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Paul McCartney felt The Beatles’ “Eight Days a Week” reflected the sexual revolution. John Lennon didn’t like the song and explained the song’s origin. On the other hand, a director associated with The Beatles said John’s memories were incorrect.

Paul McCartney holding a guitar during The Beatles' "Eight Days a Week" era
“Eight Days a Week” includes lyrics like “Hold me, love me.” During a 2015 interview with Billboard, Paul discussed the song. “Our parents had been rather repressed, and we were breaking out of

that mold,” he said.

Paul said The Beatles weren’t the only ones feeling the cultural shift. “Everyone was let off the leash,” he recalled. “Coming down from Liverpool to London, there were all sorts of swinging chicks, and we were red-blooded young men. All that’s on your mind at that age is young women — or it was, in our case.”

 

Source: cheatsheet.com

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John Lennon Vs. the Mob 02 May, 2022 - 0 Comments

Lennon’s lawyer tells the story of his near-forgotten rights battles with mobster Morris Levy

There have been scads of books about The Beatles in general and John Lennon specifically. Paul McCartney carries the Beatles legacy forward, playing stadia across America, dinging nostalgia bells in a live context, and, to a somewhat lesser extent, so does Ringo Starr, with his All-Starr Band tours, where I always think, “C’mon, Ringo, more Beatles, fewer long-ago hits by your B-level rock pals.”

But it’s Lennon–well, those who write about Lennon–who rules the bookshelves. This, obviously, owes to the fact that there was an endpoint to his career, a very bloody endpoint in December 1980 which needs no further exploration here. And the ever-lingering question of “What if?” which hovers around any artist taken away too soon.

Source: Jim Sullivan/bookandfilmglobe.com

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Over the course of his long career in music, David Bowie collaborated with a host of prodigiously talented musicians ranging from Nile Rodgers to Trent Reznor. The man had a knack for finding interesting cohorts to work with, including the jazz quartet heard on Blackstar and Brian Eno, with whom he collaborated on a trio of beloved records. There’s another name that stands out in the annals of Bowie collaborators: John Lennon, who worked with Bowie on 1975’s “Fame.”

That wasn’t his only time working with Bowie, however. The two also worked on a cover of The Beatles’ “Across the Universe,” which — like “Fame” — appeared on the album Young Americans. According to Bowie’s account of the recording process, covering a Beatles song with a Beatle along for the ride had its own challenges.

Source: Tobias Carroll/insidehook.com

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John Lennon said Paul McCartney had the inspiration for The Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine.” John said a rock star who wasn’t a member of The Beatles helped pen the song. Ringo Starr added a joke to “Yellow Submarine.”

"Yellow Submarine" era John Lennon, George Harrison, and Paul McCartney near microphones. John Lennon felt The Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine” was Paul McCartney’s “baby.” Despite this, he said another 1960s rock star helped Paul write the lyrics. In a book, Paul discussed the rock star’s role in creating the song.John recalled another rock star helped Paul write the song. “Donovan helped with the lyrics,” he said. “I helped with the lyrics, too. We virtually made the track come alive in the studio, but based on Paul’s inspiration.”

Source: cheatsheet.com

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In 1988, George Harrison accidentally formed The Traveling Wilburys. Somehow, he wrangled four of the best singer-songwriters, Tom Petty, Bob Dylan, Roy Orbison, and Jeff Lynne, into the recording studio. George and Lynne were there to record a new song. All five of them ended up recording “Handle With Care.”

It was a spontaneous thing. Soon after, George officially formed The Traveling Wilburys, and they went on to record two albums. The ex-Beatle claimed that the supergroup wouldn’t have happened if they’d planned it.

In 1988, shortly after he released his 1987 album Cloud Nine, George was in a bit of a pickle. He told Count Down in 1990 that the international sector of his record company wanted an extra song for a 12-inch single.

So, he had to record a new song quickly. That night, he told the story to Lynne and Orbison. George asked Lynne for help, but Lynne didn’t know where to get a studio and engineer so quickly. Orbison told the guys to call him when they found a recording studio. He wanted to watch them.

Source: cheatsheet.com

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John Lennon said one of The Beatles’ songs was ahead of its time.  He said it wouldn’t be the same without marijuana.
The song became a hit single.

John Lennon felt one of The Beatles’ songs was groundbreaking. In addition, he joked the “god of marijuana” helped him create the song. Interestingly, the song became a hit in the United States but not the United Kingdom.

“That’s me again — with the first backwards tape on any record anywhere,” John replied. “Before [Jimi] Hendrix, before The Who, before any f*****. Maybe there was that record about ‘They’re coming to take me away, ha-ha’ maybe that came out before “Rain,” but it’s not the same thing.” The singer was referring to the B side of “They’re Coming to Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!” by Napoleon XIV, which is just “They’re Coming to Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!” played backwards.

Source: cheatsheet.com

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Music historian Gary Wenstrup delivered an in-depth and nuanced portrait of the start, development, growth and breakup of the Beatles at the Tuesday, April 26 Levy Lecture to an online crowd of nearly 300 people. He bolstered his slides and narration with video clips of interviews with and about the band, in addition to excerpts of songs. It was a ’60s lovefest from start to finish.The Fab Four – Paul McCartney on bass guitar, John Lennon on rhythm guitar, George Harrison as lead guitar and Ringo Starr on drums – got their start in Liverpool, England, and their musical influences from American rhythm and blues bands. Wenstrup is an unabashed fan of the Beatles. He considers them to be total originals and cited some of the ways they were, and are, unique.

Source: Wendi Kromash/evanstonroundtable.com

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Even though The Beatles are one of the world’s best-known rock bands, Ringo Starr confirmed that America and England were the group’s ‘biggest part’ of their world. Here’s what he said in the Disney+ special The Beatles: Get Back.

Even years after the “Get Back” group disbanded, fans got new Beatles content. Several hours of unseen footage was finally released thanks to the Disney+ original documentary series The Beatles: Get Back.

John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr wrote and rehearsed music for their upcoming live performance in this production. That included new tracks “Get Back,” “I’ve Got A Feeling,” “One After 909,” and “Dig a Pony.”

Source: cheatsheet.com

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In the late 1980s, George Harrison put together The Traveling Wilburys, a band that included Tom Petty, Bob Dylan, Jeff Lynne, and Roy Orbison. The famous artists wanted a chance to make music for fun. After recording their first album, Orbison died. The band mourned the loss, but Harrison also shared some dark words with Petty.

Petty became a musician because of The Beatles, so Harrison’s offer to play in The Traveling Wilburys thrilled him. To Petty’s surprise, the two men also became fast friends.

“I was surprised he liked me that much,” he told Rolling Stone in 2014. “He was immediately a hangout pal. That was awkward. I’d tell him, ‘How do we deal with this? You’re a Beatle.’ He’d be like, ‘Yeah, whatever. That was a long time ago.'”

Petty said that he hadn’t realized how much he needed a figure like Harrison in his life.

Source: cheatsheet.com

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 "I am thankful to Paul [McCartney] for writing it and putting some hope behind what was to come," Julian Lennon said of The Beatles' 1968 hit on a recent episode of the SiriusXM radio show Debatable

On a recent episode of the SiriusXM Volume radio show Debatable, the 59-year-old singer-songwriter spoke in-depth about The Beatles' 1970 hit — written for him at five years old by Paul McCartney amid his parents John and Cynthia Lennon's separation — and how it inspired his new album, Jude.

Source: Jack Irvin /people.com

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