Beatles News
Kanye West and Paul McCartney were a surprising team-up that created excellent music. However, their collaboration wasn’t the first time they met. While it would make sense for Kanye to want to get some music pointers from the legendary musician, the rapper appeared to be more interested in Sir Macca’s knighthood.
McCartney and Kanye first crossed paths at a Met Gala that honored his daughter, Stella. McCartney was excited to meet the American rapper, and the feeling was mutual. However, the “Heartless” rapper appeared more interested in his knighthood than his extensive discography of iconic music.
“With Kanye, I’m always so excited that he knows who I am, and he’s come up. I’m a fan of his,” McCartney told GQ in 2012. “I met him and ‘Jay Zed’, as we call him, at the Met Ball that Stella was being honored at. I never know what to say. They were just saying, ‘Hey man, you’re really a Knight!’ Their perspective on that, as Americans, as ex-Project guys – for them, a knight is like Sir Lancelot. It’s always funny as I’m just Paul, one of the guys.”
Source: Ross Tanenbaum/cheatsheet.com
He is, to state the obvious, a legend. The bass guitar player for no less than the most successful band of all time and writer of so many classic songs that he makes the output of of most modern day songwriters look meagre by comparison. This is a man who changed the course of popular music, and took bass guitar playing to a completely new level.
Although Paul McCartney is perhaps more widely adored for his songwriting skills, on this isolated bass track of Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds you can really hear the greatness of his bass playing. He isn’t all in-your-face bass heroics – he’s a songwriter first and a bass player second, and that’s what we love about him. Bass playing that’s supportive and still central to the song. Speaking to MusicRadar (opens in new tab), the bass-playing Beatle named the song as his greatest moment on bass.
Source: Nick Wells/guitarworld.com
Paul McCartney and John Lennon go way back. They lived in the same neighborhood as teenagers and started playing music together shortly after meeting one another. During those first few years, the duo wrote over 100 songs together. Today, those songs are lost. Here are two accounts of what happened to them, and a look back at the early days of Lennon and McCartney. When McCartney met Lennon, they couldn’t have been more different. McCartney got good grades. He had a strong moral compass, bordering on self-righteous. Lennon, on the other hand, was a trouble-maker. He had emotional outbursts and could be cruel to his peers and authority figures alike. Plus, there was a two-year age difference between them. But the boys’ interests drew them together. They were both incredibly passionate about music, and they worked well together.
Source: Kelsey Goeres/cheatsheet.com
Dolly Parton is ready to rock and roll – and she’s got the Beatles back together to help her.
Sir Paul McCartney, 80, and Sir Ringo Starr, 82, teamed up with the country music singer to record Let It Be on her latest album, Rockstar.
As well as the Fab Two, the Beatles classic features Peter Frampton and Mick Fleetwood.
Dolly, 77, has also made tracks with several other legends – including Don’t Let The Sun Go Down On Me with Sir Elton John, Every Breath You Take, with Sting and Wrecking Ball, with her god-daughter Miley Cyrus.
She said: “I am very honoured and privileged to have worked with some of the greatest iconic singers and musicians of all time.
“To be able to sing all the iconic songs was a joy beyond measure.”
Dolly decided to channel her inner rock chick after her induction into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame last year.
Source: Chris Riches/express.co.uk
In the early days of The Beatles, the lineup was John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Stuart Sutcliffe. The group eventually brought Pete Best as the drummer, but the four musicians founded the band. Both McCartney and Harrison admitted that they didn’t think Sutcliffe was a very good musician, but they still felt jealous of him. McCartney shared why they couldn’t help but feel this way.
A black and white picture of Paul McCartney and Harrison playing guitars and singing into the same microphone.
McCartney and Harrison got to know Sutcliffe through Lennon. They went to art school together and formed a tight bond. Lennon had been working with McCartney and Harrison in The Quarry Men, and the group worked to convince Sutcliffe to join them. He didn’t have any musical background, but he did have enough money to buy a bass guitar after he sold a painting.
“It was a fortune in those days, like an inheritance,” McCartney said, per The Beatles Anthology. “He said he had to buy canvases or paint. We said, ‘Stu, see reason, love. A Hofner, a big ace group … fame!’ He gave in and bought this big Hofner bass that dwarfed him. The trouble was he couldn’t play well. This was a bit of a drawback, but it looked good, so it wasn’t too much of a problem.”
Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com
The Beatles' final album, "Let It Be," included a song that was considered John Lennon's cry for help.
On May 8 53 years ago, The Beatles released its what-would-be last album, "Let It Be." The 13th album was dropped less than a month before the famous boy group members decided to call it quits after a decade of performing together.
The 1970 album ran for 35 minutes, with the original release presenting two sides of songs to fans. The next versions included "Two of Us," "Across the Universe," "The Long and Winding Road," "For You Blue," "Get Back," "Let It Be," and "Don't Let Me Down."
The latter track was part of the album as a primary release, and it was considered the late Beatle's emotional song.
According to Express UK, "Don't Let Me Down" was not officially included on the album. Still, it became one of the most popular songs released by the Fab Four. In fact, The Beatles' rooftop performance of the song remains the most-viewed video on the band's YouTube channel, with more than 435 million views.
Source: Angeline Sicily/musictimes.com
George Harrison and Bob Dylan were longtime friends who met through music. The two wound up becoming part of George Harrison’s popular post-Beatles band, The Traveling Wilburys. The two always had nice things to say about each other — and that friendship had to start somewhere. Still, Harrison once reflected in his memoir that the first time he actually got to know Dylan was a bit awkward.
Dylan and Harrison were just two guys trying to make it in the rock and roll industry, and their first encounter actually happened years before their friendship — and music partnership — started. Back in 1964, Harrison was in New York City playing concerts as a member of The Beatles. The band was staying at New York’s Delmonico Hotel, which is where they first spent time with Dylan — who offered them some marijuana.
Source: Julia Mullaney/cheatsheet.com
Paul McCartney was just one face of The Beatles — arguably the most popular band to ever exist. And while all four of them rose to fame together, many of the songs that took the world by storm were written by individual band members. Even after the band broke up, solo careers persisted, with John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr becoming quite successful in their own right.
In 1983, McCartney released his song “So Bad” — just one of many in his post-Beatles era. It turns out, though, that when performing it for his family, he actually changed the lyrics because he felt “so bad” for his son James.
For 10 years, The Beatles graced our ears with some of the biggest rock and roll songs of all time. McCartney, Lennon, and Harrison got together in 1958, but their rise to fame started in the early 1960s. After securing Ringo Starr as their lead drummer in 1962, the band found fame with their song “Love Me Do.” A life of peace and quiet was over for them from there; by 1964, they were huge. In 1970, after more than a decade of working with the band, Paul McCartney announced that he had left The Beatles.
Source: Julia Mullaney/cheatsheet.com
In Forrest Gump, the title character goes on The Dick Cavett Show and inspires John Lennon’s “Imagine.” The scene makes it so that “Imagine” is inspired by Forrest’s experiences in Red China. John said the song was inspired by Yoko Ono and his feelings about religion.
John Lennon‘s “Imagine” has a big place in popular culture. For example, the song appears in the movie Forrest Gump. The song’s appearance in the film simply isn’t funny and undermines Yoko Ono’s place in history.
In a famous sequence from the film Forrest Gump, Forrest makes an appearance on The Dick Cavett Show. During his appearance, Forrest tells John about China, He remarks that the people have very few possessions and don’t go to church. John says that the people in that country have “no possessions” and “no religion.” Cavett says he can’t imagine a world like that. John says “it’s easy if you try.”
Source: Matthew Trzcinski/cheatsheet.com
John Lennon and Paul McCartney first met while growing up in Liverpool. While Lennon was slightly older than McCartney, the pair bonded over their shared love of music, and McCartney eventually joined John and his band. Paul had to prove to John he had talent, and he still remembers the song he played for his future bandmate to impress him.
Before The Beatles were even an idea, John Lennon was a member of The Quarrymen Skiffle Group. On July 6, 1957, the Quarrymen performed at the garden fete of St. Peter’s Church in Woolton, Liverpool. Lennon was the lead vocalist and guitarist for the band. In attendance at the performance was a young Paul McCartney. McCartney was beginning to develop a love of rock n’ roll and was thrilled that there was a group around his age in his hometown.
In an interview with Record Collector, McCartney recalled Lennon performing an improvised version of “Come Go With Me”, where he only knew the chorus and made up the rest. He was the only “outstanding member,” as the rest seemed to blend in the background.
Source: Ross Tanenbaum/cheatsheet.com