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Between 1973 and 1975, John Lennon and Yoko Ono separated for a period he later called his “Lost Weekend.” During this time, he dated his assistant, May Pang, and the pair moved to Los Angeles together. The two had a loving relationship, so Pang was upset when John Lennon referred to it as his “Lost Weekend.” According to Pang, the former Beatle did apologize for calling their relationship this.

Pang started working at Apple Corps., the company founded by The Beatles, at the age of 19, and she shortly became the assistant to Lennon and Ono. The couple started having marital problems in 1973, and Ono approached Pang asking her if she could start a relationship with Lennon. Pang repeatedly said no, but Ono was adamant about orchestrating everything.

Lennon and Pang did start dating, and they moved to LA together. Lennon was still having a rough time being away from Ono, and his drinking problem worsened, leading to several public drunken outbursts. However, “Lost Weekend” also saw a musical explosion from the former Beatle as he released three albums: Mind Games, Walls and Bridges, and Rock ‘n’ Roll. The “Lost Weekend” ended in early 1975 when Lennon abruptly reconciled with Ono.

Source: Ross Tanenbaum/cheatsheet.com

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John Lennon was in the midst of an incredibly successful solo career when he was assassinated on Dec. 8, 1980. While his music career was cut short, he had some unreleased tapes made into a posthumous album. Later, a few of John Lennon’s unfinished songs were utilized for The Beatles Anthology, but Paul McCartney stopped one song from being released.

After The Beatles ended, each member began their solo career. John Lennon had a long stretch of success for five years before taking a break, beginning in 1975. However, he returned in November 1970 with Double Fantasy, an album that hit No. 1 worldwide. One song he and Yoko wanted to put on the album was “Grow Old With Me,” but due to a tight deadline, they decided to save it for the following album, Milk and Honey.

“We were working against a deadline for the Christmas release of the album, [and we] kept holding “Grow Old With Me” to the end, and finally decided it was better to leave the song for Milk And Honey so we won’t do a rush job,” Ono said

Source: Ross Tanenbaum/cheatsheet.com

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Join us as we take a little trip down the Strawberry Fields of history and dig up some tasty bits of Beatles trivia. This article could probably be turned into an entire book, but there are probably too many books on The Beatles already so, we're going to condense it down to less than 600 words.The Beatles didn't use Fender guitars until 1965. By that point they had already recorded four [and a half] albums. This was allegedly done to distinguish themselves from The Shadows, who were known to use Fender instruments and featured guitarist Hank Marvin. On the Gibson side of things, The Beatles' use of the Epiphone Casino propelled the guitar to massive global sales, surpassing the Gibson equivalent, the ES-330 during Beatlemania.Wu Tang Clan's 2007 album "The 8 Diagrams" featured a guest appearance by George Harrison's only son, Dhani. The first single off that album was a re-working of the Beatles' "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" entitled "The Heart Gently Weeps".

Source: Justin Beckner/ultimate-guitar.com

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It was 60 years ago today (April 14th, 1963) that the Beatles and the Rolling Stones first met. The Beatles, who were new on the scene in London, had heard about the group through word of mouth, and were in the audience at the Stones' show in Richmond at the Crawdaddy Club at the Station Hotel. Shortly thereafter, George Harrison personally recommended that Decca Records — the same label that had passed on the Beatles — sign a deal with the still-unknown Stones.

In 1988 when Mick Jagger inducted the Beatles into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, he recalled first laying eyes on the group while on stage, remembering, "We were playing a little club in Richmond and I saw right in front of me, there they were — THE FAB FOUR. The four-headed monster. They never went anywhere alone. And they had on the most beautiful long, black leather trench coats." Jagger joked that, "I thought to myself, 'If I have to learn to write songs to get one of those, I will.'"

Source: Music News/vermilioncountyfirst.com

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On This Day, April 14, 2009: George Harrison gets a posthumous star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

Beatle George Harrison, who passed away in November, 2001, was honored with a posthumous star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles.

The ceremony was attended by Harrison’s widow Olivia and son Dhani, along with the late rock star’s famous friends, including Sir Paul McCartney, Tom Petty, Sheryl Crow, Eric Idle, Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson and more.

The star, at 1750 Vine Street, was the 2,382nd star on the Walk of Fame.

Source: kslx.com

4 of The Beatles' Biggest Scandals - 14 April, 2023 - 0 Comments

The Beatles didn’t have nearly as bad a reputation as bands like The Rolling Stones, but even they dealt with scandals in their time as a band. Many of these seem tame by today’s standards, but they still placed the band in hot water with the general public. Here are four of the scandals that The Beatles faced throughout the 1960s.

In 1966, John Lennon entangled The Beatles in what was likely their biggest controversy. In an interview, he spoke about the enduring quality of rock music versus religion.

“Christianity will go,” he said, per Rolling Stone. “It will vanish and shrink. I needn’t argue about that; I know I’m right and I will be proved right. We’re more popular than Jesus now. I don’t know which will go first – rock & roll or Christianity. Jesus was all right, but his disciples were thick and ordinary. It’s them twisting it that ruins it for me.”

Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com

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The first time music producer George Martin began working with the Beatles in May 1962, he thought little of them or their songwriting skills. "The material was either old stuff ... or very mediocre songs they had written themselves," he recounted in "All You Need Is Ears: The Inside Personal Story of the Genius Who Created the Beatles." He would later recall that they were "rotten composers" whose "own stuff wasn't any good" (via The Beatles: The Biography). Martin laid into the crestfallen band for more than an hour, ticking off all the negatives, including the band's "lack of suitable material."

In response, George Harrison cheekily retorted that he didn't like Martin's tie, which shocked his bandmates, but had Martin in stitches. Harrison broke the ice and helped solidify a history-making creative union. As Martin and the Beatles continued to work together, the producer's opinion of Paul McCartney and John Lennon's songwriting changed for the better, especially when their songs continued to become massive hits. But Harrison had a harder time of it since he hadn't been writing as long as Lennon and McCartney.

Source: Andrew Amelinckx/grunge.com

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There’s not much Lennon music heard in this doc about his affair with May Pang, and given how much Pang trashes his wife, Yoko Ono, it’s no surprise it was withheld.

Interest in John Lennon’s personal life goes back to early ’60s Beatlemania, when a waggish producer on the Ed Sullivan Show captioned a shot of the then-moptop, “Sorry girls, he’s married.”

As we have learned over and over, the emotionally damaged and frequently volatile Lennon was often no picnic as a spouse.

During his second marriage, to the artist Yoko Ono, Lennon had a long and serious affair with May Pang, who had been a personal assistant to the couple in the early 1970s. This sojourn has been nicknamed Lennon’s “lost weekend,” partly because of the drunken acting out he did with Pang in tow. Also because he reunited with Ono in 1975, had a child with her, and entered a period of devoted, near-reclusive domesticity before he was assassinated in 1980.

Source: Glenn Kenny/nytimes.com

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The Beatles exist in a stratosphere all their own decades after they broke up. The music still resonates, and the band members — living and dead — are still celebrated. So are the group’s other projects, such as The Beatles’ first movie A Hard Day’s Night. It cost $500,000 to make, which was well worth it beyond the box office receipts. Paul McCartney said filming the movie was nerve-wracking, but it came with a huge payoff.
George Harrison (from left), Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, and John Lennon on the set of The Beatles' movie 'A Hard Day's Night' in 1964.
‘A Hard Day’s Night’ more than recouped its $500,000 budget

A Hard Day’s Night (1964) was like many other movies. A screenwriter (Alun Owen) penned the script. A director (Richard Lester) helmed the shoot. And actors (many of them anonymous in the U.S. aside from The Beatles) performed in it.

Yet it comes off as a quasi-documentary with Paul, John Lennon, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr fending off rabid fans at the height of Beatlemania as they try to get to a TV appearance.

Source: Jason Rossi/cheatsheet.com

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Before The Beatles became global superstars in 1964, the band was rocking Liverpool’s Cavern Club. They eventually found their way to producer George Martin, and the band released two singles that had modest commercial success in 1962.

The Beatles recorded their first LP, Please Please Me, over a single day in 1963. It was released in the U.K. on March 22, 1963, and popular music would never be the same.

Looking back on 60 years since the album’s debut, here are seven little-known facts about the Fab Four’s first full-length record:

1. The Beatles Beat Themselves
Please Please Me spent 30 weeks at No. 1 on the U.K. album charts. It eventually dropped to No. 2 behind the band’s second LP, With The Beatles.

Source: Ryan Berenz/remindmagazine.com

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