The Beatles on Scene at 6:30

5 Responses

  1. Martin says:

    Great stuff, Roger. Been brought up with Granada (in Manchester) since I was a young boy. For the 'Music of Lennon & McCartney' when the Beatles played 'We Can Work It Out' John used the harmonium that was played by the legendary character, Ena Sharples in Coronation Street.

  2. James Percival says:

    I was born and brought up in Grandaland too and they do deserve a bit more credit, so well done for this article.

    Above all in the early 1980s they had one of the best TV drama teams in the world producing celebrated series such as Brideshead Revisited and Jewel in the Crown. Even their quizzes were brainy including The Krypton Factor and University Challenge.

    Funnily enough my main memory of the Beatles on Granada was a slot in the late and lamented Tony Wilson's 'So it Goes' around 1977. They showed their celebrated clip of the Beatles performing in the Cavern and I still swear they played it to the Hamburg recording of 'Ain't She Sweet' rather than the real recording of 'Some Other Guy'. In any case that was the first time I heard the Beatles version of Ain't She Sweet. It would be great if someone else can recall this. It's worth pointing out that the Beatles' stock was probably never as low as it was in the mid to late 70s, and TV clips were relatively rare which is why it made such an impact on me.

  3. Martin says:

    Granada was also at the forefront of current affairs and politics with World In Action and What The Papers Say. One of my favourite Granada shows was The Dustbinmen: a comedy about four Manchester refuse collectors. Many Coronation Street stars started in that show… Granada also did the (still) definitive Sherlock Holmes stories for television. That modern BBC version doesn't come near it…

    Tony Wilson did a great interview with George Harrison in 1976. Parts of it can be seen in the Living In The Material World film.

    I do remember Cavern footage with 'Ain't She Sweet'. I saw it on the news in 1980 when the BBC reported John's murder. Although it may have been an audio recording put over Cavern film…

  4. James Percival says:

    Thanks, Martin. I generally trust my memory but we all misremember to greater or lesser degrees. As I wrote above, the clip was the first time I'd heard the Beatles version of Ain't she Sweet and because I thought the Beatles wrote ALL their songs I assumed this was L&M too. Later, with a fellow Beatles nut I mentioned the clip of Ain't She Sweet and he corrected me. The only way I can reconcile the two is that in the 70s Granada thought the soundtrack was too weak so they dubbed the film with the Hamburg recording. This was definitely before John's murder and I would say 78 at the latest; possibly they resurrected as part of their tribute to John.

    How did I forget Sherlock? The definitive version for me. They filmed quite a lot of it near my home in north Cheshire including Dunham Park. Yes, a jewel in the crown of British broadcasting until all the corporate mergers in the early 90s. I hardly ever watch ITV now.

  5. Martin says:

    Apparently the BBC's Sherlock is going to be a 'tribute' to the Granada version this Christmas… Nice to see them acknowledge it, but it'll probably be a cock-up…

    I hardly watch ITV either, James. It's all reality TV and celebrity crap.
    ITV isn't what it used to be. I used to love Blakey off On The Buses ('Urrrgh! I 'ate you, Butler!).

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