Beatles News
George Harrison is the solo artist behind “My Sweet Lord,” also earning praise for his work with the Beatles. After releasing music (and producing films) for several years, this celebrity earned an impressive net worth — and even elaborated on his relationship with money.
Harrison was a member of the “Fab Four,” performing songs like “Let It Be,” “Strawberry Fields Forever,” and “Here Comes the Sun” with the Beatles. Celebrity Net Worth reported that Harrison had an estimated $400 million at his time of death.
That’s primarily thanks to his role with the Beatles, although he also worked as a film producer. Harrison also released solo music and starred in films like A Hard Day’s Night and Help.
The website explained that at the time of Lennon’s death in 1980, he was worth $200 million, with George worth $100 million, Ringo worth $80 million, and Paul worth $400 million. “Being worth $100 million in 1980 is the same as $300 million in today’s dollars.”
Source: Julia Dzurillay/cheatsheet.com
Paul McCartney always seemed to be able to create a song from thin air. Anyone who watched The Beatles: Get Back saw Macca pull the song “Get Back” out of thin air. He proved his genius as a songwriter when he wrote “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da,” based solely on a slang phrase one of his friends uttered. When inspiration struck, Paul arranged one gentle Sgt. Pepper song without producer George Martin.
Paul once said writing songs with John Lennon was easy because they had a pleasabt back and forth relationship (at least for a while). That allowed them to work quickly. Yet Paul also wrote rapidly on his own. The supposedly wistful Get Back sessions and “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da” weren’t the only examples of his songwriting prowess.
Macca wrote Let It Be opener “Two of Us” while on a date with Linda. He pulled a similar trick several years later. Paul wrote the song “Picasso’s Last Words (Drink to Me)” on the spot and put it on a Wings album when Dustin Hoffman asked him to. Paul famously churned out “Wonderful Christmastime” in a few minutes during the sweltering summer heat.
Source: Jason Rossi/cheatsheet.com
Los Beatles It was one of the most iconic bands in history. But the group made up of Paul McCartney, George Harrison, John Lennon and Ringo Starr had another name: originally it was called The Quarry Men. Those were times when Harrison had yet to join the biggest musical phenomenon of the 20th century.
On July 6, 1957, Lennon and McCartney had met: they were both 16 years old. A few months later they met Harrison, the youngest of the Liverpool Fabulous Four, who at just 14 years old dazzled the two founding members with his skills as a guitarist.
As part of a trip in a two-seater bus, which took place on February 6, 1958, Harrison made everyone present delirious. The musician was about to turn 15 and was on his way to an audition with the aim of being part of a group that needed a third artist to be able to display his talent in all its splendor. In that vehicle, George played a version of “Raunchy”an instrumental song that had been made popular by Ernie Freeman.
Source: Eliana Ramsey/zyri.net
Ringo Starr’s eldest son, Zak Starkey, followed in his father’s footsteps and became a drummer. Starkey said he admires his father’s talent and is happy to be his son. He didn’t always feel this way, though. Starkey said that as a child and teenager, he resented the fact that Starr was his father. He explained that Starr was rarely around, and he didn’t seem all that interested in his music career.
Starr has three children from his marriage with his first wife, Maureen Starkey. The couple married in 1965 after realizing Starkey was pregnant. Zak Starkey was the couple’s first child, followed by another son Jason, in 1967, and a daughter, Lee, in 1970. Starr said he never felt that the chaos of his life with The Beatles meant he couldn’t have children.
A black and white picture Ringo Starr's children Zak, Lee, and Jason standing outside at their mother's wedding.
Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com
Sir Paul McCartney was all smiles as he cosied up to wife Nancy at Hollywood Palladium on Saturday evening.
The legendary musician looked smart in a navy blazer which he donned over a blue patterned shirt and dark jeans while wrapping an arm around Nancy's waist.
Nancy looked effortlessly chic in a pair of blue jeans which she teamed with a black cardigan and coordinated jacket.
She accessorised with a bold chunky silver pendant necklace and toted her belongings around in a black and silver stud bag.
The couple attended the star studded Interscope x Flipper's Roller Boogie Palace party hosted by Usher.
Source: Bethan Edwards/dailymail.co.uk
George Harrison was called a “brave man” by Paul McCartney and “always serious” by a friend. In a self-interview, this songwriter mentioned his reputation as the “easy-going” Beatle. Here’s what we know about this member of the Beatles.
One half of the Beatles singing group, George Harrison (L) and John Lennon, are shown aboard their plane | Bettmann / Contributor via Getty Images
As one member of the Fab Four, Harrison wrote and recorded music with the Beatles. He was known for being “lovely,” with McCartney even calling him a “brave man.”
“He was a lovely guy and a very brave man and had a wonderful sense of humor,” McCartney said, via ABC News, after Harrison’s death. “He is really just my baby brother. We were school friends together, you know. And we joined the Beatles together and went through all of that together.”
Beatles fans got a behind-the-scenes look at the band’s relationship in Disney+’s The Beatles: Get Back. That includes Harrison’s attitude toward songwriting.
When it comes to Harrison’s instruments and songwriting, this artist had a different approach from the other band members. In a 1964 self-interview (via Beatles Interviews), Harrison commented on his reputation as the “most easy-going Beatle.”
Source: Julia Dzurillay/cheatsheet.com
The Beatles went on many worldwide tours where they were greeted by millions of screaming fans. However, the band abruptly stopped touring in 1966, ultimately never touring again as the group disbanded in 1970. In regards to touring, George Harrison said The Beatles stopped after they were “getting no pleasure out of it.”
In 1966, The Beatles went on their third and final tour of North America. The tour was already marked by controversy as John Lennon had to apologize for comparing The Beatles’ popularity to Jesus. The band traveled throughout the U.S., but by the end, they had decided this would be the band’s final tour.
On August 26, 1966, The Beatles performed at Candlestick Park in San Francisco. This would be the end of their touring days and the final paid concert the band would ever perform. According to Rolling Stone, George Harrison said the band had already decided it would be their final concert before they went on stage.
Source: Ross Tanenbaum/cheatsheet.com
A new Paul McCartney documentary exploring the musician’s life following the breakup of The Beatles has been announced.
Man On The Run is set to be directed by filmmaker Morgan Neville and will draw on “unprecedented access to a never-before-seen archive of Paul and Linda’s home videos and photos, as well as new interviews,” to chronicle the time between The Beatles’ breakup snd the rise of Wings in the ‘70s.
According to a press release, Man On The Run will serve as “the definitive document of Paul’s emergence from the dissolution of the world’s biggest band and his triumphant creation of a second decade of musical milestones — a brilliant and prolific stretch.”
“As a lifelong obsessive of all things McCartney, I’ve always felt that the 1970s were the great under-examined part of his story,” said Neville in a statement. “I’m thrilled to have the chance to explore and reappraise this crucial moment in a great artist’s life and work.”
Source: Ali Shutler/nme.com
George Harrison stood in the middle of the fighting that led to The Beatles’ demise. His songs rarely made it on Fab Four albums, and Paul McCartney said Harrison’s songs weren’t any good until the very end of the line. The so-called quiet Beatle got so fed up that he quit the band during the Get Back sessions. But George also helped save the work that eventually became the Let It Be album.Paul and John Lennon wrote most of the songs that put The Beatles on the charts on both sides of the Atlantic. That hierarchy persisted even as George developed as a songwriter. He once said he’d have to make a hundred Beatles albums to release the songs he penned during one particularly prolific year. But his tunes still barely made it on Beatles records.
Source: Jason Rossi/cheatsheet.com
When it comes to musical greatness, the Beatles deserve at least as much recognition as Bob Dylan, argues Gareth Calway, while Mike Pender is impressed by some lyrical changes to Dylan’s song Make You Feel My LoveDavid Cantwell’s observation, in Annie Zaleski’s feature, that classic Bob Dylan is “layered irony and hurtling verses” while his later mid-tempo ballads “align more closely to the Great American Songbook’s musical and emotional values” is spot-on (‘It speaks straight from the heart’: Bryan Ferry, Adele and Engelbert Humperdinck on Bob Dylan’s Make You Feel My Love, 31 February). But I hope the Guardian will mark, as generously as Ms Zaleski’s fitting tribute to Dylan, that extraordinary day, 60 years ago, on which the Beatles invaded that musical territory with Please Please Me, a landmark debut LP made in 24 hours. They never yielded that heartland while progressively adding to it all the original lyrical (and in their case musical) subtleties of His Bobness.
Source: theguardian.com