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It's 1966, and Paul McCartney has penned one of the Beatle's most poignant tracks as the band transition from ruling the world's stages to pushing the boundaries of rock arrangement and recording technology.

Or rather, according to John Lennon in 1980, "It's his first verse, and the rest of the verses are basically mine. But the way he did it was... he knew he'd got the song, so rather than ask me, 'John, do these lyrics' because, by that period, he didn't want to say that to me, okay..."

As Lennon recalls the song's completion in a 1980 Playboy interview, it's clear that while the facts may be in dispute - in 1997 McCartney said "John helped me on a few words but I'd put it down 80–20 to me" - the collaboration between pop's greatest songwriters was already strained, at least as far as John was concerned.

Source: Will Groves/musicradar.com

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10 of George Harrison's Best Tracks 25 March, 2023 - 0 Comments

In 1966, while the Beatles were global superstars, George Harrison stopped playing the guitar.

Then, in the summer of 1968, as abruptly as he’d abandoned the instrument, Harrison recommitted to it.

It was impossible not to notice a transformation not only in Harrison’s songwriting but also in his guitar playing.

Here are ten of his best from the late ‘60s and beyond…

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Source: Christopher Scapelliti/guitarplayer.com

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ingo Starr's son Zak Starkey was not always a fan of The Beatles' drummer.

Following Starr's footsteps, Starkey scored the chance to play with other bands, including The Who and Oasis. He mostly credits his father as he thinks The Beatles' drummer is one of the greatest drum players of all time.

However, Starkey did not always feel that way.

In the past, Starkey revealed that - instead of his father - Star's friend Keith Moon was one of his biggest influences. He told Modern Drummer that he wanted to play the drums because of him.

"When I was very young there was music all around me in my parents' house. You would go into the living room and find stacks and stacks of LPs. I would spend my days listening to records," he said." My dad took me to see T. Rex when I was six."

He then desired to be like Marc Bolan before fanboying over David Bowie.

Starkey added that Starr only gave him one drumming lesson, and he became on his own.

Source: Angeline Sicily/musictimes.com

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It was 60 years this week when the Fab Four released their first album, Please Please Me, kickstarting Beatlemania.

The Liverpudlian Mop Top legends would become a chart phenomenon – selling more than 600million albums.

Now James Moore reveals some top pop trivia about each of the band’s classic studio albums recorded between 1963 and 1970, and Buzz.ie has given each album our rating out of ten

1. REVOLVER (1966), 10 out of 10

Revolver – named after how an LP revolves - was nearly called Abracadabra and its cover, drawn by pal Klaus Voorman, almost featured Paul sitting on a toilet.

Heralding the band’s psychedelic phase, She Said She Said had links to the drug LSD, while Got To Get You Into My Life was an ode to cannabis...

Source: buzz.ie

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The Beatles had already won over music fans when they released their debut album, Please Please Me. The title song was the first of several Fab Four hits that didn’t surprisingly didn’t hit No. 1. When the album hit shelves in England on March 22, 1963, it started an incredible run of success. Let’s look at the five best Please Please Me songs, tunes that helped launch The Beatles’ legendary career.

Once Please Please Me made it on the charts in England, it locked down the top spot for an incredible 30 weeks, per the Official Charts Company. The debut album lasted for 70 weeks on the charts. Sgt. Pepper and Abbey Road are the only Beatles albums with longer tenures.

Perhaps most impressively, Please Please Me was the first of eight straight Beatles studio albums to reach No. 1. Magical Mystery Tour broke the streak in 1968. For a debut to leave such an impact underscores The Beatles’ mastery of their craft and music fans’ desire for a new sound in the early 1960s.

Source: Jason Rossi/cheatsheet.com

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The Beatles had already won over music fans when they released their debut album, Please Please Me. The title song was the first of several Fab Four hits that didn’t surprisingly didn’t hit No. 1. When the album hit shelves in England on March 22, 1963, it started an incredible run of success. Let’s look at the five best Please Please Me songs, tunes that helped launch The Beatles’ legendary career.

Once Please Please Me made it on the charts in England, it locked down the top spot for an incredible 30 weeks, per the Official Charts Company. The debut album lasted for 70 weeks on the charts. Sgt. Pepper and Abbey Road are the only Beatles albums with longer tenures.

Perhaps most impressively, Please Please Me was the first of eight straight Beatles studio albums to reach No. 1. Magical Mystery Tour broke the streak in 1968. For a debut to leave such an impact underscores The Beatles’ mastery of their craft and music fans’ desire for a new sound in the early 1960s.

Source: Jason Rossi/cheatsheet.com

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It's no surprise that Wings' synthy hit single "With a Little Luck" has a yacht-rock vibe or that Paul McCartney's group feels suddenly airy and wide open.

After all, Wings was recording on a boat – and guitarist Jimmy McCulloch was exiting the lineup. Drummer Joe English would soon follow him out, leaving Wings to complete 1978's London Town with the same core trio that fashioned their signature Band on the Run album.

This time, however, Wings had a far different, more stripped-down musical approach. "It just comes in phases," McCartney said in a 1978 promo interview with Capitol Records. "At one moment, you're listening to some records that are really produced and you think, 'Yeah, I want to do that kind of thing.' At another moment, you're listening to something that's very simple and you think, 'I really like very simple music.'"

Source: ultimateclassicrock.com

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Ringo Starr took over The Beatles’ drum seat in 1962, but that wasn’t the only elite group he joined in his career. The English royal family knighted Ringo on March 20, 2018, after he had earned several artistic honors in his career. The drummer who complained about being ignored while making Rubber Soul couldn’t be overlooked when Prince William bestowed the title Sir Richard Starkey on him. Still, the royal family was a little slow to honor Ringo for his life’s work.

The Beatles received MBE honors from Queen Elizabeth II during the height of Beatlemania in 1965. John Lennon later returned his, and George Harrison rejected the royal family’s offer to be knighted.

Paul McCartney was one of few musicians to be knighted by the queen, in 1997. More than 20 years later, Prince William made Ringo a knight in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace on March 20, 2018.

Like his bandmate, the royal family honored Ringo for his contributions to music and the arts. Receiving the honor delighted the drummer. George and John didn’t care about knighthood, but Ringo was ecstatic.

Source: Jason Rossi/cheatsheet.com

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Ringo Starr rarely hesitates to call it like he sees it, even if he’s the target. Yusuf / Cat Stevens cut his drumming from an album, and his reaction to the slight was pure class. So when Ringo complimented Brian Wilson’s work ethic, it was massive praise from The Beatles drummer to the Beach Boys frontman.

Ringo’s excessive drinking was such a problem in the mid-1980s that he played a concert with the Beach Boys and has no memory of it. Thankfully for him and music fans, he committed to a healthier lifestyle and continued making music. The drummer also inspired another legendary musician to get sober.

He was in a much better place in the early 1990s. In 1992, Ringo released his first solo album since 1981, Time Takes Time, with the help of several collaborators. Brian Wilson was one of them.

The Beach Boys’ star played on the song “Weight of the World” from that album, and he teamed up with Ringo again in 1998 on the Vertical Man album. In his book Postcards From the Boys, the drummer said watching Wilson work was an incredible experience:

Source: Jason Rossi/cheatsheet.com

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On Dec. 8, 1980, John Lennon was assassinated outside his apartment building in New York City. The news shocked the world, and many musicians paid tribute to the former Beatle shortly after his death. For the remaining Beatles members, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, and Paul McCartney, it took some time for them to process John Lennon’s death fully. However, they each mourned their former bandmate and friend in the way they knew best: music.

George Harrison released “All Those Years Ago” as a single in 1981 for his album Somewhere in England. Initially, he wrote the song for Ringo Starr. However, Starr didn’t like the lyrics and felt the track was out of his range. Harrison took the song back and decided to change the lyrics after Lennon’s death.

The song is one of the few times the three remaining Beatles played a song together. Starr played the drums, while Paul McCartney and his wife, Linda, provided backing vocals. The song was a hit, peaking at No. 2 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. In a 1987 interview with Entertainment Tonight, Harrison recalled changing the lyrics after Lennon’s death and how singing it was tough.

Source: Ross Tanenbaum/cheatsheet.com

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