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Paul McCartney makes sweet nod to late wife Linda as he marks Father's Day with throwback snap. The Beatles star Sir Paul McCartney has shared a touching family memory to mark Father's Day. Paul, who is father to five children, celebrated Father's Day (Sunday June 15) with a sweet throwback picture on his Instagram of himself with his daughter Mary as a baby, being cradled in his jacket that was taken by his first wife Linda. In the caption he wrote: "All you wonderful fathers out there, have a great Father’s Day today! - Paul."

Fans have flooded the comments to praise the sweet father and daughter moment from The Beatles star, as one wrote: "My absolute favourite picture of Paul and sweet Mary."

Paul, who turns 83 tomorrow, is a father to five kids including three biological and one adopted with late wife Linda McCartney.

The singer-songwriter, who turns 83 on June 18, first became a father in 1969, when he married photographer Linda Eastman and adopted her daughter from a previous marriage, Heather, 62. The couple eventually went on to welcome three kids: Mary, 55, Stella, 53, and James, 47.

Source: themirror.com/Niamh Spence

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George Harrison was an English musician best known as the lead guitarist of The Beatles, one of the most famous bands in history. Often called the quiet Beatle, he brought Indian music and spiritual ideas into the group’s songs.

He wrote classics like Here Comes the Sun and Something for The Beatles. After the band split, he had a successful solo career with hits such as My Sweet Lord and organized the famous Concert for Bangladesh.


About the Song

Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth) is a heartfelt plea wrapped in warm melodies and gentle guitar. The lyrics ask for light, life, and peace, aiming to lift worry and bring calm. The song’s music supports this honest message with smooth rhythm and memorable tunes.


Detail Information
Release Date May 7, 1973
Album Let It Roll: Songs by George Harrison (2009)
Writer George Harrison
Producer George Harrison
Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth) Lyrics

Give me love, give me love
Give me peace on earth
Give me light, give me life
Keep me free from birth
Give me hope, help me cope
With this heavy load
Trying to touch and reach you with
Heart and soul
Om, my Lord
Bridge

Please
Take hold of my hand
That I might understand you

Source: Casey Monroe/gigwise.com

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In one of John Lennon‘s final interviews with David Sheff, months before his death in December of 1980, he revealed a song Paul McCartney had written for the Beatles that he wished he had penned, including one of his favorites, “Here, There and Everywhere,” from the band’s 1966 album Revolver.

“I remember John saying, ‘You know, I probably like that better than any of my songs on the tape,’” recalled McCartney in The Beatles Anthology from 2002. “Coming from John, that was high praise indeed.”

Lennon also praised McCartney’s “Hey Jude,” a song he had written to comfort Lennon’s son Julian during his parents’ divorce. “That’s his best song,” said Lennon in a 1972 interview with Hit Parader. “‘Hey Jude’ is a damn good set of lyrics, and I made no contribution to that.”

The third McCartney song by the Beatles, their Abbey Road track “Oh! Darling,” was one Lennon said sounded like something he would have written. Lennon also said he would have given the song stronger vocals than McCartney, who even admitted that his singing was “lukewarm” on the track.

Source: Tina Benitez-Eves/americansongwriter.com

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Last year, the world got a new Lennon-McCartney song, but it wasn’t John Lennon or Paul McCartney. Instead, James McCartney, son of Paul and Linda McCartney, got together with Sean Ono Lennon, son of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, to write and record a single called “Primrose Hill.” Now, James McCartney and Sean Ono Lennon are together on a new song, and this one also features Zak Starkey, son of Ringo Starr.

Zak Starkey has been in the news a lot lately — for being fired, unfired, and re-fired from his job as the Who’s touring drummer. In an interview with The Telegraph last week, Starkey claimed that he turned down a spot in the Oasis reunion tour to play with the Who before he lost his spot in the Who. But Starkey still has his gig in Mantra Of The Cosmos, the UK rock supergroup. The band’s other members are Shaun Ryder and Bez, of the Happy Mondays and Black Grape, and Ride’s Andy Bell, who used to be in Oasis and Beady Eye with Starkey. Last week, Mantra Of The Cosmos shared their Noel Gallagher collab “Domino Bones (Gets Dangerous).”

In that Telegraph interview, Zak Starkey mentioned that Mantra Of The Cosmos have a new song called “Rip Off” that’s got vocals from both James McCartney and Sean Ono Lennon: “It’s like Mantra Of The Cosmos with them in it. It’s Sean Of The Cosmos and James Of The Cosmos; it’s still my band.” The interviewer joked that Starkey needs to get George Harrison’s son Dhani in there, and Starkey replied, “No I don’t.

Source: stereogum.com/Tom Breihan

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Paul McCartney can be a hard one to pin down under the spotlight. Unlike his former bandmate, John Lennon, who often took on the role of the more outspoken and brash of the two, McCartney is nown to be measured and self-preserved.

McCartney is known to hold the work of himself and bandmates, Lennon, Ringo Starr and George Harrison close to his heart, and not often disclosing any negativity towards their body of work. Despite their impressive cannon of music, artists are bound to have a few songs that don't sit right with them in the years that follow their release and Lennon was not shy in sharing his least favourites. However, McCartney is a little harder to read - but after a bust-up with his bandmates, there was a song that he didn't feature on, and that could may well be a sore spot for the bassist.

She Said, She Said was a track that Lennon brought to the studio pretty much finished. McCartney shared his feelings about this in Barry Miles’ Many Years From Now. McCartney said: "John brought it in pretty much finished.

"I’m not sure, but I think it was one of the only Beatles records I never played on. I think we’d had a barney or something, and I said: ‘Oh, f*** you!’ and they said: 'Well, we’ll do it.’ I think George played bass." The song is loved by Beatles fans due to its connection the the Swinging Sixties and the use of psychedelics.

It was inspired by actor Peter Fonda and came to fruition during an intense acid trip, with Lennon and Harrison the driving forces behind the track.

Source: Molly Toolan/express.co.uk

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The biggest band of the 20th century was the subject of plenty of rumors, myths, and conspiracies through the years. Years after The Beatles had split and well into the internet age, those myths and legends have persisted. Are any of them based in truth? Let’s look at just a few Beatles myths and rumors and examine if they were rooted in reality.

I’ve written about this little rumor often, and I couldn’t leave it off this list. The “Paul is dead” rumor is by far the craziest thing to come out of Beatles lore. The story goes that Paul McCartney was killed in a car crash just as The Beatles were ascending to megafame. Afraid of losing out on their momentum, the band and their management hired a doppleganger to take McCartney’s place and covered up his death. The myth went further into the internet age, with some conspiracy theories claiming that the “new” Paul was one Billy Shears, who is included as a character in Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Is this one true? Obviously not. That would be insane. And I doubt they’d be able to find anyone baby-faced enough to play a convincing Paul McCartney.

This is the kind of legend that followed many great talents of the 20th century. Robert Johnson, the famed early-1900s blues musician with an incredible talent, was rumored to have sold his soul to the devil for success before he met his untimely demise. There’s also a similar rumor about Elvis Presley floating around. John Lennon, too, would also die young in a particularly dark way, leading many to believe he sold his soul for fame and the “devil” came to collect.

This rumor is obviously not true, but it’s pretty fascinating to see how the human psyche will examine tragedy surrounding famous people and assume supernatural forces are at work. Charles Manson’s Connection to The Beatles. This one is unfortunate. The infamous cult leader Charles Manson really tried to get involved in the music industry before committing his heinous crimes. He even worked with The Beach Boys. Later, Manson would claim that The Beatles’ song “Helter Skelter” inspired his crimes, and that there were secret messages in the song that predicted a race war. Some conspiracy theorists believed him.

John Lennon would later say that Manson was an “extreme version” of conspiracy theorists who would pick apart the Fab Four’s songs to find references to LSD or evidence that Paul was dead. I’d have to agree with him on that one.

Source: americansongwriter.comEm Casalena

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A song by The Beatles was recorded in 'two takes', and fans say they prefer the first version.

A classic tune from the iconic band The Beatles was reportedly nailed in "just two takes". The original rendition, featured on their film's soundtrack, Help!, quickly became a fan favourite, with enthusiasts thrilled to discover an alternate version of the track exists.

Some fans argue that this earlier take on the song outshines the one released in 1965. An early recording of the Help! number was unearthed and subsequently issued as part of the Anthology series, which compiles early recordings and outtakes from The Beatles' studio sessions. This version, sung by Paul McCartney, continues to thrill fans and is a regular highlight of his live performances.

A social media post commemorates the occasion. They wrote: "60 years ago today Paul McCartney recorded Yesterday in two takes after the other Beatles had decided he should do it solo. "The first take can be heard on Anthology 2. This is the second take, the one we all know, without the string overdubs George Martin would add three days later."

The stripped-down rendition of Yesterday left fans in awe, with some expressing a preference for the string-less version. One enthusiast commented: "I'd never heard it without the strings; wish they'd left it like that." Another admirer was amazed at how swiftly such a remarkable song could be conceived, performed, and finalised. They wrote: "Two takes and that's it! It seems easy, but it's not!".

A third shared: "Thanks for sharing, first time I hear it without the strings. Music composition in the 20th century doesn't get better than this. Beatles forever." Other fans were astonished at how young McCartney was when 'Yesterday' was penned and recorded, with one fan expressing it as "unbelievable".

Source: liverpoolecho.co.uk/Ewan Gleadow

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By the time the Beatles called it a day in late 1969, they’d recorded and released more than 200 songs — most of them originals — and left dozens more in the vault. While the bulk of those unissued tracks ranged from rough demos to jams, several were completed recordings that, for one reason or another, they rejected.

Among them was a song that was the first ever written expressly for drummer Ringo Starr: “If You’ve Got Trouble.” Composed by John Lennon for inclusion on 1965’s Help!, the song was a riff-driven rocker built around the I-IV-V chords common to blues and rock. In many respects it bears similarity to a few other Beatles tracks from this period, including “She’s a Woman,” “I’m Down” and “I Feel Fine,” another Lennon-composed riff rocker, albeit one with a great deal more sophistication than “If You’ve Got Trouble.”

From the start of the Beatles’ recording career, Starr was given a vocal spot on each of their albums (except for 1964’s A Hard Day’s Night) in order to please his rabid fan base. It may be hard to fathom today, but for at least the first year of Beatlemania, Starr was the most popular Beatle, certainly in America, where his friendly, down-to-earth demeanor made him a favorite. It’s little wonder he got his own sizable scene in the Beatles’ debut film, A Hard Day’s Night, and was the main focus of its followup, 1965’s Help!

Because Starr wasn’t a songwriter, he sang either covers — “Boys,” on 1963’s Please Please Me, and “Honey Don’t” on 1964’s Beatles for Sale — or inferior cast-offs composed by Lennon and McCartney, such as “I Wanna Be Your Man,” a throwaway from 1963’s With the Beatles, and “What Goes On,” from 1965’s Rubber Soul.

Source: guitarplayer.com/Christopher Scapelliti

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As he approaches 85 next month, Ringo Starr remains spry on the mic and the drums when he and his All Starr Band performed a sold-out date at New York’s Radio City Music Hall on Friday evening. It was a positive sign given that the former Beatle had to cancel the last two showas of his summer tour last year, including a date in the Big Apple, due to illness.

The Radio City show more than certainly made up for that cancellation as he and the band — guitarist/singer Steve Lukather (Toto), bassist/singer Hamish Stuart (Average White Band), guitarist/singer Colin Hay (Men at Work), woodwinds player/multi-instrumentalist Warren Ham, drummer Gregg Bissonette and keyboardist Buck Johnson — played a set of Starr’s solo material and Beatles songs that featured him on lead vocals.

The concert kicked off with a rollicking cover of Carl Perkins’ rockabilly classic Honey Don’t (which the Fab Four covered on 1964’s Beatles for Sale). From there, Starr alternated between standing in front of the stage with a mic in his hand and playing behind his drum kit as he ran through other beloved Beatles classics: “Yellow Submarine,” “Boys,” “Octopus’s Garden,” “I Wanna Be Your Man,” and a cover of Buck Owens’ “Act Naturally.”

Additionally, Starr unveiled his popularly known solo songs such as “It Don’t Come Easy,” “I’m the Greatest,” “No No Song” and the sublime “Photograph,” which he co-wrote with his former Beatles’ bandmate George Harrison. He also performed his recent single “Look Up” from the country album (produced by T Bone Burnett) of the same name released earlier this year.

Source: forbes.com/David Chiu

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There are a lot of caveats to success, and one band that is certainly no stranger to them is The Beatles. While success brought The Beatles everything they wanted and more, it also brought them unexpected plights. Other than some of the more obvious issues, another issue The Beatles’ success entailed was the illegal use of their likeness and music. Consequently, George Harrison once divulged that The Beatles had the grounds to sue a lot of people.

Thanks to The Beatles’ success and notoriety, parties have used their likeness and music in a plethora of different ways. Folks have printed their faces on mugs, t-shirts. and other random pieces of memorabilia. Furthermore, offshoot cover bands and shows have used their music quite extensively. Well, according to George Harrison, most of it was illegal.
Why George Harrison Thought The Beatles Had the Grounds To Sue

Concerning the intellectual property and copyright crimes against The Beatles, George Harrison sat down with Rolling Stone and briefly disclosed his thoughts on the matter. He told the publication, “There’s not much more we [the Beatles] can be sued for, but we can sue a lot of other people.”

“Being split and diversified over the years has made it difficult to consolidate certain Beatles interests,” he continued. “For example, all those naughty Broadway shows and stupid movies that have been made about the Beatles, using Beatles names and ideas, are all illegal.”

Harrison attributed some of this illegal action to The Beatles’ negligence of the situation brought on by their internal turmoil. “But because we’ve been arguing among ourselves all these years, people have had a free-for-all,” said Harrison. However, at the time of the interview, The Beatles had seemingly figured out a solution to the issue.

“Now we’ve gotten to the point where everybody’s agreed, and we’ve allocated a company to go out and sue them all,” Harrison said. “It’s terrible, really. People think we’re giving all these producers and people permission to do it and that we’re making money out of it, but we don’t make a nickel.”

Source: americansongwriter.com/Peter Burditt

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