vital and valid today as they were during the Summer of Love. It's not just the durability of their hits, even the twinky pop tarts like "Penny Lane." Or the likelihood that you'll hear some Muzak version of "Yesterday" every time you step on an eleva- tor. Or the plethora of Beatles mu- sic that's dressed up TV com- mercials under the money- minded stewardship of copyright owner Michael Jackson. (The fi- nancially strapped Jackson and his new partner, Sony Corp., may be willing to sell the rights to Beatles songs back to Paul Mc- Cartney, who has not been hap- py with Jackson's commercial use of Beatles tunes.) It's simply that the Beatles provided the model on which every pop band that came in its wake is based, right up to the Pearl Jams and Smashing Pumpkins of the world — which, by the way, have been known to cover a Beatles tune or two. Before the Beatles, rock 'n' roll was a solo game, the purview of an Elvis Presley, a Chuck Berry, a Jerry Lee Lewis; the most rec- ognizable bands, the Crickets and the Comets, for example, stood placidly in the shadows of the stars they supported. The Beatles brought to the fore the idea of the band as a self- contained unit, a gang of kindred spirits. When Elvis performed on the "Ed Sullivan Show," all the boys wanted to be singers and learn to swivel their hips. When the Beatles played, all the boys — and even some girls — called their friends and wanted to put together a band. That's the Beatles' primary contribution to music. Every group, right up to and beyond Hootie & the Blowfish, is mere- ly the latest incarnation of a model that formed during the early '60s in Liverpool. "The Beatles Anthology" is the story of a - band — its be- ginnings, its ex- its istence, At demise. six hours (10 in Britain), and El TL even longer in the home-video ver- sion that's due out next year, "An- thology" is rich in details, previously unseen footage and frank revelations by its partici- pants. What it lacks is perspective; "Anthology" is a myopic project. There's no doubt that it's the de- finitive story of the Beatles, but its scope is limited. It doesn't re- ally give the band its due as a force of great change in popular culture. And for all its virtues, and they are plentiful, "Anthology" does reflect the tight control of the Beatles' organization. The in- terviews are limited to the band members — Lennon is repre- sented by old audio tapes and video clips — and a handful of intimates such as record pro- ducer George Martin and the usually reclu- sive Apple di- rector, Neil Aspinall. There's noth- ing from the BEATLES page 75 GARY GRAFF SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS everal years ago, when he was asked what interest- ing Beatles music re- mained in the vaults, producer George Martin had a standard answer. Not much. Maybe a couple of things, he said, alternate versions of a hit or two. "Ifs a question of choic,e," he cautioned. "You can put out everything the Beatles ever did or said or breathed, and you'd be bored stiff. Some of the stuff wasn't great." But now, after a year of as- sembling three double-albums' worth of material to go along with "The Beatles Anthology" TV documentary, Martin has changed his tune. "When I said those things before, I was speaking from memory," explains Martin, 69, who produced the Beatles' mu- sic between 1962-69. "What changed my mind was having to listen to these things again. For a whole year, I've been sitting in these studios listen- ing to takes I had long forgot- ten." S "There were quite a few sur- prises. I didn't expect to find so much." Besides being heard on the "Anthology" TV special — which debuts 9 p.m. Sunday on ABC — Martin's labors also have re- sulted in the three Anthology al- bums. The first hits record stores Tuesday and includes "Free As a Bird," one of the two new songs the surviving Beat- les recorded from a demo tape made by the late John Lennon, as well as 59 other pieces. Among them are the very first recordings Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harri- son made, in 1958; the Beatles' first audition tapes from 1962; cheeky covers of show-biz stan- dards like "The Sheik of Araby" and "Besame Mucho"; an as- sortment of concert perfor- mances; snippets of interviews; and alternate takes of hits such as "Love Me Do," "Can't Buy Me Love" and "A Hard Day's Night" The next two volumes, which will be released during the first half of 1996, will offer similar gems from later stages of the Fab Four's history. "I'm trying to tell the story of the Beatles in sound," says Mar- tin, who chose not to produce "Free As a Bird" or "Real Love," the other new recording for An- thology . "The time has come, 25 years after their dissolution, to close the door on an extraordi- nary chapter of British music. That's what we're doing," he • IN-STORE COFFEE ROASTING, HAVE YOUR COFFEE FRESH-ROASTED & ENJOY A CUP OF COFFEE ON US! • COFFEE HAPPY HOUR 3-7 P.M. MON.- FM. BUY ONE COFFEE DRINK & RECEIVE A SECOND COFFEE DRINK FREE • LIVE JAZZ FRI. & SAT. EVENINGS - 8 P.M.-11 P.M. THE BEST COFFEE, ESPRESSO & CAPPUCCINO IN TOWN! Taste our tortes,scoues & gourmet cakes. FREE CUP OF OUR [JAVA MASTER COFFEE] ;BUY A JAVA MASTER MUG & RECEIVE 504 REFILL L Between 6:30 am.-930 am For A Limited Time Onty 3 In His Life He loved them all. George Martin talks about "the world's greatest band." THEY IN FINALLY, A COFFEE CAFE WHERE REALLY KNOW BEANS ABOUT COFFEE. says. Martin says he was visited frequently by McCartney, Har- rison and Ringo Starr while he was assembling the Anthology music, And he was most pleased to see that his former proteges, who split up rancorously in 1970, were closer to the four charming and witty lads he met in 1962. "Occasionally all three of them would be sitting around the control room and start rap- ping about old times," the pro- ducer. recalls. "Ringo, because he doesn't live here, was not as frequent a visitor as the other two, but they've all been having their input, their selection. "Working with them in the studio again has been an ab- solute delight They found them- selves again; it was almost as if John has been with them, too. There's a great spirit of cama- raderie. They really do love each other." And how does his opinion of the Beatles in 1995 jibe with his assessment of them after their first audition for him? "They have turned out better than I thought they would ever turn out," says Martin, who plans to retire from producing next year to concentrate on a se- ries of TV shows about music. "I thought they were great then; I think they are even greater now. There's no question that in my life they're the great- est thing I ever had the good for- Simsbury Plaza 33214 W. 14 Mite Rd. • W. Bloomfield, Michigan 48322 (Corner of 14 Mile & Farmington) (810) 626-7393 Hours: Mon.-Thurs.: 6:30 a.m.-11 p.m., Fri.: 6:30 a.m.-12 a.m., Sat: 7:30 a.m.-12 a.m., Sun.: 7:30 a.m.-11 p.m., * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * WALDORF KINDER HOUSE * * * 11TH ANNUAL * * HOLIDAY FAIR SUNDAY NOVEMBER 19 10 AM - 4 PM GIFTS FROM AROUND THE WORLD... UNIQUE HANDCRAFTED TOYS & DOLLS... AREA ARTISTS & CRAFTSPERSONS... 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