Beatles News
Not only did launch The Beatles into superstardom, he also offered up his home in London as a hideout for the Fab Four to escape their hordes of screaming fans. Fast forward to today, and the late manager’s Mayfair townhouse has hit the market for £8.75 million (or roughly $10.7 million).
The Grade II-listed Georgian dwelling measures 3,800 square feet and features five bedrooms plus an adjoining mews house. The latter is connected to the main house through the basement and is where Paul McCartney, , , and Ringo Starr used to hang. It’s also believed to be the place where they worked on their eighth studio album, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.
Originally built in the 1750s, Epstein acquired the swank abode in the 1960s as his private residence. He later turned the townhouse into an early version of the Apple Corps headquarters before he died of an accidental overdose in 1967. Following Epstein’s passing, the residence was purchased by author and politician Norman St John-Stevas, Lord St John of Fawsley, a close advisor to Margaret Thatcher.
Source: Abby Montanez/yahoo.com
he Beatles legend became one of the most successful singer-songwriters of all time but he and his brother Mike were met with a tough crowd when they performed at a Butlin's holiday camp as a child, reports.
McCartney was just 11 when he performed in the talent show after he had been taught to harmonise by his father James and the siblings did their best to channel The Everly Brothers.
The 81-year-old star recalled on his new podcast 'McCartney: A Life in Lyrics', "The Everly Brothers sang in harmony, so me and my brother did. We sang 'Bye Bye Love'. We didn't win - obviously not talented enough for the Butlin's crowd!"
McCartney previously described how his childhood holiday to Butlin's was a great adventure. He told the Daily Mirror in 2021, "I was 11 when I went to Butlin's Pwllheli holiday camp and the photos of me show I'm still wearing my school cap and short school trousers."
Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com
George Harrison discussed the behind-the-scenes of The Beatles' first 'Ed Sullivan Show' set, and what was "tacky" about the show's production.
The Beatles‘ Ed Sullivan Show set changed rock ‘n’ roll, music in general, and the entire course of human history. No, that’s not going too far. Shockingly, George Harrison revealed he didn’t even rehearse for this seminal event. Here’s why — and why the performance mattered so much to him.
The book George Harrison on George Harrison: Interviews and Encounters features an interview from 1977. During that interview, George discussed the behind-the-scenes of The Beatles’ first Ed Sullivan Show appearance. “The Sullivan show was funny because I didn’t attend the rehearsal, I was sick somehow on the flight over on the first trip to the States,” he recounted.
Sullivan’s crew wasn’t all that helpful. “The band did a long rehearsal for the sound people, they kept going into the control room and checking out the sound,” recalled George. “And finally, when they got a balance between the instruments and the vocals, they marked on the boards by the control and then everybody broke for lunch. Then we came back to tape the show and the cleaners had been ’round and polished all the marks off the board.”
Source: Matthew Trzcinski/cheatsheet.com
Brisbane music writer Sean Sennett flew to Adelaide to see Paul McCartney and host a conversation with him at an exclusive fan event and he says we are all in for the treat of our lives when the former Beatle’s Got Back tour arrives in Queensland
It’s twenty-four hours before Paul McCartney is due to officially start his Australian tour. He is getting ready to play a short set to 15 competition winners.
Apart from McCartney’s crew, the winners, their guests and a smattering of media the Adelaide Entertainment Centre is virtually empty. This hardly matters a jot to McCartney who performs a blistering twenty-five-minute collection of songs comprised of Beatles’ hits, highlights from his solo career and deep cuts.
Earlier in the afternoon your correspondent had the privilege of chatting to McCartney first on stage, and facilitating questions from the small audience. Relaxed and wearing a dark hoodie, you only need two minutes in McCartney’s company and you’re knocked out by the man’s warmth, candour and, of course, his catalogue. Having interviewed him previously McCartney’s warmth is always immediate.
Source: Bryanna Rossow/inqld.com.au
Ringo Starr joined the Beatles in 1962, replacing original drummer Pete Best as the band’s permanent timekeeper. Even before he became part of the Fab Four, though, Starr was, well, a star.
“He was in one of the top groups in Britain, but especially in Liverpool, before we even had a drummer,” John Lennon explained during an interview with Playboy in 1980. “So Ringo’s talent would have come out one way or the other…I don’t know what he would have ended up as, but whatever that spark is in Ringo that we all know but can’t put our finger on—whether it is acting, drumming, or singing, I don’t know—there is something in him that is projectable, and he would have surfaced with or without The Beatles.”
He did surface with The Beatles, though, contributing to the band’s catalog not only as a drummer, but also as an occasional vocalist and songwriter. He wasn’t a technical player—”none of us are technical musicians,” Lennon added during the same Playboy interview—but he was inventive, filling the band’s songs with unlikely grooves, funky fills, and surprising tempo changes. He played drums like a composer, in other words, and his highlights behind the kit—five of which are documented below—represent some of The Beatles’ brightest moments.
Source: Robert Crawford/americansongwriter.com
There may very well have been a point of no return between Paul McCartney and John Lennon.
When The Beatles finally called it a day in 1970, tensions were at an all-time high between each of the iconic bandmates.
Marred by squabbling, creative differences, and a loss of passion for the band's future meant there was only one way it was going to go.
During the recording of their final album Let It Be - offered a new perspective in Peter Jackson's 2021 documentary Get Back - Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr still showed frequent flashes of their collective genius.
However, the cracks were very much appearing, and grew more irreparable by the day, with Yoko Ono joining every session, George growing frustrated with his songwriting contributions being consistently ignored, Ringo evidently disinterested in the band politics, leaving Paul to drag them all through the recording process.
Source: Thomas Curtis-Horsfall/goldradiouk.com
The Beatles played a killer set of songs during their first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. Some of those songs are still famous and some are not. George Harrison discussed the band’s mindset leading up to their set.
According to Kiro 7, The Beatles made their first Ed Sullivan Show appearance on February 9, 1964. The Fab Four started their set with their classic love song “All My Loving.” While The Beatles played the tune during this seminal moment in their careers, the tune is mostly forgotten in the United States and rarely receives play on rock radio.
Then, the band performed a show tune called “Till There Was You.” For context, musical theater had a much bigger influence on popular music during the early 1960s than it does now. The first half of the band’s set closed with “She Loves You,” the first song of the night that’s still really famous in the U.S.
Source: Matthew Trzcinski/cheatsheet.com
Paul McCartney felt guilty while he was making the album ‘McCartney III’. In addition, he felt crafting McCartney III was a lot more fun than crafting other albums.
“Guilt” isn’t an emotion I would associate with Paul McCartney‘s album McCartney III. Despite this, Paul said he felt guilty while he was making the album because of his personal situation. In addition, he revealed why he felt that crafting McCartney III was a lot more fun than crafting other albums.
Paul started the 1970s with an album called McCartney, the 1980s with an album called McCartney II, and the 2020s with an album called McCartney III. During a 2020 interview with Uncut, Paul discussed working on McCartney III during the coronavirus (COVD-19) lockdowns.
“If you think about it, The Beatles toured a lot, then we stopped touring and made Sgt. Pepper,” he said. “So that idea of having all the time in the world to do what you like doing isn’t new to me.
“But while I enjoyed it, at the same time I felt a bit guilty because I know a lot of people are having a very hard time,” he added. “It’s a double-edged sword. You felt sorry for people who don’t have freedom, but at the same time you were glad that you do.” He joked that his lockdown was a “rockdown.”
Source: Matthew Trzcinski/cheatsheet.com
On a transatlantic flight in the late 1960s, George Harrison – the 'Quiet Beatle' – was sitting in first class with his eyes closed, chanting in an undertone. A cabin attendant asked him if he wanted anything. 'F*** off!' George snapped. 'Can't you see I'm meditating?'
After the Beatles discovered mysticism and India, George took to obsessive chanting and spinning a prayer-wheel. But far from bringing the promised inner peace, it seemed only to make him moody and irritable.
'He wanted so much to be a spiritual being but could never reach the level he wanted to,' his wife Pattie said. Ringo Starr remarked his friend had 'two bags – the bag of beads and the bag of cocaine'.
Harrison recognised this, telling one of his spiritual advisers: 'Maybe it's something to do with me being Pisces, one fish going this way, the other that way. There are periods when I can't stop chanting, and other periods when I turn into a demon again.'
Source: Philip Norman Beatles Biographer/dailymail.co.uk
Paul McCartney reveals his favorite albums that he can’t live without. The Beatles’s bass guitarist and back vocal Paul McCartney shares his favorite 5 albums of all time.
Paul McCartney is one of the most influential figures in popular rock music and has eternally affected the music business as a musician, composer, and multi-instrumentalist. The Beatles bass guitarist and back-up vocalist has become an icon throughout his six-decade career and continues to surprise fans with his timeless songs and creativity.
Sir Paul McCartney, born June 18, 1942, is a famed British musician, singer, and songwriter who became famous as a member of the legendary band The Beatles.
McCartney’s musical career began in the 1960s with The Beatles when his joint songwriting collaboration with John Lennon created some of the most memorable and enduring songs in popular music history. Songs like “Hey Jude,” “Yesterday,” and “Let It Be” show McCartney’s talent for creating emotional songs and profound lyrics that stay popular with fans of all ages.
Following the breakup of The Beatles in 1970, McCartney launched a successful solo career, releasing popular albums such as “McCartney” (1970) and “Ram” (1971), which showed his flexibility as a musician and his skills to explore a wide range of musical techniques.
Source: Yunus Emre/metalshout.com