Miss5ft0 wrote a post on her blog about Apple Computer suing Woolworths for using the apple logo in their advertising. For those of us, and that would be everyone, who aren’t aware of this, apparently Woolworths has a new logo. It looks remarkably like an apple, being peeled. As with many apples, it’s green.
Understandably Steve Jobs, the Apple supremo, was most put out by this. An Australian supermarket stealing his trademark. Trademarks are big dollars. They are a big deal. Steve however overlooked the fact that his company inadvertently copied the Beatles’ logo when he and Steve Wozniak founded Apple Computer in 1976.
The Beatles formed Apple Corps in 1968. In true British tradition, Corps rhymed with ‘core’. The Beatles were always jokers before they were business men.
For instance, John Lennon drove a Rolls Royce, albeit a white one, covered in psychedelic graffitti. It reminds me of Molly Meldrum’s Rolls Royce in the 70s. Chauffeur driven to his gigs as a DJ in Melbourne, Molly’s Roller was constantly scratched and defaced. Eventually he gave up caring about its appearance and rode around in the worst looking Roller in Melbourne.
The Beatles ran their company similarly. Originally designed as a springboard for new talent, an outlet for Apple merchandise and any other number of wacky ideas, Apple Corps achieved little more than being a small stable for a handful of emerging artists. Backed by the Beatles’ millions, their minions squandered a fortune on far-fetched ideas. There were, however, successes. Billy Preston rose to fame on the back of Apple. ‘That’s The Way God Planned It’ is an acknowledged anthem. Cilla Black, the cutie singer from the 60s, released ‘Step Inside Love’ to chart topping acclaim. However the greatest success for Apple came in the form of an old folk song revived by an unknown singer from Wales. Mary Hopkin hadn’t had a hit, and never would again, but with the Beatles’ backing, her rendition of ‘Those Were the Days’ was an international success, and to this day, a song for celebratory drunks everywhere.
With the White Album in the bag, and the Abbey Road/Let It Be finale on the way, the Beatles had little time to wonder about Apple Corps.
It was a company out of control. Yet there was a man to take the helm, and what better man than Neil Aspinall. Neil wasn’t a man brought in from the corporate world, he was a man of their own stock. Neil met the Beatles back in the 50s. He’d met George and Paul at school, and later, John. It was a meeting of schoolboys. Neil got to drive the truck.
Many years later they were able to hire a second person, Mal Evans. They became the first of what is known as a ‘road manager’, or roadie. On tour, these two men proved pivotel in the Beatles’ evolution. A Beatles’ joke was ‘cripples’. Both Neil and Mal knew this wasn’t really a joke. It was a cry to get the Beatles out from under a crowd situation. In the early days, disabled people presented themselves to the Beatles for healing. ‘Cripples’ became a catchcry. The Beatles relied on Neil and Mal to block an untenable crowd situation.
Unthinkable these days, with security and bodyguards and political correctness.
Neil moved on from driving the truck for this nascent band. As they metamorphosed into the biggest pop band the world has ever seen, Neil used his accounting skills to take charge of the Beatles’ new company, Apple. He guided the company through its turbulent years, but was unable to forestall the inevitable decline of the Beatles’ dream.
He did however manage to fight the newly emerged Apple Computer, from across the Atlantic. An up-start company that decided to call themselves ‘Apple’. Years later, Steve Jobs admited that he and partner Wozniak loved the Beatles, yet the pinching of the logo, and the name, rankled with Aspinall and the surviving Beatles.
The original court decision rested on the fact that the computer guys and the music guys didn’t have anything in common, therefore both trademarks were legal. As we know, decisions are made to be overturned. The world has changed. Aspinall’s fight with Apple, Inc set the stage for what is hopefully an equitable method of distribution of the Beatles’ catalogue via iTunes. It should be a marriage made in heaven. However, Neil Aspinall died in 2008. He missed seeing the fruition of his battle over the copyright of an apple.
Today Apple and, err, Apple, are friends again, and we can now buy Beatles’ songs from iTunes. As for the apple, well, once again Jobs and his mates are embroiled in a fight with Woolworths (Aust) over their use of an apple logo.
Seems we can never leave the Garden of Eden. We’ll always be fighting over the apple.