January 3, 2020|Categories: Podcasts|

The gentlemen under discussion, some years prior Reader Laura pointed me to an interesting Beatles podcast called "Another Kind of Mind," and after listening to a bit, I think you guys would love it. AKOM describes itself as "Artists, musicians, & professionals who dissect and challenge Beatles narratives with irreverent, though-provoking analysis.” I think we can all get behind that. The episode [...]

Question Time!

By |January 3, 2020|Categories: Housekeeping|

Private Gripweed indulges his sweet tooth. I am attempting, with only partial success, to stay off my computer. I find, like so many of us, that frequent exposure to Facebook and Twitter makes my mind feel like the bottom of a birdcage; and on top of that, I was in production for Bystander pretty much every day since July 1. So my [...]

John Lennon, Alma Cogan, and the Delicate Mechanism of Efficient Beatles Operations

By |December 21, 2019|Categories: Alma Cogan, Uncategorized|

The Beatles with Alma Cogan This article and this article from the Daily Mail have long intrigued me, less for whether or not it they are definitely true or false than because their truthiness is revealing. They claim that John Lennon had an affair with Alma Cogan, a British singer eight years his senior, and that he apparently believed she [...]

Go to Top