“Let's collect.”



Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 2273 posts ]  Go to page 1 ... 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93 ... 104  ( Previous  |  Next )
Author Message
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Sun Jun 26, 2016 8:53 am 
User avatar

Joined: 10 Feb 2008
Posts: 5116
Yeah and when we and all other Beatle fans are dead too.


Top
  Profile E-mail  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Sun Jun 26, 2016 8:53 am 
User avatar

Joined: 10 Feb 2008
Posts: 5116
Fraxon! wrote:
Larry wrote:
or God forbid,, even the Hollywood Bowl album on CD.

Never gonna happen.



Yeah, no kidding.


Top
  Profile E-mail  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Sun Jun 26, 2016 6:07 pm 
User avatar
I love Music & hate brickwalled audio

Joined: 27 Sep 2006
Posts: 37652
Location: The Pasture
I was never that fond of Hollywood Bowl. If memory serves, there was too much audience screaming for me.

_________________
Putty Cats are God's gift to the universe.


Top
  Profile  
 

IMWAN Admin
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2016 8:48 pm 
User avatar
Helpful Librarian

Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197740
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Quote:
Beatles' 'Love Me Do' Drum Kit to Be Sold At Auction

The drum kit that contributed a cheerful backbeat to a version of the Beatles' "Love Me Do" will be auctioned off on Thursday in California by Nate D. Sanders Auctions, according to Reuters. Bidding for the kit will begin at $150,000.

"This is a piece of rock history," auction house manager Michael Kirk told Reuters. "There is only one drum kit that was there that day that this first track was laid down – the track that launched the Beatles."

Though the Fab Four used this Ludwig set to record "Love Me Do" with producer George Martin, Ringo Starr did not play on it – that honor went to Andy White. The Beatles had already hired Starr, but they had not had the chance to audition him yet, so Martin's assistant, Ron Richards, asked White to handle the drums. Starr played tambourine.

"Love Me Do" was the first single by the Beatles to hit No. 1 in the U.S. White also drummed on the "Love Me Do" B-Side, "P.S. I Love You."

According to a statement from Nate D. Sanders Auctions, three different versions of "Love Me Do" were recorded at EMI in 1962. But the rendition with White scaled the charts in the U.S. In a 2012 interview with the BBC, he suggested that his contribution stood out. "From the drum sound I can tell that I was on ['Love Me Do'] because it was a vastly different sound to Ringo's drum set at that time," he noted. "Each drummer gets an individual sound, first of all by the way they tune the drums and then by the way they play the drums.'' Ringo later purchased his own Ludwig kit.

http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/ ... n-20160630

_________________
Image


Top
  Profile  
 

IMWAN Admin
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Thu Jul 07, 2016 6:07 pm 
User avatar
Helpful Librarian

Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197740
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Quote:
Paul McCartney posts throwback photo of Ringo Starr on Beatles drummer's 76th birthday

Click for full size

Paul McCartney has posted a 'throwback' photo of fellow Beatles member Ringo Starr to mark the latter's birthday.

Starr turns 76 today (July 7), with McCartney's Twitter account posting a photo of the pair together at AIR Studios in the Caribbean island of Montserrat.

It is thought that the picture was taken during the recording of McCartney's third solo album 'Tug of War' in 1981.

See the picture above.

http://www.nme.com/news/paul-mccartney/94861

_________________
Image


Top
  Profile  
 

IMWAN Admin
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Wed Jul 13, 2016 12:17 pm 
User avatar
Helpful Librarian

Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197740
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Quote:
Singing with Gaga, a new box and jelly bean memories: Paul McCartney returns

It all began here. Yes, on Feb. 11, 1964, two days after their famous appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” the Beatles played their first Stateside gig at the Washington Coliseum (now Uline Arena). The space hasn’t been used for concerts for decades, but Paul McCartney, who just returned to America for the final leg of his “One on One” tour, still remembers it. We spoke with McCartney during a tour stop in Denmark.

It’s been 52 years ago, but do you remember anything about that first show?

Jelly beans.

What do you mean?

When you asked us kids, what’s your favorite toothpaste or what’s your favorite breakfast, what are your favorite sweets or candies . . . we said jelly babies or jelly beans. It was just a flippant remark, but the fans latched on to it and it went global. So what happened is they started throwing it at us. Which would sometimes hit you in the eye or would melt but worst of all, they would land on the stage and you would walk on them all and you would be walking through this glutinous mess of jelly babies. After that, we said, you know what, we don’t like jelly babies anymore.

On this tour, you’re playing “A Hard Day’s Night” and “Love Me Do” live for the first time as a solo artist. What made you hold off, and why now?

Normally, I used to resist something that wasn’t sort of my song. I would do “Drive My Car,” but then I would avoid “Help” or something like that because I felt it was more John than me. But I happened to relax that theory, and I’m just very happy to just do stuff that I think is a good song. I heard “A Hard Day’s Night” on the radio and thought, “Wow, great song,” and I realized John and I were both so excited about the song we both sang the lead vocal. Something that doesn’t happen these days. And that chord is one of the most iconic chords in music.

There are whole seminars on how you learn to play that chord.

It’s actually impossible. There’s a lot of archaeology involved.

Your last new album came out a couple of years ago. Do you have a songwriting routine? Do you sit down and write?

The thing is, because I’m touring quite a bit this year, it’s a question of making time. We were in Sao Paulo, I think it was last year. [McCartney played two concerts there in late 2014.] I had a day off with absolutely nothing to do. My wife, Nancy, wasn’t with me. I slept in late, got up, hung out and I suddenly had three or four hours with absolutely nothing to do. That’s the ideal time. So I wrote a song in that period.

Then there’s turning that into a releasable song, right?

Sometimes I will go into my recording studio and look through demos. Because I have way too many little half-finished demos. With the luxury of being able to stick things down on a Dictaphone, make voice memos, that’s actually a very bad thing. You make millions of half-finished songs.

Do you walk around with an iPhone and record bits when you get them?

Yeah, if you get a good idea. Or you see something. I either make a note in my notepad or do a little voice memo. Just to remind myself exactly the feel of the song. But it does mean you have a lot of fragments and you’ve got to figure out a way of piecing those together. So what I’ve done with our promoter is I’ve said, I think the last gigs are the end of October sometime. After that, I don’t want to take any more engagements this year. I’d like to get an album by next year.

What exactly are you working on in the studio?

I’m working on a film project that I’m writing some songs for. An animated film thing. The film thing, I don’t like it. Because you’re totally gung-ho and you’re doing it and somebody rings you up and says, “Well, it’s on hold.” One of the characters in our film, I’d rung up Lady Gaga and asked her to sing this song. It came out really good, but we can’t do anything with it until the film gets made. You feel like sometimes you’re walking in treacle. We made a start on it and once we get the go-ahead I will finish up the other songs and record them, and there’s one more I’d like Gaga to do.

You’ve made music just sitting in a room by yourself playing all the instruments. I love your drummer for some reason. But you’ve also recorded with everyone from Kanye to Michael Jackson to Elvis Costello. Do you like one more than the other? Do you get into a different groove doing one or the other?

I’m very lucky really. Rather than getting into a groove, you can get into a rut. I like to avoid that at all costs. So for me it’s the groove over the rut. Which happens when you do quite varied projects. I really had a great time working with Kanye. And I admire him as an artist and a producer. It was completely different from anything I’ve ever done before, but I think we got some good music out of it. The Rihanna song, “FourFiveSeconds.” And then I’ll come to work by myself. And I’ll sit down as I traditionally have done with a guitar, and so that now is freshened up by the experience with Kanye, and then I’ll go in the studio and work with [Adele producer] Greg [Kurstin] and that again is freshened up. And then I’ll tour. I think all those inspirations rub off on each other.

Some people might say, why even worry about putting out new records? You had this funny thing happen where you and Beck couldn’t get into that post-Grammys party and you said something like, “We better start working on some new songs.”

No, I said, ‘We better come up with some hits.’ It was irony, I hope people understood. Because Beck, who I was hanging with, just got the Grammy for album of the year. And also we were hanging with Woody Harrelson, who was currently in “The Hunger Games.” It wasn’t like I was with a gang of no-hopers. The truth about that story is, we weren’t even trying to get in that place. We were trying to establish whether that was Mark Ronson’s party or not. It turned out not to be. But the bouncer didn’t get it. I said, ‘Look, all I want to know is this Mark Ronson’s party.’ [He said:] ‘You can’t come in.’ ‘I don’t want to come in. Is this Mark Ronson’s party?’ The thing is, the guy was a bit thick. And he didn’t even see who anyone was. If you had flashed the big laminates he’d been told to accept, then you’d get in. And then suddenly, this is not the place and we’re talking to the guy and we’re just about to leave and what do I see, the ubiquitous TMZ camera focused on us.

I want to get to this new compilation you put out, “Pure McCartney.” What I like is that it feels like a mix tape.

That was the original thought. It was like a playlist. The ideal thing is if you’ve got a three-hour car journey and you’ve got the perfect thing to listen to, he said modestly.

How involved did you get in the song selection?

To tell you the truth, this was an idea that was put to me by one of my girls in my New York office, who I respect and is sort of a great music fan and connoisseur. She said, I’ve been listening and putting together playlists and I think it would be great to do this. So she came up with the first playlist. Then I got involved.

What’s her name?

Her name is Nancy Jeffries.

I want to lodge just one complaint with Nancy Jeffries. “Flowers in the Dirt.” I could go on and on about what’s wonderful about that album. And there’s not a song from it.

You know why, because it’s about to be reissued. It’s our next big box set. We’re working on that at the moment. So she would avoid that.

Will it be released in its entirety? There are all those songs you wrote and recorded with Elvis Costello, many of them not officially released.

That’s one of the real exciting things. Those demos. We’re releasing them as part of this package. I’m not sure I’m supposed to be telling you this. . . . It’s great that you’re a fan of “Flowers in the Dirt.” Cause you’ve got a real nice release coming out. We showed it all to Elvis, and he was just tickled pink.

I do have to ask you about Brexit. Where’d you land? And are you having E.U. remorse?

I think like a lot people I was very confused. I was so confused that I couldn’t vote.

You couldn’t?

I was actually doing concerts and I physically couldn’t get to it. But even if I had have been able to, I was so confused. You were hearing what seemed to be good arguments on both sides. I think I would have come down on the remain side because people like the governor of the Bank of England, a lot of financial experts, were saying that.

Big stories in the entertainment world as they break.

Paul, one last thing. My son, who just turned 6, asked me what I was doing today and I said I was talking to Paul McCartney. And he asked if I could ask you one question. And the question is . . . Where’s Ringo?

What was the question?

Where’s Ringo?

Oh, I believe he’s out on tour. [Pause] You tell him, he’s in Paul’s heart.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertai ... story.html

_________________
Image


Top
  Profile  
 

IMWAN Admin
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Fri Jul 15, 2016 2:40 pm 
User avatar
Helpful Librarian

Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197740
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Quote:
Beatles' 'Love' at 10: Paul, Ringo and Friends Celebrate Revamped Show

"I can see this going on for another century or something," said Yoko Ono with a smile, speaking to Rolling Stone on the age-defying popularity of the Beatles. She was among the band's extended family gathered in Las Vegas on Thursday to mark the 10th anniversary of Love, the ambitious Fab Four-themed production of sound, psychedelia and acrobatics by Cirque du Soleil. "The Beatles' music is growing, which is really nice."

The show unfurled on a specially designed stage at the Mirage Hotel and Casino and maintained much of the sophisticated staging of the acclaimed original 2006 production, but with several meaningful adjustments in performance, design and effects. The music has also been remixed and re-edited by musical director Giles Martin, son of the late Beatles producer George Martin. Father and son collaborated on the music for the original Love.

Despite excited reviews for that first production, for Dominic Champagne, the show's writer and director, it only represented to him about "40 percent of the potential," he said. "I remember Paul and Ringo feeling that 'We were quite a good band, don't you think?' They felt like that 10 years ago on the opening night. We wanted to reach that level. Now I have a feeling this is the best achievement I can probably do. Now I have a certain level of satisfaction."

When McCartney and Starr arrived at the show Thursday, they spent only a brief time on the red carpet. Starr responded to a lightning storm of camera flashes by joking with the photographers: "Everybody send me copies!"

Fans inside the Beatles gift shop scored a great vantage point, pressing against the windows as the surviving Beatles walked past. Also on the carpet was director Ron Howard, whose new documentary on the band's touring years, The Beatles: Eight Days a Week, is out this fall.

The project gave Howard a new appreciation for the band's "journey and what it meant to culture and what it meant for these guys to live through it."

The anniversary performance was dedicated "with great respect and adulation" to the memory of Beatles producer George Martin, who died this year at age 90. A tramp-like ringmaster in bowler hat also alluded to the night's violence unfolding across the globe in Nice, France, saying, "In light of recent events, we have a message: In the world that we live in today, we are thankful to share the peace and love that the Beatles continue to bring to the world at large."

The lights went down and the sound of Beatles chatter filled the room. "We're on the air, folks," said John Lennon's voice. "Ready, honey bunch?" McCartney's voice asked. These soundbites were immediately followed by the spectral a cappella vocals from "Because," the harmonies pure and soulful, as male acrobats slowly climbed ropes toward the ceiling.

Then there was the opening clang from "A Hard Day's Night" mashed together with Starr's drum solo from "The End" and McCartney's voice singing "Get Back" on a stage made to look like an old rooftop, with red brick chimneys. Within moments, the chimneys blew up, evoking the British experience of World War II – the birth years of the the individual Beatles – to the strings of "Eleanor Rigby."

It was a vibrant opening to two hours of Beatles music accompanied by images of the Fab Four, Day-Glo dancers, the Eggman and cops with Blue Meanie smiles.

The anniversary show meant that this week was also a reunion of the larger Beatles circle, which included Sean Lennon and Dhani Harrison, Starr in-law Joe Walsh and others who gathered for dinner the night before. "We have fun now," said George Harrison's widow, Olivia Harrison. "It's more of a family thing now than it's ever been. All of them are the most loving, generous people. They're really supportive. When they hug you, you've been hugged. It's a beautiful thing."

The changes to Love have been in place since March, with the subsequent months of previews leading to the official unveiling this week. George Martin was aware of that changes were being made to the show, but was too ill to participate."There's a huge poignancy because of the loss of my dad," Giles said."The most beautiful thing for me is the music remains, and will remain."

At the end, as the show's many acrobats and performers returned to the stage to wave their goodbyes for a standing ovation, McCartney and Starr joined them. "Thanks for coming," Starr told the audience. "Without you, these guys would be lonely."

McCartney thanked the performers. "I can do all that acrobatic stuff. I just don't want to show you up," he said, then repeated the timeless message of the night and of his former band. "We love you. Love is all you need."

http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/ ... te-w429341

_________________
Image


Top
  Profile  
 

IMWAN Admin
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2016 10:26 pm 
User avatar
Helpful Librarian

Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197740
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Click for full size

_________________
Image


Top
  Profile  
 

IMWAN Admin
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2016 11:34 pm 
User avatar
Helpful Librarian

Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197740
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Fraxon! wrote:
Larry wrote:
or God forbid,, even the Hollywood Bowl album on CD.

Never gonna happen.

Faith, my old friend:

viewtopic.php?f=17&t=98839

_________________
Image


Top
  Profile  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2016 1:39 am 
User avatar

Joined: 10 Feb 2008
Posts: 5116
We stand corrected. Rumors in Beatle Land are that this will have the 1964 show and one of the 1965s or (and more likely) additional songs so that each unique song from both years is on there once.


Top
  Profile E-mail  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2016 2:49 am 
User avatar

Joined: 22 Aug 2004
Posts: 40603
Linda wrote:
Fraxon! wrote:
Larry wrote:
or God forbid,, even the Hollywood Bowl album on CD.

Never gonna happen.

Faith, my old friend:

viewtopic.php?f=17&t=98839

Well, in that case: They will NEVER release "Carnival Of Light" or the 27-minute take of "Helter Skelter"! :thumbsup:


Top
  Profile  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2016 5:47 am 
User avatar

Joined: 10 Feb 2008
Posts: 5116
Yeah! Let's hope not. :)


Top
  Profile E-mail  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2016 10:04 am 
User avatar
Top of the Pops 65-68

Joined: 20 Oct 2007
Posts: 3131
Location: Sherwood Forest VA
Winston Churchill:

“Never give in. Never give in. Never, never, never, never—in nothing, great or small, large or petty—never give in, except to convictions of honour and good sense. Never yield to force. Never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy.” . . . Or the fear of The Beatles NOT releasing vital historical recordings, no matter the odds against it...

: UKflag: . . :tardis: . . :music1:


Top
  Profile  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2016 10:46 am 
User avatar

Joined: 10 Feb 2008
Posts: 5116
Crapple's master plan is open the vault floodgates only after all Beatle fans are dead.


Top
  Profile E-mail  
 

IMWAN Admin
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Sun Jul 31, 2016 2:16 pm 
User avatar
Helpful Librarian

Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197740
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Quote:
George Harrison’s Unreleased Songs May Be Finished by His Son, Dhani

Music that George Harrison recorded, but never completed, prior to his death in 2001, may surface at some point. According to his widow, Olivia, she and their son, Dhani, have been talking about having him put the final touches on the tracks.

“There are a lot of songs that are unfinished,” Billboard reported Olivia as saying. “I think there’s a project there. I just need time to get to it.”

The occasion was a 10th anniversary celebration of The Beatles Love, the Cirque du Soleil production that plays at the Mirage Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. Also in attendance was John Lennon‘s widow, Yoko Ono, who told Billboard that she has been working on an album of her own, but it was put on hold when she received a health scare in the form of the flu that caused her to be hospitalized back in February. She offered an update on her condition, saying that “everything in my body is OK now, except I have a problem walking.” As for the music, she noted that she wants “to be a little more normal” before returning to it.

Dhani Harrison has been a professional musician ever since he and Jeff Lynne worked together to bring Brainwashed, the album George was working on when he died on Nov. 29, 2001, to fruition a year later. Since 2006, he has been in thenewno2, an avant-garde rock band that has put out three records since 2008, with the most recent one being the score to the 2013 film Beautiful Creatures.

http://www.ultimateclassicrock.com/geor ... ongs-dhani

_________________
Image


Top
  Profile  
 

ICE Mod
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Fri Aug 05, 2016 4:36 pm 
User avatar
Boney Fingers Jones

Joined: 03 Aug 2006
Posts: 40883
Location: Sunny Massapequa Park, NY
Image

Revolver turns 50 today.

_________________
"Every day a little sadder,
A little madder,
Someone get me a ladder."


ELP

“You can't have everything. Where would you put it?”—Steven Wright


Image


Top
  Profile E-mail  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Wed Aug 10, 2016 4:57 pm 
User avatar

Joined: 16 May 2007
Posts: 850
Location: Virginia
Quote:
Paul McCartney strums an acoustic guitar on a sofa in his London office, humming to himself as he tries to recall a melody from his adolescence – one of the first, never-recorded songs he wrote with his teenage friend John Lennon, on their way to starting the Beatles in Liverpool. "It was like …" McCartney says, then hits a rockabilly rhythm on his guitar and sings in a familiar, robust voice: "They said our love was just fun/The day that our friendship begun/There's no blue moon that I can see/There's never been in history/Because our love was just fun."



Paul McCartney rolling Stone Interview 2016
Max Vadukul for Rolling Stone

"'Just Fun,'" McCartney says, announcing the title proudly. "I had a little school-exercise book where I wrote those lyrics down. And in the top right-hand corner of the page, I put 'A Lennon-McCartney original.' It was humble beginnings," he admits. "We developed from that."


It's an extraordinary moment – but McCartney, 74 and currently on his latest tour of American arenas and stadiums, is never far from a performance.


Over two long interviews – first in London, then a week later in Philadelphia, backstage before a concert – McCartney often bursts into song to make a point: hitting chords from another of his teenage tunes on guitar, singing a slice of Ray Charles' "What'd I Say," and imitating the young Mick Jagger at an early Rolling Stones gig. On one occasion, McCartney does an impression of Lennon doing a Gene Vincent number during the Beatles' bar-band days in Hamburg, Germany.

"It's always held a fascination for me, getting up in front of people and performing," McCartney says in Philadelphia. "From the beginning, I was trying to figure it out: What's the best way to keep true to yourself yet have people on your side?" He is wearing a dark-blue short-sleeve shirt and jeans, his bare feet propped on a coffee table. His trailer has a curtain for a door, and visitors announce themselves by ringing a red cowbell on a table near the entrance because, he points out, "You can't knock on a curtain."

McCartney has just finished a soundcheck that was a show in itself: 12 songs, almost all of which won't be played at the concert that night, including the Beatles' 1964 ballad "I'll Follow the Sun" and his 1971 curio "Ram On." He is on the road again with his band of the past 15 years – guitarists Rusty Anderson and Brian Ray, keyboard player Paul "Wix" Wickens and drummer Abe Laboriel Jr. – on the 50th anniversary of the summer that he, Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr quit the road. ("We'd had enough of playing rain-soaked stages with lousy PA's," McCartney says of the Beatles' last tour, which ended at San Francisco's Candlestick Park in August 1966.)

That manic era is celebrated in a new Ron Howard documentary, The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years, and a companion album, The Beatles: Live at the Hollywood Bowl, with newly mixed live songs from 1964 and '65. (Disclosure: I wrote liner notes for that record.) McCartney also put out Pure McCartney, a set that surveys his solo and Wings work. And in October, he caps his touring year at Desert Trip, the festival where he is appearing with old friends including Bob Dylan, the Stones and Neil Young.

"It's fossil rock," McCartney cracks, "but it's exciting. Definitely gotta ring Neil, say, 'What do you reckon, man?'"

In his London office, McCartney is surrounded by his roots and history – there is Beatles and Wings memorabilia, and a vintage jukebox loaded with 78s by Fats Domino, Wanda Jackson and Elvis Presley – but he mostly speaks of his songwriting and the stage in the present tense. He dissects his recent collaborations with Kanye West and mentions that he was "looking at some lyric ideas" for his next album. "I can write all over the place. I've got a lot of ideas on the go."

But the Beatles are always nearby, as a touchstone and renewing memory. "It's good talking with you," McCartney says at the end of one session, then recalls an encounter with Lennon a few years after the band broke up. "He hugged me. It was great, because we didn't normally do that. He said, 'It's good to touch.' I always remembered that – it's good to touch."

Why is performing still so vital to you at this point in your life?
This idea of the great little band – it's quite attractive. A basic unit is at the heart of the music we all love. It's in the halls of Nashville, the clubs of Liverpool and Hamburg. One of the pleasures for me, when we take our bow at the end of the evening, is there's five of us.

And I've learned some lessons. I used to be terrified of making a mistake. I've learned that it's OK. The audience actually likes it.

What was the last big mistake you made onstage?
I don't remember the last one. But I had a show in Paris where I started off with the second verse of "Penny Lane" instead of the first. It should have been "a barber showing photographs." So I thought, "I'll swap the verses – do verse two, then verse one and we'll go into the middle bit." But the band correctly thought, "He skipped verse one – we'll go into the middle."

It was a car crash in Penny Lane. I had to go, "Stop, stop. We've totally screwed it up. We're gonna start again." The audience went wild. A friend, Cilla Black, who just passed away, came to me after the show: "I loved that bit. Do you do it every night?"

Did you have that urge to entertain, to please, as a boy?
I suppose so. If you go into music, it's very rare that you're trying something that you don't care if people like it. It surprises me that there are some people who don't want to be liked – there are certain people, I'm sure, but I think it's just an image. It's the line in "Hey Jude" about being cool and making your world a bit colder.

In the Beatles, I was very much the guy who pushed it. It's a damn good job I did. No one would have got off their asses to come out from the suburbs into the city to make Let It Be. The film turned out pretty weird, but it's a good record.

A lot of the things we did in Hamburg were instigated by me, then taken up by the other guys. We worked in this little beer hall where nobody came in. There was a sign that said beer, 1.50 marks or something. You'd see students come in and go, "Ooh, can't afford it." They were looking for something cheaper. So we really had to work. The manager of the place said, "Mach schau" ["Make show"]. We used to do "Dance in the Street," the Gene Vincent song. John was actually the one who said, "I'll do this – [claps hands] 'Gonna dance in the street tonight! Hey, yeah, everybody! C'mon, c'mon!' " That started to pull the students. We figured, "We got 'em sitting down. Now we'll play our stuff." And they liked it.

What is the dynamic in your band? Who challenges you? Can someone say, "We should do it this way"?
It doesn't work like that. That was the Beatles. Wings was less challenged. Now it's kind of understood: "It's your band." What I do to balance that is throw it open when we're rehearsing. Sometimes there's things I don't want to do. But the guys would say, "Gotta do it. This will work."

What have they suggested that worked?
"Golden Slumbers" through "The End" [from Abbey Road]. It was a bit of work. I was being lazy. Rusty suggested "Day Tripper." I didn't want to do it because the bass part's very hard. "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite" is the same. Those are the two in the show I didn't want to do. But the guys said it would be great.

At the same time, I'm a dictator. And nobody has a problem with that – I don't think [laughs]. We've been together now longer than the Beatles or Wings. Something's happening right. And I think we get better, because we get simpler.

Can you imagine touring like this at 80? It used to be that doing this at 40 seemed  ... 
Unimaginable – and unseemly. Mind you, when I was 17, there was a guy in John's art school who was 24 – who I felt so sorry for. I grieved for him [laughs]. He was so old.

Doris Day, who I know a little bit, once said to me, "Age is an illusion." I reminded her of it recently – I was wishing her a happy birthday. People say age is a number. It's a big number the older you get. But if it doesn't interfere, I'm not bothered. You can ignore it. That's what I do.

You mentioned the Let It Be film. Is there any chance it will ever be rereleased?
I keep thinking we've done it. We've talked about it for so long.

What's the holdup?
I've no bloody idea. I keep bringing it up, and everyone goes, "Yeah, we should do that." The objection should be me. I don't come off well.

It suggests that, with the Beatles' work, you are not as in control of the legacy as people would assume.
Apple [Corps] is a democracy. I'm one of the votes. The Beatles stuff does itself. Someone will say, "Ron Howard is interested in doing a film." I get to say yes or no. My preference is yes – he's good.

Does it have to be a unanimous decision – you, Ringo, Yoko Ono and Olivia Harrison?
Yeah. That's the secret of the Beatles – can't do three to one. During the breakup was when it got screwed up – we did three against one. But now it has to be unanimous. The two girls are Beatles.

Are there things where you automatically say no? And what kind of veto can you have over the Beatles' songs when you don't own the publishing?
We don't have a veto. But we made it clear that we like it to be treated tastefully – "If that's possible, sir." They can be great offers monetarily, but we draw the line on some things, like a gas-guzzling car. I personally wouldn't do McDonald's, just because of my [vegetarian] beliefs.

The Love show [in Las Vegas] was nearly that. George knew this Cirque du Soleil guy and took me to see a show. I was blown away. I was sold on the idea [of a Beatles production]. But the climate was, "No, it's sacrosanct. You can't do this. You must not." I went, "Hang on, it's not your music."

People can relate to the Beatles in a very –
Possessive way. We never listened to that. You would get fans who'd want something and you'd go, "No, I'm sorry. I'm eating dinner. You've got to go away." They'd go, "Well, we buy your records." We said, "Stop buying them, if that's the trade-off." We were always like that, Ringo more than anyone. They would come to his house, and he'd go, "Fuck off" and slam the door. He would not have any of it. You have to draw the line. Or your sanity goes.

How would you characterize your relationship with Yoko now?
It's really good, actually. We were kind of threatened [then]. She was sitting on the amps while we were recording. Most bands couldn't handle that. We handled it, but not amazingly well, because we were so tight. We weren't sexist, but girls didn't come to the studio – they tended to leave us to it. When John got with Yoko, she wasn't in the control room or to the side. It was in the middle of the four of us.

Yet you contributed that quote on the cover of John and Yoko's Two Virgins album ("When two great saints meet, it is a humbling experience").
My big awakening was, if John loves this woman, that's gotta be right. I realized any resistance was something I had to overcome. It was a little hard at first. Gradually, we did. Now it's like we're mates. I like Yoko. [Laughs] She's so Yoko.

How often do the four of you meet to discuss Beatles affairs?
Not often. I see Ringo a lot, because he's a lovely boy. We all see each other socially, go to parties. As for meetings, I'm a bit detached from it. I went off Apple during the heavy breakup period – I sent John Eastman in and said, "You tell me what everyone is saying, because I can't bear to be sitting at that table." It was too painful, like seeing the death of your favorite pet.

The way it works now, I listen to all the records. I will be in on the approval process. But most of the work for the Beatles has been done.

Is there anything left in the vaults that is worth releasing?
That's the question: Is it worthwhile? The thing about the Beatles – they were a damn hot little band. No matter what you hear, even stuff that we thought was really bad – it doesn't sound so bad now. Because it's the Beatles.

Could you do something with the raw tapes from the White Album or Sgt. Pepper, telling the story behind those albums the way Bob Dylan released his 1965-66 sessions as a box set last year?
The talk between the takes – I've always loved that. We always had this two-track tape recorder running in case we came up with a little jam. "Take 36, what was that like?" But it was actually a chronicle of our dialogue. There's one bit I particularly liked: We were doing "I Saw Her Standing There." I went, "I can't do it. I haven't got my plec." We didn't call them guitar picks, we called them plectrums. John said, "Where is it?" – this in our thick Liverpool accents. "I think I left it in my suitcase." John goes, "Ah, soft ass." "Soft ass? I'll give you a soft ass."

That's very schoolyard.
The Beatles became more worldly. But it's nice to see the school stuff, the banter. To answer your question, is there any more? There's a few things. Is it worthwhile? I don't know.

Would you ever consider doing a tour with Ringo?
It's never come up. We come together for things like the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. But to actually tour together – leave well enough alone.

Too many wrong signals, like "Beatles reunion"?
I don't think either of us have ever thought why do it, or why not. It's just that our roads are parallel, with intersections and diversions. He's a great drummer, man. That's the thing about Ringo. He has a feel that nobody else has. As to going out on the road, it might be complicated.

You will be at Desert Trip with the Rolling Stones. What do you see when you go to a Stones show now?
It's a mirage. I see the little band I always knew. You've got Mick, Keith and Charlie, who were always there, and Ronnie – he's earned his Stone-ness. I see a good little rock & roll band – not as good as the Beatles [grins], but good.

What potential did you see in 1963, when you and John gave them "I Wanna Be Your Man" to record? It was the Stones' first Top 20 single in the U.K.
You looked at all of the other bands on the scene. We knew who was no good. We knew who was competition. It paid to know what was going on. We'd hear about the Stones. They played at the Station Hotel [in London]. We went down to see them one night, just stood in the audience. I remember Mick onstage in a gray jacket doing his hand-clappy thing [claps hands in quick rhythm].

The guy who turned the Beatles down at Decca Records happened to ask George if he knew anyone worth signing. We were friends with them, and I just thought "I Wanna Be Your Man" would be good for them. I knew they did Bo Diddley stuff. And they made a good job of it. And I like to show off, say we gave them their first hit. And we did.

Now great little bands like yours and the Stones play gargantuan venues. Can you imagine touring small halls with just new material? Is that a risk worth taking?
That is no risk. That is attractive. This is one of the things that makes you play great, when you're packed together. We knew that in the Beatles. We always used to record in Abbey Road, Studio 2. But for "Yer Blues," we were talking about this tightness, this packed-in-a-tin thing. So we got in a little cupboard – a closet that had microphone leads and things, with a drum kit, amps turned to the walls, one mic for John. We did "Yer Blues" live and it was really good.

To do new material – that's taking it one step further. This is what I am saying about the Beatles things – these ideas just arrive. I don't necessarily sit around thinking of them. That's a new idea that's just arrived. You proposed it. And we might take it up.

In "All Day," one of the tracks you did with Kanye West, there is a part that you originally wrote on guitar in 1969 but didn't use at the time. What is the story behind that lick?
Linda and I were having our first baby together, Mary. She was recuperating – I'm sitting around eating chips with my guitar in the clinic, goofing around with it. And there was a picture on the wall that I'd been looking at for days – Picasso, "The Old Guitarist." The guy held the guitar like this [strikes the pose from the painting], and a lightbulb went off in my head: "What chord is that?" It looked like it was two strings. "You know what would be cool? To write a song with only two fingers." So I wrote this thing [plays the melody].

I was telling Kanye this story. I whistled it for him. His engineer was recording it, and it went into the pool of ingredients. Kanye was just collecting things. We weren't going to sit down and write a song so much as talk and spark ideas off each other. It was only when I got this song, the Rihanna record ["FourFiveSeconds"] and "Only One," the three tracks we did, that I went, "I get it. He's taken my little whistle-y thing." It returned to me as an urban hip-hop riff. I love that record.

Did you feel like a true collaborator or a sideman? You're used to running a session, seeing a song all the way through.
We had a few afternoons at the Beverly Hills Hotel. The only deal I made with Kanye was that if it doesn't work, we won't tell anyone. I didn't know his system. I'd heard things like, "He's got a room full of guys working on riffs, and he walks around going, 'I like that one.' " It reminded me of Andy Warhol, these artists who use students to paint their backgrounds and things. It's a well-used technique. I thought, "I don't know how I'm going to fit into that, but let's see. Here goes nothing."

Do you think Kanye is a genius?
I don't throw that word around [laughs]. I think he's a great artist. Take My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. I played it when I was cooking, and it was like, "This is good. There's some really innovative stuff." When the word came from his people, through my people [laughs], I thought, "Let's give it a go."

Do you listen to much hip-hop for pleasure? Or to keep up?
I listen to it for, you could call it, education. I hear a lot of it and go to concerts occasionally. I went to see Jay Z and Kanye when they toured. I've seen Drake live. It's the music of now.

Does it feel as important to you in this era as the music you made in 1966 and '67? People often say rock is dead, that it's had its moment as a historical force.
Time will tell if it's as good. That's not for me to say. But I think it's exciting. You go to a club and hear a great hip-hop record – it definitely does the business. I wouldn't want to critique it versus "A Day in the Life." For me, it's like reggae in that I wouldn't particularly feel I could do it. I would leave that to Bob Marley, to the people that are it. It's the same with hip-hop. It was exciting to work with Kanye, to have a contribution to "All Day." [Smiles] It's the best riff on the record.

In your work with younger artists like Kanye or Dave Grohl, do you feel the challenge that you had within the Beatles, especially from John? Has that ever been replaced in any way?
No. I don't think it could be. At some point, you have to realize, some things just can't be. John and me, we were kids growing up together, in the same environment with the same influences: He knows the records I know, I know the records he knows. You're writing your first little innocent songs together. Then you're writing something that gets recorded. Each year goes by, and you get the cooler clothes. Then you write the cooler song to go with the cooler clothes. We were on the same escalator – on the same step of the escalator, all the way. It's irreplaceable – that time, friendship and bonding.

Are there people you can turn to now for advice about a new song or album?
In music, no. I rely on the experience and knowledge of what would have happened if I'd brought it to the Beatles. That is the best gauge.

What about life in general?
I have some very good friends. Lorne Michaels and I are pretty close. I can always go for a drink with him – we can talk pretty genuinely. I have relatives, my brother and my wife. Nancy is very strong that way. But music, no. It's very difficult. You can't top John. And John couldn't top Paul.

Your last studio album, New, was a musically upbeat, emotionally positive record. But it came after a few albums that were much darker, even sadder, like Chaos and Creation in the Backyard. Was it hard to write songs after Linda's death and during the personal difficulties that followed? [McCartney divorced his second wife, Heather Mills, in 2008.]
The thing about New was Nancy. That's who was new. It was a good awakening. It made me want to write positive songs. Music is like a psychiatrist. You can tell your guitar things that you can't tell people. And it will answer you with things people can't tell you. But there's a value to sad songs. Something bad happens – you don't want to repress it. So you unload it on yourself, with a guitar. I've got a couple on my next album which are a bit – [makes a shocked look]. But it works, because with songs, you can do that. That's the blues, where you put stuff.

Your youngest daughter, Beatrice, is turning 13 this year. How aware is she of your history?
It's a funny thing with your kids. "OK, Dad is famous – boring." It doesn't go much beyond that. If they come to a concert, it's like, "Oh, I liked 'Back in the U.S.S.R.' " Or "What was that song?" "It's called 'All My Loving.' " "I liked that one." As they get older, it dawns on them. When they go to college, their friends will say, "I like Ram." "What's that?" "It's your dad's album."


"You can't top John. And John couldn't top Paul."


What is your daily regimen as a father when you're not on tour?
My kids are grown up except the youngest, and that is half the time, because it's a custody situation. I try to be full-on. I get up in the morning and make her breakfast, drive to school. I check in with the teachers, see how it's going. I donate the prize at the silent auction. It's straightforward dad stuff. At the end of that period, I get on a plane, come to America and be a rock star.

How hard was it to balance your music and fame when you and Linda were raising a family in the Seventies on a farm?
It was more hippie culture. We were kind of home-schooling. I'd teach them to write. I enjoyed that. Once they got to school, we'd take tutors when we went on tour. I'd have to go to the school, find out what they were going to cover – geography, history, math – and organize it as sensibly as I could. We made it work. Linda and I always said, "The main thing is they have good hearts." They all do. They're also pretty smart.

The Beatles' children – yours, Sean and Julian Lennon, Dhani Harrison, Zak Starkey – have turned out strong and sensible, often with their own music careers. How did the biggest band in the world succeed as parents amid that madness?
It's the Liverpool roots. We had strong families. My family was particularly strong. John's aunt was strict, I thought, in a good way. Ringo was an only child, but his mom and dad were great. Growing up in Liverpool, which is very working-class, you can't get above yourself.

My family had loads of kids. You were always being handed a baby. You got used to it. John didn't have that, but he learned later. The four of us coming together, with all these roots – there was a sensibility that we would want to do it right, in the family way. We had a common goal, a common wisdom, in life and in music.

Do you have a favorite album that you feel has been underrated or misunderstood? When you reissued Ram in 2012, it got raves, but when it first came out, in 1971, it took a beating.
That album popped into my mind. But I never give myself time to sit down and go through the list. Nearest I get to that is looking for stuff to do in the show, like "Love Me Do" – "We should try that one."

You are at a rare juncture – old enough to see some of your work kicked around, then praised decades later.
I do albums and, like a fool, I listen to what people say about them. A New York Times critic damned Sgt. Pepper when it came out. The terrible thing is it puts you off your own stuff. It plays into your self-doubts, even though you overcame those self-doubts to write that song. You're left with this smell of the music – a whiff of something not very good – and that sticks with you. But then you get rescued. A while ago, one of my nephews, Jay, said, "Ram's my all-time favorite album." I thought it was dead and gone, stinking over there in the dung pit. So I listened to it. "Wow, I get what I was doing."

Were you disappointed that your last single, "Hope for the Future," was not a hit?
Yeah. It was something I thought would really do well. It didn't.

Have you had to change your expectations as to what constitutes a hit compared with what you knew in 1966?
I've given up trying to figure it out. You can't. Like this Pure album – I'll get rung up: "It's Number Three." "Wow, that's cool, man. What did it sell?" "15,000." I think inside, "It's a joke, man – 15,000 a day was not good then."

But that's the new world in record sales, unless you're Rihanna or Beyoncé. I'll put out my next album, but I won't think I'm gonna sell a lot. I'm putting it out because I have songs that I like. And I will do my best job. The scene has changed, but it doesn't disturb me, because I had the best of it – selling 100,000 a day on something like "Mull of Kintyre." I've had the joy of that. If I don't have it now, it's not just about me. All of my contemporaries, who are still pretty cool, don't have it, because things have moved on.

And you know what? We had it. And it was great.

http://www.rollingstone.com/music/featu ... ew-w433437


Top
  Profile  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Thu Aug 11, 2016 1:12 pm 
User avatar
Proud enemy of the United States--again!

Joined: 29 Apr 2014
Posts: 1543
Thank you for posting--that was one of the most engaging McCartney interviews I've ever read.

_________________
"I'm joking, of course."--Lt. Robert "Bob" Hookstratten


Top
  Profile E-mail  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Thu Aug 11, 2016 4:51 pm 
User avatar

Joined: 16 Jul 2006
Posts: 4004
Location: Massapequa, NY
Stumpy Joe wrote:
Thank you for posting--that was one of the most engaging McCartney interviews I've ever read.

Agreed.
He always seems to be willing to answer questions about anything, even stuff that he must be sick of talking about (his relationship with Yoko, for example). Not even Ringo is that engaging all the time.

_________________
"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."
-Will Rogers


Top
  Profile E-mail  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Mon Aug 15, 2016 10:11 pm 
User avatar
Proud enemy of the United States--again!

Joined: 29 Apr 2014
Posts: 1543
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyl ... story.html
Quote:
Their goal: Meet the Beatles on tour in 1966. Their solution: Impersonate the opening act.

In August 1966, as the Beatles made their way to Washington during what would ultimately be their last tour, a group of six scheming 15-year-olds from the District’s Chevy Chase neighborhood developed a plan: 1. See the concert. 2. For free. 3. By sneaking into what then was called D.C. Stadium. 4. Disguised as the Beatles’ opening act, a band called the Cyrkle.

Incorporated into this plan were makeshift costumes, a rented limo, decoy groupies and the unwitting participation of D.C. police, who provided the fake band with a motorcade escort.

Aside from a paragraph-long mention in the Washington Star, in which the kids refused to provide their names, the plot went uncatalogued in the public record. Now, on the concert’s 50th anniversary, members of the fake Cyrkle provide an oral history of how they pulled off one of the greatest pranks in Washington folklore...

_________________
"I'm joking, of course."--Lt. Robert "Bob" Hookstratten


Top
  Profile E-mail  
 

IMWAN Admin
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Sun Aug 21, 2016 5:58 pm 
User avatar
Helpful Librarian

Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197740
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Quote:
Ringo Starr and Paul McCartney Say the Beatles Could Have Toured Again

The Beatles famously walked away from touring in 1966, but looking back now, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr say that decision was never final.

“It wasn’t like we’d placed a wreath on the live Beatles,” Starr told MOJO. Pointing out that their 1969 rooftop performance “showed that we could still do that stuff,” he added, “We could maybe have gone out live again. It didn’t happen. But it was never like, ‘Oh, that’s dead, the Beatles are dead. It was always a possibility that we would do it again.'”

In fact, as Starr pointed out, McCartney — who was sitting next to him during the interview — “tried one time to get us to go out again.” Not that McCartney got much of anywhere with his fellow Beatles on that point. “But you didn’t listen to me!” McCartney’s quoted as howling in “mock outrage” — and prompting Starr to absolve himself of responsibility. “I listened,” he insisted. “It was the others!”

Starr’s sentiments echo comments he recently made during an interview with Bloomberg, in which he suggested that, had the Beatles managed to find a way to stay together, they’d probably still be touring today — much like the Rolling Stones. “We would,” he agreed. “We would have gotten over our difficulties and gotten on the road again.”

http://www.ultimateclassicrock.com/beat ... ured-again

_________________
Image


Top
  Profile  
 
 Post subject: BEATLES! BEATLES! BEATLES!
PostPosted: Mon Aug 22, 2016 1:08 am 
User avatar

Joined: 22 Aug 2004
Posts: 40603
Listening to the 'Get Back Sessions' tapes, it becomes pretty clear that Paul really wanted them to tour (or, at the very least, play live gigs), John was open to it, but was deferring everything to Yoko, and Ringo would have gone along with anything the others wanted to do. George was the only one really dead-set against it.


Top
  Profile  
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Go to page 1 ... 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93 ... 104  ( Previous  |  Next )
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 2273 posts ]   



Who is WANline

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  


Powdered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Limited

IMWAN is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide
a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com, amazon.ca and amazon.co.uk.