Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月28日
New Martin Scorsese Beatles documentary restores never-before-seen footage of young bandmates flirting, sneaking out, and playing first U.S. gigs
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迪士尼+即将上线一部名为“Beatles ’64”的纪录片,聚焦披头士乐队1964年首次美国之旅。该片使用了罕见且经过修复的影像资料,展现了乐队在纽约等地的生活片段,包括他们在酒店里的嬉戏、与粉丝的互动以及音乐创作等。此外,纪录片还采访了乐队成员、粉丝以及当时受到影响的人,探讨了披头士乐队在美国掀起的狂热现象,以及其音乐对当时社会的影响。同时,该片也揭示了当时一些人对披头士乐队的质疑和误解,以及乐队音乐受到黑人音乐的影响。

😊 **罕见影像资料呈现披头士乐队1964年美国之旅:** 纪录片“Beatles ’64”使用了Albert和David Maysles拍摄的11小时原始素材,经过修复后展现了乐队在纽约等地的生活片段,包括他们在酒店里的嬉戏、与粉丝的互动以及音乐创作等,让观众仿佛置身于那个时代。

🤔 **披头士乐队在美国掀起狂热现象:** 纪录片探讨了“Beatlemania”的成因,包括披头士乐队的音乐魅力、肯尼迪总统遇刺后美国社会的情绪以及乐队成员的个人魅力等因素,展现了乐队在美国的巨大影响力。

🎶 **披头士乐队的音乐受到黑人音乐的影响:** 纪录片中,音乐家Sananda Maitreya、Ron Isley和Smokey Robinson等谈到了披头士乐队从黑人音乐中汲取的灵感,展现了音乐文化之间的相互影响。

🤨 **披头士乐队面对的质疑和误解:** 纪录片也揭示了当时一些人对披头士乐队的质疑和误解,包括一些媒体和公众人物将乐队与德国麻疹相提并论,以及一些人认为乐队音乐会取代传统的大乐队音乐。

🗓️ **1964年发行的披头士专辑重新发行:** 纪录片上映的同时,披头士乐队1964年和1965年发行的7张美国专辑也以黑胶唱片的形式重新发行,这些专辑自1995年以来就一直绝版。

That moment — as well as George Harrison and John Lennon goofing around by exchanging their jackets — are part of the Disney+ documentary “Beatles ’64,” an intimate look at the English band’s first trip to America that uses rare and newly restored footage. It streams Friday.VIDEO“It’s so fun to be the fly on the wall in those really intimate moments,” says Margaret Bodde, who produced alongside Martin Scorsese. “It’s just this incredible gift of time and technology to be able to see it now with the decades of time stripped away so that you really feel like you’re there.”“Beatles ’64” leans into footage of the 14-day trip filmed by documentarians Albert and David Maysles, who left behind 11 hours of the Fab Four goofing around in New York’s Plaza hotel or traveling. It was restored by Park Road Post in New Zealand.“It’s beautiful, although it’s black and white and it’s not widescreen,” says director David Tedeschi. “It’s like it was shot yesterday and it captures the youth of the four Beatles and the fans.”The footage is augmented by interviews with the two surviving members of the band and people whose lives were impacted, including some of the women who as teens stood outside their hotel hoping to catch a glimpse of the Beatles.“It was like a crazy love,” fan Vickie Brenna-Costa recalls in the documentary. “I can’t really understand it now. But then, it was natural.”The film shows the four heartthrobs flirting and dancing at the Peppermint Lounge disco, Harrison noodling with a Woody Guthrie riff on his guitar and tells the story of Ronnie Spector sneaking the band out a hotel back exit and up to Harlem to eat barbeque.The documentary coincides with the release of a box set of vinyl albums collecting the band’s seven U.S. albums released in ’64 and early ’65 — “Meet The Beatles!,” “The Beatles’ Second Album,” “A Hard Day’s Night” (the movie soundtrack), ”Something New,” “The Beatles’ Story,” “Beatles ’65” and “The Early Beatles.” They had been out of print on vinyl since 1995.The Beatles’ U.S. visit in 1964 also included concerts at Carnegie Hall, a gig at the Washington Coliseum in Washington, D.C., and a visit to Miami, where the band met Muhammad Ali. The documentary shows members of the band reading newspaper coverage of themselves.Viewers may learn that the Beatles — now revered — were often met with ridicule or rudeness from the older generation. At the British Embassy in New York, the four were treated as lower class, while renowned broadcaster Eric Sevareid, doing a piece for CBS, compared the reaction to the Beatles to the German measles.“You’re nothing but four Elvis Presleys,” one reporter told them during a press conference, to which the boys good-naturedly started gyrating as Ringo Starr screamed ”It’s not true!”“Why the establishment was against them is sort of a mystery to me,” says Tedeschi. “I think older people believed that music would go back to the big bands.”Musicians like Sananda Maitreya, Ron Isley and Smokey Robinson also discuss the Fab Four and what they took from Black music. There also are interviews with residents of Harlem, critic Joe Queennan and filmmaker David Lynch, who saw the Beatles play the Washington Coliseum.“Beatles ’64” tries to explain why young people were so besotted by John, Paul, George and Ringo. Their visit came just months after the assassination of President John. F. Kennedy and Tedeschi argues Beatlemania was a salve for a nation in mourning.“Part of it is I think that the light was just off. They were depressed. Everything was dark. And ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand’ lit them up,” says Tedeschi.As McCartney says in the documentary: “Maybe America needed something like the Beatles to lift it out of mourning and just sort of say ‘Life goes on.’”How many degrees of separation are you from the globe's most powerful business leaders? Explore who made our brand-new list of the 100 Most Powerful People in Business. Plus, learn about the metrics we used to make it.

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披头士 Beatles ’64 纪录片 美国文化 音乐
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