Beatles News
Following the ill-fated breakup of the iconic band in April 1970, Lennon lived a secluded life with his family.
Therefore, a harrowing adventure on the Bermuda Triangle, infamous for disappearing ships and planes, freed Lennon’s mind to pursue music once again.
This gave way to his to-be solo Lennon album eventually released as a joint effort of the former Beatles member and Yoko Ono, Double Fantasy.
Music legend and founder of The Beatles, John Lennon owes it to the Bermuda Triangle. Following the ill-fated breakup of the iconic band in April 1970, Lennon lived a secluded life with his family, away from any music indulgence. The English songwriter was known for his eccentric personality, often acting on his whims and fancies.
Therefore, a harrowing adventure on the Bermuda Triangle, infamous for disappearing ships and planes, freed Lennon’s mind to pursue music once again. Lennon traveled to Bermuda in June 1980, months after which he was assassinated in his New York apartment.
Source: Tiyasa Biswas/fandomwire.com
This week’s Hot 100 reflects the tracking period just before Christmas Day arrived, so it makes sense that this may be the busiest frame of the year for holiday hits. The upper reaches of the ranking are almost entirely owned by various seasonal smashes, and a handful of beloved older compositions finally find their way back to the tally before the new year arrives.
This week, John Lennon returns to the Hot 100–Billboard’s ranking of the most-consumed songs in the U.S. The superstar finds his way back to the tally with his Christmas cut “Happy Xmas (War Is Over).” The tune reappears on the list at No. 48 as the biggest gift-giving day returns.
“Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” is credited not just to Lennon, though it was released during his solo career. The tune is credited to the duo John & Yoko. It also features both The Plastic Ono Band and The Harlem Community Choir.
Source: Hugh McIntyre/forbes.com
Ringo Starr recorded a New Year’s song from one of the most important living songwriters. His track begs to be compared to a George Harrison song with a similar theme.
Ringo Starr recorded a song from one of the most important songwriters of the 1980s and 1990s. He said it would be a great New Year’s anthem. Despite this, the tune never mentions the holiday. His track begs to be compared to a George Harrison song with a similar theme.
Diane Warren is a songwriter who has worked on hits such as Cher’s “If I Could Turn Back Time,” Ace of Base’s “Don’t Turn Around,” and Aerosmith’s “I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing.” During a 2021 interview with Variety, Ringo discussed working with Warren. “I asked Diane Warren for a song, and she sent over ‘Here’s to the Nights,'” he said. “Of course, she sent it over in the key of F-demented, and I was like, ‘F***!’ [Laughs.] With Benmont Tench’s help, we lowered the key to somewhere a human can sing.”
Ringo was proud of his work on “Here’s to the Nights.” “As we finished that track, I thought, ‘Well, Diane, it’s like a great New Year’s Eve singalong,'” he said. “Because I think many of us have a couple of nights we don’t remember, and friends we won’t forget. That’s a great sentiment — it’s hers, but it’s great.”
Source: Matthew Trzcinski/cheatsheet.com
It’s really quite fascinating, really, how Band on the Run became such a smash hit. Yes, of course, Sir Paul McCartney—a quarter of the greatest band in music history—is at the helm, but, before December 1973, that type of leadership on a solo quest didn’t always equate to a stroke of brilliance for the Fab Four. Just look at John Lennon’s Two Virgins or Mind Games, or George Harrison’s Electronic Sound, Ringo Starr’s Beaucoups of Blues or, even, McCartney’s first Wings album, Wild Life. In fact, that first handful of years after their breakup in the spring of 1970, the Beatles each took a bit to get their footing—well, except for Harrison, whose All Things Must Pass was an aces source of mastery composed largely of tracks he was never given the green light to put on a Beatles record when they were still together.
Band on the Run, though—not Ringo or All Things Must Pass or John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band—is the greatest Beatles solo album ever put together and, just perhaps, the greatest Beatles album ever. I say this knowing full well that virtually no one will agree with me. This is a cross I’ve made peace with bearing. If you are familiar with my writing, you are likely aware that I am a staunch McCartney stumper (I do have a tattoo of the “cute one” on my leg, afterall). Even when he released the career-low Egypt Station just a few years ago, I was one of the few listeners who came out of the woodwork to say that “Fuh You” is actually good. It’s a disease to awe over the work of one man so much, and the original title of this essay was going to be something along the lines of “Band on the Run is the Best Beatles Album of All Time.” I actually don’t think it’s a tight race, either. All Things Must Pass makes it interesting but, ultimately, falls short on account of it being a double-album when it could’ve (and should’ve) been a single LP.
Source: pastemagazine.com
John Lennon thought he was going to be jumped when he left Hamburg. Here's why he was so nervous on the trip back to Liverpool.
John Lennon left Hamburg, Germany, without the other Beatles. The government had deported George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and Pete Best, and Stuart Sutcliffe remained in Germany with his girlfriend. Lennon did not enjoy his time alone in the city and liked his trip back to England even less. He shared why he felt terrified on the journey.
After Harrison, McCartney, and Best left Hamburg, Lennon remained for a brief time.
“They were all deported and I was left in Hamburg, playing alone with another group of musicians,” he said in The Beatles Anthology. “It was quite a shattering experience to be in a foreign country, pretty young, left there all on my own. We’d spent our money as we went along. I didn’t have any to spare and being stuck in Hamburg with no food money was no joke especially just around Christmas.”
Source: Emma McKee/Showbiz Cheatsheet
If you sit for a moment and think about it, it would seem like nearly every song from The Beatles that you’ve ever heard likely hit the No. 1 spot on the Billboard charts. But that just isn’t the case, of course. No group could be that popular, that lucky—though, of anyone, The Beatles came the closest.
While The Beatles do boast the most No. 1 hit songs on the Billboard Hot 100 with 20 (heck, the band even released a popular album in 2000 just called 1 that featured all of said songs and more), there were many excellent tunes from the former Mop Tops that didn’t hit the ultimate spot on the Hot 100.
[RELATED: 5 Songwriting Tips From Paul McCartney’s ‘The Lyrics’]
1. “Eleanor Rigby”
Released on the Fab Four’s 1966 album, Revolver, this song is a masterpiece. It talks of loneliness while being built with rich vocal harmonies from Paul McCartney and a cornucopia of instruments. It also peaked at No. 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts.
Source: Jacob Uitti/americansongwriter.com
Ken Scott joined Abbey Road Studios during the making of The Beatles’ third album, A Hard Day’s Night, the first on which all songs were written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney. He witnessed the band’s transition from live act playing its repertoire to tape, to pioneering the kind of musical, studio and production techniques that would change recording forever, with albums such as Rubber Soul, Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, and The Beatles (aka The White Album).
When the group disbanded in 1970, Ken briefly worked with George Harrison, John Lennon and Ringo Starr, before heading off to assist such legends as David Bowie, Elton John, Mahavishnu Orchestra and Jeff Beck.
He recently embarked on a project to film The History Of The Beatles Recording Techniques. Working alongside Fab Dupont, producer and co-owner of plugin designer and provider of recording technique tutorials Puremix, it would be a mammoth task.
Source: Neville Marten/musicradar.com
Paul McCartney said the holiday season was always joyful as a child. He shared how his family celebrated the season.
Though Paul McCartney can afford to celebrate Christmas lavishly these days, he looks back fondly on his childhood celebrations of the holiday. McCartney shared how he celebrated Christmas as a child. He also spoke about why these are among his favorite memories.
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McCartney grew up in a Liverpool home with his mother, father, and younger brother. He said that his favorite Christmas memories come from this era of his life.
“I think waking up as a really little kid on Christmas morning, and just seeing the white pillowcase that we used to get,” he said in an interview on his official website, adding, “It was like a stocking but Mum and Dad used to put it in a white pillowcase, and it would be a present, a couple of nuts and a tangerine.”
Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com
George Harrison's father had clear expectations for his son's career. Here's the Christmas present that hinted at his hopes.
Long before fame, George Harrison received a Christmas present that made him fear his future. Though he wanted to pursue music, his father made it clear that he should look for a more stable job. Harrison found this upsetting because he didn’t think he would be able to follow through on his dad’s dreams for him.
After Harrison left school, he struggled to find a job. His friends returned to school as he tried, unsuccessfully, to get his music career off the ground. “I used to borrow money from my dad,” Harrison said in The Beatles Anthology. “I didn’t want a job — I wanted to be in a band. But it got a bit embarrassing when my father kept saying, ‘Don’t you think you’d better get a job?'”
Harrison’s father made it clear what type of job he wanted his son to have through a Christmas present. Harrison did not appreciate the gift.
“My dad never had a trade, but he had the idea that all his three sons would have different trades,” he said. “My eldest brother was a mechanic, my second brother did panel beating and welding. So Dad thought, ‘George can be an electrician, and then we can have our own garage.’ For Christmas, Dad bought me a little kit that opened up and inside were screwdrivers and tools, and I thought, ‘Oh God, he really does want me to be an electrician.’ That was depressing, because I had no chance of being one.”
Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com
The duo’s megahit single shot to number one 40 years ago this week on December 10, 1983. It then stayed at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart for six weeks. Michael Jackson and Paul McCartney teamed up to create this single for McCartney’s 1983 album Tug of War. The single being co-created by McCartney and the legendary Beatles producer George Martin certainly played a part in the success of "Say Say Say," but I’m betting having Jackson co-write and sing on the song while his Thriller album was vaporizing the world played the biggest part of Say’s explosion.
And we all loved the song’s video when it dropped.
This wasn’t the first time these two titans worked together. Thriller’s lead single was the McCartney assisted "The Girl Is Mine."
Sadly, the good times wouldn’t last between the two men. Jackson would soon buy the Beatles song catalog, which didn’t go over very well with McCartney, since…he was a Beatle and wrote many of their hit songs. But, for a few years in the early 80’s, these dudes made real magic together.
Source: Greg Simms Jr./wyso.org