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Word In Your Ear
Andy Earl’s memories of photographing Prince, Madonna and Johnny Cash
Andy Earl helped create the new dawn of colour photography in the ‘80s pop video age and went on to shoot a series of unforgettable portraits, album sleeves and magazine covers, many featuring in his new exhibition in Bankside Yards, London. He looks back here at some of his subjects and the analogue days when you flew halfway round the world for the right light and backdrop and every prop in the picture was real. Along with …
… that controversial BowWowWow shoot and how he got the job
… Johnny Cash in a cornfield near Melbourne and the dogs he called “Hell” and “Redemption”
… Duran Duran (and a mysterious nun) in Sri Lanka
… “my job was to create a look”
… why the age of digital photography brought a loss of control
… the Robbie Williams Life Thru a Lens “law court” shoot
… “he couldn’t have been more eccentric”: Prince in Monte Carlo and the confiscated camera
… Pink Floyd’s Delicate Sound of Thunder for Hipgnosis: where Dali met Magritte
… “in Monument Valley with a truckload of giant prosthetic eyeballs”: the Cranberries’ Bury the Hatchet cover
… how covers changed when the CD arrived
… and Madonna opening the hotel window and inhaling the sound of screaming fans: “I just need my hit!”
Andy’s show at Bankside Yards runs from May to August and is free to enter. Details here: https://banksidelondon.co.uk/events/andy-earl-x-bankside-yards/
Help us to keep The Longest Continuous Conversation In Rock going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
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908. The Who, Floyd, Led Zep and the great college circuit that launched 1,000 bands
49:55||Ep. 908Cheap tickets, warm beer, draughty halls and refectories, a whole new cobbled-together rock circuit was born in the ‘60s for an audience who watched and listened intently. Which allowed the music to take a different route. Paul Sexton spoke to Mark Knopfler, Nick Mason, Justin Hayward, Phil Manzanera and many others to piece together ‘Rock Goes To College: the Campus Music Scene That Shaped A Generation’ and talks to us here about the fans and amateurs who ran it and the lost world of motorway caffs and Ford Transits, stopping off at … … Hendrix, Fairport, Free, Queen, Dire Straits: tales of the campus gig foot-soldiers … no security, no lightshow, no seat, no stage: how the idea of live entertainment changed in 50 years … Pink Floyd not being allowed front-of house in Top Rank theatres without a tie … the Stranglers and the Damned refusing to play college shows “unless townies were allowed in” … the “chart clause” - £50 extra if a band’s in the Top 3! … the Stones playing an Oxford ball … bands market-researching songs before recording them … why Leeds could afford the Who and Leonard Cohen … what Harvey Goldsmith, Paul Conroy and Chris Wright learnt from booking bands … why Wings chose the college circuit … and the arrival of DJs and disco that put a nail in the college gig coffin, “a golden age with nothing like it before or after”. Order ‘Rock Goes To College’ here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Rock-Goes-College-campus-generation/dp/0008722412/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&dib_tag=se&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.EWpbXfJjfIq6DOGDGU8HMQMTbZ6fxtMSFJLLqnswcYo.7mGYWOOBglb6F5p42gs88d1lJ0uLxzWS4w3W0vPrwN0&qid=1775764128&sr=1-1Help us to keep The Longest Continuous Conversation In Rock going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
907. Paul Simon, Bad Bunny, how songwriting changed & the scourge of Blue Dot Fever!
50:00||Ep. 907It’s polling day for this week’s news and these are the stories that got our vote … ... Pussycat Dolls, Meghan Trainor and how ‘Blue Dot Fever’ is wrecking ticket sales … how can you judge a songwriter with eight collaborators? … Dylan’s ‘Judas’ moment 60 years later … is everything becoming binary: thumbs-up or thumbs-down? … Grandmaster Flash, Augustus Pablo, George McRea, Tangerine Dream and the times brand new music was invented … when certain dances got you arrested … Alice in Sunderland? See You In My Drums? Shadows’ song titles rebooted … the hilarious self-positioning of the NME critics’ poll… plus jazz pioneer Buddy Bolden and thrill of imagining the sound of acts who were never recorded.Help us to keep The Longest Continuous Conversation In Rock going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
906. Pleasure Gardens, cabaret, nightclubs, rave & 350 years of the Big Night Out
30:11||Ep. 906Mass commercial nightlife began in a Japanese Pleasure Garden in 1657 and it’s blossomed ever since – via Victorian Vauxhall, cabaret Paris, jazz-driven New Orleans, flappers, speakeasies, moonshine, Studio 54 and the rave palaces of the 21st Century. Imogen Willetts tracks its riotous evolution in ‘Up All Night: A History of Going Out’ and wonders if the invention of the iPhone has burst the balloon. She talks to us here about … ... the Tango, the Can-Can: dances that got you arrested … how bourgeois French ‘slummers’ found a taste of danger … the heady allure in the Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens as an escape from Victorian squalor … how Anita Berber’s chloroform ballet shocked and delighted Weimar Berlin … when dancing was a mating ritual and the impact of Dating Apps … democracy on the dancefloor: the unrepeatable mix of punters and celebrities at Studio 54 … and how the invention of the electric light got people going out and the iPhone made them stay home Order ‘Up All Night’ here: https://www.weidenfeldandnicolson.co.uk/titles/imogen-willetts/up-all-night/9781399617093/Help us to keep The Longest Continuous Conversation In Rock going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
904. Talk Talk, a deep-dive tale of mystery and imagination
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903. The Clash, the Cramps and Penny Kiley’s teenage punk diaries
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902. Van Morrison’s agent writes crime fiction as the music business sleeps
44:25||Ep. 902In the 70s Paul Charles wrote lyrics for an Irish prog band. Now he writes mystery novels. Inbetween he’s been agent for Tom Waits, Nick Lowe, Van Morrison, Hothouse Flowers and many others and has forgotten more about live shows than most of us will ever know. Here he talks about:• hearing the Beatles for the first time through the family radio• meeting Tom Waits in a queue at Tower Records in Hollywood• why he likes to watch the way bands take the stage• the changes he’s seen in the live music landscape• why everybody suddenly wants to tour• what will change about ticket prices and what probably won’t• why the artist doesn’t want to see his agent in the bar after the show• what it’s like when Jackson Browne plays you his new record• why his latest McCusker mystery is called “Hi Love, You Just Dropped Your Glove”Order “Hi Love, You Just Dropped Your Glove”: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/B0GTC3M9CW/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0Help us to keep The Longest Continuous Conversation In Rock going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
901. Can the Michael movie reboot Jacko? & how social media changed festivals
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900. Andy Kershaw & Dylan’s jar of jam plus the things people do to get gigs
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