500 Beatles tapes are found
By Will Pavia and Devika Bhat
Thought you'd heard every note? Fans of the biggest group of all time
are now waiting for new sounds
IT IS a priceless insight into the creative processes of the most
celebrated pop group of all time — more than 500 tapes of the Beatles
arguing, singing snatches of old tunes and jamming to unreleased tracks.
But for 35 years only tantalising fragments of the missing tapes had
emerged, until they turned up as evidence in an English court after a
long investigation into their whereabouts. Now Beatles fans are hoping
for the release of a treasure trove of material they've never heard
before.
The story starts in 1969, in a damp room at Twickenham Studios. The
Get Back sessions were an attempt to reunite the men who had dominated
popular music for the past few years — to try to find a way past the
tensions that were beginning to divide them, to find the sound they
hoped would hark back to their first years together.
Their efforts were recorded on camera and audio reels. "We were
sitting in the studio and we made it up out of thin air," Sir Paul
McCartney wrote.
The tapes recorded them performing more than 200 cover versions of
work by the artists who had influenced them: Chuck Berry, Elvis
Presley and Buddy Holly. They played their own version of Bob Dylan's
Blowing in the Wind, and Rod Stewart's Maggie May. They belted out
Great Balls of Fire, Hippy Hippy Shake and Lucille in spontaneous
bursts of play.
The album that emerged was later shelved, then put together again a
year later by Phil Spector as Let It Be.
The tapes were placed in storage. Then they disappeared. Since then,
bootlegged fragments have emerged — the dialogue, arguments, jokes and
songs selling for hundreds of pounds. Fans attempted to piece them
together, but it was only when the tapes were advertised in a local
newspaper that the investigation made any real progress.
Documents found at the home of Nigel Oliver, 55, from Slough, led
investigators to raid a warehouse in the Netherlands in 2003, where
the tapes were found. Police also found a key to a suitcase containing
the 1960 passport of George Harrison. Three men were then called to a
police station in Amsterdam. They had been the original sound
engineers during the Get Back sessions. They recognised their own
voices, mixed with those of the Beatles, on the tapes.
Yesterday, Oliver, who was found unfit to stand trial, was sentenced
to a two-year supervision order for handling stolen goods. Neil
Aspinall, the band's first road manager and now head of the Apple
estate, told the court: "These tapes have huge commercial value.
There's lots of very unknown stuff and music on there that they
wouldn't have recorded in a normal session."
One Beatles follower has an especially personal interest. Hunter
Davies, the band's authorised biographer, said: "In 1968 Paul
McCartney came to my house and he used to play the guitar on the
lavatory. He found out my real first name was Eddie and wrote a song
about that. Later someone sent me a bootlegged version from the
sessions. It's two verses, sort of mocking me. Now I'm hoping to hear
the original."