the changes meant land owned by the royal household — such as the balmoral estate — could not be subjectirst reported in the guardian. mark ronson is the multi—award winning music producer behind some of pop's biggest hits. now he's taking centre stage with a new documentary series: watch the sound on apple tv plus. he talked to my colleague, reeta chakrabarti, about his time working as an intern at rolling stone magazine at the age of 12. my voice hadn't even broken yet, i had this high—pitched squeak and they let me answer the switchboard phones, in those days it was like the old—school buttons and i'd be like, "hi, rolling stone!" it's amazing what they let me do. but ijust wanted to be around music and i think because i wasn't some piano, guitar prodigy or something i thought, maybe i'll write about it, maybe i'll make it, i'm not sure. i just want to be around it all the time. so in this new series that you've made for apple tv+ you are charting the history of music production, tell us a little bit about what you look at? yeah, well, we all know what a great song is, but behind that