Beatles News
Ringo Starr, Max Weinberg, Pearl Jam’s Matt Cameron, and over 100 other musicians have united for a massive cover of the Beatles’ “Come Together” as part of a new campaign to help end world hunger.
The “Drum Together” clip was organized by WhyHunger, and along with Starr, Weinberg, and Cameron, it features drummers like Jim Keltner, Steve Gadd, Cindy Blackman Santana, and 11-year-old prodigy Nandi Bushell. While a massive coalition of percussionists (including an orchestra timpanist) create the base for this epic rendition of “Come Together,” the meticulously stitched-together performance also features an array of other musicians from guitarists and pianists to trombonists and trumpeters.
Source: Jon Blistein/rollingstone.com
Doting father Paul McCartney made sure to support his designer daughter Stella at her eponymous label's Spring/Summer 2022 fashion show in Paris on Monday.
Sitting in the front row alongside French actress Isabelle Huppert, The Beatles frontman Paul, 79, cut a dapper figure in a tailored black blazer worn over a high-neck navy shirt.
Paul covered his nose and mouth with a black face mask and wore his greying hair neatly styled.
Once the show had come to an end, Stella, 50, made sure to walk the runway as the audience clapped and Paul was no doubt filled with pride.
Source: Aisha Nozari/dailymail.co.uk
Sociologists were stumped by the effect The Beatles had on their fans
The Beatles felt ‘a vibration’ from their audiences
Ringo Starr says the band couldn’t hear themselves play at live shows
The Beatles perform on stage at the Washington Coliseum, Washington DC, Feb. 11, 1964. The performance was their first US concert. Pictured are, from left, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon | Rowland Scherman/Getty Images
As soon as fans saw The Beatles, whether they were playing a show or simply walking down the street, they broke into seemingly uncontrollable, intense screams. This couldn’t help but have an effect on John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr. Here’s how the band felt about the reaction they elicited from their fans.
Source: cheatsheet.com
Dave Grohl will read a tale based on The Beatles’ ‘Octopus’s Garden’ to children this week for a new episode of CBeebies’ Bedtime Stories.
The Foo Fighters frontman will read the story, which is written by Ringo Starr and features pictures by Ben Cort, at 6.50pm BST this Friday (October 8) on the CBeebies channel.
Grohl is the latest high profile star to contribute to the series, which has seen Dolly Parton, Sir Elton John, Robbie Williams and Mark Ronson read stories aloud. Actors including Tom Hardy, Felicity Jones, Tom Hiddleston and Orlando Bloom have also narrated in the past.
Per press material, the story that Grohl will read “follows five children on a magical journey through the Octopus’s garden. The playful Octopus takes them on a wondrous underwater adventure, riding on the backs of turtles, playing pirates in a sunken city and sheltering from a storm in the octopus’s cave”.
Source: Charlotte Krol/nme.com
The Beatles almost sacked George Harrison and were reportedly thinking about replacing him with Eric Clapton, according to a newly unearthed interview with John Lennon.
The tape hears Lennon threaten to replace Harrison with Clapton after the guitarist temporarily quit the band in January 1969, during the recording sessions for the band’s final album, ‘Let It Be’, reports The Daily Mail.
The sudden departure of Harrison – who felt that his songs weren’t getting as much attention as those of Lennon and Paul McCartney – worried McCartney and Ringo Starr. Lennon, however, while sympathetic, was also practical about the situation.
Lennon said that Harrison’s attitude had been “a festering wound and we allowed it to go deeper and we didn’t even give him any bandages.”
The ‘Imagine’ hitmaker then suggested that his place in The Beatles be taken by fellow guitarist Clapton. “I think if George doesn’t come back by (next week) we ask Eric Clapton to play,” Lennon said.
Source: Will Lavin/nme.com
The Beatles thought the parents of their American fans were rude
They aggressively, thanklessly asked them for autographs
The band relaxed in the Florida sun (away from their fans’ rude parents)
In 1964, The Beatles got on a plane and flew to America for the first time as a band to make their debut. There, they made an appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show and played venues all around the country (they were excited most of all for Carnegie Hall). To John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr‘s delight, the U.S. welcomed them with open arms. And the feeling was mutual. The Beatles loved their American fans. But they did not, however, love their parents.
In his 1964 column for the Daily Express (with the help of Daily Express writer Derek Taylor), Harrison wrote about interacting with The Beatles’ American fans’ parents.
Source: cheatsheet.com
The farm in Peasmarsh, near Rye has been ranked the sixth most searched A list home on the web, according to interior designers UNCLE.
Searches for the homes of Jeremy Clarkson, Eric Clapton, Emma Watson, Harry Styles and Chris Evans were also popular.
The former Beatle’s stunning 160-acre plot - dubbed Blossom Wood Farm - was purchased in 1973.
Last year, Sir Paul revealed that he was isolating at his farm along with his daughter Mary and her family.
The 79-year-old was due to embark on a series of European concerts in 2020 including a Saturday night performance on the Glastonbury festival.
Source: Olivia Marshall/theargus.co.uk
Having placed mysterious ads in regional papers, including The Liverpool Echo, to tease publication of his new picture book, Grandude’s Green Submarine, Paul McCartney is now sending a giant green submarine to his beloved hometown for families to enjoy!
On Saturday 2nd October, Paul McCartney’s Green Submarine will dock outside Waterstones Liverpool One to entertain families and mark publication of his new book Grandude’s Green Submarine (illustrated by Kathryn Durst). Young children will be able to meet Grandude and Nandude and have their photo taken in the submarine and the first 55 families to engage with the submarine will be in with a chance of winning one of 5 exclusive signed copies in a nod to it being 55 years since the release of Yellow Submarine.
The green submarine will stay docked in Waterstones, Liverpool One on the Sunday and Monday as well and will find final harbour with Alder Hey Children’s Hospital and Charity who are delighted that Paul has decided to donate the submarine to them.
Source: theguideliverpool.com
Sir Ringo Starr doesn’t know if he will tour in 2022 – because the COVID-19 situation is still “dodgy”.
The 81-year-olf Beatles legend had no choice but to call off all his shows in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and although he has the opportunity to head out on the road with his All-Starr Band again next year, he is still wary about risking his health.
He said: “We didn’t know what it was going to be like in March 2020.
“It was getting a bit rough and we all knew about it and we had to postpone the main tour.
Source: oleantimesherald.com
Back in 1964, The Beatles began approaching international superstardom and Beatlemania was spreading like wildfire. Unquestionably, there has never been a fan base quite like that of The Beatles back in the ’60s. Why were fans of the group so uniquely passionate? George Harrison wrote about his theory in his column for the Daily Express, along with help from Daily Express writer Derek Taylor.
In his Feb 14, 1964 column for the Daily Express, Harrison wrote about the band’s first time playing in America. First, they appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, then they toured around the country, including a performance at Carnegie Hall (what they were most excited about). It was a whirlwind trip and Harrison, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, and Ringo Starr were all pleased to find that Americans had more than welcomed them with open arms. But they also found that they were the subject of scrutiny.
Source: cheatsheet.com