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The Beatles' legendary member, Sir Paul McCartney, played a pivotal role in creating what fans now call a "perfect" song.
The Beatles recorded this fuzzed-out rocker in 1966 before deciding to quit touring for good. One of Paul’s aunties nudged ...
The dynamics in the democracy shifted after Harrison's death in 2001. With George gone, the Beatles no longer had a skeptic in their ranks, so if McCartney wanted to finish the song, he could.
McCartney once credited this track as one of his favorite songs Harrison contributed to the band. Amid the Covid-19 pandemic, McCartney was asked what song of Harrison’s he liked best.
Released in 1968, “Hey Jude” is a song that depicts the epic magnitude of The Beatles’ monumental career. And George Harrison once tried to alter the way we all know and love “Hey Jude”.
Speaking to Guitar World in 1997, McCartney recalled that George Harrison – looking for a way to contribute to the song – suggested answering each of McCartney's lines with an electric guitar ...
The song is a great little tune, but we can understand why McCartney wasn’t all that partial to it. George Harrison was nervous to write his own material, and he needed a song to sing lead.
“It’s like a lunatic playing,” Harrison said, to which the interviewer replied, “It sounds like McCartney was going nuts again.” George replied that he was playing bass.
George Harrison quit The Beatles on January 10, 1969, following an argument with Paul McCartney during the 'Get Back' sessions, which would result in the band's final album 'Let it Be.' He ...
George Harrison said John Lennon and Paul McCartney struggled to look past each other After The Beatles broke up, Lennon complained that Harrison hadn’t credited him enough in his memoir I Me Mine.
McCartney said he considers himself lucky that he met Lennon and Harrison, who shared his passion for music. “We were lucky, but I think the luck just came from the passion,” McCartney told ...