- Jan 3, 2012
- 17,351
I am sorry but just because radio stations only played tedious or tame music does not mean that bands and music available was bland or boring. If anything I think because the Beatles had the right management and they had the right connections it reaffirms my stance that the Beatles were the first truly manufactured British boy band. As we all know from day one radio stations played safe music that did not offend anyone, and with songs like love love me do..... bingo, this does not mean they are the best or worst band ever.
As I said, I was only 10 in 1963, so was not aware of the wider music scene. But am aware from reading about stuff later on that there was an awful lot going on before the Beatles broke through. People like the Graham Bond organisation and Alexis Korner are two that I am aware of.
But I think it was significant that the chart programme was on the "light" programme of the BBC. Radio 1 and radio 2 did not come in to being until 1968, to reflect the need that had at long last been realised for a greater degree of catering for the tastes of young people. In these days of wall to wall MTV and God knows how many radio stations all over the place, there were probably only about two programmes a week on the radio then that catered for young people.
And I am aware that the Beatles changed their drummer and brought in Ringo Starr, but I think it is an enormous exaggeration to say they were a manufactured boy band. They had been around for a while, as the Quarrymen and then the Silver Beatles, and were famously turned down by Decca before they signed for EMI. Hardly a Simon Cowell type rise to instant fame.