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Quiz about The Corps of Apple Records III
Quiz about The Corps of Apple Records III

The Corps of Apple Records III Quiz


Apple Records was founded by the Beatles in 1968 as the recording division of Apple Corps, Ltd. From then until its "end" in 1976, the label made a worldwide impact. This quiz is the final one of three quizzes about the label.

A multiple-choice quiz by AyatollahK. Estimated time: 7 mins.
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Author
AyatollahK
Time
7 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
298,606
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
7 / 10
Plays
407
Awards
Top 35% Quiz
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. This Brixton, England-based group released their first single, a reggae-tinged version of John Lennon's "Give Peace a Chance", on Apple in 1969, which flopped. After leaving Apple, the group had a U.K. chart hit every year from 1970 to 1984, including such smashes as "Brother Louie," "You Sexy Thing" and "So You Win Again." Although "You Sexy Thing" reached number three on the Billboard singles chart in the U.S. as well, they may have been better known in the U.S. as one of the first groups with both black and white members. Who were they? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. One of Apple's ventures was a special label for spoken word and experimental music called Zapple, headed by Barry Miles, once a London bookstore owner. Apple's stated intent was that Zapple albums would cost about the same as a paperback book. However, only two Zapple albums (both by ex-Beatles, and both at regular price) were ever released, as Allen Klein pulled the plug on Zapple in June 1969 just as it was about to release Zapple 3, its first spoken word album. The album was instead released on Harvest Records in 1970, and a reissue includes liner notes from Miles explaining its origin. What popular American author (and sometimes trout fisherman) of the 1960s recorded this album? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. This Apple artist released two unsuccessful solo albums in 1970: an album of standards titled "Sentimental Journey" and an album of country songs titled "Beaucoups of Blues". However, another song that he recorded that year, titled "It Don't Come Easy" and produced by George Harrison, became his first solo hit, although it didn't appear on either album. Who was he? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. This Apple "singer" released four solo albums on Apple, plus four albums on which she was credited as the artist along with her husband, including "Two Virgins" and their "Wedding Album", as well as appearing as a member of a "supergroup" at a live concert in Canada. A former Apple executive compared her husband's attempts to make her a successful recording artist despite her lack of talent to "Citizen Kane." Who was she? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Beginning with its very first album (George Harrison's original soundtrack for the movie "Wonderwall"), Apple released many soundtrack albums for films that were distributed by Apple Films or Abkco Films. Which of the following was not a motion picture soundtrack released on Apple? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. David Peel and the Lower East Side were an Apple band that played "street rock", which was an early version of hippie-influenced punk. The band's lyrics expressed the anarchistic attitude of such later acts as the Sex Pistols and the Clash, and their blatant pro-drug and anti-religion lyrics made EMI reluctant to distribute their records. Ultimately, their Apple album was only released in the U.S. and Canada. What was this album, produced by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, that expressed these lyrical themes in its rhyming title? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. This guitarist/bassist/singer had been a member of the Liverpool band the Undertakers before he signed to Brian Epstein's NEMS and then to Apple as a solo artist. Despite having both George Harrison and Paul McCartney produce his debut sessions, including his first single "Sour Milk Sea" (a Harrison composition), which was one of Apple's "First Four" singles, and despite a backing band of Harrison, McCartney, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton and Nicky Hopkins, he was never able to produce a hit, and his frustrations eventually showed up in his album title, "Is This What You Want?" He ended up moving to the U.S. and recording several more unsuccessful solo albums. Who was he? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. This American, who had been the featured lead singer of one of the "girl groups" of the early 1960s, recorded one single for Apple (Apple 33). The song, "Try Some, Buy Some" (written by George Harrison), was moderately successful in the U.S. but failed to chart in England, and she never recorded for Apple again. She was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame for her earlier work in 2007. Who was she? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. In another strange Apple saga, George Harrison was sued for copyright infringement for his Apple single "My Sweet Lord." which was alleged to have infringed the copyright of the Chiffons' "He's So Fine." Apple, headed by Allen Klein, defended Harrison in this lawsuit. However, after Apple fired Klein, Klein then bought the "He's So Fine" copyright from Bright Tunes Music to "get back" at Harrison for his firing. It turned out that, when infringement damages were calculated, they were well in excess of the amount paid by Klein to acquire the copyright from Bright Tunes. How much did Harrison and Apple ultimately have to pay Klein? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. During its life, Apple had many other artists, none of whom became successful, and it also rejected several artists who did become stars. Which of these potential Apple artists was rejected by Apple as not commercial enough, despite having submitted the future "greatest hit" "Waterfall", although perhaps "Donna", "Rubber Bullets" or "The Wall Street Shuffle" should have been submitted instead? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. This Brixton, England-based group released their first single, a reggae-tinged version of John Lennon's "Give Peace a Chance", on Apple in 1969, which flopped. After leaving Apple, the group had a U.K. chart hit every year from 1970 to 1984, including such smashes as "Brother Louie," "You Sexy Thing" and "So You Win Again." Although "You Sexy Thing" reached number three on the Billboard singles chart in the U.S. as well, they may have been better known in the U.S. as one of the first groups with both black and white members. Who were they?

Answer: Hot Chocolate

Errol Brown and Tony Wilson signed to Apple both as recording artists and as songwriters, and they composed virtually all of their multitude of U.K. hits. The name "The Hot Chocolate Band" was made up for them by an Apple secretary, which they simplified to "Hot Chocolate" after being dropped from Apple. Ironically, other than "You Sexy Thing" and "Every 1's a Winner," their music may be best known in the U.S. in cover versions of their tunes by other artists such as Stories, who had a U.S. number one hit with "Brother Louie" (a Wilson/Brown composition), while their only U.K. number one was a cover of Russ Ballard's "So You Win Again."
2. One of Apple's ventures was a special label for spoken word and experimental music called Zapple, headed by Barry Miles, once a London bookstore owner. Apple's stated intent was that Zapple albums would cost about the same as a paperback book. However, only two Zapple albums (both by ex-Beatles, and both at regular price) were ever released, as Allen Klein pulled the plug on Zapple in June 1969 just as it was about to release Zapple 3, its first spoken word album. The album was instead released on Harvest Records in 1970, and a reissue includes liner notes from Miles explaining its origin. What popular American author (and sometimes trout fisherman) of the 1960s recorded this album?

Answer: Richard Brautigan

Brautigan was the author of the 1960s counterculture smash "Trout Fishing in America," and the album includes both real-life segments and readings from Brautigan's books and poems. In the liner notes for the re-release of "Listening to Richard Brautigan," Miles says that only two test acetates of Zapple 3 were produced, one for himself and one for Apple A&R head Peter Asher, before Klein killed the release. The album came out on Harvest in 1970 only because Brautigan was able to transfer his contract from Apple to Capitol in the U.S.

Miles had already recorded (but not finished) planned Zapple albums with several other counterculture authors, including Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Allen Ginsberg, Charles Olson and Charles Bukowski, most of which were ultimately released in some form on other labels, but only the Brautigan album was ever assigned a Zapple release number.
3. This Apple artist released two unsuccessful solo albums in 1970: an album of standards titled "Sentimental Journey" and an album of country songs titled "Beaucoups of Blues". However, another song that he recorded that year, titled "It Don't Come Easy" and produced by George Harrison, became his first solo hit, although it didn't appear on either album. Who was he?

Answer: Ringo Starr

Ringo had actually begun "Sentimental Journey" in 1969, prior to the breakup of the Beatles. In February 1970, during those sessions, he recorded the original version of "It Don't Come Easy," but the single version was recorded in a later session with, among others, George Harrison on guitar and harmony vocals, Stephen Stills on piano, Klaus Voorman on bass, Peter Ham and Tom Evans from Badfinger on backing vocals, and Ringo on drums and lead vocals.
4. This Apple "singer" released four solo albums on Apple, plus four albums on which she was credited as the artist along with her husband, including "Two Virgins" and their "Wedding Album", as well as appearing as a member of a "supergroup" at a live concert in Canada. A former Apple executive compared her husband's attempts to make her a successful recording artist despite her lack of talent to "Citizen Kane." Who was she?

Answer: Yoko Ono

In total, counting Yoko Ono's appearance on the Plastic Ono Band's "Live Peace in Toronto 1969," she was a credited artist on nine Apple albums excluding Beatles albums, more than anyone else except her husband John Lennon, who did eleven. Her bizarre attempts at singing caused her solo Apple releases, plus most of her albums with Lennon, to be complete duds at the cash register, although Lennon kept trying to promote her. Zapple head Barry Miles (who released one of the Lennon/Ono bombs as Zapple 1) compared Lennon's efforts on Ono's behalf to the futile efforts of William Randolph Hearst and his fictional counterpart Charles Foster Kane for their wives.

Carly Simon married former Apple artist James Taylor but never recorded for Apple herself. Mary Hopkin married record producer and arranger Tony Visconti, who produced her Apple album "Earth Song, Ocean Song." Ronnie Spector, the wife of superproducer Phil Spector and former lead singer for the Ronettes, recorded a single for Apple that her husband co-produced.
5. Beginning with its very first album (George Harrison's original soundtrack for the movie "Wonderwall"), Apple released many soundtrack albums for films that were distributed by Apple Films or Abkco Films. Which of the following was not a motion picture soundtrack released on Apple?

Answer: All of them were

Apple released at least six movie soundtracks, although several of them came out in the U.S. only. "Let It Be" was the official soundtrack to the Beatles' movie on Apple, although it was "reproduced for disk by Phil Spector." Because it was a soundtrack, Allen Klein was able to have it distributed by United Artists Records as opposed to Capitol Records in the U.S., thus snagging a higher royalty rate. "El Topo" was a cult film directed by Alejandro Jodorowsky, which John Lennon convinced Allen Klein to acquire for Abkco Films; Jodorowsky also co-wrote the score, and Lennon had John Barham re-record the score for the record. "Cometogether" was another Abkco film, although with no redeeming features -- the New York Times called it "empty-headed" and "as wan as the efforts of a small child who makes rude noises to give himself importance."

Other Apple soundtracks included "Raga", a documentary about Ravi Shankar, "Concert for Bangladesh", George Harrison's 1971 benefit show, and the Apple/RCA (Rapple) album "Son of Dracula" with Harry Nilsson.
6. David Peel and the Lower East Side were an Apple band that played "street rock", which was an early version of hippie-influenced punk. The band's lyrics expressed the anarchistic attitude of such later acts as the Sex Pistols and the Clash, and their blatant pro-drug and anti-religion lyrics made EMI reluctant to distribute their records. Ultimately, their Apple album was only released in the U.S. and Canada. What was this album, produced by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, that expressed these lyrical themes in its rhyming title?

Answer: The Pope Smokes Dope

"The Pope Smokes Dope" was Peel's third major label release, as his first two albums, "Have a Marijuana" and "The American Revolution," had come out on Elektra Records (and were reissued in 2008 on Rhino). After the almost-worldwide refusal of EMI to distribute "The Pope Smokes Dope" (similar to the way EMI later dropped the Sex Pistols' "Anarchy in the U.K."), Peel decided to release all future albums independently on his own label, Orange Records.
7. This guitarist/bassist/singer had been a member of the Liverpool band the Undertakers before he signed to Brian Epstein's NEMS and then to Apple as a solo artist. Despite having both George Harrison and Paul McCartney produce his debut sessions, including his first single "Sour Milk Sea" (a Harrison composition), which was one of Apple's "First Four" singles, and despite a backing band of Harrison, McCartney, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton and Nicky Hopkins, he was never able to produce a hit, and his frustrations eventually showed up in his album title, "Is This What You Want?" He ended up moving to the U.S. and recording several more unsuccessful solo albums. Who was he?

Answer: Jackie Lomax

Apple recording engineer Geoff Emerick wrote that the Lomax sessions for "Sour Milk Sea," which occurred during the recording of the Beatles' "white album," had "an exceptionally good vibe that night -- possibly because John and Yoko weren't around" and that "it was a really good-sounding record for the time; the rhythm track was especially strong." Nevertheless, after the single failed and Allen Klein came in as head of Apple, Lomax was unceremoniously dumped.

Untertakers' sax player Brian Jones (not to be confused with the Rolling Stones' Brian Jones, who played sax on the Beatles' "You Know My Name (Look Up the Number)") later appeared on several Paul McCartney and Wings projects, including the "McGear" album, on which Wings backed McCartney's brother Michael.
8. This American, who had been the featured lead singer of one of the "girl groups" of the early 1960s, recorded one single for Apple (Apple 33). The song, "Try Some, Buy Some" (written by George Harrison), was moderately successful in the U.S. but failed to chart in England, and she never recorded for Apple again. She was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame for her earlier work in 2007. Who was she?

Answer: Ronnie Spector

Ronnie Barrett was the lead singer of the Ronettes, with whom superproducer Phil Spector recorded a number of classic records in the early 1960s. After Ronnie and Phil were married, Phil insisted that she retire from music, but his involvement in Apple led to this abortive comeback attempt (using her married name).

All of the other three singers named -- Barbara Alston, Darlene Love and LaLa Brooks -- served as the lead singers of Spector's other hit girl group, the Crystals. Love was actually the lead singer of the Blossoms in L.A., but Spector used the Blossoms to record some of the Crystals' biggest hits (since the Crystals were from New York City, and Spector didn't always want to wait for them to fly to the West Coast). Alston was the original lead singer of the Crystals but quit due to stage fright, being replaced by Brooks.
9. In another strange Apple saga, George Harrison was sued for copyright infringement for his Apple single "My Sweet Lord." which was alleged to have infringed the copyright of the Chiffons' "He's So Fine." Apple, headed by Allen Klein, defended Harrison in this lawsuit. However, after Apple fired Klein, Klein then bought the "He's So Fine" copyright from Bright Tunes Music to "get back" at Harrison for his firing. It turned out that, when infringement damages were calculated, they were well in excess of the amount paid by Klein to acquire the copyright from Bright Tunes. How much did Harrison and Apple ultimately have to pay Klein?

Answer: Klein's purchase price for the copyright, which was then awarded to Harrison

In a decision still taught in U.S. law school "civil procedure" classes, the court held that Klein could not use his insider knowledge of the lawsuit to change sides during it, and so Klein's purchase of Bright Tunes' worldwide copyright for "He's So Fine" should be held to have been performed in the capacity of Harrison's "agent", which was Klein's position at the start of the suit. Klein was deemed to hold the copyright in trust for Harrison. Thus, as soon as Harrison reimbursed Klein for the money he spent to acquire the worldwide copyright from Bright Tunes, its ownership was transferred to Harrison, ending the lawsuits worldwide. Although Klein spent over a dozen more years litigating this issue, his attempt at revenge ended up saving Harrison a lot of money ... and costing Klein a bundle, as he had to pay all his own legal fees.

The final ruling in the case was made in 1991, 20 years after the case was initiated. See ABKCO Music, Inc. v. Harrisongs Music, Ltd., 944 F.2d 971 (2d Cir. 1991).
10. During its life, Apple had many other artists, none of whom became successful, and it also rejected several artists who did become stars. Which of these potential Apple artists was rejected by Apple as not commercial enough, despite having submitted the future "greatest hit" "Waterfall", although perhaps "Donna", "Rubber Bullets" or "The Wall Street Shuffle" should have been submitted instead?

Answer: 10cc

10cc desperately wanted to record for Apple, and "Waterfall" (written by Graham Gouldman and Eric Stewart, who later wrote the group's US hits "I'm Not in Love" and "The Things We Do For Love") was their attempt to get signed. However, the song was rejected by Apple -- which was probably a break for the group, since they were signed almost immediately thereafter by Jonathan King and his UK Records and released two quirky British hit singles ("Donna" - number two; "Rubber Bullets" - number one) that probably would have failed on Apple. Later, "Waterfall" was included on both the U.S. and U.K. versions of "100cc", the group's first greatest hits album, and 10cc released a copy of the Apple rejection letter (signed by Apple press officer Derek Taylor).

The other artists listed -- Chris Hodge, Trash (also known as "White Trash") and Lon & Derek Van Eaton -- were all signed by Apple and had multiple releases, although none of them ever came remotely close to success.
Source: Author AyatollahK

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Related Quizzes
This quiz is part of series Apple Corps:

A series of quizzes about The Beatles' Apple Corps Ltd., including Apple Records and Apple Music Publishing

  1. First Bite of the Apple: Apple Publishing Average
  2. Chanteuse: The Mary Hopkin Story Average
  3. The Corps of Apple Records I Average
  4. The Corps of Apple Records II Average
  5. The Corps of Apple Records III Average
  6. Apple to the Core Average

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