About Michael Gerber

is Blogmom of Hey Dullblog. His novels and parodies have sold 1.25 million copies in 25 languages. He lives in Santa Monica, CA, and runs The American Bystander all-star print humor magazine.

Eight Days A Week

By |2016-09-27T20:16:04-07:00September 27, 2016|Documentaries|

A room and a room and a car and a room: At least this room has wheels. Well, I finally went to see the much-anticipated Eight Days A Week last night at 10:00 in the p.m. Why so late? Because I've been working eight days, etc etc. I know the story, backwards and forwards, and so do you. So going in, I expected nothing, especially after reading Nancy's review which suggested a surface take. And a surface take it was indeed -- but I loved it. I think you should see it; in fact, I think every serious Beatles fan [...]

Did Monoculture Make The Beatles?

By |2016-09-19T10:09:16-07:00September 18, 2016|1967|

December 21, 1967: John, Paul and Ringo at the party celebrating the BBC's transmission of "Magical Mystery Tour." This morning, as I was shaving -- a marvelously quick operation now that I have a beard -- "Breakfast With the Beatles" played a blast-from-the-past radio ad touting the then-new LPs Magical Mystery Tour and Wild Honey. (So we can date the spot to late December 1967/early 1968). I suddenly felt a very warm feeling, a pang of entirely comfortable longing. How nice it would be to hear something like this on contemporary radio, something that I understand fully, by artists I [...]

Death and the Beatles Fan

By |2016-08-22T14:57:45-07:00August 22, 2016|Beatle-inspired|

I hope this fan is still with us. Stephen Kennedy's "Death and the Beatles Fan" has been called a Beatles-themed parody of The Seventh Seal... which makes it catnip for yours truly. (Seventh Seal is my mother's favorite movie, which I guess explains all my therapists.) Anyway, "Death and the Beatles Fan" was broadcast on Ireland's RTE Radio One last weekend; and reader Linda has kindly sent a link where you can listen to the play online. Tell us what you think in the comments! And brush up on your chess, it's later than you think. Stephen Kennedy next [...]

Eight Days A Week trailer

By |2016-06-20T12:53:16-07:00June 20, 2016|Documentaries|

Am I excited for Ron Howard's upcoming documentary, Eight Days A Week? Hell yes, I am. The story of the Beatles' touring years is the great untold portion of their career, and it deserves more attention. In part because the touring experience was what made them who they were; in part because we think we know what it was like; and in part because no one but them could ever truly know what it was like. In my generation, Touring Beatles (1962-66) were often dismissed as pop lightweights turned into artists by exposure to drugs and Bob Dylan. And that viewpoint has [...]

Lewisohn with Conan O’Brien on Serious Jibber-Jabber

By |2016-05-19T11:48:25-07:00May 19, 2016|Mark Lewisohn|

Geekin' out with Conan and Lewisohn. Comedy legend (and serious Beatle fan) Conan O'Brien has just interviewed Beatle legend (and serious Beatle fan) Mark Lewisohn on his chat show "Serious Jibber-Jabber." It's well worth a listen. "Most of the books you have read, upon which you base your knowledge," Lewisohn begins, "in terms of biography they only skim the surface. The writers will take a year or two. And in that time, they'll do six to nine months of research, six to nine months of interviews, and then they'll write. I always felt this was a subject that would merit [...]

Tony Barrow 1936-2016

By |2016-05-16T12:53:46-07:00May 15, 2016|Obituaries|

The Beatles and Tony Barrow, 1963 Former Beatles press agent Tony Barrow has died at age 80. A member of the group's original Liverpool gang, Barrow was part of the Beatles' story from 1961-1968. Record reviewer for the Liverpool Echo from the age of 17, Barrow was working for Decca when Brian Epstein called for some advice regarding a pop group he'd just agreed to manage. Using his connections, Barrow was able to finagle the Beatles an audition. Not forgetting the favor, Brian Epstein later hired him away from Decca to handle press for all the NEMS groups. As every [...]

Our media policy

By |2016-05-11T18:34:55-07:00May 11, 2016|Housekeeping|

"You sold me oregano!" Folks, just a quick check-in here -- earlier a commenter put up a link to a downloadable .epub of Philip Norman's new biography of Paul McCartney. This file is almost certainly an infringement on several entities' copyright, and I removed it as soon as I was made aware of its existence. As someone who has lost thousands (millions?) of dollars in royalties because of exactly this kind of piracy, I take a very dim view of this type of behavior. You want a book, go buy the book. Or get it from the library. Piracy hurts [...]

The Joshua Liquid Light Show

By |2016-05-04T09:50:38-07:00May 4, 2016|1969|

The Joshua Liquid Light Show, invented by artist Joshua White, was a psychedelic staple at New York's iconic Fillmore East in the late Sixties. White and his colleagues would project their work on 30-40 foot screens behind bands like Jimi Hendrix and The Who, improvising in time with the music. I've found one of their Shows on YouTube, which I'm pasting below. This work is now part of the permanent collection at The Museum of Modern Art in New York. https://youtu.be/TW733Ut5zE0 It is a real shame that the Beatles didn't return to touring; their post-Pepper music, plus proper mic-ing and amplification, plus [...]

Sgt Pepper and Psychedelic Utopianism

By |2016-05-03T11:04:41-07:00May 3, 2016|Sgt. Pepper|

"Did you hear that, lads? It's...HISTORY" In a comment on Starostin's latest review of Sgt. Pepper, Dullblogger Karen wrote the following: Part of the charm of this album, as it relates to the construction of an alternate reality, is that it was borne of out a felt need. It wasn’t just conceptual; it was an “only if” type of reaction to the group’s growing disenchantment with their own fame. No other group had ever done that, and with the exception of Prince (who changed his name a few times for the same reason) no-one else has done it since. This [...]

The Turtles and Managers

By |2016-05-02T14:01:50-07:00May 2, 2016|music business|

"Then he went to Mexico, with $40K and the bass player's wife." Since we've been talking a lot lately about managers and agents and their role in the story of the Beatles, I thought I'd post this so-sad-it's-funny video done in 1990 by Flo and Eddie, the founders of The Turtles. https://youtu.be/5JHN5HaUg28 As the Fabs discovered, this kind of thing makes it much, much harder to create, and no band -- no matter how touched with genius -- survives for long under these conditions. This is why I endlessly sing the praises of Mister Brian Epstein. This from Flo and [...]

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