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The Beatles‘ George Harrison released his third studio album, the triple album All Things Must Pass, which would go on to spend seven weeks on top of the Billboard Album chart.

The record, co-produced by Phil Spector, was Harrison’s first full-length album following the breakup of The Beatles and featured guest appearances by Harrison’s Beatles bandmate Ringo Starr, as well as Eric Clapton, Billy Preston and others.

All Things Must Pass contained the #1 single “My Sweet Lord,” which made Harrison the first former member of The Beatles to score a solo #1 in the U.S. The track, which was released as a double A-side single with “Isn’t It a Pity,” also went to #1 in several other countries, including the U.K. and Australia.

A commercial success for Harrison, the record has been certified seven-times Platinum by the RIAA.

Source: Jill Lances/1430wcmy.com

Many rightly recognize All Things Must Pass as George Harrison’s solo masterpiece.

But Harrison followed it in 1973 with Living in the Material World, which details his personal and spiritual struggles. The recording differs from the dense and ambitious production of All Things Must Pass with its stripped-back and earthy performances of Harrison contemplating a higher power.

Mostly self-produced, Harrison also returned to the sitar, which he’d abandoned for years. Apart from the religious pronouncements, Harrison’s life had descended into an abyss of sex and drugs. Legal issues surrounding The Beatles and mismanaged funds raised from his Concert for Bangladesh left him in despair. So he turned his despair into yet another great work.

Though it was a commercial success upon release, Living in the Material World was quickly forgotten. And its 50th anniversary arrived last year without recognition. But Dhani and Olivia Harrison have overseen the release of a newly mixed and expanded version of the album, shining a light on an overlooked masterpiece.

Here are three classics from Harrison’s equally timeless Living in the Material World.
“Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)”

In 1971, Harrison raised awareness and money for millions of refugees fleeing East Pakistan during the Bangladesh Liberation War with a pair of benefit concerts at Madison Square Garden. Then he took a break. During this period, the former Beatle also dedicated himself more fervently to Hinduism. “Give Me Love” lives in the same spirit as “My Sweet Lord,” and Harrison said the song just fell from his lips. “Sometimes you open your mouth, and you don’t know what you are going to say, and whatever comes out is the starting point,” he said in his 1980 autobiography I, Me, Mine.

Source: americansongwriter.com

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Fans were left in shock after Paul McCartney snuck into the Beatles '64 documentary premiere at Hudson Square Theater in New York City on Sunday. The musician, 82, looked relaxed as he settled into a random seat in the middle of the venue alongside his wife Nancy, 65, and behind comedian Chris Rock.

While the crowd around him remained calm, Paul was seen waving to a few fans before watching the new film which is produced by famed filmmaker Martin Scorsese, 82. It was announced that Paul was in attendance right before the screening started, but the majority of the crowd saw him as they were taking their seats. Overwhelmed by Paul's appearance, the fan wrote: 'trying to watch the new beatles documentary and HE SHOWS UP'.

She added in the caption: 'and if i said i cried during the first ten minutes…'  Fans were left in shock after Paul McCartney snuck into the Beatles '64 documentary premiere in NYC on Sunday alongside his wife Nancy

Other fans couldn't believe he had snuck into the theatre as they took to the comments to share their surprise. They penned: 'Nah but imagine watching the beatles documentary and PAUL MCCARTNEY sits next to you'; 'omfg y’all are breathing the same air'; 'No matter how rich and famous a person can be. When Paul walks in the room everyone else looks smaller.';

'Paul McCartney is the one celebrity I would absolutely die if I saw in person'. Others joked: 'he probably whispered "i know them" to the person sitting next to him, pointing at john ringo n george'; 'there to fact check'.

Earlier in the night the star took to the red carpet with his wife as he donned a mixed-material jacket with grey tweed and light-wash denim details along the cuffs, collar and buttons down the center.

Source: dailymail.co.uk

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Nothing else that might happen in their careers could be bigger than going to America. Or so The Beatles thought in 1964.

“They're all so free on this trip, and joyful,” says David Tedeschi, director of the new Disney+ documentary “Beatles ‘64” (streaming Friday), which follows the Fab Four and their most devoted fans through the chaotic days before and after the band’s Feb. 9 appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show.” “Even later on in 1964, it wasn't the thrill that it was in February.”

The footage, shot by Albert and David Maysles for a rarely seen 1964 TV documentary (“What’s Happening! The Beatles in the USA”), is supplemented with fresh interviews with Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, interspersed with recollections from those early admirers. Martin Scorsese, a producer on the project, also gets a tour of Starr's well-preserved Beatles wardrobe, including the drummer's hot pink “Sgt. Pepper” uniform and green pinstriped “Hey Jude” jacket.

Most thrilling for the audience will be the restoration of the original 16 mm film, with the live performances demixed by “Get Back” director Peter Jackson’s WingNut Films and remixed by Beatles producer Giles Martin. The band’s famous concert at Washington Coliseum − their first in America − finally can be heard over the screaming, weeping and rhapsodic crowd.

Source: usatoday.com

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Ringo Starr appears to have confirmed the rumors that Saltburn star Barry Keoghan is going to play him in Sam Mendes’ upcoming Beatles movies.

Back in February, Mendes announced plans to make four separate Beatles movies, one for each member — Ringo, Paul McCartney, John Lennon and George Harrison — and almost immediately speculation began as to who’ll play the Fab Four, with Keoghan’s name mentioned for Ringo.

In a recent interview with Entertainment Tonight, the 84-year-old Ringo appeared to let it slip that the rumor is true.

When asked how he feels about Keoghan playing him, Ringo shared, “Well, I think it’s great. I believe he’s somewhere taking drum lessons, and I hope not too many.”

So far there’s been no official announcement about the casting.

Mendes’ films will be made by Sony Pictures, and will mark the first time Apple Corps Ltd. and The Beatles have granted a studio the rights to the life stories of band members and their legendary catalog of music. Each film will be told from the point of view of one of the band members.

Source: kslx.com

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It’s often claimed, I’m not sure on what authority, that the Beatles’ arrival in America, three months after the assassination of President Kennedy, in some unquantifiable way lifted the spirits of a depressed nation, allowing it to move forward into the light. Perhaps reliving it in 2024 will bring similar relief, though of course, some will just long for the past.

It’s a thought repeated by Paul McCartney himself in a delightful new-old documentary “Beatles ’64,” premiering Friday on Disney+, in what, after “The Beatles Anthology” in 1995 and “Get Back” in 2019, might be seen as an infrequent Thanksgiving tradition. The film, produced by Martin Scorsese and directed by David Tedeschi, is the latest repurposing of footage shot by Albert and David Maysles, when the band crossed the pond to appear on “The Ed Sullivan Show” in February 1964.

The Maysles’ footage was originally used for the BBC documentary “What’s Happening! The Beatles in the U.S.A.,” and formed the substance of the 1991 “The Beatles: The First U.S. Visit.” (Bits and pieces have appeared in various Beatles docs over the years; it is foundational stuff.) But there is more of it here, interspersed with new interviews with McCartney, Ringo Starr and fans and friends who participated in the moment, along with archival interviews with George Harrison and John Lennon and some needless social context from Marshall McLuhan and Betty Friedan. Happily absent are later-generation pop stars testifying to the band’s genius, or worse, singing their own versions of Beatles songs. Not even the Beatles testify to their own genius.

“You must be kidding with that question,” says McCartney, when a reporter asks about their place in “Western culture.” “It’s not culture, it’s a good laugh.”

Source: Robert Lloyd/latimes.com

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While I tend to prefer The Beatles's more experimental sound in albums such as Abbey Road, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, or Magical Mystery Tour, I can't deny that I have jammed countless times to Hey Jude. But if you were to tell me that a song deemed one of the worst of its decade that talked about cake and rain was behind the release of "Hey Jude", then maybe I should reconsider my musical preferences.

Well, that song is "MacArthur Park", ranked as the third worst song of the '60s by Rolling Stone in 2011. Now, what does a folk song sung by Richard Harris have to do with the "Na-na-na-na's" of The Beatles single? Not the lyrics, not the chords, not the structure, but the length of the song itself.

"At first, we felt like the guys who'd created the A-bomb: we were a bit afraid of what we'd done," Jimmy Webb said in an interview with The Guardian. He was the one who wrote "MacArthur Park." "I didn't know I could write something like that," he continued. To be honest, I didn't know someone could write anything like that, actually.

The infamous song has a length of seven minutes and 21 seconds. Webb was surprised that radio stations began playing it in its entirety. "I was asked to do a shorter version as a single," he said. "I refused, so eventually they put out the full seven minutes 20 seconds. George Martin once told me The Beatles let 'Hey Jude' run to over seven minutes because of 'MacArthur Park."

If you are like me who suffers from an extreme case of the Mandela Effect, you would be surprised to learn that the Beatles single's length is seven minutes and 12 seconds. That's a lot of "Na-na-na-nas," and if Webb is right, then we owe him for every single one of them.

Source: Alejandro Josan/wideopencountry.com

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By the mid to late-’60s, Paul McCartney became immersed in the underground scene in London, sparked by the British pop art movement, works coming from the Drury Lane Arts Lab—where John Lennon and Yoko Ono would premiere their joint work Four Thoughts (Build-Around) in 1968—Andy Warhol and David Morrissey’s Chelsea Girls, and other emerging collectives.

After connecting with the design group BEV (Binder, Edwards & Vaughan), McCartney was commissioned to produce a piece for their upcoming exhibition The Million Volt Light and Sound Rave in 1967 and jumped at the opportunity to showcase the Beatles‘ more avant-garde side.

Recorded on the morning of January 5, 1967, the near-14-minute piece, “Carnival of Light,” was a free-for-all, orchestrated by McCartney of loosely riffed guitars, distorted instrumentation, dense echos, and random phrases blurted: “Barcelona” and “Are you all right?”

“I said ‘All I want you to do is just wander around all the stuff, bang it, shout, play it, it doesn’t need to make any sense,’” recalled McCartney of his instructions to the band for the recording. “’Hit a drum, then wander on to the piano, hit a few notes. Just wander around.’ So that’s what we did and then put a bit of an echo on it. It’s very free.”

After creating a mess of noise for nearly 14 minutes, McCartney pulled the plug on “Carnival of Light” after 13 minutes and 48 seconds. “This is ridiculous,” said producer George Martin. “We’ve got to get our teeth into something a little more productive.” After wrapping up their experimental piece, the band recorded “Penny Lane,” which was initially intended for Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Source: Tina Benitez-Eves/americansongwriter.com

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Regrets that stem from inaction can be some of the most painful to reconcile, and that seemed to be the case for the one thing John Lennon always regretted about his time with the Beatles. Although he would admit in the same breath, he didn’t regret it enough to act on it.

So it often goes in life, after all. Hindsight is always 20/20, and when it comes to matters of creativity and ego, that type of clarity can reveal far more than we’re often comfortable seeing face-to-face.
John Lennon Regretted This About The Beatles

David Sheff’s All We Are Saying: The Last Major Interview with John Lennon and Yoko Ono is as revealing as a conversation with that kind of pomp would suggest. In the massive interview spanning three weeks in August 1980, four months before Lennon’s death, the ex-Beatle talked about his life with his second wife, individual Beatles songs, and memories (and regrets) of his time in the Fab Four.

The last included one notable tinge of remorse Lennon always felt about George Harrison and Ringo Starr’s place in the Beatles’ songwriting compensation. As Lennon was discussing hurtful comments Harrison had made about him in his memoir, the “Imagine” singer said it was particularly painful because he had tried to ensure Harrison and Starr would get decent compensation from Beatles songs.

“It was because of me that Ringo and George got a piece of John and Paul’s songwriting,” Lennon argued to Sheff. “Under [manager] Allen Klein’s auspices, John and Paul own completely anything that [publishing company] Maclen published. I always felt bad that George and Ringo didn’t get a piece of the publishing. Not bad enough to do anything about it, but slightly guilty about it.”

Source: Melanie Davis/americansongwriter.com

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As someone who has been a major part of the music industry since the 1960s, Paul McCartney has undoubtedly run into countless troubled musicians around the world, but one singer he never helped has always nagged him in hindsight. Of course, such is the way of regret. There would be no need for it if we had the ability to go back in time and change our actions.

But because that’s impossible and time keeps marching on, McCartney has held on to his remorse, especially after the troubled singer he wished he could have saved died in the summer of 2011.

From the initial waves of Beatlemania to the tragic killing of his bandmate, John Lennon, and everything before, after, and in between, Paul McCartney has certainly witnessed a lot in his lifetime. McCartney has been around to see every member of the infamous 27 Club die, but one of its unlucky members always stuck with him a bit more than the rest.

McCartney recalled meeting Amy Winehouse for the first time in passing in 2008. Winehouse was at the height of her fame and corresponding scandals around her relationships, mental health, and substance abuse. The two British icons passed each other at the European MTV Awards in Liverpool.

Source: Melanie Davis/americansongwriter.com

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