Beatles News
An all-star tribute to Jimmy Buffett in April will feature Paul McCartney, Kenny Chesney, the Eagles, Brandi Carlile and more, Variety has reported.
According to Variety.com, the show will take place April 11 at the Hollywood Bowl. It’s titled, “Keep the Party Going: A Tribute to Jimmy Buffett.” Other performers include Jon Bon Jovi, Pitbull, Eric Church, Sheryl Crow, Jack Johnson, Jackson Browne, Zac Brown, Mac McAnally and the Coral Reefer Band.
Variety said ticket pre-sale offers will begin at noon Central time on Wednesday, with a general on-sale starting at noon Friday through Ticketmaster. Ticketmaster listed six pre-sales, with two starting at noon Wednesday and four starting at noon Thursday. Ticket prices were not immediately available.
Many of the featured artists have performed with Buffett or have performed his songs. At least one, Carlile, knew him through a shared enthusiasm for fishing, according to Variety.
In other Buffett news, the video recently was released for “University of Bourbon Street,” a song from his posthumously released album “Equal Strain on All Parts.” Like several other songs on the album, it was co-written by Mobile native Will Kimbrough. It also features the Preservation Hall Jazz Band.
Buffett, who died Sept. 1, also recently had a cameo in the Hulu series “Life and Beth,” in an episode set in New Orleans.
Source: al.com
The early days of Paul McCartney’s post-Beatles career was explored in the first volume of the book The McCartney Legacy, and now the second volume is on its way.
In celebration of National Book Day, a post on The McCartney Legacy social media account announced that Volume 2 of the series will be released on December 10, 2024.
The new edition will pick up where Volume 1 left off, covering McCartney’s life and career between 1974 and 1980, a time when he was enjoying huge success with his band Wings.
The McCartney Legacy Volume 1, written by Allan Kozinn and Adrian Sinclair, was released in December 2022. It covered the years between 1969 to 1974, delving into McCartney’s creative life right after The Beatles broke up. It featured interviews with fellow musicians, tour managers, producers and more.
Of course, McCartney has released his own book about his life, although it focused more on his music. The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present was released in November 2021.
Source: ABC News/everettpost.com
In an oddball metaphor, John Lennon compared The Beatles to flags on top of a boat. However, he said that the Fab Four weren’t the ones getting the boat to move. In other words, he felt the band were products of their society as much as they were trendsetters. Paul McCartney made some similar remarks about his own musical legacy.
John Lennon said ‘Maybe The Beatles were in the crow’s nest shouting ‘Land Ho!”
The book All We Are Saying: The Last Major Interview with John Lennon and Yoko Ono features an interview from 1980. In it, the “Imagine” singer was asked what “moved The Beatles.” “Whatever wind was blowing at the time moved The Beatles, too,” he replied. “I’m not saying we weren’t flags on the top of the ship. But the whole boat was moving.
“Maybe The Beatles were in the crow’s nest shouting ‘Land Ho!
Source: imdb.com
John Lennon wrote a number of songs that radio stations banned. He said censors completely misinterpreted the point of one banned song.
Though The Beatles were the biggest band in the world in the 1960s, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr still faced censure. Several Beatles songs were banned around the world. One song Lennon wrote did not receive playtime on the radio because some believed it referenced drugs. Lennon rolled his eyes at this interpretation and called the song beautiful.
John Lennon admired a banned Beatles song
In 1968, The Beatles released “Happiness is a Warm Gun.” Every member of the band was incredibly proud of the song, but some censors were not. The BBC banned the song, believing it referenced heroin use.
“‘Happiness Is A Warm Gun’ was another one which was banned on the radio — they said it was about shooting up drugs. But they were advertising guns and I thought it was so crazy that I made a song out of it,” Lennon said in The Beatles Anthology. “It wasn’t about ‘H’ at all. George Martin showed me the cover of a magazine that said: ‘Happiness is a warm gun.’ I thought it was a fantastic, insane thing to say. A warm gun means you’ve just shot something!”
Though the BBC banned the song, it was one of Lennon’s favorites. He said he loved it.
“I think it’s a beautiful song,” he said, adding, “I like all the different things that are happening in it. I had put together three sections of different songs, it seemed to run through all the different kinds of rock music.”
Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com
All you need is love – but not an autograph from Sir Paul McCartney.
The Beatle has gotten quite persnickety when it comes to fans seeking his signature. But at age 79, he has earned the right to be.
In a new interview, McCartney shared that while he’s happy to have a conversation with fans, he will not participate in scribbling his John Hancock or posing for selfies.
“[It] always struck me as a bit strange,” the Grammy-winning singer/songwriter told Reader’s Digest UK for a November 2021 cover story. “‘Here, can I write your name down on the back of this till receipt please?’ Why? We both know who I am.”
McCartney has found that stopping those kinds of interactions are better in the long run. “What you’ve usually got is a ropey photo with a poor backdrop and me looking a bit miserable,” he said. “Let’s chat, let’s exchange stories.”
The beloved Beatles musician is following suit from his former bandmate, Ringo Starr, who’s also not a fan of the fanatical practice. In 2008, Starr warned fans to stop sending him fan mail or presenting him with objects to autograph.
“I’m warning you with peace and love. I have too much to do, so no more fan mail!” the beloved drummer said in a video message. “And no objects to be signed. Nothing! Anyway, peace and love, peace and love.”
Source: Karu F. Daniels, New York Daily News
Ringo Starr was lazing around his house when he wrote his first solo Beatles song. Here's what he said about the writing process.
Ringo Starr rarely wrote or sang Beatles songs. He preferred to play the drums and support his bandmates. Even after The Beatles broke up, his bandmates often wrote him songs for his solo albums. Still, he had several writing credits with the band. John Lennon insinuated that Starr got his first solo writing credit with the band because he was bored.
In 1968, Starr received his first solo writing credit with The Beatles with “Don’t Pass Me By.” The song appeared on the White Album. Starr said he wrote it while lazing around his house.
“I wrote ‘Don’t Pass Me By’ when I was sitting round at home,” Starr said in The Beatles Anthology. “I only play three chords on the guitar and three on the piano. I was fiddling with the piano — I just bang away — and then if a melody comes and some words, I just have to keep going. That’s how it happened: I was just sitting at home alone and ‘Don’t Pass Me By’ arrived. We played it with a country attitude.”
Lennon was blunt when he described Starr’s writing process.
Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com
It is the most famous love triangle in music history: George Harrison, Eric Clapton and Pattie Boyd, the quintessential face of the 1960s, who was married to Harrison while being courted by Clapton. Over half a century after Clapton uttered to Harrison the immortal words “I have to tell you, man, I’m in love with your wife” after the Beatle confronted the couple in the garden of the Bee Gees’ manager Robert Stigwood in 1970, the former model is selling their love letters. Alongside photographs taken by Boyd, Christie’s is auctioning lyrics by Harrison and the original artwork for Derek and the Dominos’ 1970 album Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs — a painting of a golden-haired girl that Clapton bought for its resemblance
Source: Will Hodgkinson/thetimes.co.uk
George Martin got to know The Beatles well over the years. While he usually liked them, they once let him down.
The Beatles’ longtime producer George Martin worked with them on each album they put out in the 1960s. He was a key part of their success and got to know them well throughout their collaboration. Their antics, particularly in the early 1960s, grew familiar to him. Still, they sometimes pushed Martin too far. He shared what they did to let him down for the very first time.
In the early 1960s, The Beatles traveled to Paris for a concert. While they were there, Martin booked them studio time to record German language versions of “She Loves You” and “I Want to Hold Your Hand.” A record company executive believed there was no chance the songs would sell in Germany if they were in English.
“I was disinclined to believe this, but that’s what he said and I told The Beatles,” Martin said in The Beatles Anthology. “They laughed: ‘That’s absolute rubbish.’ So I said, ‘Well, if we want to sell records in Germany, that’s what we’ve got to do.’ So they agreed to record in German. I mean, really it was rubbish, but the company sent over one Otto Demmlar to help coach them in German.”
Demmlar and Martin waited for The Beatles in the studio on the day they were meant to record, but they never arrived.
“It was the first time in my experience with them that they had let me down, so I rang the George V Hotel where they were staying, and Neil Aspinall answered,” Martin said. “He said, ‘I’m sorry, they’re not coming, they asked me to tell you.’ I said, ‘You mean to tell me they’re telling you to tell me? They’re not telling me themselves?’ — ‘That’s right.’ — ‘I’m coming right over,’ I said.”
Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com
A limited-edition vinyl EP featuring John Lennon’s 1973 hit “Mind Games” and three other tracks will be released as part of the 2024 Record Store Day celebration on Saturday, April 20.
The EP will offer fans a preview of the upcoming 50th anniversary “Ultimate Edition” reissue of the Mind Games album.
Mind Games and its title track were issued in the U.S. on October 29, 1973. “Mind Games” was the only single released from the record. It peaked at No. 18 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The Writing of “Mind Games”
Lennon began writing “Mind Games” in 1969, initially titling the song “Make Love, Not War.” Another song that Lennon was working on around that time called “I Promise” also featured some lyrics and melody that would be heard in “Mind Games.”
Lennon completed “Mind Games” after reading the 1972 book Mind Games: The Guide to Inner Space, written by Robert Masters and Jean Houston. The book offered exercises to help people train their minds to focus on positivity by looking inward.
Source: Matt Friedlander/americansongwriter.com
Paul McCartney has revealed the moving inspiration behind his song, “My Valentine”.
The Beatles star has been divulging some of the stories and influences behind his best-known songs while in the Fab Four, as well as his work as a solo artist and with his post-Beatles band, Wings.
He wrote “My Valentine” for his wife Nancy Shevell, whom he met in 2007. The song was included on his 2012 album, Kisses on the Bottom, which comprised several cover versions of tracks by songwriters Billy Hill, Frank Loesser and Irving Berlin.
In the latest episode of his podcast, McCartney: A Life in Lyrics, the 81-year-old explained that he went on a holiday with Shevell before they were “an item”, but he already knew he was in love with her.
“I had fallen in love with my lady Nancy, but we weren’t an item yet, and in my case I was looking over my shoulder for paparazzi,” he explained.
Source: Roisin O'Connor/independent.co.uk