The Movie Diary: Fun in the Sun

18 January, 2024 - 0 Comments

In 1950, a young George Martin, having been educated at the acclaimed Guildhall School of Music and Drama, joined the British record label EMI as a producer. Five years later he became the head of Parlophone Records where he specialized in classical and comedy recordings. Martin, however, was always on the lookout for ways to expand the label’s scope, so he began considering musical acts that he would have previously passed over.

His life would be forever altered in 1962 when four young lads from Liverpool (calling themselves “The Beatles”) walked in looking to make a recording. Martin was initially skeptical about the group’s potential. At that point, they were a young and relatively unknown band, but they had built a reputation as an entertaining live act, so Martin agreed to an audition.

In their initial session, Martin was struck by the member’s personalities and their witty banter, but he wasn’t immediately convinced of their musical prowess. He also had heard that the group had been turned down by most of the other major record labels, making Parlophone one of their last chances.

Source: mountaintimes.info

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