Ringo Starr: 'The Beatles weren't partying when doing the tracks. We did that occasionally

31 December, 2024 - 0 Comments

Richard Starkey, born in Liverpool and known throughout the world as Ringo Starr, is the constant reminder that The Beatles loved each other, respected each other, and worked like dogs to make good music. “Every generation listens to the Beatles. It’s fantastic. The remastering, for me, was great because you can hear the drums, really hear what was played, not so boom, boom, boom… I still love the tracks. There was a lot of energy. We realized ‘we’re working here,’ you know, we’re not partying down while doing the tracks. We did that occasionally, and the track was always shit. But we went in and we did our best,” says Starr, 84, in the room of a luxury London hotel, where he has locked himself away to launch the promotion of his new album, Look Up, which will go on sale on January 10.

Starr’s latest record consists of 11 country songs written mostly by T. Bone Burnett, Bob Dylan’s guitarist during the 1970s, and a composer and producer with several Grammys under his belt. This is not the first album of the genre released by the former Beatles drummer: over 50 years ago he composed and produced the album Beaucoups of Blues.

And anyone who has heard the few Beatles songs Ringo sang, such as What Goes On, Act Naturally (“We’re going to make a film about a sad, lonely man. All I have to do is act naturally”), or even Octopus’s Garden, can sense a cowboy soul in the rhythm and in his voice.

Source: Rafa de Miguel/english.elpais.com

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