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John Lennon delivered some of the most celebrated songs in music history, both during his time with The Beatles and throughout his solo career. Among his most enduring solo works are "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)," "Woman," "Jealous Guy," "(Just Like) Starting Over," "Give Peace a Chance," "Grow Old with Me," "Nobody Told Me," "Watching the Wheels," and arguably his most universally beloved composition, "Imagine." Yet among the many songs Lennon wrote, one held a particularly special place in the heart of Paul McCartney. That song is “Beautiful Boy (Darling Boy),” a deeply personal track from Double Fantasy, his fifth collaborative studio album with Yoko Ono.
John Lennon Wrote "Beautiful Boy (Darling Boy)" as a Tribute to His Son Sean

“I haven’t chosen any Beatles records, but if we had more than eight, I probably would have. I haven’t chosen any of my records so to sum up the whole thing I have chosen one of John Lennon’s from Double Fantasy, which I think is a beautiful song very moving to me. So, I’d like to sum up the whole thing by playing ‘Beautiful Boy.’”

The song reflects Lennon’s desire to protect his child from the world’s uncertainties, capturing a peaceful, intimate moment. The lyrics go, "Close your eyes / Have no fear / The monster's gone / He's on the run / And your daddy's here." Lennon also once spoke about how proud he is of his son and the hands-on role he played in raising him. He explained that “Beautiful Boy (Darling Boy)” is simply about Sean, with the music and lyrics coming naturally from his love as a father. 

Source: Ryan Louis Mantilla/collider.com

The Beatles sang a lot of songs about love and delivered many songs with the word “you” in the title in their early days. But as the 60s progressed, they started to branch out with their lyrics to keep in line with the psychedelic times.

 These four songs defy easy description if you just focus on the narrative. But they nonetheless show off the ambition and ingenuity of The Beatles’ songwriters.


“I Am The Walrus”

John Lennon was starting to get fed up with people analyzing his song lyrics looking for deeper meanings between the lines. He decided to purposely send them way off out into the woods with a song that was mostly nonsensical. And yet, what brilliant nonsense “I Am The Walrus” turned out to be. Lennon raised the stakes on Dylanesque stream-of-consciousness writing, adding his love of Lewis Carroll’s wordplay and absurdist humor to a thesaurus-straining choice of words. Throw in a little bit of hippie-ish sentiment: “I am he as you are he as you are me/And we are all together.” Stir it all up and you end up with a surreal masterpiece where the wildness of the music is more than matched by the daring of the words.
“Glass Onion”

Lennon was at it again on “Glass Onion”, one of the unassailable standouts from The White Album. Only here, he gets a little “meta” before such a tactic even had a name. During the lyrics, he references no less than five different Beatles songs. Only he twists most of them ever so slightly. For instance, he sings of “Fixing a hole in the ocean.” Most tellingly, he goes back to “I Am The Walrus”, undercutting his original stance in the process: “Well, here’s another clue for you all/The Walrus was Paul.” Those lines would send conspiracy theorists down all kinds of wild rabbit holes. Even the song’s title contains meaning within meaning. It references an obscure flower-like creation that, when you look through it, skews perspective.

Source: Jim Beviglia/americansongwriter.com

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While Anna Sawai has been busy conquering TV and film, the Emmy-winning “Shōgun” star first got her start in show business as a member of the J-pop band FAKY. Now, Sawai is going back to her musical roots in the role of Yoko Ono in Sam Mendes’ forthcoming “Beatles” biopics.

“It was my dream to tell her story and I didn’t think it would come this quick,” Sawai told Variety at the Los Angeles premiere of Apple TV’s “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters” Season 2 on Thursday night. “There’s a version of her I feel people still don’t understand. And in this film, I think we’re going to be able to tell that side of the story.”

To prepare, Sawai has been busy reading everything she can about the artist and musician. “So much reading, oh my gosh,” she said. “So many books, so many videos, so many articles…She has so much artwork that also shows her personality.”

While on set in London, Sawai teases it’s been fun to hear the cast — Paul Mescal as Paul McCartney, Harris Dickinson as John Lennon, Joseph Quinn as George Harrison and Barry Keoghan as Ringo Starr — play the iconic band’s music. “They’re not even looking at the sheet music anymore. They can just play it off and sing it, and it really sounds like the Beatles to me. It feels surreal.”

The four biopics will release simultaneously in theaters on April 7, 2028.

Source: Payton Turkeltaub/variety.com

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It's 1969. The Beatles are trying to record what would become their final albums, and they're at each other's throats. Nothing is working. Then a visitor enters the studio, the keyboard player Billy Preston. On a whim, he sits down to join them for a song, and the mood totally changes.

LENNON: You've given us a lift, Bill. We've been doing this for days.

MARTIN: Did you catch what they said? You're in the group. You've given us a lift. We've been doing this for days. Preston saved those sessions, which is just one reason John Lennon called him the fifth Beatle. But Preston died in 2006. Younger generations barely know who he is. There's a new documentary that hopes to change that. It's called "Billy Preston: That's The Way God Planned It." I spoke with director Paris Barclay.

PARIS BARCLAY: I didn't know about his relationship to Beatles. I didn't know that he played with the Rolling Stones constantly. And as I started to do a little research, I discovered that not only was he a transcendent performer musically, but that his story, including even the tragic things that happened, can be sort of a cautionary tale for how we deal with genius and especially how the Black church deals with people who are different.

Source: Michel Martin/wfdd.org

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They were awards given to The Beatles at the peak of their fame - but have been out of sight for 60 years.

Now the gongs, including one for their 1966 smash hit Paperback Writer – a number one in both the UK and US charts – are to go under the hammer this coming week.  The commemorative discs are described as 'real rarities' and experts predict they'll be a hit with collectors - each selling for over £10,000.

The 7-inch silver disc for Paperback Writer was presented to the band by a weekly music paper in 1966 after the single's huge success.

The catalogue description released by Surrey-based Ewbanks Auctioneers, states: 'The Beatles received this award for the hit single 'Paperback Writer' released on the Parlophone label 10th June 1966, from the (then) prominent British weekly music paper 'Disc' (later Disc and Music Echo)'.  Ewbanks said the award came 'at a pivotal point in the band's career, marking the end of live shows and touring and becoming a more experimental studio based creative powerhouse, a time when Brian Epstein's influence was fading, Beatle Boots, suits and head shaking were all in the past'. However, it was 'a time that many consider the peak of their artistic career'.

The mounted award is estimated to fetch up to £10,000.  The second award, a mounted gold disc, was given by the Recording Industry Association of America, which represented major US record labels.

Silver disc given to the band in 1966 by British weekly music paper 'Disc' for Paperback Writer.  Gold disc given by the Recording Industry Association of America to commemorate the success of the 1964 US album Meet The Beatles!

It was handed out in recognition of the success of Meet The Beatles!, the US title for the first Beatles album, released on the Capitol Records label in 1964 and which reached No.1 for 11 consecutive weeks.

Millions of Americans rushed out to buy the album after seeing the band on the epoch-making Ed Sullivan Show.

The award, estimated to sell for up to £12,000, commemorates 'The Sale Of More Than One Million Dollars Worth Of The Capitol Records Long-Playing Record Album 'Meet The Beatles!'

Roag Best, half-brother of Pete Best, drummer for the Beatles in their early years between 1960 and 1962, and who advises The Beatles Museum in Liverpool, believes the newly unearthed awards will be a hit with collectors.

He said: 'These are awards hidden away for years. Collectors will like them for sure.'

Source: Richard Marsden/dailymail.co.uk

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Paul McCartney’s new documentary revisits life after the Beatles and the formation of Wings. McCartney described seeing footage of Linda as “very emotional” and deeply personal.  Lost home videos resurfaced, adding a special family touch to the film.

At the screening of his latest film, which explores his life after the Beatles and the formation of Wings, McCartney reflected with Us Weekly, “I think all the stuff with the kids and Linda is lovely to see. I mean, obviously, the Linda stuff was very emotional. She looks so beautiful. She’s so cool.”

He continued, “Me and Linda interacting is very special, because she’s not here. Seeing the kids little, ’cause they know they’re not little anymore … they’ve got kids of their own. Linda, the kids, me and John [Lennon], just these memories … it’s like a life flashing in front of me.”

According to the outlet, several of the photos and home videos featured in the documentary were taken by Linda, adding a special and deeply personal touch to the film. McCartney later admitted he had long believed the footage was gone for good and was stunned when it resurfaced.

“Because in the ’60s and ’70s, you’d have a lot of break-ins. You wouldn’t really bother locking your door too much. So fans would come in, just nicking a lot of stuff. It was just like … it was how it was,” he said, adding, “So I kind of automatically just thought, ‘Well, it’s all gone. But [the] kids at my office were fantastic. They looked in every little, you know, storage units and every little drawer and everything, and they found it all.”

Paul and Linda wed in March 1969, and went on to raise four children together: Heather, 63, whom Paul adopted, Stella, 54; Mary, 53; and James, 48.

Source: Marika Kazimierska/parade.com

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5 Forgotten No. 1 Songs By The Beatles 21 February, 2026 - 0 Comments

It sounds counterintuitive to suggest that The Beatles, the most celebrated band of all time, has forgotten songs, and even more so to suggest the group has forgotten No. 1 hits. In fact, interest in the Fab Four has remained incredibly high in the decades since the band broke up back in 1970. But as the years have passed, the popularity of individual songs within The Beatles' discography has fluctuated. If we look at the numbers of streaming platforms such as Spotify, we can see at the time of writing that some of the band's iconic singles, such as "Hey Jude" and "Let It Be" — both of which hit the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100 — continue to attract a huge listenership. Yet many of the most popular Beatles songs were not singles at all but album tracks that have aged particularly well, such as "Here Comes the Sun" and "In My Life."

With that in mind, we're revisiting five of the 20 Beatles singles that topped the charts in the United States but whose popularity has waned slightly within the band's discography. Don't get us wrong: These songs still have tens of millions of plays on streaming platforms (it's The Beatles, after all). But the truth is they no longer have a seat at the top table in terms of listener numbers in the way, say, "Come Together" or "Yesterday" have, and you might have even forgotten they were No. 1 singles at all. 

"Love Me Do" remains instantly recognizable as an early Beatles classic, but if we're honest, there is plenty to justify modern listeners' comparative lack of interest in the song. Unlike other early hits like "She Loves You" and "Can't Buy Me Love," the pace of the 1964 U.S. No. 1 is glacial rather than explosive. The lyrics are also exceptionally simple, even by the standards of early Beatles singles.

The song it resembles most among the early No. 1's is "I Want To Hold Your Hand," The Beatles' breakthrough single in America, which arguably beats "Love Me Do" on almost all metrics. But the truth is that "Love Me Do" is the one that started it all — well, in the U.K. at least, where it was The Beatles' first single. And it has to be noted that though the track may sound utterly inoffensive now, in the context of the very early '60s, it would have been something of a bombshell: A stripped-back love song featuring raw vocals that, when you actually listen to them, are subtly seductive.

Source: S. Flannagan/grunge.com

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“It was John’s original inspiration, I think my melody, I think my guitar riff. That’s my recollection”: Lennon might have written the lyrics, but as McCartney remembers it, he “wrote the tune” to one of The Beatles’ greatest and most poignant songs.

Anyone looking to pinpoint the moment when The Beatles turned from pop idols into mature artists will inevitably hone in on their landmark sixth studio album Rubber Soul. Recorded over a four-week period, from 12 October to 11 November 1965, Rubber Soul is The Beatles’ first masterpiece, a hugely influential pre-psychedelia work that draws on folk, soul and pop.

Sonically the album signalled a major shift, as the band incorporated soul-style bass lines, fuzz bass effects, harmonium and sitar. But it also marked a transition in John Lennon and Paul McCartney’s songwriting, from pop singles to a more cohesive, mature, album-orientated style.

Much of this was due to the ongoing influence of Bob Dylan, the folk-rock jangle of The Byrds and soul artists on the Motown and Stax labels whose music The Beatles soaked up from radio stations across the US during the summer of 1965.

Then, of course, there is the influence of marijuana, which is omnipresent within the mellow tones of Rubber Soul.

By 1965, John Lennon in particular was demonstrating a lyrical maturity that was far more personal and introspective. On Nowhere Man, Lennon perceives himself as someone with no direction in life, while Norwegian Wood is a veiled account of an extramarital affair.

Source: Neil Crossley/musicradar.com

Paul McCartney had a famously stoic reaction to John Lennon's death in 1980.  Lennon's son Sean Ono Lennon defends McCartney in the new documentary Man on the Run.  McCartney's daughter Stella also reveals he did, in fact, have an emotional reaction to Lennon's death.

Just hours after John Lennon’s death, Paul McCartney was bombarded by reporters asking him for a reaction to losing his lifelong friend and bandmate.

The stunned McCartney, 83, famously offered a stoic response, nonchalantly telling the reporters, “[It’s a] drag, isn’t it?” in a clip that has been repeatedly analyzed by fans. Now, in a new documentary following McCartney’s life and career, Lennon’s son Sean Ono Lennon is opening up about why the singer’s reaction actually makes a lot of sense to him.

“I always notice the look in his eyes and the tone of his voice. Really felt like someone who was unable to process what was going on,” Sean says in the documentary Man on the Run (in theaters Thursday, Feb. 19 and Sunday, Feb. 22 only and out on Prime Video Feb. 27). “He just seemed almost robotic, which I think some people took possibly as coldness, but I never took it as that, ‘cause I understood even then what it was like when something that terrible happens.” 

 Lennon was 40 years old when he was shot and killed outside his New York City apartment building on Dec. 8, 1980.

In his interview with reporters, McCartney says he was “very shocked” to learn of his Beatle bandmate’s death, calling it “terrible news” and saying he was told in a phone call earlier that morning. He says he’s unsure whether he’ll go to the funeral, and leaves the interview by saying, “Okay, cheers.”  In Man on the Run, Sean, 50, goes on to explain the bond that his father had with McCartney, and reveals that his dad often played the 1970 album McCartney on vinyl.

“When the Beatles broke up, he had to grow up, but in a way I feel like my dad passing was probably the real growing up moment,” he says. “They had a once-in-a-millennium chemistry that I don’t think we’re likely to see again.”
Paul McCartney in Paris in 1976.

McCartney’s daughter Stella is also interviewed in the film, and reveals that her dad actually did have an emotional reaction to hearing about Lennon’s death, despite what his interview suggested. “I remember that moment. I remember the phone ringing. I remember some, the biggest reaction I'd ever seen and him leaving the kitchen and going outside,” she says. “That was heartbreaking, like truly heartbreaking.”

Source: Rachel DeSantis/people.com

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Though John Lennon reached the highest levels of musicsuccess with The Beatles, the prolific singer-songwriter only topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart once while he was alive. Lennon’s 1974 song, “Whatever Gets You Thru The Night,” was put together with an assist from another major player in the music game, Elton John, and was inspired by an unexpected television show.

The song made its debut on September 28, 1974 and made it to the top of the chart by November. American Songwriter reports that the song’s title and message came from Lennon’s late-night channel surfing habit.

May Pang, who was his wife Yoko Ono’s personal assistant and who was in a romantic relationship with Lennon (approved by Ono!) at the time he wrote the song, told Radio Times, “One time, he was watching Reverend Ike, a famous Black evangelist, who was saying, ‘Let me tell you guys, it doesn’t matter, it’s whatever gets you through the night.’ John loved it and said, ‘I’ve got to write it down or I’ll forget it.’”

The song eventually made its way onto Lennon’s 1974 album, Walls and Bridges, with a little help from Elton John. While recording the album, Lennon leaned on his friend to give the song an extra boost, with John eventually adding in piano, organ, and vocal harmonies.

The duo famously made a bet that if the song made it to the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart, Lennon would join John onstage at a concert for a live version, and the Beatle kept his word, taking to the stage at Madison Square Garden in November 1974.

In addition to their Billboard hit, Lennon also performed “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” and “I Saw Her Standing There” by The Beatles. American Songwriter notes that this was the last major live performance from Lennon before he died in 1980.

After his death, Lennon once again made it to the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart with “(Just Like) Starting Over,” which spent five weeks at number one beginning on December 27, 1980.

Source: Gabriela Arevalo/yahoo.com