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Beatles songs on iTunes is just ‘speculation’

Apple says rumors in press about band’s catalog going online are just that

Image: Beatles
The Beatles, shown in 1967 are, from left, Ringo Starr, John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison. Apple Inc has shot down rumors that the band’s catalog is going to be made available online, calling them “unsubstantiated speculation.”
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By Tom Ferguson
Billboard
updated 7:32 p.m. ET March 14, 2008

Apple Inc has dismissed claims in the U.K. press that the Beatles catalog is about to be made available online through the computer giant’s iTunes Music Store as “unsubstantiated speculation.”

Reports on Friday suggested that unnamed sources “close to Sir Paul McCartney” had confirmed that the Beatles catalog would be available online though iTunes and other legal services “within months.” However, the claim has been met with a string of “no comments” from the Beatles’ own label Apple Corps, and EMI. “This is not news nor is it a scoop,” says an Apple Inc. spokesman, declining further comment.

Efforts to clear the Beatles’ music for digital distribution had long been delayed by a trademark dispute between Apple Inc. and Apple Corps., which was finally resolved in February, 2007.

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Olivia Harrison, widow of Beatles guitarist George, told Reuters last June that the surviving band members McCartney and Ringo Starr plus the representatives of her late husband and John Lennon were in agreement that the material should be made available. At that time, an early 2008 release was suggested as likely.

McCartney , whose solo catalog is already available on-line, told Billboard.com in November that “It’s down to fine-tuning, but I’m pretty sure it’ll be happening next year, 2008.”

© 2009 Billboard

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