Main content

Beatle Time

4 Extra Debut. Adam Gopnik celebrates the 50th anniversary of the Beatles' first concert and ponders what it is that makes their music endure.

"There is something eerie, fated, cosmic about the Beatles" writes Adam Gopnik, writer for The New York Times. "They appear in public as a unit on August 22nd 1962 and disappear as a unit, Mary Poppins like, exactly seven years later".

In this talk, he ponders exactly what it is that makes their music endure.

Why is it, he asks, that one of the things people never say is "I don't like the Beatles".

For his children, he says, "the Beatles are as uncontroversial as the moon. Just there, shining on".

To underline how strange this is, he points out that had the same thing been true for his generation, then the pop music of his childhood would have dated from before the First World War. And that, he says "would have been more than bizarre".

Gopnik concludes that the reason their music lasts is that it was a perfect collaboration of opposites.

Producer: Adele Armstrong

First broadcast on Ö÷²¥´óÐã Radio 4 in June 2012.

Available now

15 minutes

Last on

Fri 2 Jun 2023 00:45

Broadcasts

  • Fri 15 Jun 2012 20:50
  • Sun 17 Jun 2012 08:50
  • Thu 1 Jun 2023 05:45
  • Thu 1 Jun 2023 10:45
  • Thu 1 Jun 2023 15:45
  • Fri 2 Jun 2023 00:45

Featured in...

Beatles About

Beatles About

Programmes celebrating the 60th anniversary of The Beatles’ breakthrough year (1963).

Podcast