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Marc Bolan (June 1, 1972) “The Spector Sound ‘easy to achieve’” – 3-Page Feature – Hit Parader (US)

  • Writer: Marc Bolan
    Marc Bolan
  • Jun 1, 1972
  • 2 min read

In-depth three-page interview and feature with Marc Bolan discussing his musical influences, songwriting philosophy, and the sound of T. Rex.



PUBLICATION:

Date: June 1972

Country: United States Section / Pages: Feature / Interview (Pages 24–26) Title: The Spector Sound ‘easy to achieve’ / MARC BOLAN


THE STORY

The feature includes a large portrait of Bolan, an interview where he talks about creating the T. Rex sound, his admiration for Phil Spector, Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, and other influences. He explains his approach to blending basic rock ’n’ roll with modern lyrics and his evolution from Tyrannosaurus Rex. Additional photos show Bolan performing and with Mickey Finn





CONTEXT AND NOTES

Published during the height of T. Rex’s “T. Rextasy” in 1972, this American magazine feature helped introduce Bolan’s glam rock vision and songcraft to US audiences. It captures Bolan at a pivotal moment as he transitioned from underground folk to mainstream electric glam stardom.


FEATURE HIGHLIGHTS

Event: Major Interview / Feature Spread Era: T. Rex / Electric Warrior Era (1972) Tone: Insightful, conversational, enthusiastic

Photography: Multiple portraits and live/action shots of Marc Bolan


 “The Spector Sound ‘easy to achieve’”

WHAT THE CLIPPING SHOWS

Three-page spread from Hit Parader magazine featuring bold headlines, several black-and-white photographs of Bolan (including a striking close-up and performance shots), and extensive interview text. Classic early 1970s American rock magazine layout.


RELATED MATERIAL

  • Marc Bolan (June 4, 1977) Record Mirror Cover Feature – Record Mirror (UK)

  • Tyrannosaurus Rex (May 31, 1970) Mushroom Promotions Advert – Evening Sentinel (UK)

  • Marc Bolan (June 1994) “gold” Magazine Cover & Feature – “The Boy Who Would Be King”

Also see tabs at the foot of this post.

All magazine scans, photographs and original text excerpts remain the property of their respective copyright holders. This entry is a transformative, non-commercial archival summary created for historical documentation and educational reference.



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