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In July 1971, John Lennon was putting the finishing touches on a masterpiece that, according to Grunge, would become the most-covered song of the decade and an enduring anthem that would transcend borders, time, and generations.

OnJuly 4, Lennon traveled to the Record Plant in New York City to record the iconic string arrangements for "Imagine." Later that summer, he was famously filmed at his English estate, Tittenhurst Park, singing different versions of the song on his magnificent white piano.

Co-written with his wife, Yoko Ono, and drafted on a sheet of Hilton Hotel stationery, the track made its official debut later that year in October. Music fans immediately embraced the song for its soft, hypnotic melody and hopeful vision for a world without borders, religions, or material possessions.

Seen as an idealistic, universal anthem of peace, the track was a natural evolution of Lennon's earlier peace activism. Despite slight controversy caused by the opening line, "Imagine there's no heaven," the song became a cultural symbol of unity and one of Lennon's defining works. It also became the most successful single of his solo career.

Source: yahoo.com/DeAnna Janes

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George Harrison is sitting in a vast soundstage at Twickenham Film Studios, explaining to Ringo Starr and film director Michael Lindsay-Hogg how a BBC2 sci-fi series called Out Of The Unknown, that he watched the previous evening, has inspired a new song. Harrison is sporting the same black fur coat he wears on the iconic rooftop concert and perched on his knee is John Lennon’s 1965 Epiphone Casino.

It’s mid-morning on Tuesday 7 January, 1969 and the next Beatle to arrive is Paul McCartney. “Good morning,” says the bearded bassman chirpily as he strides across the floor. “Do you wanna hear a song I wrote last night?” Harrison asks him. “It’s just a very short one, called I Me Mine”.

What follows is a beautifully plaintive and sparse rendition with Harrison’s voice sounding particularly pure. “Lovely” exclaims Lyndsey Hogg. McCartney, with hands in pockets, stands beside Harrison and stares down at his fingers on the fretboard, but says nothing. Then John Lennon arrives. Harrison, now standing, runs through the song again but speeds it up. “Run along son, see you later,” jokes Lennon. “We’re a rock and roll band you know”.

If one incident highlights the tortuous position that George Harrison found himself in as part of The Beatles then this is it. It’s just one of a number of incidents captured in Peter Jackson’s three-part 2021 documentary Get Back, in which Harrison employs impressive levels of tenacity and tact to push his own songs forward to Lennon and McCartney. Their songwriting partnership was a source of both inspiration and frustration for George. They are ostensibly the gatekeepers, two strong personalities locked into an even stronger autonomous partnership.

Source: musicradar.com/Neil Crossley

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The Beatles broke new ground with practically every move that they made in the early 60s. They rewrote the rule book for what a rock group could and should do. As such, other bands had to try to raise their game just to keep up.

The 1964 album A Hard Day’s Night represented an impressive flex by the band. It was the first album where all the songs were written by the band, specifically John Lennon and Paul McCartney. 

The Beatles entered 1964 having just enjoyed one of the finest years any British band had ever encountered. They turned it up a notch by visiting America for the first time in February 1964 while their song “I Want To Hold Your Hand” was charming US audiences. The world pretty much belonged to them from that point.

For their next trick, they decided to make their first motion picture. It was a field about which they knew very little. But they wisely aligned themselves with the right people to help guide them through the making of the film. And their natural charisma helped immensely once they found themselves on camera.

The film needed a new batch of songs from the group. Deadlines were tighter than usual, since the band was not only tasked with acting in the film but also with providing the soundtrack. John Lennon and Paul McCartney then decided to raise the difficulty level even higher.

Source: americansongwriter.com/Jim Beviglia

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Dolly Parton has never been one to shy away from a challenge, and when the country icon set out to make her first rock album, she knew exactly which song had to feature the two surviving Beatles.

Parton's 2023 album, Rockstar, features a rendition of "Let It Be" with Paul McCartney on piano and vocals and Ringo Starr on drums, joined by Peter Frampton on guitar and Mick Fleetwood on percussion. The pairing marked one of the rare instances of the two Beatles teaming up outside their own solo projects, following their 2020 collaboration on Starr's "Here's to the Nights" and Starr's surprise appearance at the close of McCartney's 2019 tour.

Parton's admiration for the Beatles stretches back decades. In 1979, she recorded a bluegrass-flavored version of "Help!" on her album Great Balls of Fire, an early sign of the crossover appeal she would later fully embrace with Rockstar.

Getting McCartney and Starr on board for "Let It Be" required a simple, personal touch. Parton explained that she reached out to both musicians through a love note sent via their managers, letting them know what she was working on.

"I've always loved that song. I recorded the song without them, and then I thought, 'Wow. Wouldn't it be great if Paul McCartney would agree to play piano and sing on it?!' And then I thought, 'wouldn't it even be greater to have Ringo Starr — because that's the last of The Beatles — play on that track?" the country icon shared in 2023. Despite being the living legend she is, the "Jolene" hitmaker admitted she was "very humbled" when both Beatles responded with an eager "yes."

Source: country1037fm.com/Jennifer Eggleston

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With a songwriting catalogue that features some of the most important music ever created, there's no doubt that John Lennon changed the world. His partnership with Paul McCartney throughout their tenure with The Beatles spawned some special, revolutionary, and oftentimes musically complex songs.

With tracks like "Tomorrow Never Knows" and "Day in the Life," there's no shortage of musical experimentation across the band's catalog. In a new interview however, the legendary singer's son Sean Lennon spoke about the song that he finds "shockingly complex," and the story behind its composition. That song is "Because."

The story goes that Yoko Ono was playing Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonata" on the piano, and Lennon took notice and asked for her to write the chords down backwards. These chords became the basis for the chords in the song.

It's so interesting learning this and then listening to the two iconic songs next to each other. It's so obvious, I don't know how I didn't notice the similarities sooner. The song is a particularly interesting one in in The Beatles' discography as well, as it comes just before "The Long One," the nine song medley that completes "Abbey Road." As one of the last songs the band ever released, it occupies this interesting place as a statement that they're still innovating, still experimenting, and still pushing the envelope.

Source: aol.com/Rylan Fischer

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The Beatles were always open about the artists who shaped them. But within that broad field of influence, there was a select few they spoke about in near-devotional terms – figures without whom they almost certainly would not have become the band that changed the world.

Like almost every forward-thinking musician of their generation, The Beatles were profoundly shaped by the American rock ‘n’ roll explosion of the late 1950s. Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly and Gene Vincent all fed into what the Fab Four would become. But for John Lennon in particular, one American figure loomed larger than most: Little Richard.

Arguably the most pioneering performer of that era, Little Richard brought a wildness and physicality to rock ‘n’ roll that nobody else had quite managed – and it was a quality The Beatles would absorb and carry into their own music.

In The Life and Times of Little Richard: The Authorised Biography, Lennon recalls the moment he first heard ‘Long Tall Sally’ in 1956 – and how it immediately complicated his absolute devotion to Elvis.

“Elvis was bigger than religion in my life,” he said. “Then this boy at school said he’d got this record by somebody called Little Richard who was better than Elvis – we used to go to this boy’s house after school and listen to Elvis on 78s: we’d buy five ciggies loose and some chips and go along.”

The new record stopped him in his tracks. “When I heard it, it was so great I couldn’t speak.”

‘Long Tall Sally’ – frenetic, bluesy, barely contained – can be heard as a direct precursor to early Beatles classics like ‘Twist and Shout’. Hearing it for the first time, Lennon found himself torn in a way he had never expected. “You know how you are torn,” he said. “I didn’t want to leave Elvis, but this was so much better. We all looked at each other, but I didn’t want to say anything against Elvis, even in my mind. How could they both be happening in my life?”

Source: whynow.co.uk

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A book signed by Sir Paul McCartney has sold for nearly £1,000 after being donated to a charity shop.

The copy of Paul McCartney In His Own Words, a collection of interviews with the Beatles star, was given to an Oxfam shop in Aberystwyth, Ceredigion.

The book, donated as part of a wider collection of 1970s memorabilia, sat in the shop for several months before its inscription was discovered by manager Joan Randle.

It was subsequently sold at auction with Bonhams, raising £950 for the charity.

PA Media The inside front cover of a book. The pages are cream and on the inside there is a signed note from Sir Paul McCartney. On the other side there is a black and white image of Sir Paul McCartney and the headline text Paul McCartney In His Own WordsPA Media
The copy of Paul McCartney In His Own Words was given to an Oxfam shop in Aberystwyth

Randle said: "The book had actually been sitting on a shelf for a few months alongside lots of other 1970s memorabilia. "I'd been planning to use some of the items in a fun window display, so it wasn't something we'd paid particular attention to at first."

She added that one afternoon she found herself "with a bit of spare time" and decided to work her way through the pile.

"It was one of the very last things I looked at. "When I opened the book and saw Paul McCartney's signature, I could hardly believe it... it was one of the best moments of my 10 years working in the shop."

The book is signed on the inside front cover in black ballpoint pen by Sir Paul, reading: "All the best! to ye!" Oxfam staff have so far been unable to trace the donor.

Source: bbc.com/Miriam BarkerRead More<<<

Some of the best songs come from a difficult place. Here are a few Beatles songs that are already a bit sad but become absolutely devastating once you know the thought that went behind them.
“Julia”

“Julia” is a song inspired by Lennon’s mother, who died in a car accident when Lennon was just 17. In a 2020 interview, McCartney shared that this was his favorite Lennon song. It doesn’t really even sound that sad, even though there are elements of grief in it.
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“Half of what I say is meaningless / But I say it just to reach you, Julia, Julia / Julia, ocean child, calls me.”

“Julia was my mother,” Lennon told David Sheff. “But [the song] was sort of a combination of Yoko and my mother blended into one…”
“Blackbird”

If you’ve ever heard “Blackbird”, you’ve likely felt captivated by that guitar riff that plays at the beginning of the song or noticed the catchy melody that McCartney sings over top of it. While “Blackbird” basically sounds like a song about a raven, the idea behind the tune actually goes a lot deeper than that, as McCartney explained to Barry Miles.

“I had in mind a Black woman, rather than a bird,” he explained. “Those were the days of the civil rights movement, which all of us cared passionately about, so this was really a song from me to a Black woman, experiencing these problems in the States…”

Source: americansongwriter.com/Kat Caudill

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With a songwriting catalogue that features some of the most important music ever created, there’s no doubt that John Lennon changed the world. His partnership with Paul McCartney throughout their tenure with The Beatles spawned some special, revolutionary, and oftentimes musically complex songs.

With tracks like “Tomorrow Never Knows” and “Day in the Life,” there’s no shortage of musical experimentation across the band’s catalog. In a new interview however, the legendary singer’s son Sean Lennon spoke about the song that he finds “shockingly complex,” and the story behind its composition. That song is “Because.”

The story goes that Yoko Ono was playing Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata” on the piano, and Lennon took notice and asked for her to write the chords down backwards. These chords became the basis for the chords in the song.

It’s so interesting learning this and then listening to the two iconic songs next to each other. It’s so obvious, I don’t know how I didn’t notice the similarities sooner. The song is a particularly interesting one in in The Beatles’ discography as well, as it comes just before “The Long One,” the nine song medley that completes “Abbey Road.” As one of the last songs the band ever released, it occupies this interesting place as a statement that they’re still innovating, still experimenting, and still pushing the envelope.

 

Source: parade.com/Rylan Fischer

Mick Jagger has spoken to NME about the “very easy” experience of working with Paul McCartney on The Rolling Stones‘ new album ‘Foreign Tongues’.

The Beatles legend teamed up with the Stones for their latest full-length effort – released next Friday (July 10) – taking on bass duties for the song ‘Covered In You’.

The Wings star and solo icon also spoke to NME about his excitement to get involved in the record, explaining that he was “chuffed” to be asked to contribute.

“You could be a bit blasé and go, ‘Yeah, OK, so what?’ But for me, it wasn’t – it went the other way,” he said, going on to recall how he felt in the studio.

“It was like, ‘Wow, there’s Mick [Jagger]! Ooh, there’s Keith [Richards]! Woah, there’s Ronnie [Wood]!’ It was exciting. It was really good. A great thing is all I had to do was play bass and not make mistakes, so it was good.”

McCartney continued: “I went home that day, and I’m saying to everyone, ‘I just played with The Stones!’ I was glad I wasn’t blasé about it. It’s really exciting. Not everyone plays with The Stones!”

Now, in a new interview with NME, Stones frontman Jagger has opened up about what it was like to get the music legend in the studio with them, and revealed that he recorded his part in “the same session as he did ‘Bite My Head Off’” for their last album, 2023’s ‘Hackney Diamonds’.

“The new tune is more of a funk bass part,” Jagger explained, before going on to share what it was like to work alongside McCartney.

“It was very easy,” he told NME. “Obviously, I’ve known Paul for ages. He’s not a stranger, but he’s never played bass with us before. It’s a different thing, you know?

Source: nme.com/Liberty Dunworth