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Paul McCartney said the lyrics of his solo songs contain a “schoolboy prank.” In addition, he said the lyrics of The Beatles‘ “Day Tripper” are similar. Notably, “Day Tripper” was a hit twice in the United Kingdom.

During a 2018 interview with GQ, Paul discussed the origin of his song “Fuh You.” “This song was coming to a close and we were just getting a bit hysterical in the studio, as you do when you’re locked away for long hours, and I said, ‘Well, I’ll just say, “I just wanna shag you,” he said. “And we had a laugh.”

And I said, ‘No, I’ll tell you what we can do is, I can make it questionable as to what it is I’m singing,'” Paul added. “So the actual lyrics are ‘You make me wanna go out and steal / I just want to f*** you’ or … ‘I just want it for you.‘ It’s a schoolboy prank.”

Paul said “Fuh You” was born out of a libertine approach to songwriting. “I mean, it’s intended as a popular song,” he said. “So you don’t feel like you’ve got to adhere to any rules.”

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George Harrison said he had to “punch” a doctor out for mistreating his mother, Louise, in her last months. The Beatle had enough on his plate in 1970; he didn’t need a doctor carelessly taking months off his mother’s life.

When George was 10, Louise gave him money to buy a beginner’s guitar from a boy at school.

From the day that George came home and asked for his first guitar, Louise supported her son. She encouraged him musically and let him leave school to travel to Hamburg, Germany, with The Beatles.

When the band played at The Cavern Club, she always cheered them on in the front row. After The Beatles became famous and Beatlemania exploded, Louise found that the only way she could support her son from home was to support his fans.

Soon, excited girls started visiting George’s house. Louise sometimes invited them inside for tea. She answered fan mail and communicated with fan clubs.

Source: Hannah Wigandt/cheatsheet.com

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A line in George Harrison‘s “Badge” came from a drunk Ringo Starr. He gave a few nonsensical lines to George’s humorous song, which he later gave to Eric Clapton.

In the late-1960s, George became friends with Eric Clapton. The Beatle asked Clapton to perform on his White Album hit, “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” and George wrote “Savoy Truffle” for Clapton.

Then, in 1968, George learned that Clapton’s band Cream was about to make their last album.

“Each of them had to come up with a song for that ‘Goodbye’ Cream album and Eric didn’t have his written,” George told Mitch Glazer at Crawdaddy in 1977 (George Harrison on George Harrison: Interviews and Encounters). George took it upon himself to help his friend write a song.

According to George’s 1980 memoir, I Me Mine, Clapton had the song’s melody before George started writing the lyrics.

Source: Hannah Wigandt/cheatsheet.com

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After seeing two videos of an elephant in India being beaten by handlers, Sir Paul McCartney has teamed up with PETA India to send a letter to the Indian government requesting help for the animal, named Jeymalyatha.

“I have considered India a spiritual place ever since I travelled there in the 1960s. I was impressed by India’s cultural love for animals,” McCartney wrote in the letter. “I know India reveres elephants, its national heritage animal, but cruelty to animals happens everywhere, even in India. What reflects on a country’s values is how that cruelty is addressed.”

Source: Rania Aniftos/yahoo.com

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Only a handful of rock drummers are on a first-name basis with most of the world. Ringo Starr is one of them. The timekeeper for the Beatles has some impressive drumming skills and crafted beats that are instantly recognizable. Despite his talents behind the kit, Ringo said there is one thing he could never do as a drummer because of his emotional style.

Ringo sat in the background as John Lennon, Paul McCartney, and George Harrison provided the melodies that helped drive the Beatles’ popularity. Still, there’s no doubt the kitman left his mark on the band.

“Come Together” wouldn’t be the same without Ringo’s rolling, tom-heavy beat. He drives the menacing closing moments of “I Want You (She’s So Heavy),” and Ringo puts on a memorable display in the early part of “The End.” Really, all of Abbey Road gives Ringo a chance to shine in a way he hadn’t before.

Source: Jason Rossi/cheatsheet.com

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In 1970, the only producer George Harrison had ever worked with was The Beatles’ producer, George Martin. When the band broke up, he had to find a new producer to look after the many songs he planned to record for his first solo album outside The Beatles, All Things Must Pass. George Harrison chose one of the most prolific producers of the 1960s, Phil Spector.

However, he should’ve thought a little harder before deciding.

In 1970, George was experiencing profound change. It was a very dualistic time in his life. The Beatles broke up, and he was without a band and a producer. George’s marriage to his first wife, Pattie Boyd, was crumbling, he’d just bought a dilapidated mansion, Friar Park, and his mother was dying.

Source: Hannah Wigandt/cheatsheet.com

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How many children do The Beatles have? - Wednesday, September 14, 2022

Two Beatle children - Stella McCartney and Zak Starkey - celebrate their birthdays on 13 September. Which Beatle was the first to have a child?

  1. Heather McCartney (born 31 December 1962)

    Paul McCartney marries Linda Eastman, 12 March 1969. With them is Linda's daughter Heather.

Technically, Heather is the eldest Beatle child by four months, but Paul is not her biological father: she was born to Joseph See Jr and Linda Eastman in 1962, but her parents divorced after two years of marriage. McCartney adopted Heather after he married her mother in March 1969.

 

Source: radiox.co.uk

 

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The man who shot and killed John Lennon outside his Manhattan apartment building in 1980 has been denied parole for a 12th time, New York corrections officials said Monday.

Mark David Chapman, 67, appeared before a parole board at the end of August, according to the state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision.

Chapman shot and killed Lennon on the night of Dec. 8, 1980, as Lennon and Yoko Ono were returning to their Upper West Side apartment. Lennon had signed an autograph for Chapman on a copy of his recently released album, "Double Fantasy," earlier that day.

Source: abc7news.com

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Ringo Starr has been in the music business for six decades, and he doesn’t show any signs of slowing down. The drummer became famous playing with the Beatles, but those years represent just a fraction of his career. He’s contributed to some classic albums by other artists (and not just as a drummer) in addition to his steady stream of solo works and concert tours. Ringo’s career might have been quite different if not for a chance encounter with Ed Sullivan that led to the Beatles becoming international superstars.Any musician can release a song or album on the internet to help build an audience. But the Beatles had to cultivate a following the old-fashioned way — by playing live.

Source: Jason Rossi/cheatsheet.com

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Pattie Boyd has joked she demanded royalties from ex-husband Eric Clapton as part of their divorce settlement for inspiring his rock classic ‘Layla’.

The model and rock muse, now 78 and a successful writer, was wooed from her husband, Beatles guitarist George Harrison, after Eric played her his 1970 anthem and told her it was written in honour of his love for her.

But she resisted leaving George, who died aged 58 in 2001, for Eric until the Beatle’s cheating led to their divorce in 1974.

Pattie, who then divorced Eric, 77, in 1989, jokingly told the Sunday Times magazine she hasn’t received a penny from the track.

She said: “I asked for that in my divorce and he said, ‘Are you kidding?’ That’s why I have to write books.”

Source: crowrivermedia.com

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George Harrison wasn’t overly fussed about his country’s monarchy and Queen Elizabeth II. He cared much more about the only figure above her, God. However, that doesn’t mean the former Beatle disliked the queen. He thought she was a very nice lady, but her niceness “made it worse somehow.”

According to Beatles Bible, Harold Wilson, the prime minister, nominated The Beatles for the award. Many speculated Wilson selected the Fab Four to gain the support of younger voters.

Shortly after, The Beatles held a press conference about the award at Twickenham Film Studios, where they watched a rough cut of Help!

“We thought that MBE stood for Mr. Brian Epstein because we always sign his contracts because he’s our manager,” Paul McCartney joked.

Source: Hannah Wigandt/cheatsheet.com

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Paul McCartney admitted he has played The Beatles‘ “A Hard Day’s Night” incorrectly in recent years. In the same vein, he explained why he plays the song wrong. Notably, he revealed what it was like for him to listen to “A Hard Day’s Night.”

During a 2018 interview with GQ, Paul discussed playing “A Hard Day’s Night” incorrectly. “People aren’t you, and they don’t experience it,” he said.

“People haven’t written 300 songs,” he added. “And that’s just with John. They haven’t written … too many songs. So you don’t remember them.”

Paul revealed his band didn’t know how to play the song’s opening chord either when Paul started playing the song again in 2016. “Nobody knows what that chord is,” he said. “It’s a mystical chord.”

Paul discussed his band’s reaction to this conundrum. “We had to investigate it,” he recalled. “I said, ‘I think it’s this,'” Paul then played his guitar. “That’s sort of like it,” he opined. “But it’s not.”

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George Harrison initially wrote “Cheer Down” for Eric Clapton’s 1989 album, Journeyman. However, director Dick Donner heard the song and snatched it for his 1989 film Lethal Weapon 2.

In 1988, George and Tom Petty became bandmates in The Traveling Wilburys. They also became close friends. George asked Petty to help him write “Cheer Down.”

In a special edition of Rolling Stone, “Remembering George,” Petty explained that he and George based “Cheer Down” on something George’s wife, Olivia, used to say to him when he got overexcited.

“Olivia would say that to George when he got a little too happy,” Petty explained. “He would get a burst of enthusiasm, and she’d say, ‘OK, cheer down, big fellow.'”

Source: Hannah Wigandt/cheatsheet.com

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How The Beatles came to use a Riverside-built guitar on the ‘White Album’

The instrument found its way to George Harrison, who played it on the landmark 1968 release.
It seems that a prototype guitar — built in Riverside — was used by George Harrison ofon the 1968 “White Album.”First, how did Riverside get a guitar factory?This story actually starts in the 1920s with a man named Paul Barth. Barth was a quiet, unassuming person who was, in essence, the father of the electric guitar. Starting in the ’20s, he was creating and experimenting with many types of electric methods of amplifying the sound of a guitar, which at the time was being drowned out by other instruments in dance and jazz bands. Barth worked with George Beauchamp in the 1930s to further develop electric guitars and guitar pickups.

Source: L.A. Daily News/headtopics.com

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Sir Paul McCartney has joined those offering tributes to Queen Elizabeth II, following her death at 96.

Stars have shared their fondest memories of Her Majesty on social media after Buckingham Palace confirmed that she had died, earlier today.

The Beatles legend was among those, taking to Twitter with a stunning portrait of the monarch.

‘God bless Queen Elizabeth II May she rest in peace Long live The King,’ he captioned the upload.

The 80-year-old wasn’t the only member of the fab four to pay his condolences, with Ringo Starr following suit.

‘God bless Queen Elizabeth peace and love to all the family peace and love Ringo,’ he penned, beside a string of emoji.

Source: Rishma Dosani/Rishma Dosani

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