Beatles News
It was midsummer 1970 in Florida. Eric Clapton looked out over the blue water knowing his life was at yet another crucial crossroad.
"I was standing there wondering which way to go and was paralysed with fear about making a decision," he would later recount.
"It seemed there were all these choices, musically and emotionally."
Fed up with stardom, he'd dismantled his supergroup Blind Faith and fled Britain with a drug habit, a broken heart and a crazy plan to make an album that would win back a lost love.
A man with black hair poses close to a women with blonde hair in a black and white photograph
Pattie Boyd and George Harrison photographed in 1966, shortly before their wedding.(By Robert Freeman)
The woman in question was Pattie Boyd. She was the wife of one of Clapton's closest friends: former Beatle George Harrison.
Neglected and betrayed by her own husband, Pattie had grown close to Clapton, but in the end she could not bring herself to run away with him.
Source: abc.net.au
The Beatles started out with a bluesy, skiffle edge before they became famous. Their music evolved as their fandom grew, and by the end, their songs were far more experimental and full of intrigue. There are classic songs in every era of The Beatles - but which was John Lennon’s favourite one?
What was John Lennon's favourite song by The Beatles?
This is a tricky thing to work out as John spoke openly about various songs.
Naturally, as a songwriter it would make sense for him to lean closer to his own style, however in a number of interviews John spoke about which tracks meant the most to him, and some have mainly been written by his songwriting partner Sir Paul McCartney.
While it is hard to pin down his exact favourite song, there are some which he lauded in his lifetime which can give us a clear glimpse at his taste.
Source: Jenny Desborough/express.co.uk
Phil Rudd has recently joined AC/DC with Brian Johnson and Cliff Williams to release an album amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. The album titled ‘PWR/UP‘ and will be released on November 13th.
Whatever, recently, during the interview, the successful drummer was asked, “Who were your guys, the drummers that you were rocking to when you started out?”, Phil Rudd replied and said:
“Well, we got Ringo, Charlie Watts, Ian Paice, just those ’60s guys, British rock guys, and Ringo’s sort of always a special kind of a dude. He was great – he was great, he had really great attitude.”
Following that conversation, the interviewer said that it’s funny to think of Ringo Starr and that if he thinks whether he is so underrated. Phil replied:
“I saw him play with Carl Perkins and Eric Clapton on that Carl Perkins birthday show they did – he’s just hot, he’s on it.
Source: Talha Cetinbas/metalcastle.net
While we await the release of Peter Jackson’s The Beatles: Get Back, we already know where the living members of the Fab Four stand on the documentary’s release. Both Ringo Starr and Paul McCartney expressed their approval of this alternate look at the Let It Be sessions.
As for George Harrison and John Lennon, we only have their takes on 1970’s Let It Be — and both recalled the period as extremely unpleasant. ““It was just a dreadful, dreadful feeling and, being filmed all the time, I just wanted them to go away,” Lennon said in Beatles Anthology.
Harrison said more or less the same thing. “For me, to come back into the winter of discontent with The Beatles [during the Let It Be shoot] was very unhealthy and unhappy,” he recalled in Anthology (in the ’90s). At another point, Harrison described it as “painful.”
Originally, Harrison saw Let It Be in a far more positive light. In a March ’70 interview with the BBC, he described the film and record as “a good change” from previous Beatles releases. He liked the imperfections the project revealed.
Source: cheatsheet.com
The Beatles spent almost all of their time writing and recording songs. During the recording sessions for the band’s fourth album, Beatles for Sale, inspiration struck John Lennon. Although the album was about to be finished, he couldn’t help but write the music and lyrics for yet another show-stopping hit.
The song in question was the 1964 hit I Feel Fine.
Although all the songs had been recorded for Beatles for Sale, Lennon worked with his peers to perfect the somewhat country-and-western hit.
The single was released just one month before the release of Beatles for Sale in November of 1964, and was an instant success.
As soon as I Feel Fine was released it topped charts in the UK, USA, Canada, Ireland, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, and Sweden.
Source: Callum Crumlish/express.co.uk
Apple Corps Limited's annual accounts showed a turnover of £50,244,899 for the 12 months ending in January, the equivalent of £137,657 a day, despite the group having gone their separate ways more than 50 years ago.
According to the Daily Mirror newspaper, of the figure, surviving members Sir Paul McCartney and Sir Ringo Starr, along with John Lennon's widow Yoko Ono and George Harrison's widow Olivia, received £6.1 million each.
This was made up of £1,417,000 in dividends and £4,719,500 in “connection with the provision of promotional services and name and likeness rights”.
Apple Corps' figures also showed they made a pre-tax profit of £8,606,191.
A large chunk of the money comes from Las Vegas stage show 'Love', a joint venture with Cirque du Soleil.
Source: pressofatlanticcity.com
Paul McCartney wrote this song about his wife Linda, who died of breast cancer in 1998. McCartney never wavered in his love for Linda, and even made her part of his band so she could tour with him.
"Maybe I'm Amazed" was written in 1969 just after The Beatles broke up. McCartney credits Linda with helping him get through this difficult time.
The studio version of this song was never released as a single (no tracks on the album were), but it is one of the most enduring songs on McCartney's first solo album. A concert version was released as a single in 1977 to promote the Wings Over America live album. Credited to Paul McCartney & Wings, it went to #10 in the US in April 1977.
McCartney, an animal rights activist, appeared on The Simpsons episode 3F03, "Lisa The Vegetarian." McCartney helps Lisa become a vegetarian and tells her that if you play this song backwards, you hear a recipe for lentil soup. Over the closing credits of that episode, if you listen carefully, you can hear the backwards message. As an extra feature on The Simpsons DVD, you can hear McCartney read the recipe and say, "There you have it Simpsons lovers, oh and by the way, I'm alive."
Source: songfacts.com
In many ways, 1960s It girl Jenny Boyd's life has been overshadowed by that of her more famous elder sister. Pattie met George Harrison of The Beatles while playing a school girl in A Hard Day's Night, later marrying him and inspiring several of his songs, before leaving him for his friend Eric Clapton, who wooed her with Lola, written about her. Yet now Jenny, aged 72, is stepping into the spotlight, with the publication of her own memoir, Jennifer Juniper: a Journey Beyond the Muse.
Born on 8 November 1947, she met her future (two time) husband Mick Fleetwood aged 16, and was with him when he formed Fleetwood Mac, one of the most famous and successful bands of the 20th century. She headed to California to experience the hippy revolution of San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury aged just 19 in 1966, before joining her sister Pattie and brother-in-law George on The Beatles' famous trip to India in 1968, spending time with the band as they learned from guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.
Source: Rebecca Cope/tatler.com
The Beatles recorded hundreds of songs throughout their careers. Many of them made it onto their albums, but a collection of them failed to get appearances in records or single releases. So then, it is surprising to hear that the band’s drummer, Ringo Starr, favours one song over the rest, and it was a B-side of a single.
Shortly into the band’s career they released Paperback Writer - one of their best-known songs.
The single was released in 1966, but was not featured on any of the Fab Four’s studio albums.
While the track itself was a runaway hit, hitting number one in the UK charts instantly, it is the other side of the disc that Ringo remembers fondly.
Rain appears on the B-side of Paperback Writer, and was also recorded during the recording sessions for the band’s seventh album Revolver.
Source: Callum Crumlish/express.co.uk
The Beatles came to an end in 1970 after a collection of disagreements, and a slow degradation of relationships between the four members. John Lennon, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and Ringo Starr were the most popular people on the planet, but they simply couldn’t work together any more after ten years of hard recording, performing, and touring.
The 1960s were a different time for the band, however. Despite becoming icons later in the decade, they began with nothing to their names, and no notoriety.
A recent interview with former Fab Four pal and artist Klaus Voorman told of the band’s squalor in the earlier days.
Voorman first explained to The Guardian that he met the band in Hamburg, Germany, in 1960.
After storming out of the home of his girlfriend at the time - The Beatles' photographer Astrid Kirchherr - he came across a club that the Fab Four were playing at.
Source: Callum Crumlish/express.co.uk