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This programme contains some strong language | 0:00:02 | 0:00:04 | |
Record shops were great to spend time in. | 0:00:04 | 0:00:07 | |
I could spend three or four hours just strolling round. | 0:00:07 | 0:00:11 | |
That was one of the most exciting places to hang out. | 0:00:11 | 0:00:14 | |
You break the veneer of the hip joint employee. | 0:00:14 | 0:00:19 | |
All it is, is a kind of like, "All right?" - just one of them, | 0:00:19 | 0:00:22 | |
and you're like, "I own this town and everything in it." | 0:00:22 | 0:00:26 | |
That's how it felt. | 0:00:26 | 0:00:27 | |
When people walked around town, | 0:00:29 | 0:00:31 | |
if you had some albums under your arm, it told people who you were. | 0:00:31 | 0:00:35 | |
Something to read on the bus on the way home from the record shop. | 0:00:35 | 0:00:39 | |
Really a magical moment, when you rush home and you put the music on. | 0:00:39 | 0:00:44 | |
You'd have to extract the record from its sleeve | 0:00:44 | 0:00:47 | |
and place it on the turntable. | 0:00:47 | 0:00:49 | |
The first time you drop a needle on a record, | 0:00:49 | 0:00:52 | |
it's ten points if there's a little bit of skid and then... | 0:00:52 | 0:00:55 | |
Bump, biting into it, as the needle hit the vinyl. | 0:00:55 | 0:00:59 | |
And then the music comes in. | 0:01:01 | 0:01:03 | |
There's nothing as wonderful as that. | 0:01:03 | 0:01:06 | |
The unsung hero in popular music's epic history is not a performer, | 0:01:12 | 0:01:17 | |
or a band, or even a song. | 0:01:17 | 0:01:20 | |
It's this - the long-playing album. | 0:01:20 | 0:01:23 | |
A creative canvas on which musicians could express themselves | 0:01:28 | 0:01:31 | |
like never before. | 0:01:31 | 0:01:33 | |
It turned record labels into business empires, | 0:01:36 | 0:01:41 | |
turned humble musicians into exalted immortals... | 0:01:41 | 0:01:46 | |
..and helped transform popular music from disposable teenage distraction | 0:01:47 | 0:01:53 | |
to an art form. | 0:01:53 | 0:01:55 | |
This is the story of how, from the mid-'60s to the late '70s, | 0:01:55 | 0:01:59 | |
the long-playing album changed popular music for ever... | 0:01:59 | 0:02:03 | |
..the era when albums ruled the world. | 0:02:05 | 0:02:09 | |
Around 130 grams of vinyl and acetate mix, 1,600 feet of groove, | 0:02:15 | 0:02:22 | |
33 and a third revolutions per minute - | 0:02:22 | 0:02:25 | |
the long-playing vinyl record was unveiled to the world | 0:02:25 | 0:02:29 | |
by Columbia Records in 1948. | 0:02:29 | 0:02:31 | |
With up to 22 and a half minutes of sound per side, | 0:02:36 | 0:02:40 | |
it was the perfect vehicle for classical music | 0:02:40 | 0:02:43 | |
and soundtracks to popular musicals. | 0:02:43 | 0:02:45 | |
It was a product aimed at, and bought by, adults. | 0:02:45 | 0:02:50 | |
I remember a lot of soundtrack albums. | 0:02:50 | 0:02:52 | |
Your parents went to see a show or a film, then they'd get | 0:02:52 | 0:02:57 | |
West Side Story soundtrack, or Oklahoma! soundtrack or My Fair Lady. | 0:02:57 | 0:03:02 | |
And it was very much... I saw LPs as being part of the grown-up world. | 0:03:02 | 0:03:07 | |
Along with soundtracks and classical music, the LP soon became home | 0:03:08 | 0:03:12 | |
to easy listening collections and jazz recordings. | 0:03:12 | 0:03:16 | |
But while parents listened to their LPs, | 0:03:16 | 0:03:19 | |
teenagers were dancing to a different beat. | 0:03:19 | 0:03:22 | |
# Wop-bop-a-loo-bop a-lop-bam-boom Tutti frutti... # | 0:03:22 | 0:03:25 | |
This was rock'n'roll, preserve of a smaller, cheaper disc. | 0:03:25 | 0:03:30 | |
A 45 is a little guy with a big fat hole in the middle, | 0:03:30 | 0:03:34 | |
slips on to this penis. | 0:03:34 | 0:03:36 | |
How very phallic, how very sexual. | 0:03:36 | 0:03:39 | |
But as the '50s became the '60s, | 0:03:39 | 0:03:42 | |
teenagers' disposable income grew and rock'n'roll, | 0:03:42 | 0:03:46 | |
increasingly called pop music, began to creep onto the grooves of the LP. | 0:03:46 | 0:03:51 | |
Many albums of that era | 0:03:51 | 0:03:53 | |
by pop artists contained the singles and then some duff tracks, | 0:03:53 | 0:03:58 | |
a few covers, and some filler. | 0:03:58 | 0:04:01 | |
The artistic pinnacle is a hit single as a pop artist, | 0:04:01 | 0:04:05 | |
and an album, in a way, is often always perceived | 0:04:05 | 0:04:08 | |
as a kind of cash-in on the single rather than the other way round. | 0:04:08 | 0:04:12 | |
The artistic opportunity the LP could provide | 0:04:12 | 0:04:15 | |
was still waiting to be discovered. | 0:04:15 | 0:04:18 | |
Intellectually, it was fallow. | 0:04:18 | 0:04:20 | |
The minds of the young people hadn't really expanded yet. | 0:04:20 | 0:04:25 | |
# I'm all shook up. # | 0:04:25 | 0:04:27 | |
But change was in the air. | 0:04:30 | 0:04:33 | |
In New York's Greenwich Village, folk music was about to show | 0:04:33 | 0:04:37 | |
that the LP could be the canvas for a new kind of musical expression. | 0:04:37 | 0:04:41 | |
In the early 1960s, American folk music was enjoying a renaissance. | 0:04:41 | 0:04:47 | |
Folk captured the spirit of protest | 0:04:47 | 0:04:50 | |
in a society still scarred by racial segregation. | 0:04:50 | 0:04:54 | |
Society itself is changing during the early '60s, | 0:04:54 | 0:04:57 | |
both technologically and socially, | 0:04:57 | 0:04:59 | |
and there's a growing sense | 0:04:59 | 0:05:01 | |
that music itself should address some of that. | 0:05:01 | 0:05:03 | |
# I've seen trouble all my days... # | 0:05:03 | 0:05:07 | |
Into this scene stepped a 20-year-old Bob Dylan. | 0:05:07 | 0:05:12 | |
His 1962 debut was a collection of folk standards. | 0:05:12 | 0:05:16 | |
But for his second record, he did something different. | 0:05:16 | 0:05:20 | |
# Oh, where have you been, my blue-eyed son? # | 0:05:20 | 0:05:23 | |
He recorded an album almost entirely made up of original songs. | 0:05:23 | 0:05:27 | |
# Oh, where have you been, my darling young one? # | 0:05:27 | 0:05:30 | |
That marks a change | 0:05:30 | 0:05:32 | |
and one that's quite noticeable among his peers | 0:05:32 | 0:05:35 | |
and general public, that the songs are credited to Bob Dylan. | 0:05:35 | 0:05:39 | |
He is the artist behind this album. | 0:05:39 | 0:05:42 | |
Here were 13 songs that tackled love, war, peace and race. | 0:05:42 | 0:05:48 | |
I ran into him at a party, | 0:05:48 | 0:05:50 | |
and he was in a back bedroom, playing to some girls, | 0:05:50 | 0:05:53 | |
trying to impress them, and he played Masters Of War | 0:05:53 | 0:05:57 | |
and A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall, and I was like, what?! | 0:05:57 | 0:06:00 | |
It was the most powerful thing I had ever heard. | 0:06:00 | 0:06:02 | |
# Come, you masters of war | 0:06:02 | 0:06:05 | |
# You that build the big guns... # | 0:06:07 | 0:06:09 | |
Freewheelin' was Dylan's statement on the world around him. | 0:06:09 | 0:06:14 | |
Bob Dylan was clearly developing the idea | 0:06:14 | 0:06:19 | |
of looking at the album as a collection. | 0:06:19 | 0:06:22 | |
There was serious thought put into the make-up | 0:06:22 | 0:06:25 | |
of what this album was going to be. | 0:06:25 | 0:06:28 | |
This was a landmark. | 0:06:28 | 0:06:32 | |
This was a new chapter in American music. | 0:06:32 | 0:06:36 | |
# The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind | 0:06:36 | 0:06:42 | |
# The answer is blowin' in the wind... # | 0:06:42 | 0:06:45 | |
Everything about Freewheelin' seemed to herald a new era, | 0:06:45 | 0:06:49 | |
right down to the cover. | 0:06:49 | 0:06:51 | |
Nobody did covers like that. | 0:06:51 | 0:06:53 | |
It was so confident, so oblique, so casual, like, | 0:06:53 | 0:06:57 | |
"Yeah, I got a girlfriend, so what? | 0:06:57 | 0:07:00 | |
"Here she is. It's not glamorous, it's nothing. It's just reality." | 0:07:00 | 0:07:03 | |
The whole thing, just...powerful. | 0:07:03 | 0:07:07 | |
# I'll know my song well before I start singing | 0:07:07 | 0:07:11 | |
# And it's a hard And it's a hard... # | 0:07:11 | 0:07:13 | |
The expansive canvas of the long player | 0:07:13 | 0:07:16 | |
had allowed Bob Dylan to find his voice. | 0:07:16 | 0:07:19 | |
In return, Dylan had given the album a new purpose. | 0:07:19 | 0:07:23 | |
While the early albums from British bands like The Rolling Stones, | 0:07:28 | 0:07:32 | |
The Beatles and The Kinks were still just collections of pop songs, | 0:07:32 | 0:07:36 | |
Dylan's next records would continue | 0:07:36 | 0:07:38 | |
to push the boundaries of what an album could be. | 0:07:38 | 0:07:41 | |
He pushes that further and further, | 0:07:41 | 0:07:44 | |
by introducing 11-minute songs | 0:07:44 | 0:07:47 | |
on Highway 61 Revisited or Desolation Row, | 0:07:47 | 0:07:50 | |
and then having what is one of the very first double albums | 0:07:50 | 0:07:54 | |
with Blonde On Blonde, where you have side-sprawling tracks. | 0:07:54 | 0:07:59 | |
And with these albums now charting in the US top 10, | 0:07:59 | 0:08:03 | |
Dylan's vision for the album was entering the mainstream. | 0:08:03 | 0:08:06 | |
Dylan's career, in a way, provides a blueprint | 0:08:06 | 0:08:10 | |
for how artists that follow him want to pursue their careers. | 0:08:10 | 0:08:14 | |
They want to be able to pursue their own artistic vision | 0:08:14 | 0:08:18 | |
and they want to pursue it on album. | 0:08:18 | 0:08:20 | |
In California, this artistic vision was heightened | 0:08:21 | 0:08:25 | |
by the addition of a new ingredient. | 0:08:25 | 0:08:27 | |
PSYCHEDELIC ELECTRIC GUITAR PLAYS | 0:08:27 | 0:08:32 | |
Diethylamide, popularly known as LSD. | 0:08:41 | 0:08:45 | |
If you haven't heard of LSD, you will. | 0:08:45 | 0:08:48 | |
LSD was the catalyst behind a psychedelic subculture | 0:08:48 | 0:08:53 | |
that had the album at its core. | 0:08:53 | 0:08:55 | |
A whole kind of chunk of your mind gets opened up | 0:08:57 | 0:09:02 | |
and a lot of the musicians had fairly good experiences with acid. | 0:09:02 | 0:09:07 | |
By 1966, the folk music revival had reached California, | 0:09:07 | 0:09:12 | |
where bands like Jefferson Airplane | 0:09:12 | 0:09:14 | |
had absorbed it into a new musical melting pot. | 0:09:14 | 0:09:17 | |
# Lord, look at me here... # | 0:09:17 | 0:09:20 | |
Jack and Jorma were blues men. | 0:09:20 | 0:09:24 | |
Paul liked outer space, and Marty wrote love songs. | 0:09:24 | 0:09:28 | |
And I like folk music, | 0:09:28 | 0:09:30 | |
so you got a real smorgasbord of stuff, and I liked it that way. | 0:09:30 | 0:09:35 | |
But it was the acid that took the music of the West Coast underground | 0:09:35 | 0:09:39 | |
in entirely new directions. | 0:09:39 | 0:09:42 | |
Expansive psychedelic rock LPs like this were tailor-made | 0:09:44 | 0:09:48 | |
for their tune-in, drop-out audience. | 0:09:48 | 0:09:51 | |
I mean, one reason why album culture suited psychedelic culture | 0:09:51 | 0:09:56 | |
is that if you were sprawled out or sitting cross-legged | 0:09:56 | 0:10:00 | |
and being semi-meditative to the music, the last thing you wanted | 0:10:00 | 0:10:03 | |
was to have to get up and, you know, turn the record over | 0:10:03 | 0:10:07 | |
or change the record any more often than you had to. | 0:10:07 | 0:10:11 | |
Call your friends and come on over | 0:10:12 | 0:10:14 | |
and everybody sitting listening to the whole album all at once, | 0:10:14 | 0:10:19 | |
you made comments about it afterwards, smoked a bunch of dope | 0:10:19 | 0:10:22 | |
or have wine or whatever you do, and it was great. | 0:10:22 | 0:10:24 | |
But while this new audience | 0:10:28 | 0:10:30 | |
devoured the records of the psychedelic scene, | 0:10:30 | 0:10:33 | |
one place this new album-based music couldn't be heard was radio. | 0:10:33 | 0:10:38 | |
# I need love, love | 0:10:38 | 0:10:40 | |
# To ease my mind... # | 0:10:40 | 0:10:43 | |
The big American radio stations, | 0:10:43 | 0:10:44 | |
I mean, the giants, you know, in LA, | 0:10:44 | 0:10:47 | |
93 KHJ, for example, the Boss Jocks, they were playing singles, | 0:10:47 | 0:10:51 | |
so, you know, there wasn't a lot of platform on air | 0:10:51 | 0:10:56 | |
for album music until the arrival of KSAN in San Francisco. | 0:10:56 | 0:10:59 | |
KSAN was a local station that revolutionised American radio. | 0:11:01 | 0:11:07 | |
In 1967, a KSAN DJ connected to the psychedelic scene, | 0:11:07 | 0:11:11 | |
called Tom Donahue, stopped broadcasting chart hits | 0:11:11 | 0:11:14 | |
and started playing album tracks instead. | 0:11:14 | 0:11:17 | |
This is Tom Donahue at KSAN, | 0:11:17 | 0:11:19 | |
K-S-A-N, Metromedia Stereo 95, San Francisco, Oakland. | 0:11:19 | 0:11:23 | |
This new format was an instant success. | 0:11:23 | 0:11:27 | |
By the late '60s, | 0:11:27 | 0:11:29 | |
every town in America had an FM station | 0:11:29 | 0:11:34 | |
with at least a late-night free-form show, if not all day long. | 0:11:34 | 0:11:40 | |
It was a massive game changer. | 0:11:40 | 0:11:41 | |
The origination of the engine, | 0:11:41 | 0:11:46 | |
the first part of the engine | 0:11:46 | 0:11:48 | |
that powered album sales in America through the '70s. | 0:11:48 | 0:11:52 | |
Donahue's radio revolution soon crossed the Atlantic | 0:11:53 | 0:11:57 | |
and found its way aboard the pirate radio stations | 0:11:57 | 0:12:00 | |
based off the coast of Britain. | 0:12:00 | 0:12:02 | |
The turning point for me | 0:12:02 | 0:12:04 | |
was hearing John Peel do Perfume Garden late at night out there, | 0:12:04 | 0:12:08 | |
and as John described it one night, | 0:12:08 | 0:12:10 | |
in his stone solitude in the middle of the North Sea, | 0:12:10 | 0:12:12 | |
playing this amazing music that he'd brought back from America with him. | 0:12:12 | 0:12:18 | |
The concept of the album as a revolutionary musical force | 0:12:18 | 0:12:22 | |
was spreading. | 0:12:22 | 0:12:24 | |
And in London, it would now emerge as the object | 0:12:24 | 0:12:27 | |
and the idea that would dominate the next decade of music history. | 0:12:27 | 0:12:31 | |
MUSIC: I Can't Explain by The Who | 0:12:31 | 0:12:35 | |
By the mid-'60s, swinging London had | 0:12:38 | 0:12:40 | |
become the hippest city in the world. | 0:12:40 | 0:12:43 | |
Acts like The Who, Dusty Springfield | 0:12:43 | 0:12:46 | |
and Manfred Mann had scored hit single | 0:12:46 | 0:12:49 | |
after international hit single. | 0:12:49 | 0:12:51 | |
But the biggest singles band of them all, The Beatles, had been | 0:12:52 | 0:12:56 | |
absorbing American album music, from Dylan to the psychedelic scene. | 0:12:56 | 0:13:02 | |
At the start of '60s, your parents loved them. | 0:13:02 | 0:13:05 | |
Your mum would take you to see Help!, A Hard Day's Night, | 0:13:05 | 0:13:08 | |
and maybe she'd buy the LP for herself. | 0:13:08 | 0:13:11 | |
And by the end of the '60s, your parents despised The Beatles | 0:13:11 | 0:13:14 | |
and they were symbolic of everything that | 0:13:14 | 0:13:17 | |
they were afraid was going to happen to you - | 0:13:17 | 0:13:20 | |
that you were going to grow your hair, you were going to take drugs. | 0:13:20 | 0:13:23 | |
When I saw that Rubber Soul album cover and they're looking down, | 0:13:23 | 0:13:27 | |
you looked at them and went, | 0:13:27 | 0:13:28 | |
"Uh-oh, these guys have been psychedelicised." | 0:13:28 | 0:13:31 | |
After The Beatles ended their 1966 world tour, they returned to | 0:13:31 | 0:13:35 | |
London's Abbey Road Studios to begin another recording session, | 0:13:35 | 0:13:39 | |
but this time, things would be different. | 0:13:39 | 0:13:43 | |
Out of the blue, John says to George Martin, "On this record, | 0:13:43 | 0:13:47 | |
"we're going to create sounds that no-one's ever heard before. | 0:13:47 | 0:13:51 | |
"We don't have to worry about reproducing them live | 0:13:51 | 0:13:54 | |
"because we're never going to tour again." | 0:13:54 | 0:13:56 | |
At the end of 1966, | 0:13:56 | 0:13:58 | |
The Beatles started work on Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | 0:13:58 | 0:14:01 | |
and so began the most ambitious album recording session to date. | 0:14:01 | 0:14:06 | |
When you see shots of George Harrison bundling out of a Rolls-Royce | 0:14:06 | 0:14:11 | |
and in through the door of Abbey Road with reams and reams of A4, | 0:14:11 | 0:14:15 | |
waving at everyone, head down, | 0:14:15 | 0:14:17 | |
getting into the studio, getting to work, it's like... | 0:14:17 | 0:14:21 | |
They must have felt like they were splitting the atom in there. | 0:14:21 | 0:14:24 | |
For those inside Abbey Road, it was clear the band wanted this | 0:14:24 | 0:14:28 | |
to be a different kind of recording session. | 0:14:28 | 0:14:32 | |
John, especially, was looking for something new. | 0:14:32 | 0:14:35 | |
Things weren't in the studio to create things new, | 0:14:35 | 0:14:39 | |
so that was the gauntlet that was thrown down. | 0:14:39 | 0:14:41 | |
Analogue four-track studio technology | 0:14:41 | 0:14:44 | |
was to be pushed to its limits. | 0:14:44 | 0:14:46 | |
Every time we were going to use an instrument, | 0:14:46 | 0:14:48 | |
they were fed up with listening to a guitar sounding like a guitar, | 0:14:48 | 0:14:51 | |
or a piano sounding like a piano, a cowbell sounding like a cowbell, | 0:14:51 | 0:14:55 | |
so we did all we could to try and mask those sounds. | 0:14:55 | 0:14:58 | |
You knew it was a guitar, but it had some sort of quirkiness to it. | 0:14:58 | 0:15:02 | |
This intensive approach to recording was another influence picked up | 0:15:03 | 0:15:08 | |
from the American psychedelic scene. | 0:15:08 | 0:15:10 | |
The idea that it's possible to really spend time in the studio | 0:15:10 | 0:15:14 | |
and experiment and explore. | 0:15:14 | 0:15:17 | |
Brian Wilson was doing that with Pet Sounds | 0:15:17 | 0:15:19 | |
and Paul sort of picked that baton up as well. | 0:15:19 | 0:15:21 | |
Here we go, then. We'll send the tape. Are you ready, Richard? | 0:15:21 | 0:15:26 | |
Marshalling the band was veteran producer George Martin. | 0:15:26 | 0:15:29 | |
OK, Jeff? Right, here we go. | 0:15:29 | 0:15:31 | |
He turned the studio into the LP's final instrument. | 0:15:31 | 0:15:35 | |
George was brilliant at that. | 0:15:35 | 0:15:37 | |
He was like a schoolmaster and we were the schoolchildren, you know? | 0:15:37 | 0:15:40 | |
The last tracks on the record were laid down in April 1967. | 0:15:40 | 0:15:44 | |
That night, set up a monitor mix, | 0:15:44 | 0:15:46 | |
and there was just the most unbelievable atmosphere. | 0:15:46 | 0:15:50 | |
# Woke up, fell out of bed Dragged a comb across my head... # | 0:15:50 | 0:15:55 | |
No-one had ever heard anything that sounded like that in their lives, | 0:15:55 | 0:15:59 | |
it was like going from a square black and white picture | 0:15:59 | 0:16:03 | |
into CinemaScope Technicolor. | 0:16:03 | 0:16:04 | |
And Ron Richards was sitting on the floor by the mixing console, | 0:16:04 | 0:16:07 | |
and Ron was the producer of The Hollies. | 0:16:07 | 0:16:10 | |
And Ron had his head in his hands | 0:16:10 | 0:16:12 | |
and he said, "I'm going to give the business up." | 0:16:12 | 0:16:15 | |
That was his intention, it was that amazing. | 0:16:15 | 0:16:18 | |
# Ah... # | 0:16:18 | 0:16:23 | |
What The Beatles had created was arguably | 0:16:23 | 0:16:25 | |
the world's first concept album. | 0:16:25 | 0:16:28 | |
Since they weren't touring any more, | 0:16:28 | 0:16:30 | |
The Beatles would go on the road in their imaginations | 0:16:30 | 0:16:34 | |
as Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. | 0:16:34 | 0:16:37 | |
# It was 20 years ago today... # | 0:16:37 | 0:16:39 | |
This is the start of his concept. It was some fictitious band | 0:16:39 | 0:16:42 | |
and they were tuning up at the Albert Hall. | 0:16:42 | 0:16:44 | |
They're creating a kind of quasi-live set | 0:16:44 | 0:16:49 | |
and bring in a lot of ideas | 0:16:49 | 0:16:52 | |
that are quintessentially English, you have to say, you know? | 0:16:52 | 0:16:55 | |
The sort of musical idea of... they had a brass band. | 0:16:55 | 0:16:58 | |
And then you hear a laughter. | 0:17:00 | 0:17:03 | |
The reason why the laughter's there is that we're supposed to be | 0:17:03 | 0:17:05 | |
the audience, the listener of that album is supposed to be | 0:17:05 | 0:17:08 | |
sitting in the audience of a theatre. | 0:17:08 | 0:17:11 | |
# We're Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | 0:17:11 | 0:17:16 | |
# We hope you will enjoy the show... # | 0:17:16 | 0:17:19 | |
And the way they flow into each other. | 0:17:19 | 0:17:21 | |
CHEERING | 0:17:21 | 0:17:23 | |
The way that the stories and the themes reappear. | 0:17:26 | 0:17:28 | |
# We're Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | 0:17:28 | 0:17:32 | |
# We hope you have enjoyed the show... # | 0:17:32 | 0:17:35 | |
There's a cohesive thread that binds all these songs together. | 0:17:35 | 0:17:39 | |
The album has a beginning and a middle and an end. | 0:17:39 | 0:17:41 | |
This was a revelation. | 0:17:41 | 0:17:43 | |
# Sgt Pepper's Lonely Sgt Pepper's Lonely... # | 0:17:44 | 0:17:48 | |
The concept of an imaginary band on tour was played out | 0:17:48 | 0:17:52 | |
on the album sleeve as well. | 0:17:52 | 0:17:53 | |
Bela Lugosi and God knows who, Lenny Bruce, WC Fields, | 0:17:57 | 0:18:02 | |
Laurel and Hardy. | 0:18:02 | 0:18:04 | |
Oh, look, there's Marlon Brando. Oh, there's Bob Dylan. | 0:18:04 | 0:18:07 | |
This is one of...might be the most recognisable album cover of all time. | 0:18:07 | 0:18:11 | |
As a last, innovative touch, the final groove on the record | 0:18:15 | 0:18:19 | |
was cut back on itself so, in theory, it would play into infinity, | 0:18:19 | 0:18:23 | |
just like the influence of the music itself. | 0:18:23 | 0:18:27 | |
Sgt Pepper is the template for everything we've come to know | 0:18:27 | 0:18:32 | |
now as the great long-playing record. | 0:18:32 | 0:18:35 | |
Sgt Pepper shot to number one in the UK and became the longest | 0:18:37 | 0:18:41 | |
and highest charting of all The Beatles' albums in America. | 0:18:41 | 0:18:45 | |
By the end of the year, | 0:18:49 | 0:18:51 | |
sales of albums in the US passed the 1 billion mark for the first time. | 0:18:51 | 0:18:56 | |
Albums were now outselling singles in both the US and UK. | 0:18:56 | 0:19:01 | |
Sgt Pepper, it was a catalyst. | 0:19:01 | 0:19:04 | |
When you think, '66, '67, was an incredibly creative time. | 0:19:04 | 0:19:10 | |
So you've got other bands that were coming through, | 0:19:10 | 0:19:13 | |
particularly in London, The Underground, | 0:19:13 | 0:19:15 | |
bands like Pink Floyd, Soft Machine, | 0:19:15 | 0:19:17 | |
who weren't conforming their songs to two-and-a-half, | 0:19:17 | 0:19:20 | |
three-minute single formats. | 0:19:20 | 0:19:23 | |
Some bands tried to copy the Sgt Pepper's formula. | 0:19:23 | 0:19:28 | |
Some lampooned it. Others, like guitarist Jimi Hendrix, | 0:19:28 | 0:19:32 | |
wanted to take the idea of artistic control a step further. | 0:19:32 | 0:19:36 | |
All right! | 0:19:36 | 0:19:37 | |
Hendrix had been plucked from obscurity by producer, | 0:19:39 | 0:19:42 | |
Chas Chandler, in 1966. | 0:19:42 | 0:19:45 | |
Together, they made two albums that established Hendrix | 0:19:45 | 0:19:48 | |
as the most influential guitarist in rock. | 0:19:48 | 0:19:51 | |
But his 1968 LP, Electric Ladyland, would be a new departure. | 0:19:51 | 0:19:57 | |
After a fallout with Chandler, | 0:20:00 | 0:20:01 | |
this would be Hendrix's first album without a producer. | 0:20:01 | 0:20:05 | |
MUSIC: All Along The Watchtower | 0:20:05 | 0:20:09 | |
Artistic control over album recording was entering a new phase. | 0:20:09 | 0:20:14 | |
So Hendrix, at this point, in order to warm up, almost, | 0:20:14 | 0:20:18 | |
is every single evening going to jam at a club | 0:20:18 | 0:20:22 | |
two blocks down the street called The Scene. | 0:20:22 | 0:20:25 | |
He would literally turn up and jam with whoever happened to be on stage. | 0:20:25 | 0:20:30 | |
You know, we have the session booked for eight o'clock. No Jimi. | 0:20:30 | 0:20:35 | |
And then around midnight or so, when Jimi felt he'd got enough | 0:20:35 | 0:20:39 | |
players that he felt were in the moment with him and would be useful | 0:20:39 | 0:20:44 | |
in the studio, he would literally walk from The Scene down to the | 0:20:44 | 0:20:48 | |
record plant, like a circus of people walking these two blocks in New York. | 0:20:48 | 0:20:53 | |
I can think of this one fabulous night where he dragged in | 0:20:53 | 0:20:57 | |
Steve Winwood, Jack Cassidy, they come in, | 0:20:57 | 0:21:02 | |
Mitch gets on the drums, Jimi plugs in the guitar. | 0:21:02 | 0:21:06 | |
The organ's all ready, the bass, everything. | 0:21:06 | 0:21:09 | |
We open up the faders, they rehearse, one take. | 0:21:09 | 0:21:13 | |
Next take, that's the master. Done. We get Voodoo Chile. | 0:21:13 | 0:21:18 | |
MUSIC: Voodoo Chile | 0:21:18 | 0:21:22 | |
This is where we are now with long-playing records. | 0:21:24 | 0:21:27 | |
We're beyond even where The Beatles were, who were, more or less, | 0:21:27 | 0:21:30 | |
nine-to-five creatures in the studio. | 0:21:30 | 0:21:32 | |
We're, "When will the lightning strike? We need to be ready." | 0:21:32 | 0:21:36 | |
Complete control of the recording process | 0:21:37 | 0:21:40 | |
allowed Hendrix to indulge his every musical whim. | 0:21:40 | 0:21:42 | |
Electric Ladyland was his most adventurous record. | 0:21:44 | 0:21:48 | |
And there was so much... | 0:21:48 | 0:21:51 | |
so many great things he was doing in the studio that hadn't | 0:21:51 | 0:21:55 | |
necessarily been heard before. | 0:21:55 | 0:21:56 | |
The result was tracks of increasing length and complexity, | 0:21:58 | 0:22:02 | |
such as the near 14-minute 1983... | 0:22:02 | 0:22:05 | |
# Hooray, I wake from yesterday... # | 0:22:07 | 0:22:10 | |
One take all the way through. | 0:22:10 | 0:22:13 | |
..which Hendrix even helped mix. | 0:22:13 | 0:22:15 | |
I would take one half of the console | 0:22:15 | 0:22:18 | |
and I'd give Jimi, like, a vocal track | 0:22:18 | 0:22:20 | |
and some other things over here | 0:22:20 | 0:22:22 | |
and we would rehearse it as a performance, and then in the middle | 0:22:22 | 0:22:25 | |
of the mix, we would look at each other and we would start laughing | 0:22:25 | 0:22:28 | |
and say, "OK, are you ready to split? OK, go." | 0:22:28 | 0:22:30 | |
And I'd get up and I'd shift positions with Jimi, and Jimi would | 0:22:30 | 0:22:34 | |
take my position, and we'd go like this, "You ready to go back? Yeah." | 0:22:34 | 0:22:37 | |
And then we'd bump into each other, | 0:22:37 | 0:22:39 | |
he'd fall on the floor laughing, I'd fall on the floor laughing | 0:22:39 | 0:22:42 | |
and then the tape would still be running. | 0:22:42 | 0:22:44 | |
Electric Ladyland was the first Hendrix LP to hit | 0:22:46 | 0:22:50 | |
the top of the US charts when released in 1968... | 0:22:50 | 0:22:53 | |
..proving that artistic freedom could equal commercial success. | 0:22:55 | 0:22:59 | |
# You jump in front of my car When you, you know all the time... # | 0:22:59 | 0:23:04 | |
Classic double albums like Electric Ladyland were met with | 0:23:04 | 0:23:09 | |
a certain amount of incomprehension by early reviewers. | 0:23:09 | 0:23:15 | |
They weren't designed to whack you over the head the first time | 0:23:15 | 0:23:18 | |
you heard them and give up all they had to offer on that first hearing. | 0:23:18 | 0:23:23 | |
They were designed to gradually sink in to reveal more detail | 0:23:23 | 0:23:29 | |
and subtext as you listened to them over and over again. | 0:23:29 | 0:23:32 | |
Increasingly adventurous album tracks from both British | 0:23:36 | 0:23:39 | |
and American bands were now dominating the ever more popular | 0:23:39 | 0:23:43 | |
FM radio network in America. | 0:23:43 | 0:23:45 | |
This album music was becoming a category all of its own. AOR. | 0:23:48 | 0:23:53 | |
Album-oriented rock. | 0:23:53 | 0:23:55 | |
You know, you've got bands who were now maturing | 0:23:55 | 0:23:58 | |
and now delivering what was becoming increasingly sophisticated music. | 0:23:58 | 0:24:03 | |
Fantastic sort of time for albums to burst through, | 0:24:03 | 0:24:07 | |
supported by American radio in the way that they were. | 0:24:07 | 0:24:10 | |
You've got The Velvet Underground, | 0:24:12 | 0:24:14 | |
you had Frank Zappa And The Mothers Of Invention, | 0:24:14 | 0:24:16 | |
you had Captain Beefheart, | 0:24:16 | 0:24:18 | |
you had a whole bunch of stuff that would have been... | 0:24:18 | 0:24:21 | |
that wouldn't even have been classified as pop music | 0:24:21 | 0:24:26 | |
or rock music just a little while earlier. | 0:24:26 | 0:24:30 | |
# Ever since I was a young boy I played the silver ball... # | 0:24:30 | 0:24:34 | |
In London, The Who, once known as a singles band, | 0:24:34 | 0:24:37 | |
released a double album called Tommy. | 0:24:37 | 0:24:40 | |
Its writer, Pete Townshend, proclaimed it a rock opera. | 0:24:40 | 0:24:44 | |
It's such a cliched term now, but at the time, it was exciting and fresh. | 0:24:51 | 0:24:55 | |
A rock opera. Grandeur, meaning, credibility. | 0:24:55 | 0:25:01 | |
And The Who weren't the only chart-friendly band to recognise | 0:25:01 | 0:25:04 | |
the creative power of the album. | 0:25:04 | 0:25:07 | |
Some people may see The Stones as perhaps more of a singles band. | 0:25:09 | 0:25:13 | |
They think of Satisfaction, Paint It Black. | 0:25:13 | 0:25:16 | |
And, of course, that's what they were to begin with, in the same way | 0:25:16 | 0:25:19 | |
that that's what The Beatles were to begin with. | 0:25:19 | 0:25:22 | |
But they wouldn't have the legacy they have now | 0:25:22 | 0:25:25 | |
if they hadn't made the same journey The Beatles did from being | 0:25:25 | 0:25:29 | |
this supernova singles act into long-playing-oriented band | 0:25:29 | 0:25:36 | |
that made its reputation completely on its albums. | 0:25:36 | 0:25:39 | |
Starting in 1968, The Stones made a series of four albums, | 0:25:41 | 0:25:45 | |
which would be seen by many as their creative peak. | 0:25:45 | 0:25:49 | |
If you think of some of their greatest tracks, | 0:25:49 | 0:25:52 | |
Sympathy For The Devil, You Can't Always Get What You Want, | 0:25:52 | 0:25:54 | |
Wild Horses, none of these are singles. | 0:25:54 | 0:25:57 | |
The more rock bands embraced the LP | 0:25:59 | 0:26:01 | |
and pushed its artistic boundaries, the more sales soared. | 0:26:01 | 0:26:06 | |
By 1969, some 200 million albums were being bought annually | 0:26:06 | 0:26:10 | |
in the US, and rock LPs accounted for four-fifths of these sales. | 0:26:10 | 0:26:16 | |
The economics of the industry were changing, commercial success | 0:26:16 | 0:26:20 | |
no longer depended on hit singles, as one band was about to prove. | 0:26:20 | 0:26:25 | |
# Hey... # | 0:26:28 | 0:26:30 | |
With a harder-edged raucous rock sound, Led Zeppelin hit | 0:26:30 | 0:26:34 | |
the top of the US and UK charts with their 1969 debut album. | 0:26:34 | 0:26:39 | |
The band was led by a veteran session guitarist. | 0:26:39 | 0:26:42 | |
We're talking about a guy, Jimmy Page, who played on something | 0:26:42 | 0:26:46 | |
like 60% of every hit single made in London over the previous five years. | 0:26:46 | 0:26:51 | |
Led Zeppelin were Page's way out from a career of playing | 0:26:51 | 0:26:54 | |
on other people's hit singles. | 0:26:54 | 0:26:56 | |
The whole idea is for Jimmy Page to do everything | 0:26:59 | 0:27:04 | |
he'd never done before - not make music to the clock, not make hits. | 0:27:04 | 0:27:10 | |
When work finished on the band's second album later in 1969, | 0:27:10 | 0:27:15 | |
Page sends Zeppelin's manager, Peter Grant, | 0:27:15 | 0:27:17 | |
with an ultimatum to Atlantic Records. | 0:27:17 | 0:27:20 | |
No singles were to be released, not even the sure-fire hit, | 0:27:20 | 0:27:23 | |
Whole Lotta Love. | 0:27:23 | 0:27:25 | |
# Yeah, what a whole lotta love... # | 0:27:25 | 0:27:28 | |
Pete doing his air of threat about him, he said, "No singles." | 0:27:29 | 0:27:35 | |
And everybody looked in astonishment. | 0:27:35 | 0:27:37 | |
The record company, understandably, utterly baffled. | 0:27:37 | 0:27:40 | |
Here's this hit in the making, we can't release it. | 0:27:40 | 0:27:43 | |
But Carson wasn't about to be told what to do, | 0:27:45 | 0:27:48 | |
even by Peter Grant and Led Zeppelin. | 0:27:48 | 0:27:50 | |
I decided that there should be a single, right? I did that. | 0:27:50 | 0:27:54 | |
And I put a single out. | 0:27:54 | 0:27:56 | |
I put an edited version of Whole Lotta Love out | 0:27:56 | 0:27:58 | |
and incurred the total wrath of Jimmy Page and Peter Grant | 0:27:58 | 0:28:02 | |
and was immediately forced to withdraw the whole damn lot. | 0:28:02 | 0:28:06 | |
I think the number was something like 3,000 went to Manchester | 0:28:06 | 0:28:10 | |
before I could stop them going there. | 0:28:10 | 0:28:12 | |
Even with no singles to promote it, | 0:28:15 | 0:28:17 | |
Led Zeppelin II topped the charts in both America and Britain in 1970. | 0:28:17 | 0:28:22 | |
Jimmy and Peter Grant and Led Zeppelin were right. | 0:28:22 | 0:28:26 | |
By not having a single, | 0:28:26 | 0:28:28 | |
that Led Zeppelin II album was selling like it was a single. | 0:28:28 | 0:28:33 | |
Within three years, | 0:28:37 | 0:28:38 | |
Led Zeppelin were the biggest grossing act in the world. | 0:28:38 | 0:28:41 | |
That is probably the pinnacle of how to sell an album. | 0:28:41 | 0:28:46 | |
Make great music and make it available only in its album format. | 0:28:46 | 0:28:53 | |
Don't sell anybody a single. | 0:28:53 | 0:28:55 | |
The single was rapidly falling out of fashion. | 0:28:57 | 0:29:00 | |
By the turn of the decade, | 0:29:00 | 0:29:01 | |
albums accounted for over 80% of record sales. | 0:29:01 | 0:29:05 | |
TRUMPET PLAYS | 0:29:07 | 0:29:10 | |
But while the rock album was on the crest of a wave, | 0:29:14 | 0:29:17 | |
other musical forms were suffering. | 0:29:17 | 0:29:19 | |
The popularity of jazz had been declining for years. | 0:29:20 | 0:29:24 | |
Not even one of the most celebrated jazz musicians of all time | 0:29:24 | 0:29:27 | |
was immune, | 0:29:27 | 0:29:28 | |
Miles Davis, a long-time Columbia Records artist. | 0:29:28 | 0:29:32 | |
You know, he came to me, and his words, he said, | 0:29:34 | 0:29:36 | |
"These fucking young, long-haired white kids, | 0:29:36 | 0:29:40 | |
"they're stealing my rip." | 0:29:40 | 0:29:42 | |
He said, "How come I'm selling 70,000 | 0:29:42 | 0:29:46 | |
"and they're selling a million, | 0:29:46 | 0:29:49 | |
"two million albums?" | 0:29:49 | 0:29:50 | |
With Columbia riding high on sales of rock LPs, Clive Davis knew | 0:29:53 | 0:29:58 | |
better than anyone where the album-buying market was - rock fans. | 0:29:58 | 0:30:03 | |
My saying, "Miles, you know, you're playing in small jazz clubs." | 0:30:03 | 0:30:08 | |
I said, "You've got to get out where the young people are, | 0:30:09 | 0:30:14 | |
"you're going to be impressed... | 0:30:14 | 0:30:16 | |
"..with what you hear. Somehow it's going to influence your music... | 0:30:17 | 0:30:21 | |
"..and moreover, you're going to have an audience that just doesn't go | 0:30:23 | 0:30:27 | |
"to your jazz clubs." | 0:30:27 | 0:30:29 | |
So, for his next project, | 0:30:29 | 0:30:31 | |
Miles Davis took a whole new approach to the jazz LP. | 0:30:31 | 0:30:34 | |
At this particular moment, | 0:30:34 | 0:30:36 | |
you suddenly get Miles Davis dropping the suit and tie, | 0:30:36 | 0:30:39 | |
dropping the super jazz cool and suddenly dressing like Jimi Hendrix. | 0:30:39 | 0:30:43 | |
Big shades, robes. | 0:30:43 | 0:30:46 | |
And suddenly he makes this extraordinary album | 0:30:46 | 0:30:49 | |
called Bitches Brew. | 0:30:49 | 0:30:50 | |
The double album Bitches Brew was released in 1970, | 0:30:52 | 0:30:55 | |
with a cover from artist Marty Klarwein, | 0:30:55 | 0:30:58 | |
whose work had adorned Jimi Hendrix LPs. | 0:30:58 | 0:31:00 | |
The music was a radical departure for jazz, | 0:31:05 | 0:31:08 | |
adding rock guitar and drums. | 0:31:08 | 0:31:11 | |
It was the style that became known as fusion. | 0:31:11 | 0:31:14 | |
So, what you will find in fusion that you can listen to, | 0:31:16 | 0:31:20 | |
that you'll pull out of it, is the groove. | 0:31:20 | 0:31:23 | |
A jazz personality on top of a rock groove, | 0:31:26 | 0:31:30 | |
fundamentally, and that's what fusion, fundamentally, is. | 0:31:30 | 0:31:33 | |
It was interesting because during those days, | 0:31:35 | 0:31:39 | |
jazz and rock started to work together | 0:31:39 | 0:31:41 | |
and all of a sudden you heard jazz being played on a technical level | 0:31:41 | 0:31:47 | |
that was next level. | 0:31:47 | 0:31:49 | |
HE IMITATES TRUMPET | 0:31:51 | 0:31:53 | |
It's like, "Whoa!" | 0:31:53 | 0:31:54 | |
To record the album, Davis had assembled an astonishing array | 0:31:56 | 0:32:00 | |
of young jazz talent, including drummer Billy Cobham. | 0:32:00 | 0:32:04 | |
The tracks were heavily improvised, with Davis as the conductor. | 0:32:04 | 0:32:08 | |
He said to me the night before, "You know that groove we played? | 0:32:08 | 0:32:13 | |
"I like that, play it tomorrow." | 0:32:13 | 0:32:15 | |
OK. Got there, of course I couldn't remember what to play. | 0:32:15 | 0:32:17 | |
I started to play something, | 0:32:17 | 0:32:19 | |
he says, "That's not what you played last night. | 0:32:19 | 0:32:21 | |
"But I like that, I want it!" | 0:32:21 | 0:32:23 | |
Bitches Brew changed everything for Davis. | 0:32:27 | 0:32:30 | |
Hardcore jazz fans were outraged by this new direction, | 0:32:30 | 0:32:34 | |
but Davis was now playing to rock fans at the Isle of Wight Festival | 0:32:34 | 0:32:38 | |
in 1970. | 0:32:38 | 0:32:40 | |
Is this a jazz festival? No. | 0:32:40 | 0:32:43 | |
Is this a pop festival? Absolutely not. | 0:32:43 | 0:32:46 | |
This is a rock, long-playing, freak-out, far-out, | 0:32:46 | 0:32:50 | |
join in, trip out, go-on-your-journey festival. | 0:32:50 | 0:32:55 | |
Davis tapped into this vast rock audience, | 0:32:56 | 0:33:00 | |
scoring his first gold record on one of the bestselling jazz albums ever. | 0:33:00 | 0:33:04 | |
The musicians from Bitches Brew would go on to form bands | 0:33:07 | 0:33:10 | |
like Mahavishnu Orchestra, Weather Report | 0:33:10 | 0:33:13 | |
and Return To Forever, whose LPs would cement fusion | 0:33:13 | 0:33:17 | |
as jazz's dominant direction for the 1970s. | 0:33:17 | 0:33:20 | |
CHEERING | 0:33:25 | 0:33:27 | |
But even with sales soaring, | 0:33:27 | 0:33:29 | |
not everyone had yet woken up to the power of the album. | 0:33:29 | 0:33:32 | |
In Detroit, Tamla Motown was the most successful record label | 0:33:36 | 0:33:41 | |
of the 1960s, an empire built on the 45. | 0:33:41 | 0:33:44 | |
The core of the Detroit sound | 0:33:44 | 0:33:46 | |
was the idea of the two-and-a-half-minute single | 0:33:46 | 0:33:49 | |
that was instantly recognisable, that had a chorus, three verses. | 0:33:49 | 0:33:54 | |
# Baby, everything is all right... # | 0:33:54 | 0:33:57 | |
And a song that was effervescent, upbeat, very positive about life. | 0:33:57 | 0:34:02 | |
They were not essentially, at least in the '60s, an album company. | 0:34:02 | 0:34:06 | |
MUSIC: I Can't Help Myself by The Four Tops | 0:34:06 | 0:34:09 | |
As the '70s dawned, Motown owner Berry Gordy remained | 0:34:12 | 0:34:15 | |
committed to the label's hit factory formula. | 0:34:15 | 0:34:19 | |
He imagined that he had a better sense of what made a hit record | 0:34:19 | 0:34:22 | |
than any members of his staff. | 0:34:22 | 0:34:24 | |
This often lead to a kind of rancorous relationship | 0:34:24 | 0:34:27 | |
with the producers and sometimes with the singers and musicians. | 0:34:27 | 0:34:30 | |
One of these singers was about to launch Motown into the album era. | 0:34:31 | 0:34:35 | |
# Darling, please stay Don't go away... # | 0:34:35 | 0:34:39 | |
Marvin Gaye was known as the Prince of Motown, | 0:34:39 | 0:34:42 | |
the epitome of the label's chart-friendly sound. | 0:34:42 | 0:34:46 | |
But his relationship with his label was becoming fraught. | 0:34:46 | 0:34:49 | |
He felt that the company was essentially constraining him, | 0:34:49 | 0:34:53 | |
constraining him in all sorts of different ways. | 0:34:53 | 0:34:56 | |
He always felt that Berry Gordy was denying him | 0:34:56 | 0:34:59 | |
being the full Marvin Gaye. | 0:34:59 | 0:35:00 | |
You know, this is a guy who really didn't want the restrictions | 0:35:00 | 0:35:04 | |
of Motown on him. | 0:35:04 | 0:35:05 | |
It was a hit factory, and all of a sudden these artists wanted to grow. | 0:35:05 | 0:35:10 | |
# Ooh, I bet you're wondering how I knew... # | 0:35:10 | 0:35:13 | |
Following the death of singing partner Tammi Terrell, | 0:35:13 | 0:35:16 | |
Gaye had become disillusioned with his pop career | 0:35:16 | 0:35:19 | |
and increasingly concerned with Detroit's social problems. | 0:35:19 | 0:35:23 | |
Gradually, from about 1967 onwards, | 0:35:23 | 0:35:27 | |
that was the era of the urban riots in Detroit, | 0:35:27 | 0:35:30 | |
he began to compile almost a kind of dossier of different things | 0:35:30 | 0:35:35 | |
that were going on in the city, and that dossier became the basis | 0:35:35 | 0:35:38 | |
of probably the greatest soul concept album of all time, | 0:35:38 | 0:35:41 | |
Marvin Gaye's What's Going On. | 0:35:41 | 0:35:43 | |
This is it. | 0:35:43 | 0:35:45 | |
This is What's Going On, Marvin Gaye. | 0:35:45 | 0:35:47 | |
Best sleeve, don't you think? | 0:35:47 | 0:35:49 | |
MUSIC: What's Going On by Marvin Gaye | 0:35:52 | 0:35:57 | |
In 1970, under Berry Gordy's radar, | 0:35:57 | 0:36:00 | |
Gaye had begun work on some new material, not hit singles | 0:36:00 | 0:36:05 | |
but an album, and a radical new direction for Motown. | 0:36:05 | 0:36:09 | |
# Mother, mother... # | 0:36:09 | 0:36:12 | |
CHEERING Thank you! | 0:36:12 | 0:36:13 | |
# There's too many of you crying... # | 0:36:13 | 0:36:16 | |
You knew when you heard it that it was important, | 0:36:16 | 0:36:19 | |
and this was a move on, not just in terms of what he was saying, | 0:36:19 | 0:36:24 | |
ie, "What's going on?" | 0:36:24 | 0:36:26 | |
It was more the construction of the whole piece. | 0:36:26 | 0:36:29 | |
The tracks on What's Going On seemed to melt into one another. | 0:36:32 | 0:36:37 | |
A theme of social commentary | 0:36:37 | 0:36:39 | |
and snippets of conversation gave the album a documentary feel. | 0:36:39 | 0:36:43 | |
This was a concept album in the new rock mould. | 0:36:43 | 0:36:47 | |
It was probably like the early days of rock'n'roll | 0:36:47 | 0:36:52 | |
where bands like The Stones and The Beatles were basically emulating | 0:36:52 | 0:36:56 | |
their blues gospel idols from America. | 0:36:56 | 0:37:00 | |
But here, the roles were reversed. | 0:37:00 | 0:37:03 | |
For the first time, the black acts | 0:37:03 | 0:37:05 | |
were starting to imitate the rock acts. | 0:37:05 | 0:37:07 | |
Musically, Gaye brought | 0:37:10 | 0:37:12 | |
nearly a decade of songwriting experience to bear. | 0:37:12 | 0:37:16 | |
Everything there, jazz, funk, soul, it was all there. | 0:37:16 | 0:37:20 | |
Berry Gordy was worried Gaye's new direction would alienate | 0:37:22 | 0:37:26 | |
his core audience. | 0:37:26 | 0:37:27 | |
But released in May 1971, What's Going On became | 0:37:27 | 0:37:31 | |
Marvin Gaye's first LP to break the Billboard Top 10. | 0:37:31 | 0:37:35 | |
This album came out like a smooth assassin, it was like... | 0:37:35 | 0:37:39 | |
It crept up on you. You know, it's screaming. | 0:37:39 | 0:37:41 | |
It should be a rock album, its statements are so strong. | 0:37:41 | 0:37:45 | |
But yet it's delivered so coolly and so smoothly. | 0:37:45 | 0:37:50 | |
The fact that it gets to the end and he goes up on that high note, | 0:37:50 | 0:37:53 | |
"Ooooh", and then it comes back in like the record begins, | 0:37:53 | 0:37:57 | |
and the fact that it doesn't resolve, it just trots off into the distance, | 0:37:57 | 0:38:01 | |
almost suggesting that that music is playing still | 0:38:01 | 0:38:05 | |
somewhere in the universe. | 0:38:05 | 0:38:07 | |
Within a year, it had sold two million copies | 0:38:08 | 0:38:11 | |
and become Motown's biggest-selling LP. | 0:38:11 | 0:38:14 | |
Even Motown had now entered the album game. | 0:38:14 | 0:38:18 | |
It was with What's Going On that they began to realise | 0:38:19 | 0:38:22 | |
that there was a market in the album, | 0:38:22 | 0:38:25 | |
and then that subsequently set the tone for big albums | 0:38:25 | 0:38:29 | |
by Diana Ross, Stevie Wonder's three albums in the '70s. | 0:38:29 | 0:38:34 | |
It's this moment where rock | 0:38:34 | 0:38:35 | |
and the whole idea of the long-playing record | 0:38:35 | 0:38:38 | |
actually now infiltrates every sphere of music. | 0:38:38 | 0:38:42 | |
The early '70s saw musicians from all backgrounds embracing | 0:38:42 | 0:38:46 | |
the approach, and commercial potential, of the rock album. | 0:38:46 | 0:38:50 | |
Bands like Jethro Tull fused rock with English folk. | 0:38:50 | 0:38:54 | |
MUSIC: Aqualung by Jethro Tull | 0:38:54 | 0:38:56 | |
The Doobie Brothers mixed rock with country. | 0:38:58 | 0:39:01 | |
And in the glam rock scene, | 0:39:03 | 0:39:05 | |
the power of the album divided two of the biggest artists... | 0:39:05 | 0:39:08 | |
MUSIC: Starman by David Bowie | 0:39:08 | 0:39:11 | |
..Marc Bolan and David Bowie. | 0:39:11 | 0:39:13 | |
The crucial difference, really, between what T-Rex | 0:39:14 | 0:39:17 | |
and Marc Bolan were doing and what David Bowie | 0:39:17 | 0:39:21 | |
and the Spiders from Mars were doing | 0:39:21 | 0:39:23 | |
can be summed up in two words - long player. | 0:39:23 | 0:39:27 | |
MUSIC: Cosmic Dancer by T-Rex | 0:39:27 | 0:39:32 | |
Bolan was a glam rock pioneer, but it was the single, | 0:39:32 | 0:39:36 | |
not the album, that was his focus. | 0:39:36 | 0:39:38 | |
I think Marc Bolan and David Bowie, | 0:39:38 | 0:39:40 | |
they always had different goals. | 0:39:40 | 0:39:42 | |
Marc Bolan wanted to have singles, | 0:39:42 | 0:39:45 | |
he wanted to emulate | 0:39:45 | 0:39:46 | |
the singles that he grew up with by Little Richard, Elvis Presley. | 0:39:46 | 0:39:50 | |
David made great albums and let the single be damned. | 0:39:50 | 0:39:54 | |
He did get great singles out of the albums, | 0:39:54 | 0:39:57 | |
but it wasn't his purpose, it wasn't his primary purpose. | 0:39:57 | 0:40:01 | |
Bowie used LPs to stretch himself as an artist. | 0:40:01 | 0:40:04 | |
I hadn't seen him for a whole year and a half | 0:40:06 | 0:40:09 | |
and he came to my apartment in full Ziggy regalia. | 0:40:09 | 0:40:13 | |
No eyebrows, spiky orange hair and all that. | 0:40:13 | 0:40:16 | |
But when this voice came out of that person, it was my friend David. | 0:40:16 | 0:40:19 | |
# Now, Ziggy played guitar | 0:40:19 | 0:40:21 | |
# Jamming good with Weird and Gilly | 0:40:21 | 0:40:25 | |
# And the Spiders from Mars... # | 0:40:25 | 0:40:28 | |
He was the first rock star to invent a rock star. | 0:40:28 | 0:40:31 | |
To invent a person with another name. That's unbelievable. | 0:40:31 | 0:40:36 | |
And then he could still be... | 0:40:36 | 0:40:38 | |
The album could be Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars. | 0:40:38 | 0:40:42 | |
# Ziggy really sang... # | 0:40:42 | 0:40:44 | |
So, you know, Bolan was the pathfinder, in a way, | 0:40:44 | 0:40:50 | |
when it comes to glam rock. | 0:40:50 | 0:40:51 | |
But it was David Bowie, it was Roxy Music, those were the artists | 0:40:51 | 0:40:57 | |
that really benefited long-term because they were LP artists. | 0:40:57 | 0:41:01 | |
As well as allowing artists the space to grow creatively, | 0:41:06 | 0:41:09 | |
the album also allowed them to look inward | 0:41:09 | 0:41:11 | |
and explore a more personal agenda. | 0:41:11 | 0:41:14 | |
In the early '70s, | 0:41:15 | 0:41:17 | |
a new kind of musician started to adopt the album - | 0:41:17 | 0:41:20 | |
the singer-songwriter. | 0:41:20 | 0:41:21 | |
Suddenly it was like people kind of sat down | 0:41:21 | 0:41:24 | |
and were contemplating people more and were wanting to know more what | 0:41:24 | 0:41:28 | |
they had to say and what they had to say about the world, as it were. | 0:41:28 | 0:41:33 | |
Therefore, it became more introspective. | 0:41:33 | 0:41:35 | |
# Tonight you're mine completely... # | 0:41:35 | 0:41:40 | |
Carole King had spent the 1960s writing hits for other people. | 0:41:40 | 0:41:45 | |
A lot of what we did in the early days, | 0:41:45 | 0:41:48 | |
creating a really good track | 0:41:48 | 0:41:50 | |
and getting a couple of good-looking kids | 0:41:50 | 0:41:52 | |
and putting them on it, that was a different business. | 0:41:52 | 0:41:55 | |
But stardom in the era of the album depended on a different | 0:41:55 | 0:41:59 | |
set of qualities. | 0:41:59 | 0:42:01 | |
# You got to get up every morning | 0:42:01 | 0:42:05 | |
# With a smile on your face and show the world... # | 0:42:05 | 0:42:09 | |
In 1970, King and producer Lou Adler, of Ode Records, began work | 0:42:09 | 0:42:14 | |
on a collection of songs with the working title Tapestry. | 0:42:14 | 0:42:17 | |
I certainly knew and Carole knew that we were making an album. | 0:42:17 | 0:42:22 | |
It was obvious that we were trying to complete something. | 0:42:22 | 0:42:26 | |
And not just go for a hit single or something. It was way past that. | 0:42:28 | 0:42:33 | |
# So far away | 0:42:33 | 0:42:37 | |
# Doesn't anybody stay in one place any more? # | 0:42:37 | 0:42:43 | |
Tapestry would be the most personal and intimate work of King's career. | 0:42:43 | 0:42:48 | |
In the older sessions, you went in, whatever the lights were, | 0:42:50 | 0:42:53 | |
that's what you recorded under. | 0:42:53 | 0:42:54 | |
And these kind of sessions, | 0:42:54 | 0:42:56 | |
if you are doing a ballad, you turned the lights down a little bit. | 0:42:56 | 0:42:59 | |
# Long ago I reached for you... # | 0:42:59 | 0:43:03 | |
When I describe what Tapestry means to me, | 0:43:03 | 0:43:05 | |
I always describe it as the musical equivalent of your big sister | 0:43:05 | 0:43:09 | |
or your big brother putting the kettle on | 0:43:09 | 0:43:12 | |
when you're having a really bad time, and they are like, | 0:43:12 | 0:43:14 | |
"Come over here, come on, we will sort it out. | 0:43:14 | 0:43:17 | |
"We'll have a cup of tea, we'll fix the world." | 0:43:17 | 0:43:20 | |
# Stayed in bed all morning Just to pass the time... # | 0:43:26 | 0:43:31 | |
# There's something wrong here There can be no denying | 0:43:31 | 0:43:35 | |
# One of us is changing or maybe we've just stopped trying... # | 0:43:35 | 0:43:42 | |
The final running order of Tapestry was | 0:43:42 | 0:43:45 | |
a masterclass in one of the secrets of a great album - sequencing. | 0:43:45 | 0:43:50 | |
I must have spent two weeks or more on the sequence of Tapestry. | 0:43:50 | 0:43:56 | |
Coming out of the right chord into the right chord of the next song | 0:43:56 | 0:44:00 | |
so that you don't, you know, abruptly shake somebody, | 0:44:00 | 0:44:04 | |
not only shake them but musically shake them. | 0:44:04 | 0:44:08 | |
The transition from So Far Away to It's Too Late was a classic example | 0:44:08 | 0:44:14 | |
of Adler's sequence. | 0:44:14 | 0:44:15 | |
What I really like is that you're going from this chord, | 0:44:15 | 0:44:18 | |
it's a fade-out, actually, so we don't get a proper ending on | 0:44:18 | 0:44:22 | |
So Far Away, but it sets you up nicely | 0:44:22 | 0:44:24 | |
for that move to the A minor 7th. | 0:44:24 | 0:44:26 | |
Because that chord is there again. | 0:44:29 | 0:44:31 | |
So there's this really nice harmonic relationship. | 0:44:31 | 0:44:34 | |
They're in different keys | 0:44:34 | 0:44:36 | |
but they are echoing the song that's come before. | 0:44:36 | 0:44:39 | |
Tapestry was released in the US in March 1971. | 0:44:45 | 0:44:49 | |
All that pop kind of thing that she had come from, | 0:44:49 | 0:44:53 | |
she poured into this album, but it's very personalised too. | 0:44:53 | 0:44:58 | |
And that's quite a potent combination. | 0:44:58 | 0:45:01 | |
The album spent 15 consecutive weeks at the top of the US album charts - | 0:45:01 | 0:45:06 | |
the only time a female solo artist would achieve this | 0:45:06 | 0:45:09 | |
in the entire 20th century. | 0:45:09 | 0:45:12 | |
No solo album would outsell it until Thriller over a decade later. | 0:45:12 | 0:45:17 | |
Tapestry was confirmation that the era of the album encouraged | 0:45:17 | 0:45:20 | |
a new kind of star. | 0:45:20 | 0:45:23 | |
Carole and I won five Grammys that year, | 0:45:23 | 0:45:27 | |
the most by a female artist at that time. | 0:45:27 | 0:45:29 | |
We won Best Album Of The Year and Song Of The Year | 0:45:29 | 0:45:36 | |
and Single Of The Year. | 0:45:36 | 0:45:39 | |
So that validated Carole King as an artist. | 0:45:39 | 0:45:43 | |
# ..Like a natural woman. # | 0:45:43 | 0:45:49 | |
Artists like James Taylor, Joni Mitchell | 0:45:49 | 0:45:52 | |
and Don McLean contributed to the singer-songwriter boom. | 0:45:52 | 0:45:57 | |
# And I think it's gonna be a long, long time... # | 0:45:57 | 0:46:02 | |
Britain's answer was Elton John, who scored seven consecutive | 0:46:02 | 0:46:06 | |
number one LPs in the US in the early '70s. | 0:46:06 | 0:46:09 | |
# I'm a rocket man... # | 0:46:09 | 0:46:13 | |
Only The Beatles ever surpassed this feat. | 0:46:13 | 0:46:16 | |
But in contrast to the intimate stripped-back | 0:46:19 | 0:46:22 | |
style of the singer-songwriters, other musicians were using | 0:46:22 | 0:46:25 | |
the LP to create ever more elaborate musical landscapes. | 0:46:25 | 0:46:29 | |
This was progressive rock. | 0:46:29 | 0:46:31 | |
In a strange way we were musical scientists. | 0:46:33 | 0:46:36 | |
We had lots of ingredients of different instruments around us | 0:46:36 | 0:46:39 | |
and we had lots of different kinds of musical knowledge. | 0:46:39 | 0:46:42 | |
And I didn't want to play three chords | 0:46:42 | 0:46:44 | |
and just sort of do blues solos and things. | 0:46:44 | 0:46:46 | |
I wanted to go to different levels and fuse music | 0:46:46 | 0:46:49 | |
and put things together. | 0:46:49 | 0:46:50 | |
The most popular album band on the Billboard charts for 1972 was | 0:46:54 | 0:46:59 | |
a prog band, Yes. | 0:46:59 | 0:47:02 | |
Yes music was as convoluted as it was excellent. | 0:47:04 | 0:47:11 | |
Songs often spanned entire sides of vinyl. | 0:47:15 | 0:47:19 | |
Double albums became triple albums. | 0:47:19 | 0:47:22 | |
Such grandiose music required similarly creative sleeve design. | 0:47:22 | 0:47:27 | |
Yes found their visual identity through artist Roger Dean. | 0:47:27 | 0:47:32 | |
I never tried to paint music. | 0:47:32 | 0:47:34 | |
What I was looking for in the imagery was something that | 0:47:34 | 0:47:40 | |
would stop people, make them think, | 0:47:40 | 0:47:43 | |
and have something that was from the same source as the music, | 0:47:43 | 0:47:47 | |
rather than an image of the music. | 0:47:47 | 0:47:50 | |
That was desperately important to us, desperately important, | 0:47:50 | 0:47:53 | |
because the cover was as important as to what was inside. | 0:47:53 | 0:47:58 | |
I mean, they say you can tell a book by its cover. | 0:47:58 | 0:48:00 | |
You can also tell a vinyl by its cover. | 0:48:00 | 0:48:03 | |
Increasingly extravagant packaging allowed Dean to explore | 0:48:07 | 0:48:11 | |
entire narratives through a single album design. | 0:48:11 | 0:48:15 | |
When we did the Yessongs album, it was a great opportunity to | 0:48:15 | 0:48:20 | |
tell the story because it was a triple album with a booklet. | 0:48:20 | 0:48:23 | |
Landing on a new planet, life restarting | 0:48:23 | 0:48:28 | |
and humans and cities coming about. | 0:48:28 | 0:48:33 | |
Yes's huge album sales gave Dean's artwork huge exposure. | 0:48:37 | 0:48:42 | |
We did sell an enormous number of posters and calendars and books. | 0:48:44 | 0:48:49 | |
I've looked at figures ranging from 60 to 100 million, | 0:48:49 | 0:48:53 | |
so it's a lot of pieces. | 0:48:53 | 0:48:54 | |
But iconic sleeves | 0:48:54 | 0:48:56 | |
and progressive sounds didn't only meet in the world of rock. | 0:48:56 | 0:49:00 | |
The albums of the Parliament Funkadelic collective created | 0:49:02 | 0:49:06 | |
a funk universe every bit as creative as prog. | 0:49:06 | 0:49:09 | |
It was the most insane, ridiculous, creative, | 0:49:11 | 0:49:15 | |
ludicrous band collective of all time, Parliament Funkadelic. | 0:49:15 | 0:49:21 | |
Just the most genius insanity that music has ever produced. | 0:49:21 | 0:49:26 | |
Bands like Parliament Funkadelic, they were much more | 0:49:28 | 0:49:31 | |
like the R&B, soul, funk versions of the Grateful Dead. | 0:49:31 | 0:49:37 | |
Band leader George Clinton's clash of psychedelic rock, | 0:49:37 | 0:49:41 | |
soul and funk met its match with the album artwork of Pedro Bell. | 0:49:41 | 0:49:47 | |
It's Afrocentric, it's mad, it's kind of got Satanic qualities to it, | 0:49:47 | 0:49:52 | |
it's challenging all sorts of different things. | 0:49:52 | 0:49:56 | |
Just look at the breasts of this weird-looking woman here. | 0:49:56 | 0:49:59 | |
One is a map of the world, | 0:49:59 | 0:50:02 | |
the other is a musical turntable on the end of her nipples. | 0:50:02 | 0:50:05 | |
I think it is very hard not to like a record which, on the sleeve, | 0:50:05 | 0:50:08 | |
it describes the record company as, "Vinyl Binbanglers" | 0:50:08 | 0:50:12 | |
and where the bass musicians are called "bass thumpasaurians". | 0:50:12 | 0:50:16 | |
Cosmic Slop, No Compute, Trash A Go-Go, March To The Witch's Castle, | 0:50:16 | 0:50:21 | |
The Nappy Dugout, and two skeletons having sex in the corner. | 0:50:21 | 0:50:27 | |
Excellent! | 0:50:27 | 0:50:28 | |
For the '70s music fan, | 0:50:30 | 0:50:32 | |
the album sleeve became a symbol of their identity. | 0:50:32 | 0:50:35 | |
It actually summed up a lifestyle. | 0:50:35 | 0:50:38 | |
When people walked around town, | 0:50:38 | 0:50:41 | |
if you had some albums under your arm, it told people who you were. | 0:50:41 | 0:50:45 | |
If you walked in somebody's house and there were racks | 0:50:45 | 0:50:48 | |
and racks of album covers, it is | 0:50:48 | 0:50:51 | |
a bit like going into somebody's library and you would look to see | 0:50:51 | 0:50:55 | |
what books they read to kind of ascertain | 0:50:55 | 0:50:57 | |
what kind of person they are. | 0:50:57 | 0:50:58 | |
The same thing happened with the album cover. | 0:50:58 | 0:51:01 | |
Of all the iconic images on '70s album sleeves, | 0:51:01 | 0:51:05 | |
one above all appeared to define the era... | 0:51:05 | 0:51:10 | |
# Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day... # | 0:51:10 | 0:51:16 | |
..Pink Floyd's 1973 album, The Dark Side Of The Moon... | 0:51:16 | 0:51:21 | |
..one of the highest-selling albums in history. | 0:51:23 | 0:51:26 | |
# Digging around on a piece of ground in your home town... # | 0:51:26 | 0:51:31 | |
When I was growing up as a child in the late '70s and early '80s, | 0:51:31 | 0:51:34 | |
it was a commonly held belief that there was a factory somewhere | 0:51:34 | 0:51:37 | |
in Germany which only pressed copies of Dark Side Of The Moon. | 0:51:37 | 0:51:41 | |
It just seemed convincingly true | 0:51:41 | 0:51:42 | |
because practically every household, | 0:51:42 | 0:51:45 | |
everyone's parents' household, had a copy of Dark Side Of The Moon. | 0:51:45 | 0:51:48 | |
You could not avoid that record. | 0:51:48 | 0:51:50 | |
The Dark Side Of The Moon would sell some 40 million copies | 0:51:53 | 0:51:55 | |
in its lifetime. | 0:51:55 | 0:51:57 | |
Yet it was released with a stark sleeve design with no mention | 0:51:58 | 0:52:01 | |
or photo of the band. | 0:52:01 | 0:52:04 | |
The cover art was the brainchild of Hipgnosis design agency. | 0:52:07 | 0:52:11 | |
Hipgnosis never worked for record companies, | 0:52:12 | 0:52:15 | |
we only worked for the artists, | 0:52:15 | 0:52:17 | |
we were commissioned directly to work for all the people who we worked for. | 0:52:17 | 0:52:21 | |
The record companies hated us with a vengeance. | 0:52:21 | 0:52:24 | |
Storm and Po from Hipgnosis went into EMI with the cover | 0:52:24 | 0:52:27 | |
and EMI went, "A record cover with no picture and no name? | 0:52:27 | 0:52:32 | |
"Can't have that." They went, "Tell you what, we can, | 0:52:32 | 0:52:35 | |
"because we're with Pink Floyd. | 0:52:35 | 0:52:37 | |
"That's what they want, what they're having and what you're doing." | 0:52:37 | 0:52:40 | |
At no point when you're flicking through the racks in a record shop, | 0:52:40 | 0:52:44 | |
unless you knew what that was, you would not know that's Pink Floyd. | 0:52:44 | 0:52:48 | |
The themes on Dark Side were uncompromisingly adult. | 0:52:51 | 0:52:55 | |
The idea was that the album | 0:52:55 | 0:52:57 | |
would sort of focus on the pressures that we were feeling, I suppose. | 0:52:57 | 0:53:02 | |
Or the sort of things that impinge on your life. | 0:53:02 | 0:53:05 | |
# Money... # | 0:53:05 | 0:53:07 | |
Money, the acquisition of too much, in a way, mortality, time, | 0:53:07 | 0:53:14 | |
rather than teenage love, which we felt perhaps other people did better. | 0:53:14 | 0:53:18 | |
The band's attitude to publicity was similarly uncommercial. | 0:53:18 | 0:53:24 | |
They didn't do one press interview, not one press interview. | 0:53:24 | 0:53:27 | |
There wasn't even a picture. | 0:53:27 | 0:53:30 | |
Cos why would you want a picture of someone you haven't interviewed? | 0:53:30 | 0:53:34 | |
And you weren't going to reproduce a picture of their covers | 0:53:34 | 0:53:36 | |
cos they weren't on the cover. But it didn't do them any harm. | 0:53:36 | 0:53:41 | |
It was just extraordinary that they got away with it, in a way. | 0:53:41 | 0:53:45 | |
I think at the time we were being a bit grand | 0:53:45 | 0:53:48 | |
and felt that we didn't really want to be too involved in the | 0:53:48 | 0:53:51 | |
sort of promotion that the record company were doing. | 0:53:51 | 0:53:54 | |
I think there was a playback at the planetarium. | 0:53:54 | 0:53:56 | |
And I think that we decided that we weren't going to turn up for this. | 0:53:56 | 0:54:00 | |
Quite why, I have no idea. | 0:54:00 | 0:54:02 | |
Despite Pink Floyd's disdain for publicity, | 0:54:02 | 0:54:05 | |
Dark Side Of The Moon spent 14 years in the Billboard Top 200. | 0:54:05 | 0:54:10 | |
No other album has ever come close to this feat. | 0:54:13 | 0:54:16 | |
This piece of work, I think they will still be listening to in | 0:54:19 | 0:54:23 | |
the same way they listen to Mozart, you know, in hundreds of years' time. | 0:54:23 | 0:54:26 | |
It is just perfect, there are no rough edges. | 0:54:26 | 0:54:30 | |
You're going to ask me why I think Dark Side was successful. | 0:54:33 | 0:54:36 | |
And, erm... | 0:54:36 | 0:54:39 | |
My answer is, it's more than one reason, | 0:54:39 | 0:54:43 | |
it isn't just because the drums are so fantastic or anything like that. | 0:54:43 | 0:54:48 | |
It is actually the fact that the lyrics are extraordinary | 0:54:48 | 0:54:51 | |
and they are more relevant to a 50-year-old than | 0:54:51 | 0:54:53 | |
they are to a 23-year-old, in many ways. | 0:54:53 | 0:54:56 | |
# And if the dam breaks open many years too soon | 0:54:56 | 0:55:02 | |
# And if there is no room upon the hill... # | 0:55:02 | 0:55:07 | |
Dark Side turned Pink Floyd into one of the biggest bands in the world. | 0:55:07 | 0:55:12 | |
But an album was now capable of even more than that. | 0:55:12 | 0:55:16 | |
# I'll see you on the dark side of the moon... # | 0:55:16 | 0:55:21 | |
In 1973, the first release from a start-up independent label | 0:55:21 | 0:55:25 | |
called Virgin Records was delivered to be cut to vinyl. | 0:55:25 | 0:55:29 | |
MUSIC: Tubular Bells by Mike Oldfield | 0:55:29 | 0:55:32 | |
Each side was a single experimental instrumental track. | 0:55:35 | 0:55:40 | |
It was written and performed by a complete unknown. | 0:55:40 | 0:55:44 | |
It featured no lyrics and no songs. | 0:55:44 | 0:55:47 | |
It's always every young musician's dream to make their own album. | 0:55:47 | 0:55:52 | |
That's what life is about. I thought one day I will make my own album. | 0:55:52 | 0:55:58 | |
In 1973, young musician Mike Oldfield sent a set of home demos | 0:55:58 | 0:56:03 | |
to every record company in London. No-one was interested. | 0:56:03 | 0:56:09 | |
But then they came to the attention of an independent record shop owner. | 0:56:09 | 0:56:13 | |
Somebody brought a tape that he had made which was the sort of makings | 0:56:13 | 0:56:19 | |
of Tubular Bells that he had recorded in his flat above his mother's house. | 0:56:19 | 0:56:27 | |
It was captivating. | 0:56:27 | 0:56:29 | |
Branson saw something in Oldfield's tapes | 0:56:30 | 0:56:32 | |
that the record companies didn't. | 0:56:32 | 0:56:35 | |
When he launched his own record company a few months later, | 0:56:35 | 0:56:38 | |
Oldfield was the first person he called. | 0:56:38 | 0:56:41 | |
They said, "OK, we'll give you a week in the studio." | 0:56:41 | 0:56:45 | |
And in that week I did a huge part of Tubular Bells, nearly all of it. | 0:56:45 | 0:56:49 | |
Oldfield played almost every instrument on the record | 0:56:55 | 0:56:58 | |
and composed all the music. | 0:56:58 | 0:57:00 | |
I knew it would be a long and difficult job | 0:57:02 | 0:57:04 | |
and take me quite some time. | 0:57:04 | 0:57:07 | |
The studio was a big thing and cost hundreds of dollars per hour. | 0:57:07 | 0:57:12 | |
So, to be allowed free rein of a studio was quite a special thing. | 0:57:13 | 0:57:18 | |
The album was released in May 1973. | 0:57:18 | 0:57:22 | |
Richard Branson arranged a live television recital to promote it. | 0:57:24 | 0:57:28 | |
But Oldfield was less keen. | 0:57:28 | 0:57:31 | |
I'd finished the album and I was pretty exhausted, | 0:57:31 | 0:57:33 | |
and then they came to me and said, "All right, | 0:57:33 | 0:57:35 | |
"now you've got to do all that again, but live. | 0:57:35 | 0:57:38 | |
Oldfield's mesmerising instrumentals | 0:57:39 | 0:57:42 | |
had been meticulously constructed in the studio. | 0:57:42 | 0:57:45 | |
He hadn't considered the complications of performing it live. | 0:57:45 | 0:57:48 | |
I think we counted once, | 0:57:50 | 0:57:51 | |
over 1,800 or 1,900 overdubs on Tubular Bells, | 0:57:51 | 0:57:56 | |
and I had to work out how to translate that studio production | 0:57:56 | 0:57:58 | |
into a live concert. | 0:57:58 | 0:58:00 | |
And...it was exhausting. | 0:58:00 | 0:58:04 | |
On the way there, he said to me, "I'm afraid I just can't do it." | 0:58:04 | 0:58:07 | |
You know, "I just can't face it." | 0:58:07 | 0:58:09 | |
I'd got a very old Bentley which cost about £300, | 0:58:09 | 0:58:13 | |
which my parents had given me for a wedding present, | 0:58:13 | 0:58:16 | |
and I was driving him there in it, | 0:58:16 | 0:58:19 | |
and I pulled in and I said to Mike, "Look, you know, | 0:58:19 | 0:58:23 | |
"if you can overcome your psychological problems, | 0:58:23 | 0:58:25 | |
"the keys are yours." | 0:58:25 | 0:58:27 | |
And Mike sort of sat there for about five seconds and said, | 0:58:27 | 0:58:31 | |
"I think I'm feeling slightly better." | 0:58:31 | 0:58:34 | |
MUSIC: Tubular Bells | 0:58:34 | 0:58:36 | |
That night he performed at the Queen Elizabeth Hall | 0:58:40 | 0:58:43 | |
and brought the house down. | 0:58:43 | 0:58:45 | |
It was absolutely, you know, breathtaking. | 0:58:53 | 0:58:56 | |
I mean, a standing ovation for, I don't know, | 0:58:56 | 0:59:00 | |
20 minutes at the end. | 0:59:00 | 0:59:01 | |
The audience absolutely loved it, which was... | 0:59:04 | 0:59:06 | |
You know, rapturous reception, which was rather nice. | 0:59:06 | 0:59:10 | |
And I got the Bentley. | 0:59:10 | 0:59:12 | |
Tubular Bells has sold 18 million copies worldwide | 0:59:13 | 0:59:17 | |
and spent nearly 300 weeks in the charts. | 0:59:17 | 0:59:20 | |
It was the album upon which Richard Branson built his empire. | 0:59:20 | 0:59:25 | |
Obviously Tubular Bells, you know, made an enormous difference | 0:59:25 | 0:59:29 | |
and it really kicked off our record company. | 0:59:29 | 0:59:33 | |
By the end of 1974, in America, | 0:59:36 | 0:59:39 | |
more money was being spent on records than movies or sports. | 0:59:39 | 0:59:43 | |
And the major record labels | 0:59:44 | 0:59:46 | |
were joining the ranks of the corporate elite. | 0:59:46 | 0:59:49 | |
By the early '70s, most of the record companies | 0:59:49 | 0:59:52 | |
have interests in lots of areas. | 0:59:52 | 0:59:54 | |
RCA, you know, home for David Bowie during the 1970s | 0:59:54 | 0:59:58 | |
and that fantastic stream of albums he produced, | 0:59:58 | 1:00:00 | |
also owns the Hertz rental car company. | 1:00:00 | 1:00:03 | |
MCA has, you know, Universal Studios. | 1:00:03 | 1:00:07 | |
Now, with companies themselves thinking big, | 1:00:07 | 1:00:10 | |
you get, equally, the promotion of artists | 1:00:10 | 1:00:13 | |
who are kind of megastars during this period - | 1:00:13 | 1:00:16 | |
people like Elton John, for instance. | 1:00:16 | 1:00:19 | |
Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy, | 1:00:19 | 1:00:22 | |
selling something like 1.3 million copies | 1:00:22 | 1:00:25 | |
within its first four days of sales. | 1:00:25 | 1:00:28 | |
So, huge budgets are then bequeathed to those stars | 1:00:28 | 1:00:32 | |
because they're seen as sure-fire bets. | 1:00:32 | 1:00:36 | |
In 1975, Queen began recording their fourth album, A Night At The Opera. | 1:00:39 | 1:00:45 | |
At the time, it would be the most expensive album ever made. | 1:00:45 | 1:00:49 | |
It was painstaking. | 1:00:49 | 1:00:51 | |
We were using four studios at once at one point | 1:00:51 | 1:00:53 | |
and there'd be a different member in each studio doing different things. | 1:00:53 | 1:00:58 | |
# Oh, oh, people of the earth... # | 1:00:58 | 1:01:02 | |
Speeding and stopping the machines and slowing them down | 1:01:02 | 1:01:05 | |
and speeding them up again and recording that. | 1:01:05 | 1:01:10 | |
It seemed to take for ever, actually. | 1:01:13 | 1:01:16 | |
For four months, the band overdubbed track after track. | 1:01:16 | 1:01:20 | |
We really did take it so that the tape...all the oxide | 1:01:20 | 1:01:23 | |
was almost worn away, it was actually transparent in places. | 1:01:23 | 1:01:27 | |
The result was a sprawling, diverse album | 1:01:27 | 1:01:30 | |
which indulged the band's influences from music hall to opera. | 1:01:30 | 1:01:34 | |
# I see a little silhouetto of a man | 1:01:34 | 1:01:37 | |
# Scaramouch, scaramouch Will you do the fandango? # | 1:01:37 | 1:01:41 | |
We were sort of almost showing off what we could achieve in the studio. | 1:01:41 | 1:01:45 | |
-# Gallileo -Gallileo... # | 1:01:45 | 1:01:47 | |
Oh, yeah, making records in the '70s was a lot of fun. | 1:01:47 | 1:01:50 | |
You usually own the studio, like, you'd block book it. | 1:01:50 | 1:01:54 | |
You would live in that studio for two months. | 1:01:54 | 1:01:56 | |
You'd have Ping-Pong tables, pool tables, dartboards. | 1:01:56 | 1:02:01 | |
The record company's role was simply to write the cheque. | 1:02:01 | 1:02:05 | |
So, yeah, you know, the idea | 1:02:05 | 1:02:07 | |
of anyone going to a Queen album session | 1:02:07 | 1:02:09 | |
and discussing the merits of the songs | 1:02:09 | 1:02:11 | |
with Freddie Mercury and Brian May, pretty unlikely. | 1:02:11 | 1:02:14 | |
You know, they knew what they were doing. | 1:02:14 | 1:02:15 | |
But investment in these headline artists | 1:02:18 | 1:02:21 | |
didn't tell the whole mid-'70s story. | 1:02:21 | 1:02:23 | |
In 1973, Arab nations had declared an oil embargo | 1:02:23 | 1:02:28 | |
and the price of oil, | 1:02:28 | 1:02:30 | |
a key substance in the manufacture of vinyl, had quadrupled. | 1:02:30 | 1:02:33 | |
There's a shortage of PVC vinyl, | 1:02:33 | 1:02:35 | |
the oil offshoot that records are made from. | 1:02:35 | 1:02:38 | |
The price has shot up £60 in three months to £210 a tonne. | 1:02:38 | 1:02:42 | |
With vinyl costs soaring, | 1:02:42 | 1:02:44 | |
record companies turned to cheap solutions to balance the books. | 1:02:44 | 1:02:47 | |
Best of albums and greatest hits compilations and, you know, | 1:02:47 | 1:02:50 | |
cheapy chart compilations become a kind of mainstay | 1:02:50 | 1:02:54 | |
of the record companies' revenue stream. | 1:02:54 | 1:02:57 | |
When I was at EMI, we started doing 20 Golden Greats, | 1:02:57 | 1:03:00 | |
which was, you know, an enormous income earner for EMI | 1:03:00 | 1:03:04 | |
at a time when we struggled in the mid-'70s. | 1:03:04 | 1:03:07 | |
You paid no recording costs. | 1:03:08 | 1:03:11 | |
You know, you just basically compiled it and you made an ad. | 1:03:11 | 1:03:15 | |
You know, that kept the books balanced. | 1:03:15 | 1:03:18 | |
Best of albums by The Carpenters, The Stylistics and Abba | 1:03:18 | 1:03:24 | |
were the UK's highest sellers in '74, '75, and '76. | 1:03:24 | 1:03:29 | |
And in the huge rock market, | 1:03:29 | 1:03:31 | |
there was another way to package collections of hits cheaply - | 1:03:31 | 1:03:34 | |
the live album. | 1:03:34 | 1:03:36 | |
It's better than a greatest hits | 1:03:39 | 1:03:41 | |
because the greatest hits were kind of like for the part-timers | 1:03:41 | 1:03:44 | |
or the non-serious fans - | 1:03:44 | 1:03:46 | |
the "here today, gone later today" crowd. | 1:03:46 | 1:03:49 | |
Live albums, though, had their cake and ate it all up. | 1:03:49 | 1:03:53 | |
You know, you had all the hits but done in a new, unfamiliar style. | 1:03:53 | 1:03:59 | |
It was easy as pie to make a live album. | 1:03:59 | 1:04:01 | |
You would just show up with a truck that had a 16-track recorder in it, | 1:04:01 | 1:04:05 | |
set up the mics, you know, | 1:04:05 | 1:04:07 | |
take a feed off the stage mics, | 1:04:07 | 1:04:09 | |
and labels were thrilled that a live album | 1:04:09 | 1:04:12 | |
took relatively nothing to produce | 1:04:12 | 1:04:14 | |
and you could still get millions of sales. | 1:04:14 | 1:04:17 | |
It was an LP recorded in 1975 | 1:04:17 | 1:04:20 | |
that showed just what a cash cow the live album could be. | 1:04:20 | 1:04:23 | |
British guitarist Peter Frampton had released four studio albums, | 1:04:25 | 1:04:28 | |
none of which had even scratched the US top 20. | 1:04:28 | 1:04:31 | |
# I wondered how you're feeling... # | 1:04:31 | 1:04:34 | |
For his first live album, | 1:04:34 | 1:04:36 | |
he took to the stage at San Francisco's Winterland Arena. | 1:04:36 | 1:04:40 | |
It was 7,000 people, you know, in Winterland, | 1:04:40 | 1:04:44 | |
and when we walked out, got this huge ovation, | 1:04:44 | 1:04:49 | |
and because of that, I think we forgot that we were recording | 1:04:49 | 1:04:54 | |
and the audience just brought something to the show | 1:04:54 | 1:04:57 | |
and we just did one hell of a show that night. | 1:04:57 | 1:05:00 | |
# I want you to show me the way... # | 1:05:00 | 1:05:04 | |
The recording of a live LP was the reverse | 1:05:04 | 1:05:07 | |
of the often lengthy, complex sessions of a studio album. | 1:05:07 | 1:05:11 | |
I remember standing at the back of the control room, | 1:05:11 | 1:05:14 | |
leaning up against the wall, and Ray just put...he said, | 1:05:14 | 1:05:17 | |
"I'm not going to do a mix, I'm just going to put all the faders up." | 1:05:17 | 1:05:20 | |
He said, "Check this out." | 1:05:20 | 1:05:22 | |
And I don't remember what he played first. | 1:05:22 | 1:05:24 | |
I just remember us all going... | 1:05:24 | 1:05:26 | |
..and just the energy that we'd captured from that, | 1:05:27 | 1:05:31 | |
it was just quite special. | 1:05:31 | 1:05:34 | |
# I want you... # | 1:05:34 | 1:05:36 | |
The mix of Frampton's best material, his rapport with the audience | 1:05:36 | 1:05:40 | |
and the instantly recognisable talkbox was a smash hit. | 1:05:40 | 1:05:45 | |
MUSIC PLAYS ON IPHONE | 1:05:45 | 1:05:47 | |
HE LAUGHS | 1:05:59 | 1:06:00 | |
I'm going to have to disinfect my iPhone now! | 1:06:03 | 1:06:06 | |
The album became the biggest-selling record of 1976 in America | 1:06:15 | 1:06:19 | |
and the biggest-selling live rock album of all time. | 1:06:19 | 1:06:22 | |
# I can't believe this is happening to me... # | 1:06:22 | 1:06:27 | |
You couldn't go in anyone's car, anyone's house, | 1:06:27 | 1:06:31 | |
or walking down the street, you heard Comes Alive coming from somewhere. | 1:06:31 | 1:06:37 | |
And even I would change the channel on the radio... | 1:06:37 | 1:06:42 | |
now, I wish. | 1:06:42 | 1:06:43 | |
# I want you... # | 1:06:43 | 1:06:45 | |
Live albums, best-of collections and bankable megastars | 1:06:45 | 1:06:48 | |
kept the industry growing. | 1:06:48 | 1:06:49 | |
But attitudes to risky new releases were changing. | 1:06:51 | 1:06:55 | |
The record companies, after the oil crisis, in a sense, | 1:06:55 | 1:06:57 | |
become more conservative in their choices, | 1:06:57 | 1:07:01 | |
they become, perhaps, more businesslike. | 1:07:01 | 1:07:03 | |
With most debut LPs failing to hit profit, | 1:07:05 | 1:07:08 | |
labels cut back on new releases. | 1:07:08 | 1:07:11 | |
And in America, album-oriented radio, | 1:07:11 | 1:07:14 | |
which once championed the artistic freedom of the LP, | 1:07:14 | 1:07:18 | |
was becoming increasingly resistant to new music. | 1:07:18 | 1:07:21 | |
MUSIC: In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida by Iron Butterfly | 1:07:21 | 1:07:24 | |
Now, bigger, you know, | 1:07:24 | 1:07:26 | |
corporate companies had got hold of radio in America | 1:07:26 | 1:07:29 | |
and were beginning to want certain tracks played | 1:07:29 | 1:07:32 | |
from certain albums, you know. | 1:07:32 | 1:07:34 | |
Radio had gone from playing every new song | 1:07:34 | 1:07:37 | |
that the music industry put out, to a very tight playlist, | 1:07:37 | 1:07:41 | |
and no-one in a competitive market | 1:07:41 | 1:07:42 | |
wanted to be the first one to try out a new song. | 1:07:42 | 1:07:44 | |
So, increasingly, | 1:07:44 | 1:07:46 | |
the universe of songs being played on the radio was shrinking. | 1:07:46 | 1:07:49 | |
Album-oriented radio was still key to breaking the vast US market, | 1:07:49 | 1:07:53 | |
but in order to break the tightening playlists, | 1:07:53 | 1:07:56 | |
new artists needed a new approach to creating a record. | 1:07:56 | 1:08:00 | |
In the early '70s, Tom Scholz was an engineering graduate | 1:08:05 | 1:08:09 | |
and wannabe rock star in search of a record deal. | 1:08:09 | 1:08:12 | |
I realised somewhere around 1973 or '74 | 1:08:13 | 1:08:17 | |
that the only way I was going to get a chance to have my music heard | 1:08:17 | 1:08:23 | |
was if I could find a way to get it on the radio. | 1:08:23 | 1:08:27 | |
Scholz built a studio in his basement, | 1:08:28 | 1:08:30 | |
where he set about creating songs that could break US radio. | 1:08:30 | 1:08:34 | |
From that point on, I was pretty much independent. | 1:08:35 | 1:08:38 | |
I could play every single part | 1:08:38 | 1:08:40 | |
and I not only didn't need anybody else, | 1:08:40 | 1:08:43 | |
I really had learned the hard way | 1:08:43 | 1:08:46 | |
that the only way that I was going to be successful | 1:08:46 | 1:08:49 | |
is if I did everything the way I heard it. | 1:08:49 | 1:08:52 | |
Scholz used his engineering know-how | 1:08:56 | 1:08:58 | |
to produce a sophisticated, radio-friendly sound. | 1:08:58 | 1:09:01 | |
# More than a feeling... # | 1:09:01 | 1:09:03 | |
This was no rough and ready demo. | 1:09:03 | 1:09:05 | |
# More than a feeling... # | 1:09:05 | 1:09:08 | |
Every guitar note, every melody, every vocal, | 1:09:08 | 1:09:12 | |
was thoroughly produced. | 1:09:12 | 1:09:14 | |
More Than A Feeling is a sensational track. | 1:09:16 | 1:09:19 | |
He was a brilliant, brilliant producer. | 1:09:19 | 1:09:21 | |
The vocals are panned a little bit towards the centre | 1:09:21 | 1:09:24 | |
to give more phasing on the line on purpose. | 1:09:24 | 1:09:27 | |
# ..As clear as the sun... # | 1:09:29 | 1:09:32 | |
If you listen very closely, you can tell | 1:09:32 | 1:09:34 | |
that there's two singers singing the same part. | 1:09:34 | 1:09:37 | |
Here there's four guitar... lead guitar parts come in. | 1:09:37 | 1:09:42 | |
There's one on each side playing at the same note, | 1:09:42 | 1:09:45 | |
then there's a harmony part on top of it. | 1:09:45 | 1:09:47 | |
There are two electric guitars, one on each side. | 1:09:47 | 1:09:51 | |
There are two acoustic guitars on each side. | 1:09:51 | 1:09:54 | |
There's a lead guitar running off under the vocals. | 1:09:54 | 1:09:58 | |
There's a total of eight guitars playing, plus the bass, of course. | 1:09:58 | 1:10:02 | |
# ..Till I see Marianne walk away... # | 1:10:02 | 1:10:06 | |
Scholz's sound caught the ear of producer John Boylan. | 1:10:06 | 1:10:10 | |
I remember taking the two-track tape and flying to New York with it | 1:10:10 | 1:10:14 | |
and playing it at the singles meeting in New York | 1:10:14 | 1:10:18 | |
for Ron Alexenberg and the entire Epic staff and they went nuts. | 1:10:18 | 1:10:22 | |
And I knew that something was going to happen with this record | 1:10:22 | 1:10:25 | |
right then and there. | 1:10:25 | 1:10:28 | |
Boylan persuaded Epic Records to sign Scholz | 1:10:28 | 1:10:31 | |
and vocalist Brad Delp under the name Boston | 1:10:31 | 1:10:35 | |
and the debut album was released in the summer of 1976. | 1:10:35 | 1:10:38 | |
A band was assembled to perform the music, | 1:10:40 | 1:10:42 | |
and just weeks after More Than A Feeling | 1:10:42 | 1:10:44 | |
was played on FM radio, Boston played their first gig. | 1:10:44 | 1:10:48 | |
I guess they could have accommodated | 1:10:48 | 1:10:49 | |
something like 1,000 people in the stands. | 1:10:49 | 1:10:52 | |
There was a riot. | 1:10:52 | 1:10:54 | |
3,000 people showed up. | 1:10:54 | 1:10:55 | |
They broke down the fence, the promoter was arrested. | 1:10:55 | 1:10:58 | |
It was the most exciting show of all time! | 1:10:58 | 1:11:01 | |
More Than A Feeling helped turn Boston's album | 1:11:04 | 1:11:07 | |
into one of the biggest-selling debut albums in history. | 1:11:07 | 1:11:11 | |
And not only that, it heralded a whole new style of rock music. | 1:11:11 | 1:11:16 | |
I would say Boston was the first album of a certain genre, | 1:11:16 | 1:11:22 | |
and that genre was continued on | 1:11:22 | 1:11:24 | |
by acts like Journey and Styx and Kansas | 1:11:24 | 1:11:27 | |
and other artists that had a sonic signature, | 1:11:27 | 1:11:32 | |
you know, that sounded great on the radio, that were definitely rock, | 1:11:32 | 1:11:36 | |
but also melodic and also had a lot of other things going for it | 1:11:36 | 1:11:40 | |
than just a plain ahead rhythm and blues | 1:11:40 | 1:11:43 | |
kind of rooted rock'n'roll. | 1:11:43 | 1:11:45 | |
# And I guess it's just the woman in you... # | 1:11:45 | 1:11:49 | |
The kind of music that was dominating American FM radio | 1:11:49 | 1:11:53 | |
began to change. | 1:11:53 | 1:11:54 | |
AOR was no longer album-oriented rock. | 1:11:54 | 1:11:58 | |
In the '70s, it did become adult-oriented rock, | 1:11:58 | 1:12:01 | |
and there's, I think, a simple reason, | 1:12:01 | 1:12:03 | |
is that the audience became adults. | 1:12:03 | 1:12:05 | |
Let's face it, they weren't going to be teenagers | 1:12:05 | 1:12:07 | |
and college kids for ever. | 1:12:07 | 1:12:09 | |
Album-oriented rock became adult-oriented rock | 1:12:09 | 1:12:11 | |
only because the audience became adults. | 1:12:11 | 1:12:13 | |
Of course, the downside of groups like Foreigner, Journey, | 1:12:13 | 1:12:18 | |
REO Speedwagon, was that we now had the formula. | 1:12:18 | 1:12:23 | |
We now had the rules, the map, | 1:12:23 | 1:12:27 | |
we could build it in the laboratory. | 1:12:27 | 1:12:29 | |
A little bit of Zep, a little bit of Beatles, | 1:12:29 | 1:12:32 | |
a little bit of this and that | 1:12:32 | 1:12:34 | |
and we could come up with this really beautiful anthem | 1:12:34 | 1:12:37 | |
that would sound perfect on FM radio in America. | 1:12:37 | 1:12:40 | |
So, a lot of these records are fantastically well-crafted, | 1:12:40 | 1:12:44 | |
but they're kind of sealed hermetically. | 1:12:44 | 1:12:47 | |
There's no air in them. There's no life, they don't breathe. | 1:12:47 | 1:12:50 | |
# Welcome to the Hotel California... # | 1:12:50 | 1:12:55 | |
Polished melodic rock was becoming | 1:12:55 | 1:12:57 | |
a feature of the American charts. | 1:12:57 | 1:13:00 | |
# Such a lovely face... # | 1:13:00 | 1:13:02 | |
In 1977, the Eagles' Hotel California | 1:13:02 | 1:13:05 | |
was knocked off the number one spot | 1:13:05 | 1:13:07 | |
by the biggest-selling album of the year, | 1:13:07 | 1:13:10 | |
Fleetwood Mac's Rumours. | 1:13:10 | 1:13:12 | |
# Don't stop thinking about tomorrow... # | 1:13:12 | 1:13:15 | |
An album like Rumours, for instance, | 1:13:15 | 1:13:18 | |
manages to combine the kind of rhythmic, | 1:13:18 | 1:13:21 | |
catchy element of rock'n'roll | 1:13:21 | 1:13:25 | |
with something that's slick and smooth. | 1:13:25 | 1:13:29 | |
# Loving you isn't the right thing to do... # | 1:13:30 | 1:13:35 | |
Perhaps its audience were seeking something akin to easy listening. | 1:13:35 | 1:13:39 | |
They wanted something that was comforting | 1:13:39 | 1:13:42 | |
and could be stuck on in the background. | 1:13:42 | 1:13:44 | |
But they are a generation that's grown up with rock'n'roll, | 1:13:44 | 1:13:47 | |
so they're used to the idea of a beat. | 1:13:47 | 1:13:49 | |
Everyone of a certain age probably has a copy of Rumours. | 1:13:51 | 1:13:55 | |
It became part of the furniture | 1:13:55 | 1:13:58 | |
of being an adult in the 1970s. | 1:13:58 | 1:14:02 | |
# Go your own way... # | 1:14:02 | 1:14:05 | |
But it wasn't just the album buyer that was growing up. | 1:14:05 | 1:14:09 | |
It was musicians too. | 1:14:09 | 1:14:11 | |
The British prog artists, | 1:14:11 | 1:14:13 | |
famous for pushing the envelope of the album | 1:14:13 | 1:14:16 | |
in the early '70s, were now increasingly accused of indulgence. | 1:14:16 | 1:14:19 | |
I think progressive music started with every good intention. | 1:14:23 | 1:14:27 | |
It started in the way we've been describing of, you know, | 1:14:27 | 1:14:31 | |
pushing out, "Let's experiment, let's see how far we can go. | 1:14:31 | 1:14:35 | |
"Let's introduce lots of other different elements into it." | 1:14:35 | 1:14:38 | |
And I remember my turning point with all of this came watching | 1:14:38 | 1:14:42 | |
Yes at Madison Square Garden... | 1:14:42 | 1:14:43 | |
..where there were pods | 1:14:47 | 1:14:51 | |
lowered down through dry ice, you know, onto the stage. | 1:14:51 | 1:14:54 | |
The pod opened | 1:14:54 | 1:14:56 | |
and the drummer steps out through the dry ice... | 1:14:56 | 1:15:00 | |
..all to very dramatic music going on, and I began to think, | 1:15:02 | 1:15:07 | |
"Whoa, hang on a minute. | 1:15:07 | 1:15:09 | |
"We have now come about as far away | 1:15:09 | 1:15:13 | |
"from Elvis being at the RCA Studio | 1:15:13 | 1:15:15 | |
"in '56 as you could possibly get." | 1:15:15 | 1:15:17 | |
All those guys that were in their early 30s by the mid-'70s, | 1:15:17 | 1:15:22 | |
they were all pretty ropey. | 1:15:22 | 1:15:24 | |
It wasn't just the LP, it was The Rolling Stones too. | 1:15:24 | 1:15:28 | |
It wasn't just Pink Floyd, it was David Bowie too. | 1:15:28 | 1:15:31 | |
The promise of the long-playing album was no longer | 1:15:31 | 1:15:35 | |
delivering for a new generation of music fans. | 1:15:35 | 1:15:38 | |
But once again, the album was about to be reinvented. | 1:15:38 | 1:15:42 | |
No, it's extremely provocative, you know. | 1:15:45 | 1:15:48 | |
MUSIC: Holidays In The Sun by The Sex Pistols | 1:15:48 | 1:15:50 | |
Starts with, you know, | 1:15:50 | 1:15:52 | |
what we can only assume are jackboots marching. | 1:15:52 | 1:15:54 | |
At the time... | 1:15:59 | 1:16:00 | |
At that point, it's all over. | 1:16:03 | 1:16:05 | |
Everything that's gone before that | 1:16:05 | 1:16:07 | |
has now been deemed fucking irrelevant, | 1:16:07 | 1:16:10 | |
as soon as he starts anti-singing. | 1:16:10 | 1:16:12 | |
# I don't wanna holiday in the sun | 1:16:15 | 1:16:18 | |
# I wanna go to the new Belsen | 1:16:18 | 1:16:21 | |
# I wanna see some history... # | 1:16:21 | 1:16:24 | |
In 1977, the Sex Pistols | 1:16:24 | 1:16:26 | |
released their debut album, Never Mind The Bollocks. | 1:16:26 | 1:16:31 | |
Punk, in a sense, defined itself against hippy. | 1:16:31 | 1:16:36 | |
Whatever hippies did, punks did the opposite. | 1:16:36 | 1:16:39 | |
Hippies play long instrumental solos, | 1:16:39 | 1:16:42 | |
punks play short solos or no solos at all. | 1:16:42 | 1:16:45 | |
Hippies make conceptual, thematic double albums, | 1:16:45 | 1:16:48 | |
punks make short singles. | 1:16:48 | 1:16:50 | |
It was designed specifically to be | 1:16:50 | 1:16:53 | |
whatever the hippies didn't do. | 1:16:53 | 1:16:55 | |
# Sensurround sound in a two-inch wall... # | 1:16:56 | 1:17:00 | |
We were quite Stalinist, you know, like breaking from the past, | 1:17:00 | 1:17:04 | |
till it meant nothing to us, | 1:17:04 | 1:17:05 | |
apart from a few revered icons, | 1:17:05 | 1:17:08 | |
like The Velvet Underground or Iggy Pop. | 1:17:08 | 1:17:10 | |
Never Mind The Bollocks brought | 1:17:12 | 1:17:15 | |
a new way of thinking to the LP. | 1:17:15 | 1:17:16 | |
Short songs, no sleeve notes and stripped-down production. | 1:17:16 | 1:17:20 | |
MUSIC: Pretty Vacant by The Sex Pistols | 1:17:20 | 1:17:25 | |
Now, this guitar riff, this is probably alone... | 1:17:25 | 1:17:30 | |
You don't need much more of a reason | 1:17:30 | 1:17:33 | |
to produce The Sex Pistols. | 1:17:33 | 1:17:34 | |
It's one of the first things you learn | 1:17:39 | 1:17:41 | |
when you pick up the electric guitar is that riff. | 1:17:41 | 1:17:43 | |
I wanted it to sound like real steel. | 1:17:44 | 1:17:48 | |
No flab at all. | 1:17:48 | 1:17:50 | |
# There's no point in asking You'll get no reply | 1:17:50 | 1:17:53 | |
# Oh, just remember... # | 1:17:53 | 1:17:55 | |
Just two musicians played almost all the music on the record - | 1:17:55 | 1:17:59 | |
drummer Paul Cook and guitarist Steve Jones, | 1:17:59 | 1:18:02 | |
who also played the bass parts. | 1:18:02 | 1:18:05 | |
He just played exactly the same thing on the bass guitar | 1:18:05 | 1:18:08 | |
as he played on the guitar. | 1:18:08 | 1:18:10 | |
He just followed the root note, one octave down. | 1:18:10 | 1:18:14 | |
You've got a perfect harmonic sequence of - boomf - an octave | 1:18:14 | 1:18:18 | |
and then a fifth of an octave and then... | 1:18:18 | 1:18:21 | |
And that's where the power came from. | 1:18:21 | 1:18:23 | |
# ..And we don't care. # | 1:18:23 | 1:18:26 | |
The more you look at it, it's got the words sex and bollocks on it, | 1:18:26 | 1:18:30 | |
and it might be the most provocative piece of popular art ever. | 1:18:30 | 1:18:35 | |
But, despite its rebellious stance, | 1:18:35 | 1:18:38 | |
Never Mind The Bollocks was | 1:18:38 | 1:18:39 | |
no less sophisticated an album in its creative intent. | 1:18:39 | 1:18:43 | |
# I am an antichrist... # | 1:18:43 | 1:18:46 | |
It was the politics and the fashion and the thinking. | 1:18:46 | 1:18:50 | |
Youth culture had died before that point, it wasn't really... | 1:18:50 | 1:18:55 | |
Kids weren't empowered, they were just still seen as kids. | 1:18:55 | 1:19:00 | |
The Sex Pistols came along saying that the established order | 1:19:00 | 1:19:04 | |
was about to change. | 1:19:04 | 1:19:06 | |
It did, for ever. It's never gone back. | 1:19:06 | 1:19:09 | |
While punk purports to have kind of introduced a ground zero | 1:19:09 | 1:19:14 | |
approach to everything that had come before - | 1:19:14 | 1:19:16 | |
goodbye, horrible, self-indulgent concept album, progressive, | 1:19:16 | 1:19:22 | |
long-haired fools - | 1:19:22 | 1:19:24 | |
Never Mind The Bollocks actually turns out to be perhaps | 1:19:24 | 1:19:28 | |
one of the greatest rock concept albums of all time. | 1:19:28 | 1:19:32 | |
# ..An anarchist... # | 1:19:32 | 1:19:33 | |
Never Mind The Bollocks went to number one in the UK in 1977. | 1:19:33 | 1:19:38 | |
That's it, for them. It's all they ever did. | 1:19:38 | 1:19:40 | |
That's their one statement to the world. | 1:19:40 | 1:19:43 | |
And imagine getting it so right once. | 1:19:43 | 1:19:46 | |
I made ten albums and in my own mind | 1:19:47 | 1:19:50 | |
they don't match up to that. | 1:19:50 | 1:19:52 | |
And I'm an arrogant bastard. | 1:19:52 | 1:19:54 | |
Seriously. | 1:19:55 | 1:19:57 | |
And I'd give them all up to have written that. I truly would. | 1:19:57 | 1:20:03 | |
1977 also saw debut albums from The Stranglers, | 1:20:03 | 1:20:06 | |
The Clash and The Damned. | 1:20:06 | 1:20:08 | |
# Be a man, can a mystery man | 1:20:08 | 1:20:11 | |
# Be a doll... # | 1:20:11 | 1:20:12 | |
Even for this revolutionary, raw, anti-Establishment music, | 1:20:12 | 1:20:15 | |
the album was crucial. | 1:20:15 | 1:20:17 | |
Punk rock and New Wave, | 1:20:17 | 1:20:18 | |
which I think was the last great flowering of the LP, | 1:20:18 | 1:20:22 | |
cos everybody wanted their LPs, and if they were The Ramones, | 1:20:22 | 1:20:27 | |
you know, even if all their songs lasted the two minutes, | 1:20:27 | 1:20:30 | |
you still had to get your album out | 1:20:30 | 1:20:33 | |
because you weren't a grown-up rock band unless you did that. | 1:20:33 | 1:20:36 | |
# Once I had a love And it was a gas... # | 1:20:36 | 1:20:40 | |
Punk and New Wave had given the album a creative shot in the arm. | 1:20:40 | 1:20:44 | |
In 1978, record sales propelled the industry to unprecedented revenues. | 1:20:45 | 1:20:51 | |
And in a nod to the LP's early days, | 1:20:54 | 1:20:56 | |
the biggest sellers in 1978 were both soundtracks. | 1:20:56 | 1:21:00 | |
But the long-playing album was spinning on borrowed time. | 1:21:00 | 1:21:06 | |
The record industry is enjoying an unparalleled level of dominance | 1:21:06 | 1:21:11 | |
and success in 1978. | 1:21:11 | 1:21:14 | |
Sales of vinyl albums are at their peak, and then | 1:21:14 | 1:21:17 | |
that's unfortunately followed in 1979 by a massive global downturn. | 1:21:17 | 1:21:22 | |
In 1979, for the first time since album sales overtook singles | 1:21:23 | 1:21:28 | |
11 years earlier, | 1:21:28 | 1:21:30 | |
record industry profits crashed by nearly a quarter. | 1:21:30 | 1:21:33 | |
A golden age of album-led growth came to a close. | 1:21:33 | 1:21:37 | |
The industry blamed the wider recession | 1:21:37 | 1:21:40 | |
and new competition for young consumers' attentions. | 1:21:40 | 1:21:43 | |
They're concerned about the arrival of computer games, | 1:21:45 | 1:21:48 | |
both in arcades and TV consoles. | 1:21:48 | 1:21:51 | |
They're concerned about video recorders, and most of all, | 1:21:51 | 1:21:56 | |
they're concerned about cassette recorders. | 1:21:56 | 1:21:58 | |
# You must be my lucky star... # | 1:21:58 | 1:22:01 | |
Changing technology was undermining the record industry's | 1:22:01 | 1:22:04 | |
LP-orientated business model. | 1:22:04 | 1:22:06 | |
# I just think of you... # | 1:22:06 | 1:22:09 | |
The cassette transforms the way in which people can listen to music. | 1:22:09 | 1:22:13 | |
They're no longer trapped by the physical object of the LP, | 1:22:13 | 1:22:18 | |
they can also tape the album, mix up the tracks | 1:22:18 | 1:22:21 | |
and make their own compilations. | 1:22:21 | 1:22:22 | |
So, it brings a completely different experience of listening | 1:22:22 | 1:22:26 | |
into the equation of the album, | 1:22:26 | 1:22:28 | |
one that reduces the album's kind of | 1:22:28 | 1:22:31 | |
monolithic presence in youth culture | 1:22:31 | 1:22:35 | |
during that period and beyond. | 1:22:35 | 1:22:37 | |
As sales of LPs continued to struggle into the early '80s, | 1:22:37 | 1:22:40 | |
a new way of selling music | 1:22:40 | 1:22:43 | |
and a new canvas for artists' creativity was about to emerge. | 1:22:43 | 1:22:47 | |
MTV was launched in 1981. | 1:22:47 | 1:22:50 | |
Its brash, iconic branding signalled a new approach | 1:22:50 | 1:22:53 | |
to selling music. | 1:22:53 | 1:22:55 | |
What made MTV so different is that everybody else | 1:22:57 | 1:23:00 | |
who had done music on TV | 1:23:00 | 1:23:03 | |
had tried to make music for the TV form, create a story arc through it. | 1:23:03 | 1:23:08 | |
And we said, "No, no. | 1:23:08 | 1:23:09 | |
"We're going to make TV for the music form - | 1:23:09 | 1:23:12 | |
"mood, emotion, attitude." | 1:23:12 | 1:23:14 | |
That was new, that was different, | 1:23:14 | 1:23:15 | |
that was revolutionary at the time. | 1:23:15 | 1:23:17 | |
# Video killed the radio star... # | 1:23:17 | 1:23:20 | |
The music video changed the whole way music was marketed for a while. | 1:23:20 | 1:23:25 | |
I mean, in the old days, you'd have to hear a song | 1:23:25 | 1:23:27 | |
five, six, seven, eight, nine times and then you'd say, | 1:23:27 | 1:23:29 | |
"I've got to have this thing." | 1:23:29 | 1:23:31 | |
But with the music video, | 1:23:31 | 1:23:33 | |
because you had that extra level of entertainment and visual thing, | 1:23:33 | 1:23:37 | |
sometimes the conversion from experience to purchase | 1:23:37 | 1:23:42 | |
happened a lot faster. | 1:23:42 | 1:23:43 | |
Within a year of its launch, | 1:23:43 | 1:23:46 | |
MTV had made an indelible mark on the industry. | 1:23:46 | 1:23:50 | |
Clearly the most influential album was Thriller, Michael Jackson. | 1:23:50 | 1:23:54 | |
# Cos this is thriller | 1:23:54 | 1:23:56 | |
# Thriller night... # | 1:23:56 | 1:23:57 | |
He and Madonna were the first video artists | 1:23:57 | 1:24:01 | |
that really conceived of everything, | 1:24:01 | 1:24:03 | |
the record around the video. | 1:24:03 | 1:24:06 | |
They sort of thought of it as one piece. | 1:24:06 | 1:24:08 | |
# Killer, thriller... # | 1:24:08 | 1:24:10 | |
All of a sudden, the emphasis was | 1:24:10 | 1:24:13 | |
now making singles that would make a good video. | 1:24:13 | 1:24:16 | |
People were writing for video and were abandoning the album concept. | 1:24:16 | 1:24:20 | |
The whole idea, then, of the video being the art form | 1:24:20 | 1:24:24 | |
and you're going to divert huge amounts of resource | 1:24:24 | 1:24:28 | |
from your core album into the marketing of that album. | 1:24:28 | 1:24:33 | |
You're going to suck half the budget away from what previously | 1:24:33 | 1:24:36 | |
had been the recording costs into now marketing that album. | 1:24:36 | 1:24:39 | |
The era of the video had arrived. | 1:24:41 | 1:24:43 | |
EVIL LAUGHTER | 1:24:43 | 1:24:48 | |
The long-playing album would never again be | 1:24:48 | 1:24:51 | |
the driving force of the music industry. | 1:24:51 | 1:24:54 | |
But, even long after the needle lifted from its golden age, | 1:24:54 | 1:24:57 | |
its influence lives on. | 1:24:57 | 1:25:00 | |
I consider myself extremely fortunate to have been | 1:25:00 | 1:25:02 | |
in the music business in what I think will be looked back on | 1:25:02 | 1:25:06 | |
as a golden era, and that is the vinyl era, | 1:25:06 | 1:25:09 | |
I think was the most productive, the most musical | 1:25:09 | 1:25:11 | |
and the most forward-thinking era in the entire | 1:25:11 | 1:25:14 | |
140 years of the music industry. | 1:25:14 | 1:25:16 | |
Things like Pink Floyd, Dark Side Of The Moon, | 1:25:16 | 1:25:18 | |
would never have been able to exist | 1:25:18 | 1:25:22 | |
without the LP, and so there were | 1:25:22 | 1:25:26 | |
beautiful albums produced that only would work in LP form. | 1:25:26 | 1:25:31 | |
It's like sitting by an old fire, a crackly piece of vinyl. | 1:25:31 | 1:25:33 | |
There's something really comforting about it. | 1:25:33 | 1:25:35 | |
You could sit there over a lovely cup of tea | 1:25:35 | 1:25:38 | |
and you could have people round to listen to it. | 1:25:38 | 1:25:40 | |
It wasn't just this experience that happened in your ears only. | 1:25:40 | 1:25:44 | |
Every single time you listen to the record, | 1:25:44 | 1:25:46 | |
you've got to do the same thing - handle it with care, | 1:25:46 | 1:25:48 | |
put your finger in the middle, keep it balanced, | 1:25:48 | 1:25:50 | |
put it on the platter, do that. | 1:25:50 | 1:25:52 | |
You can't just casually throw it and hope that it... | 1:25:52 | 1:25:55 | |
You've got to do the same ritual, | 1:25:55 | 1:25:57 | |
that preparatory ritual, | 1:25:57 | 1:25:59 | |
-before you sit back and go... -HE SIGHS | 1:25:59 | 1:26:02 | |
That was like a gift, a gift to yourself or a gift to somebody else, | 1:26:02 | 1:26:06 | |
and it was a magical experience. | 1:26:06 | 1:26:08 | |
My favourite quote from any rock star is | 1:26:08 | 1:26:11 | |
Ray Davies of The Kinks said that | 1:26:11 | 1:26:13 | |
when he looks at someone's LP collection, | 1:26:13 | 1:26:16 | |
he always feels like weeping, | 1:26:16 | 1:26:18 | |
because it's like looking into their soul. | 1:26:18 | 1:26:20 | |
And anybody that collected LPs | 1:26:20 | 1:26:24 | |
in that golden age can understand that. | 1:26:24 | 1:26:27 | |
The record collection was really the art collection | 1:26:27 | 1:26:31 | |
of the ordinary man, of the working man or woman, you know? | 1:26:31 | 1:26:35 | |
And it's only now, as they slip into history, | 1:26:35 | 1:26:38 | |
that we see their real beauty and their real power. | 1:26:38 | 1:26:41 |