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Paul McCartney reveals first time John Lennon, Ringo and George turned on him

Thursday, May 8, 2025

It wasn’t often The Beatles took formal votes on decisions, as most things were discussed and agreed upon as a group. But in 1969, during a recording session that should have been routine, Paul McCartney found himself on the receiving end of something that hadn’t happened before: all three of his bandmates siding against him, and the issue was Allen Klein.

After the death of manager Brian Epstein, the band was left with a gap in leadership. Soon, John Lennon was quickly won over by Klein’s pitch, and George Harrison and Ringo Starr agreed.

But McCartney remained unconvinced. He wanted the band to be represented by Lee Eastman, his future father-in-law and a respected entertainment lawyer.   The moment came when Klein turned up at Apple and asked the band to sign his contract on the spot. He said he had a board meeting the following morning and Paul asked to wait until Monday.

“I said, ‘Well I’m not going to [sign it now]. I demand at least the weekend. I’ll look at it, and on Monday. This is supposed to be a recording session, after all,’” McCartney later recalled in All You Need Is Love: The Beatles in Their Own Words.

But the other three pushed back, and then someone suggested a vote.

McCartney didn’t think it would be unanimous: “I said, ‘No, you’ll never get Ringo to’. I looked at Ringo, and he gave me this sick look like, Yeah, I’m going with them.”   The vote went three to one, which meant Lennon, Harrison and Starr signed with Klein, while McCartney didn’t. “That was the first time”, he said. “And they all signed it. They didn’t need my signature.”

It wouldn’t be the last time he felt sidelined. Months later, after finishing his debut solo album McCartney, he was visited at home by Ringo Starr, who wanted them to delay the release of the album so that 'Let It Be' could come out first.

“They eventually sent Ringo round my house at Cavendish with a message: ‘We want you to put your release date back, it’s for the good of the group’”, McCartney said in Paul McCartney: Many Years From Now. “And he was giving me the party line - they just made him come round”.

Source: express.co.uk/Maria Leticia Gomes

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