How John Lennon Changed the World Forever 56 Years Ago Today

20 September, 2025 - 0 Comments

There are few moments in music history that rocked the world harder than the breakup of the Beatles. John Lennon announced he was leaving the group on this day 56 years go, but fans didn’t find out about his shocking decision until the next year…why?

According to The Beatles Bible, while Lennon actually decided he wanted to end his time with the Beatles a week earlier, business manager Allen Klein (who’d been trying to negotiate a new contract for the band with EMI/Capitol) persuaded him to keep the information to himself.

However, by Sept. 20, 1969, Lennon couldn’t hold back anymore. When the group came together at Apple’s headquarters in London’s Savile Row to sign the aforementioned contract, he took the opportunity to let his bandmates know it was over.

“When I got back [from Toronto] there were a few meetings and Allen said, ‘Cool it,’ ’cause there was a lot to do [with The Beatles] business-wise, and it wouldn’t have been suitable at the time,” Lennon recalled in the book Lennon Remembers by Jann Wenner.

“Then we were discussing something in the office with Paul [McCartney] and Paul was saying to do something, and I kept saying, ‘No, no, no’ to everything he said,” he continued.

“So it came to a point that I had to say something. So I said, ‘The group’s over, I’m leaving.’ Allen was there, and he was saying, ‘Don’t tell.’ He didn’t want me to tell Paul even. But I couldn’t help it, I couldn’t stop it, it came out. And Paul and Allen said they were glad that I wasn’t going to announce it, like I was going to make an event out of it. I don’t know whether Paul said, ‘Don’t tell anybody,’ but he was damn pleased that I wasn’t. He said, ‘Oh well, that means nothing really happened if you’re not going to say anything.’ So that’s what happened.”  In the Anthology book, McCartney opened up about his reaction to Lennon’s announcement.

“I’d said: ‘I think we should go back to little gigs — I really think we’re a great little band. We should find our basic roots, and then who knows what will happen? We may want to fold after that, or we may really think we’ve still got it.’ John looked at me in the eye and said: ‘Well, I think you’re daft. I wasn’t going to tell you till we signed the Capitol deal’ — Klein was trying to get us to sign a new deal with the record company — ‘but I’m leaving the group!’ We paled visibly and our jaws slackened a bit,” McCartney recalled.

“I must admit we’d known it was coming at some point because of his intense involvement with Yoko [Ono],” he continued. “John needed to give space to his and Yoko’s thing. Someone like John would want to end The Beatles period and start the Yoko period; and he wouldn’t like either to interfere with the other. But what wasn’t too clever was this idea of: ‘I wasn’t going to tell you till after we signed the new contract.’ Good old John — he had to blurt it out. And that was it. There’s not a lot you can say to, ‘I’m leaving the group,’ from a key member.”

According to the Independent, the rest of the world heard the news several months later when McCartney was asked by a reporter if he foresaw a time “when Lennon-McCartney becomes an active songwriting partnership again” and answered, “No.”

The next day, on April 10, 1970, the Daily Mirror ran the front-page headline “Paul Quits the Beatles,” breaking the hearts of countless fans around the world. 

Source: Jacqueline Burt Cote/parade.com

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