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 Why Moon wanted to join The Beatles as a drummer has nothing to do with jealousy, but more to do with admiration. Moon had always been a fan, a friend, and an occasional collaborator who even offered backup vocals in their track “All You Need Is Love,” long before The Beatles’ breakup. As iconic and essential to rock music as Moon is, he would have never fit in with The Beatles.

The Beatles and The Who, although friendly, were also compared to each other by music fans. Both bands were on a trajectory to greatness, as The Who climbed the charts and England and worldwide descended into Beatlemania. However, while tension was well and truly alive in The Beatles, something even more violent was occurring in The Who.

Internal conflicts rocked his relationship with the band, and Moon grew frustrated with it, especially after he chased fellow member Pete Townshend with a knife. Moon was dealing with drug use during his time as a drummer in The Who, which contributed to the tension. Things came to a head when Roger Daltrey flushed his drugs down the toilet, prompting him to search for other bands to join.
Paul McCartney Turned Down Keith Moon’s Preposition

When Moon asked McCartney for a spot in the Fab Four, he politely turned him down as they were not looking for a new drummer. Starr was the perfect fit for The Beatles as he matched the sound and the aesthetic the group needed. Even when he was the first to leave The Beatles, he returned behind the drum kit to feed more Beatlemaniac fans with more classic rock songs that defined the genre. However, McCartney did point him to Starr’s direction to speak to him about the preposition, but whether that conversation was had is unknown.

Even after getting rejected by The Animals and The Beatles, Moon didn’t leave the band. He stayed and contributed to more of The Who’s greatest songs and classics, such as “Baba O’Riley” and “Won’t Get Fooled Again” as the band gained more popularity. Moon stayed in The Who as their drummer until his unexpected death in September 1978.
Keith Moon Was Essential to The Who, Just as Ringo Starr Was to The Beatles

The Who were not always the best of friends, even when tensions lessened. Still, they always came together to create classic hits, and continued as a band in Moon’s honor after he died of a drug overdose. Sadly, as for The Beatles, tensions continued to rise, which ultimately led to their breakup.

Source: collider.com/Teguan Harris

John Lennon's friend Elliot Mintz said the star was "insanely jealous" of Paul McCartney's success with Wings in the 1970s. Lennon stepped out of the spotlight in 1975 to raise his son Sean. Mintz appeared on Billy Corgan's The Magnificent Others podcast

After the Beatles broke up in 1970, its chief songwriters Paul McCartney and John Lennon experienced different levels of solo success — something that irked Lennon in the years before his tragic death, according to a friend.

Lennon’s longtime friend and confidante Elliot Mintz appeared on Billy Corgan’s The Magnificent Others podcast on Wednesday, July 30, and opened up about the “Imagine” singer’s complicated feelings toward McCartney in the 1970s.

After the Beatles went their separate ways, McCartney, 83, formed the band Wings, and saw commercial and critical success with hits like “Jet” and the chart-topper “Listen to What the Man Said.”

Lennon, meanwhile, released a number of solo albums, but stepped out of the spotlight in 1975 to focus on raising his son Sean, whom he shared with wife Yoko Ono.

“He spoke so lovingly of Paul. But then when John was not making any music between 1975 and almost ‘80, and Paul would have these mega-hits with Wings, John became insanely jealous about that,” Mintz recalled. “He was jealous of the amount of attention and accolades, and the fact that Paul was filling stadiums.” 

 Mintz, 80, continued, “At that time, John was just looking after Sean. John would say to me, ‘They’re not embracing me the way they are him.’ And I said, ‘John, you’re not on a concert stage. You’re not in a stadium. You’re not making music,’ And he said, ‘You’re missing the point. They’re embracing his genius, but have you heard ‘Silly Love Songs’? And I would say, ‘Look, let’s be fair. He’s done things other than ‘Silly Love Songs.’ But that would go nowhere.”

Source: people.com/Rachel DeSantis

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Ringo Starr is considered one of the most amicable Beatles. He was more or less left out of the three-way fight his former bandmates were entangled in towards the end of their career. But that doesn’t mean he didn’t have opinions on the way things soured. One nasty conversation with Paul McCartney in the middle of their breakup had Starr throwing the gloves off. Though his bandmates said much worse to each other, learn more about the surprising jab Starr gave McCartney in one of his solo pursuits. A Fight Between Ringo Starr and Paul McCartney Led to an Insult-Filled Song.

Though Starr has a reputation for being sweet and sympathetic, that didn’t mean he was immune to the fighting. The end of the Beatles’ career was marked by numerous issues. That kind of thing would weigh on anyone, even the middleman.

While the band was in conversations to end things (the legal part of their partnership, anyway), Starr went to see McCartney, who had all but given up on the band’s future. McCartney, believing that Starr had been sent by the rest of his bandmates and label figureheads, let his anger get the better of him.

“Ringo came to see me,” McCartney once recalled. “He was sent, I believe – being mild-mannered, the nice guy – by the others, because of the dispute. So Ringo arrived at the house, and I must say I gave him a bit of verbal. I said: ‘You guys are just messing me around.’ He said: ‘No, well, on behalf of the board and on behalf of The Beatles and so and so, we think you should do this.’”

“I was just fed up with that,” he added. “It was the only time I ever told anyone to get out! It was fairly hostile. But things had got like that by this time. It hadn’t actually come to blows, but it was near enough.”

“I went to see Paul,” Starr added from his perspective. “To my dismay, he went completely out of control, shouting at me, prodding his fingers towards my face, saying: ‘I’ll finish you now’ and ‘you’ll pay.’ He told me to put my coat on and get out. I did so.”

Source: americansongwriter.com/Alex Hopper

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 The director of the Cavern Club, the Liverpool nightclub described as the birthplace of The Beatles, says the venue "has to focus" on younger fans ahead of the city's annual International Beatleweek later this month.

Jon Keats told BBC Radio Merseyside "younger fans luckily are attending the festival more and more every year, which is important".

He said: "That's a big thing that we have to focus on and that is happening because younger people are finding The Beatles for themselves."

"At the heart of everything, it's about the music, it's all the emotions those four musicians left us," he added.

The week-long festival, which celebrates the legacy of the Beatles, begins on 20 August.

Source: bbc.com

In 1969, Paul McCartney wed Linda Eastman and adopted her daughter, Heather Louise, from a previous marriage.
The former Beatle and Eastman welcomed three more children together between 1969 and 1977: daughters Mary Anna and Stella Nina and son James Louis.  McCartney shares his youngest daughter, Beatrice Milly, with ex-wife Heather Mills. The couple welcomed Beatrice in 2003.

Paul McCartney might be a music icon to the world, but at home, he’s just dad. The former Beatles legend has five children: Heather, Mary, Stella, James, and Beatrice.

The singer-songwriter married his first wife, Linda Eastman, in March 1969. McCartney adopted Eastman’s daughter from a previous marriage, Heather, the same year. Over the course of their nearly 30 year marriage, the couple welcomed three more children together: daughters Mary and Stella and son James.

Eastman died of breast cancer in 1998, with her four children and McCartney by her side, People reported. “Any love song I write is written for Linda,” the musician had told People the year before. 

In 2002, he married model Heather Mills. The couple welcomed their only child, a daughter named Beatrice, in 2003. Mills and McCartney separated three years later. Currently, McCartney is married to businesswoman Nancy Shevell. After crossing paths by chance in the Hamptons in 2007, the couple began dating and wed in October 2011.

With his kids all grown up, McCartney’s relationship with them has evolved. “As far as being a dad is concerned, I’ve always just tried to give my kids a bit of guidance, if they seem to need it—but that was mainly when they were younger,” he said in a 2023 interview posted to his official website.

“Now that they are older, they’re guiding me! They don’t need so much guidance these days but if there’s ever a problem, I’m very happy to be the guy they come to,” he added.

Source: instyle.com/ Bailey Bujnosek

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On the morning of December 9, 1980, Paul McCartney received the devastating news of the death of John Lennon hours earlier at New York City’s Roosevelt Hospital. The ex-Beatle had been shot and killed just outside of his apartment in The Dakota just before 11 pm the previous evening. And while the global impact of Lennon’s death was immense, it paled in comparison to the painful shockwaves it sent through his closest associates, relatives, and friends.

Because many of those associates, relatives, and friends were just as famous as Lennon, the press flocked to the musician’s survivors to hear comments on how they were processing the violent tragedy. Years later, McCartney reflected on how the media twisted his shell-shocked reaction in the days and weeks that followed. 

The Beatles’ sheer gravitas and celebrity make it easier to forget that they were normal people, albeit famous ones, too. To receive a call about the death of your best friend, particularly one with whom you were not on good terms at the time, would be life-shattering for anyone. For a musical icon like Paul McCartney, it certainly was life-shattering. It was also glaringly, uncomfortably public.

Speaking about the experience years later in a television interview, McCartney said, “I was probably more shattered than most people when John died. And I had plenty of personal grief. But I’m not very good at public grief. So, someone thrust a microphone into my face on the day it happened and said, ‘What’s your comment?’”

Source: americansongwriter.com/Melanie Davis

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As part of a covers album made in tribute to the very best of the Fab Four’s music, longtime producer George Martin assembled some of the biggest names for fourteen songs. Each of the songs featured on In My Life had originally been produced by Martin with the band. Features from Céline Dion to Phil Collins gave the album some contemporary features from some of the biggest names around, but there were also some surprising additions made by Hollywood stars Sean Connery and Robin Williams. A comedian who featured on the album is the standout moment for fans, though, with Jim Carrey and his version of I Am the Walrus hailed by listeners as one of the best covers around.

One fan praised The Mask and Sonic the Hedgehog star in a post to the r/Music subreddit, writing: “Wow, he’s good. You can tell he put a ton of work into that, and wanted to do it right.”

Another added: “Holy shit, he actually sings rather well.” A third wrote: “Wow. Mind Blown. I wasn’t expecting that whatsoever.” Other listeners were left enjoying the Carrey cover more than the original version of the song, which went on to be covered by Oasis during several of their tours.

Source: cultfollowing.co.uk/Ewan Gleadow

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The Beatles’ music and their ability to elicit intense emotional reactions from their audience go hand in hand when defining their cultural legacy, but one of the biggest controversies the band ever faced (thanks in no small part to John Lennon) had the potential to derail their career entirely by alienating their U.S. audience.

Of course, in the end, not even the staunchest of American critics could hold back the massive tidal wave of Beatlemania that crashed into countries around the world throughout the 1960s.  John Lennon’s Words Came Back To Haunt Him In 1966

When Maureen Cleave first published her interview with John Lennon in the Evening Standard, few Brits batted an eyelash when reading the Beatle’s cheeky comments about the guitarist’s home life, the gorilla suit he bought for a band prank that only he participated in, and, of course, his dry commentary about the Beatles versus Jesus Christ. At a time when Lennon and the rest of the band were heavily investing in Eastern philosophy, practices, and perspectives, he waxed cynical about religion.

“Christianity will go,” he told Cleave. “It will vanish and shrink. I needn’t argue about that. I’m right, and I will be proved right. We’re more popular than Jesus now. I don’t know which will go first—rock ‘n’ roll or Christianity. Jesus was all right, but his disciples were thick and ordinary. It’s them twisting it that ruins it for me.” The London Evening Standard published the conversation on March 4, 1966.

Nearly five months later, on July 29, 1966, U.S. teen magazine Datebook republished Lennon’s comments, out of context, in a section that the publication titled, “The Ten Adults You Dig/Hate The Most.” American audiences had a much different reaction to Lennon joking about his band being more popular than Jesus. Seemingly overnight, the Beatles’ massive fan base in the United States began to fracture.
One Of The Beatles’ Biggest Controversies Of Their Career

As one of the most significant rock bands of the decade, the Beatles were certainly no strangers to fans’ intense emotional reactions and propensity for crossing boundaries. But the way John Lennon’s comments incensed American Christians created one of the biggest controversies of the Beatles’ career. The backlash to his comparison of the Beatles to Jesus far surpassed the initial hesitation older crowds had with the Fab Four when they first burst onto the scene. This was intense and potentially violent.

Source: americansongwriter.com/Melanie Davis

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We often think about the Beatles’ infamous breakup within the context of the music and cultural movements they were promoting throughout the 1960s, but the ramifications of that split went far beyond the music charts or trends of the day and deep into the center of the lives of Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr. These men weren’t just losing bandmates. They were growing apart from the friends they had since they were in their formative late teens and early 20s.

During a 2016 special edition of BBC Radio 4 Mastertapes, McCartney talked about the emotional impact of splitting up the Fab Four—an experience he likened to a popular barbershop song from 1929.  

By the time the Beatles officially split up, tensions were so high that it wouldn’t be unreasonable to assume they couldn’t wait to get as far away from each other as possible. But as every ex-Beatle attested after the split, the business dealings and creative disagreements became too much for the band to bear. After less than a decade together, the Liverpudlian quartet broke up and began going their separate ways personally and musically.

Paul McCartney had no qualms about admitting that the entire experience left him “depressed.” “You would be,” he insisted, before busting out into a quick snippet of Lesley Gore’s “It’s My Party.” (You would cry, too, if it happened to you.) “It was very depressing,” McCartney continued, switching back to his normal speaking voice. “You were breaking from your lifelong friends. We used to liken it to the army, where you’d been army buddies for a few years, and now, you weren’t going to see them again.”

Source: americansongwriter.com/Melanie Davis

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As any band that has parted ways and continued solo will tell you, it’s impossible not to be compared to your former bandmates. Even in the most amicable of situations, it’s always a competition to see who can come out on top. The Beatles suffered these kinds of comparisons after they parted ways. While most of them took it in stride, John Lennon was personally offended after being compared to one of his Beatles bandmates. Find out which one below.

If we had to compare the solo careers of two former Beatles, the easiest connection would be Lennon and George Harrison. They both had something to say with their music that extended far beyond the typical love song or ode to heartbreak. They were both free thinkers who had no problem alienating listeners who were less so.

However, if you dissect what both Lennon and Harrison were saying with their music, you’ll find two people on opposite sides of a religious battle. Though they both penned songs about more than just faith, their opposing views in this arena summarize their differences—differences Lennon wanted people not to miss.

Lennon was markedly anti-faith. He wrote many songs about his disillusionment with religion. Harrison, however, was staunch in his Hindu beliefs. In one interview, Lennon’s solo music was compared to Harrison’s. Lennon bit back.

“We’re not talking about that anyway,” Lennon once said. “We’re talking about social revolution in England. It’s hard not to compare with George, even for us. But I don’t want to be compared with George. Why should I be compared with George?”

Source: americansongwriter.com/Alex Hopper

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