Apple Corps operated in various fields, mostly related to the music business and other media, through a number of subsidiaries.
Apple Electronics Apple Electronics was the electronics division of Apple Corps, founded as Fiftyshapes Ltd., at 34 Boston Place, Westminster, London. It was headed by Beatles' associate Yanni Alexis Mardas, whom Lennon had nicknamed
Magic Alex. Intending to revolutionise the consumer electronics market, largely through products based on Mardas' unique and, as it turned out, commercially impractical designs, the electronics division did not make any breakthroughs. After the dismissal of Mardas in 1969, during Klein's 'house-cleaning' of Apple Corps, Apple Electronics fell victim to the same forces that troubled the company as a whole, including the impending Beatles' break-up. It was later estimated that Mardas' ideas and projects had cost the Beatles at least £300,000 (worth approximately £ in ).
Apple Films Apple Films is the film-making division of Apple Corps. Its first production was
The Beatles' 1967 TV movie
Magical Mystery Tour. The Beatles' films
Yellow Submarine and
Let it Be were also produced under Apple Films. Other notable releases included
Raga (a 1971 documentary on
Ravi Shankar),
The Concert for Bangladesh (1972) and
Little Malcolm (1974). The latter, produced by
George Harrison, included the song "Lonely Man" by
Dark Horse Records band
Splinter. Apple Films was also responsible for producing Apple Corps' televised promotions. The following is a list of releases from Apple Films, usually in the role of production company. •
Magical Mystery Tour (1967). Starring the Beatles; produced and directed by the Beatles; filmed September–October 1967; 54 mins. World premiere:
BBC1 (TV), 26 December 1967. •
Yellow Submarine (1968). Animated film featuring the Beatles; produced by
Al Brodax; directed by
George Dunning; animation designed by
Heinz Edelmann; written by Lee Minoff, Al Brodax,
Jack Mendelsohn and
Erich Segal; 85 mins. Distributed by
United Artists. World/UK premiere: London, 17 July 1968. US premiere: New York, 13 November 1968. •
Did Britain Murder Hanratty? (1969) A 40-minute documentary film commissioned by John Lennon and produced by Apple Films Limited. The only public screening of the complete film was in the crypt of
St Martin-in-the-Fields Church, London on 17 February 1970. •
Let It Be (1970). Documentary featuring the Beatles; produced by
Neil Aspinall; directed by
Michael Lindsay-Hogg; filmed January–February 1969; 88 mins. Distributed by United Artists. World/US premiere: New York, 13 May 1970. UK premiere: London, 20 May 1970. •
Raga (1971). Documentary featuring Ravi Shankar,
Yehudi Menuhin, George Harrison and
Ustad Alauddin Khan; produced by
Howard Worth and Nancy Bacal; directed by Howard Worth; 96 mins. Distributed by Apple Films. World/US premiere: New York, 23 November 1971. •
The Concert for Bangladesh (1972). Concert documentary featuring George Harrison, Ravi Shankar,
Ringo Starr,
Bob Dylan,
Ali Akbar Khan,
Billy Preston,
Eric Clapton and
Leon Russell; produced by George Harrison and
Allen Klein; directed by
Saul Swimmer; filmed July–August 1971; 103 mins. Distributed by
20th Century Fox. World/US premiere: New York, 23 March 1972. UK premiere: London, 27 July 1972. •
Born to Boogie (1972). Documentary featuring
Marc Bolan,
T. Rex,
Elton John and Ringo Starr; produced and directed by Ringo Starr; filmed March–April 1972. Distributed by Apple Films. World/UK premiere: London, 18 December 1972. •
Son of Dracula (1974). Starring
Harry Nilsson, Ringo Starr,
Suzanna Leigh,
Freddie Jones and
Dennis Price; produced by Ringo Starr, Jerry Gross and Tim Van Rellim; directed by
Freddie Francis; screenplay by
Jennifer Jayne; filmed August–October 1972; 90 mins. Distributed by Cinemation Industries. World/US premiere: Atlanta, Georgia, USA, 19 April 1974. •
Little Malcolm (1974). Starring
John Hurt,
John McEnery,
Raymond Platt,
Rosalind Ayres and
David Warner; produced by George Harrison and
Gavrick Losey; directed by
Stuart Cooper; screenplay by
David Halliwell and Derek Woodward; 109 mins. Distributed by Apple Films. World/European premiere: Berlin, July 1974.
Apple Publishing Apple's
music publishing arm predated the record company. In September 1967, the first artists to be signed by Apple Publishing were two songwriters from Liverpool. Paul Tennant and David Rhodes were offered a contract after meeting McCartney in Hyde Park. They were advised to form a band by Epstein after he and Lennon heard their demos, calling the group Focal Point. Epstein was to have managed the band but died before he could become involved.
Terry Doran MD of Apple Publishing became their manager and they were signed by
Deram Records. Apple published the group's self-penned songs from early 1968. Another early band on its publishing roster was the group
Grapefruit. Apple Publishing Ltd. was also used as a publishing stop-gap by Harrison and Starr, as they sought to shift control of their own songs away from
Northern Songs, in which their status was little more than paid writers. (Harrison later started
Harrisongs, and Starr created
Startling Music). Apple's greatest publishing successes were the
Badfinger hits "
No Matter What", "
Day After Day" and "
Baby Blue", all written by group member
Pete Ham, and Badfinger's "
Without You", a song penned by Ham and Badfinger bandmate
Tom Evans. "Without You" became a worldwide No. 1 chart hit for
Harry Nilsson in 1972 and
Mariah Carey in 1993. In 2005, however, Apple lost the US publishing rights for the work of Ham and Evans. Those rights were transferred to
Bug Music, now a branch of
BMG Rights Management. Apple also undertook publishing duties, at various times, for other Apple artists, including
Yoko Ono,
Billy Preston and the
Radha Krishna Temple. Apple received a large number of demo tapes; some songs were published, some were issued on other labels and only
Benny Gallagher & Lyle were retained as in-house writers before going on to co-found
McGuinness Flint. Many of these demos have been collected on a series of
CDs released by
Cherry Red Records. They are entitled
94 Baker Street,
An Apple for the Day,
Treacle Toffee World,
Lovers from the Sky: Pop Psych from the Apple Era 1968-1971 and
94 Baker Street Revisited: Poptastic Sounds from the Apple Era 1967-1968. Apple Books was largely inactive and had very few releases. One notable release was the book that accompanied the initial pressing of the
Let It Be album, titled
The Beatles Get Back, containing photographs by
Ethan Russell and text by
Rolling Stone writers
Jonathan Cott and
David Dalton. Although the book was credited to Apple Publishing, all of the work on the project was actually done by freelancers.
Apple Records and Zapple Records From 1968 onwards, new releases by the Beatles were issued by
Apple Records, although the copyright remained with EMI, and Parlophone/Capitol catalogue numbers continued to be used. Apple releases of recordings by artists other than the Beatles, however, used a new set of numbers, and the copyrights were held mostly by Apple Corps Ltd. More than a "vanity label", Apple Records developed an eclectic roster of their own, releasing records by artists as diverse as Indian sitar guru
Ravi Shankar, Welsh easy listening singer
Mary Hopkin, the power-pop band
Badfinger, classical music composer
John Tavener, soul singer
Billy Preston, folk singer
James Taylor, R&B singer
Doris Troy, New York underground rock band
Elephant's Memory, original bad girl of rock and roll
Ronnie Spector, rock singer
Jackie Lomax, the
Modern Jazz Quartet, and London's
Radha Krishna Temple. Since Apple's inception, McCartney and Lennon had been very interested in launching a budget-line label to issue what would essentially be known three decades later as "audio books". In October 1968, Apple hired Barry Miles, who co-owned the Indica bookshop with John Dunbar and Peter Asher, to manage the proposed spoken-word label. The initial idea of
Zapple Records was that it would release avant-garde and spoken word records at a reduced price that would be comparable to that of a paperback novel. While the idea looked good on paper, the reality was that when the few records actually put out by Zapple finally made it into the shops, they were priced like any other full-priced music album. Zapple Records was started on 3 February 1969, but after Klein was brought in to run Apple Corps' affairs, it was closed down after just two releases: Lennon and Ono's
Unfinished Music No. 2: Life with the Lions, and Harrison's
Electronic Sound.
Apple Retail The
Apple Boutique was a
retail store, located at 94
Baker Street in London, and was one of the first business ventures by Apple Corps. Lennon's schoolfriend
Pete Shotton was hired as manager, and the Dutch design collective
The Fool were brought in to design the store and much of the merchandise. The store opened to much fanfare on 7 December 1967, with Lennon and Harrison attending (Starr was filming, and McCartney was on holiday). The boutique was never profitable, largely due to
shoplifting, by customers and its own staff. After Shotton resigned, John Lyndon took over but his management experience could not save the enterprise. The store's remaining stock was liquidated by giving it away, after the individual Beatles had taken whatever they liked the night before its closure. The boutique closed its doors on 31 July 1968.
Apple Studio Apple Studio was a
recording studio located in the basement of the Apple Corps headquarters at 3
Savile Row, purchased in 1968. The facility was renamed
Apple Studios after its expansion in 1971. Originally designed by Alex Mardas, of Apple Electronics, the initial installation proved to be unworkable − with almost no standard studio features such as a
patch bay, or a
talkback system between the studio and the
control room, let alone Mardas' promised innovations − and had to be scrapped. Nevertheless, the Beatles recorded and filmed portions of their album
Let It Be in the Apple Studio, with equipment borrowed from
EMI; during takes they had to shut down the building's central heating, also located in the basement, because the lack of
soundproofing allowed the heating system to be heard in the studio. The redesign and rebuilding of the basement to accommodate proper recording facilities was overseen by former EMI engineer
Geoff Emerick, and took eighteen months at an estimated cost of $1.5 million. Beatles' technical engineer Claude Harper aided on the project, as well. The studio reopened on 30 September 1971 and now included its own natural
echo chamber, a wide range of recording and mastering facilities, and could turn out mono, stereo and
quadrophonic master tapes and discs. In 1971, it would have cost £37 an hour (equivalent to £ in ) to record to 16-track, £29 an hour (equivalent to £ in ) to mix to stereo, and £12 (equivalent to £ in ) to cut a 12" master. George Harrison attended the launch party, along with
Pete Ham of
Badfinger and
Klaus Voormann. The studio became a second home for
Apple Records artists, although they also used
Abbey Road and other studios in
London, including
Trident Studios,
AIR Studios,
Morgan Studios and
Olympic Studios or elsewhere. The only Beatle solo release to use Apple Studio for a significant portion of its production was Harrison's
Living in the Material World album of 1973, yet most of the recording is thought to have taken place at his
Friar Park studio. The first projects to be carried out there after the re-opening were the recording of
Lon & Derrek Van Eaton's
Brother album, Other artists such as
Fanny,
Harry Nilsson,
Nicky Hopkins,
Wishbone Ash,
Viv Stanshall,
Stealers Wheel,
Lou Reizner,
Clodagh Rodgers and
Marc Bolan (as shown in the movie
Born to Boogie) also worked there. Apple Studio ceased operations on 16 May 1975. ==Legal battles==