My guest for this episode is John Higgs, who joins me to discuss his book 'Love and Let Die - Bond, The Beatles and The British Psyche'.
Dr No, the first Bond film, and ‘Love Me Do’, the first Beatles record, were both released on the same day – Friday, 5 October 1962 - John's book looks at how and why these two cultural phenomena endure - what that says about Britain and what the future holds for Mr. Bond and the Fab Four.
Debbie Gendler -'I Saw Them Standing There'
Mark Lewisohn on Beatles books
Mary McGlory & Sylvia Saunders - 'The Liverbirds'
Mark Lewisohn on Mark Lewisohn
Aaron Badgley -'Dark Horse Records: The Story of George Harrison's Post-Beatles Record Label'
Laurie Kaye - ’Confessions of a Rock n Roll Name Dropper’
Ken Womack - ’Living The Beatles Legend -The Mal Evans Story’
Jonathan Knott - ’Follow The Sun - The Beatles in Greece’
Deirdre Kelly - ’Fashioning The Beatles’
Ken Mcnab - ’Shake It Up Baby’
Richard Driver - ’That Was Me’
Steve Matteo - ’Act Naturally - The Beatles on Film’
Leslie Cavendish - ’The Cutting Edge’
Bob Kealing - ’Good Day Sunshine State’
David Jacks - ’Peter Asher A Life in Music’
Bill Janovitz - ’Leon Russell: The Master of Space and Time’s Journey Through Rock & Roll History’
Colin Hall - ’The Songs The Beatles Gave Away’
Tony King ’ ’The Tastemaker’
Allan Kozinn & Adrian Sinclair - ’McCartney Legacy Vol 1’
Dafydd Rees - ’1963 - A Year in the Life’
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