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  • Five Thoughts About the Beatles’ Last Song, “Now and Then”

    Five Thoughts About the Beatles’ Last Song, “Now and Then”

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    The last album the Beatles recorded ended with “The End.” (Unless you count “Her Majesty.”) But the actual end of the band’s official output—at least according to the marketing materials—came on Thursday, when the corporate entity called the Beatles released “Now and Then.” The song, which was written by John Lennon in the late 1970s and demoed on a handheld cassette recorder perched on his piano, was considered for the full-band treatment during the 1995 Beatles Anthology project, when the surviving “Threetles” (Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr) worked with producer Jeff Lynne of Electric Light Orchestra and Traveling Wilburys fame to finish a few of Lennon’s songs.

    Included on the tapes Lennon’s widow, Yoko Ono, had given McCartney were demos of four tracks: “Free As a Bird,” “Real Love,” “Grow Old With Me,” and “Now and Then.” Lennon’s former bandmates recorded the first two but passed on recording “Grow Old With Me,” which had already been released on the posthumous Milk and Honey in 1984. (Starr and McCartney would eventually cover it on Starr’s 2019 solo album, What’s My Name.) After some experimentation, they also rejected “Now and Then,” largely at the behest of Harrison, who thought the quality of Lennon’s demo was insufficient for a full-fledged recording.

    Harrison passed in 2001, but McCartney never dropped the idea of returning to the song, which seems to hold some special significance for him: According to Carl Perkins, Lennon’s last words to McCartney were “Think about me every now and then, old friend,” which may have made the demo smack of a message from the beyond. Recent technological advances made that message much clearer: Peter Jackson’s machine audio learning algorithm (MAL, named for Beatles roadie and confidant Mal Evans), which was developed for the 2021 documentary The Beatles: Get Back, isolated Lennon’s vocal from its piano accompaniment and removed the hum and background sounds that marred the original recording. The Beatles version of the song, which was coproduced by McCartney and Beatles producer George Martin’s son Giles, incorporates Lennon’s singing, Harrison’s 1995 guitar work, harmonies sampled from Beatles songs of the ’60s, new recordings by McCartney and Starr, and additional orchestration.

    Speaking of orchestration, “Now and Then” is the centerpiece of a three-part, three-day rollout: on Wednesday, a short film about the making of the track; on Thursday, the song itself; and on Friday, Jackson’s music video. It’s also an enticement to purchase some merch: For the full-circle feels, the song is being sold as a double-A-side single alongside a MAL-demixed, stereo version of the Beatles’ mono first single, “Love Me Do”—a figurative “Hello, Goodbye.” It will also appear on newly expanded, remixed, and demixed releases of the band’s vintage greatest-hits compilations, known as the Red and Blue albums.

    “Now and Then” almost certainly won’t remain in your rotation as long as the rest of the cuts on those classic comps, but at minimum, it’s a fascinating artifact. And if it’s the official farewell from a group whose legacy will long outlive any of its members, it merits a close listen. At slightly more than four minutes long, the track is a trifle compared to the nearly eight-hour Get Back, but after asking five questions sparked by that chronicle of the Beatles’ last released album, I’m back to share five thoughts prompted by the band’s last released song. Now, then: Let’s examine “Now and Then.”

    Yes, this is all slightly disconcerting.

    As with “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love,” but even more so, the release of a new “Beatles” song without the knowledge, approval, and active participation of all four Beatles may strike some fans as morbid, presumptuous, or creatively questionable. Before he was murdered in December 1980, Lennon sometimes sounded receptive (or was said to have sounded receptive) to the idea of all four Beatles working together again. At other times, not so much. I tend to think that had he lived longer, there would have been some sort of Beatles reunion: the repair (for the most part) of his and McCartney’s relationship after the acrimony of the Beatles’ breakup, the fact that up to three of the former bandmates often played on one another’s songs, and the Anthology project (and the examples of so many other ’60s and ’70s groups who eventually got the band back together) all suggest that the four Fabs would have been seen at some point on stage or in studio. But would Lennon have wanted a reunion to take this form, with this demo of this song? Not even those who were closest to him can know with absolute certainty.

    Harrison’s absence adds an additional layer of uncertainty, given that he was the one who scuttled the first attempt to finish “Now and Then.” In 1997, McCartney told Q Magazine, “George didn’t like it. The Beatles being a democracy, we didn’t do it.” Fifteen years later, long after Harrison’s death, McCartney said, “George went off it,” recounting how Harrison had called it “fuckin’ rubbish.” But those quotes are unclear: rubbish because the demo was so rough, or rubbish because he simply disliked the song?

    Possibly both. In 2021, Mark Cunningham, the technical musical consultant to Beatles press officer Derek Taylor, told The Daily Beast what Harrison had told him when Cunningham had asked why the Threetles didn’t record the third song. “He was very critical,” Cunningham said. “He was a real downer about it and said, ‘I wasn’t really interested.’ He said, ‘Apart from the quality, which was worse than the other two, I didn’t think it was much of a song.’”

    The Beatles are still a democracy, but Harrison no longer has his own vote. His family does, and his wife and son say his objections were limited to the demo’s vocal quality. In a recent press release about the new song, Harrison’s widow, Olivia, said, “George felt the technical issues with the demo were insurmountable and concluded that it was not possible to finish the track to a high enough standard. If he were here today, Dhani and I know he would have wholeheartedly joined Paul and Ringo in completing the recording of ‘Now and Then.’” That’s certainly plausible—it was Harrison who first spoke to Ono about the surviving Beatles tinkering with John’s songs, and he helped out with “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love.” But even if Harrison would have signed off on the MAL-enhanced vocal, the new “Now and Then” lacks whatever adornments he might have added to the basic rhythm track he laid down in ’95.

    Asked about the prospect of a Beatles reunion in 1974, Harrison said, “If we do it again, it will probably be because we’ll be broke and need the money.” That’s clearly not what’s happening here: This song seems to have flowed from the best of intentions of McCartney and Starr, with green lights and love from the families and estates of Lennon and Harrison. Still, I’d understand if any fans shared the late George Martin’s misgivings about long-after-the-fact recordings. When Martin was asked in 2013 about why he didn’t produce “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love,” he said, “I kind of told them I wasn’t too happy with putting them together with the dead John. I’ve got nothing wrong with dead John, but the idea of having dead John with live Paul and Ringo and George to form a group, it didn’t appeal to me too much.”

    Decades earlier, in 1976, Martin told Rolling Stone, “What happened was great at its time, but whenever you try to recapture something that existed before, you’re walking on dangerous ground, like when you go back to a place that you loved as a child and you find it’s been rebuilt. … The Beatles existed years ago; they don’t exist today. And if the four men came back together, it wouldn’t be the Beatles.”

    That’s no less true now that two of the men are gone and the others are in their 80s. I don’t object to the exercise so much as the branding: This obviously isn’t a Beatles song in the same sense as the songs from the ’60s, or even “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love.” Which doesn’t mean it’s not enjoyable. But …

    How you feel about the music depends in part on whether you’ve heard it before.

    If you haven’t heard Lennon’s demo, don’t listen to it before you take in the new “Now and Then.” I’ve heard the former untold times over many years, and my familiarity with it can’t help but color my perception of the “Beatles” track.

    Lennon’s demo is spare, imperfect, and fittingly ghostly. The new release is heavily produced (after the fairly faithful, unvarnished first minute), and so sonically compressed in its streaming incarnation that the muddy mix obscures some of the depth and detail in the bass and strings. In some respects, the more polished approach is preferable. In others, the haunting, ethereal, stripped-down demo sounds more appropriate for a plaintive love song sung by a man who’s been dead for longer than he was alive. It’s a little like the difference between the Let It Be version of “The Long and Winding Road” and the Let It Be … Naked version without the wall of sound. Both have adherents, but the latter’s intimacy is more my speed. (In the case of “Now and Then,” though, McCartney and the younger Martin added the overdubs, whereas Macca and the older Martin were the ones excoriating Phil Spector’s alterations to “The Long and Winding Road.”)

    However, my primary source of dissatisfaction (which has lessened a little as I’ve listened more) stems not from the sound of the new “Now and Then,” but from its structure. Earlier, I referred to the Threetles “completing” or “finishing” Lennon’s musical sketches, but this time, McCartney collaborates with his former muse not just by building on Lennon’s work, but by undoing it. The Lennon demo is almost a minute longer than the Beatles release, largely because the former includes two pre-chorus bridges that the latter removes (aside from a subtle, hard-to-hear allusion in McCartney’s piano chords during the new solo).

    I understand why McCartney cut these “I don’t want to lose you / Abuse you or confuse you” sections. For one thing, Lennon’s lyrics trail off into placeholder scatting. It was one thing for McCartney and Harrison to replace Lennon’s incomplete pre-chorus vocals on “Free As a Bird” in 1995. It would have been another for McCartney to do the same on “Now and Then” in 2023, with his husky, warbly, 81-year-old voice. Moreover, a reference to abuse might have landed differently now, what with the wider awareness of Lennon’s history with women.

    Setting aside the unanswerable question of whether Lennon would have wanted the song released without a section he may have considered essential, I can’t help but be a bit let down by the bridge’s omission. Without those surprising, distinctly Lennon-esque digressions, the song’s structure is simpler and more repetitive: verse, chorus, verse, chorus, solo, verse. Plus, its sentiment is less poignant without some of the singer’s self-doubt. Even if there were no respectful, seamless way to preserve those fragments, I miss them sorely, having grown accustomed to them during my many spins of the demo. It’s enough to make me do a “distracted boyfriend” glance at the fan edits and covers that keep the pre-choruses in.

    MAL is magic.

    Whatever one might think about the “Beatles” arrangement of “Now and Then,” the vocal revealed by Jackson’s proprietary software is a minor miracle. In contrast to the reedy original rendition, Lennon’s voice sounds strong and clear yet in essence the same, dispelling any misplaced panic conjured by mentions of “AI.” It isn’t studio caliber, but it’s close enough that “Now and Then” doesn’t suffer from the Anthology tracks’ somewhat distracting dissonance in vocal quality and unscrubbable snippets of piano. “There it was, John’s voice, crystal clear,” McCartney said of hearing the cleaned-up performance. “It’s quite emotional.” Starr agreed: “It was the closest we’ll ever come to having him back in the room, so it was very emotional for all of us. It was like John was there, you know. It’s far out.”

    It is far out! Even after the incredible demonstrations of this tech’s potential in Get Back, I’m as thrilled and delighted by each new implementation as a baby is by peekaboo. MAL is magical in an Arthur C. Clarke kind of way. I’d imagine that we’ll hear much more of its output in the coming years, with the Beatles and beyond; training this tool on more mono mixes and crackly recordings should give Apple Corps, Capitol, and Universal an excuse to sell us portions of the Beatles’ back catalog yet again. (Sign me up for MAL-aided remixes of “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love,” and perhaps a less screamy Live at the Hollywood Bowl.)

    Jackson hasn’t directed a narrative feature film since 2014’s The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, but since then he’s been bringing the past to vibrant life—both visually, via the colorized, retimed footage in World War I documentary They Shall Not Grow Old, and audibly, through the gifts he’s given fellow Beatles fans. His greatest triumphs as a filmmaker have come from using technology to render real and fictional characters and worlds in unprecedentedly lifelike ways, making them feel fresh, vital, and visceral. I’m not saying he shouldn’t make more movies about Tintin, but selfishly, I hope he keeps catering to my personal interests. Thanks for fixing Get Back and “Now and Then.” Now do Magical Mystery Tour.

    This is a better Beatles tribute than it is a song.

    Considering that “Now and Then” is an amalgamation of music made over four different decades with varying levels of fidelity, constrained by both the unreachability of John and George and the need not to tamper too much with their past contributions, it’s a wonder that it sounds as cohesive as it does. But the song’s greatest strength isn’t its sound—it’s the way its production echoes and amplifies the motif of the melding of past and present.

    The Anthology recordings are as old now as some of the Beatles’ songs were when the Threetles convened in the mid-’90s, and time has taken its toll on both the band’s roster and its surviving members’ skills. Paul’s voice is much diminished these days, but on “Now and Then,” that’s an asset: Like the footage old Paul plays of young John as they do live “duets” on “I’ve Got a Feeling” in concert, the blending of the 30-something Lennon and the 80-something McCartney on this track is a guaranteed tearjerker. The first words McCartney sings alongside Lennon are “love you,” and in the chorus’s confession and plea, “Now and then / I miss you,” the two seem to be talking to each other while we listen and gently weep. Jackson’s irreverent, touching, time-hopping music video doubles down on these themes.

    “Now and Then” is Lennon’s song, but this recording is unmistakably a Paul project. Of course, the Beatles were often a Paul project in their later years, and it wasn’t uncommon for the bandmates to write and record individually and then stitch their creations together. This isn’t the first Beatles song recorded without Lennon at the sessions, or the first on which McCartney subbed in for Harrison on the solo. McCartney may be “a bit overpowering at times,” as Harrison once said, but here he recedes into the swirl of sound enough for John to stay center stage.

    Between McCartney’s George-inspired (but not George-soundalike) slide solo and a piano that could’ve been ported from one of Paul’s 21st-century solo tracks—I hear shades of the Harrison-inspiredFriends to Go”—“Now and Then” slightly updates the band’s sound amid its many conscious invocations of the Beatles’ musical hallmarks. Then again, the Beatles’ sound was always evolving, and if they were all alive and aligned on a track today, they wouldn’t sound the same as they used to. “Now and Then” bears the sonic stamps of more recent efforts, just as “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love” reflected Harrison’s, McCartney’s, and Starr’s separate work with Lynne.

    “Now and Then” isn’t an authentic song by the Beatles in the same way that Hackney Diamonds is an authentic album by the Rolling Stones—the British Invasion is back!—but it’s a convincing spiritual successor. “It’s not some sort of cynical marketing exercise to try and push catalog sales,” Giles told Variety, adding, “I think [Paul] just misses John and he wants to work on a song with him. It’s just as simple as that.” If this song brings some creative closure to McCartney, a tireless and responsible steward of the band’s IP, I won’t begrudge him that. All in all, I’m moderately happy to have this recording, although musically, it’s my least favorite of the post-Lennon Beatles songs, and I doubt it will displace the demo in my affections. There was no way for “Now and Then” to live up to the hype of a new Beatles song or, for that matter, to match the standard set by the Beatles’ library, but it’s a sweet, nostalgic, and not excessively schmaltzy or self-referential postscript.

    The Beatles’ body of work didn’t need another coda, but this one works. “Good one,” Ringo mumbles at the end. Not great one, but we’ll take it.

    The Beatles always return to us.

    The long-awaited arrival of “Now and Then” is bittersweet because, barring a creative reversal or the discovery of a new stash of songs, it’s the end of the end, the last new track that will ever be released by the Beatles (air quotes or asterisk implied). But the band as a cultural touchstone and source of inspiration is almost immortal. The rereleases, documentaries, and books will keep coming, and so may periodic deliveries from the vault. (With “Now and Then” unveiled, Beatleologists will focus their willpower on unearthing McCartney’s “Carnival of Light.”)

    This may be the band’s final single, but in the end, the enjoyment we take is greater than the music they make. As Lennon—and only Lennon—sang in his “Grow Old With Me” demo: “World without end / World without end.”

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    Ben Lindbergh

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  • The Beatles release their last new song

    The Beatles release their last new song

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    The last “new” Beatles song, “Now and Then,” was released on Thursday, 60 years after the onset of Beatlemania

    The fresh release features the voices of all four original Beatles performers, with surviving members Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr essentially finishing what was initially an old demo recording by John Lennon. The track draws in many ways on group’s signature style and features emotional chorus where, together, McCartney and Lennon’s voices sing, “I miss you.”

    Listen: The Beatles – Now And Then (Official Audio)

    The original “Now and Then,” recorded by Lennon more than 40 years ago, came from the same group of demo recordings that his former bandmates used to create the songs “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love” in the mid-90s.

    Written by Lennon in 1978 and and completed by McCartney and Starr last year, “Now and Then” also features sounds by the band’s late guitarist George Harrison, using pieces of one of his studio recordings from 1995. McCartney also added a new string guitar part with help from Giles Martin, the son of the late Beatles producer George Martin, the Associated Press reported last month. 

    How did The Beatles make a new song?

    “Now and Then,” in part, used artificial intelligence to separate out Lennon’s original vocals before incorporating McCartney and Starr’s musical additions in the studio last year. A short documentary film chronicling the making of “Now and Then” was released Wednesday on The Beatles’ official YouTube channel, ahead of an upcoming music video which is expected to drop roughly 24 hours after the release of the song itself.

    “‘Now and Then’s eventful journey to fruition took place over five decades and is the product of conversations and collaborations between the four Beatles that go on to this day,” reads the short film’s YouTube description. “The long mythologised John Lennon demo was first worked on in February 1995 by Paul, George and Ringo as part of The Beatles Anthology project but it remained unfinished, partly because of the impossible technological challenges involved in working with the vocal John had recorded on tape in the 1970s.”

    “For years it looked like the song could never be completed,” it continues. “But in 2022 there was a stroke of serendipity.”

    In the documentary, both McCartney and Starr marveled at how clearly Lennon’s voice comes through in the newly-packaged version of “Now and Then.”

    “All those memories came flooding back,” said McCartney. “My God, how lucky was I to have those men in my life? To still be working on Beatles music in 2023? Wow.”

    Starr added, “It was the closest we’ll ever come to having him [Lennon] back in the room … Far out.”

    Which Beatles are still alive?

    Two of the four original members of The Beatles are still alive: McCartney, who played bass guitar for the group and shared both songwriting responsibilities and lead vocals with Lennon, and Starr, the band’s drummer. At 81 and 83 years old, respectively, McCartney and Starr have continued to make music as solo artists, and in collaborations with other performers, through the years. 

    Lennon, who served as the co-lead songwriter and vocalist, and rhythm guitarist, for The Beatles, died in 1980 at 40 years old. He was shot several times and fatally wounded by Mark David Chapman as he walked into his New York City apartment building on Dec. 8 of that year. Lennon’s death is remembered as one of the most infamous celebrity killings of all time.

    Harrison, The Beatles’ original lead guitarist, died on Nov. 29, 2001, after battling cancer. He was 58 years old. 


    Paul McCartney’s photos of The Beatles’ 1964 invasion

    07:38

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  • 3 lifelong Beatles fans seek to find missing Paul McCartney guitar and solve

    3 lifelong Beatles fans seek to find missing Paul McCartney guitar and solve

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    A guitar expert and two journalists have launched a global hunt for a missing bass guitar owned by Paul McCartney, bidding to solve what they brand “the greatest mystery in rock and roll.”

    The three lifelong Beatles fans are searching for McCartney’s original Höfner bass — last seen in London in 1969 — in order to reunite the instrument with the former Fab Four frontman.

    McCartney played the instrument throughout the 1960s, including at Hamburg, Germany’s Top Ten Club, at the Cavern Club in Liverpool, England and on early Beatles recordings at London’s Abbey Road studios.

    paul-mccartney-february-1964-first-beatles-us-tour.jpg
    Paul McCartney playing guitar in New York during the Beatles’ first U.S. tour in February 1964. 

    Daily Mirror / Mirrorpix via Getty Images


    “This is the search for the most important bass in history — Paul McCartney’s original Höfner,” the search party says on a website — thelostbass.com — newly-created for the endeavor.

    “This is the bass you hear on ‘Love Me Do,’ ‘She Loves You’ and ‘Twist and Shout.’ The bass that powered Beatlemania — and shaped the sound of the modern world.”

    How McCartney came to buy it

    McCartney bought the left-handed Höfner 500/1 Violin Bass for around 30 pounds ($38) ($585 in today’s money) in Hamburg in 1961, during The Beatles’ four-month residency at the Top Ten Club.

    The website quotes McCartney recalling in interviews that, “My dad had always hammered into us never to get into debt because we weren’t that rich. (Fellow Beatles) John (Lennon) and George (Harrison) went easily in debt and got beautiful guitars. … All I could really afford was about £30 (30 pounds). So for about £30, I found this Hofner violin bass. And to me, because I was left-handed, it looked less daft because it was symmetrical. I got into that. And once I bought it, I fell in love with it.”

    An enduring mystery begins

    It disappeared without a trace nearly eight years later, in January 1969, when the band was recording the “Get Back/Let It Be” sessions in central London.

    By then its appearance was unique — after being overhauled in 1964, including with a complete respray in a three-part dark sunburst polyurethane finish — and it had become McCartney’s back-up bass.

    The team now hunting for the guitar say it has not been seen since but that “numerous theories and false sightings have occurred over the years.”

    Appealing for fresh tips on its whereabouts, they insist their mission is “a search, not an investigation,” noting all information will be treated confidentially.

    “With a little help from our friends — from fans and musicians to collectors and music shops — we can get the bass back to where it once belonged,” the trio states on the website.

    “Paul McCartney has given us so much over the last 62 years. The Lost Bass project is our chance to give something back.”

    The team behind the search

    Nick Wass, a semi-retired former marketing manager and electric guitar developer for Höfner who co-wrote the definitive book on the Höfner 500/1 Violin Bass, is spearheading the search.

    He told CBS News partner network BBC News McCartney 
    asked him about the guitar recently — and the effort to find it began.

    “It was played in Hamburg, at The Cavern Club, at Abbey Road. Isn’t that enough alone to get this bass back?” he said. “I know, because I talked with him about it, that Paul would be so happy — thrilled — if this bass could get back to him.”

    Wass is joined by journalist husband and wife team Scott and Naomi Jones.

    The trio said other previously lost guitars have been found.

    John Lennon’s Gibson J-160E — which he used to write “I Want To Hold Your Hand” — disappeared during The Beatles’ Christmas Show in 1963.

    It resurfaced half a century later, then sold at auction for $2.4 million.

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  • Ringo Starr says The Beatles would ‘never’ fake John Lennon’s vocals with AI on new song | CNN

    Ringo Starr says The Beatles would ‘never’ fake John Lennon’s vocals with AI on new song | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Ringo Starr is doubling down about the authenticity of the vocals on the highly anticipated new Beatles song recently teased by former bandmate Paul McCartney.

    Starr spoke with Rolling Stone for an upcoming podcast, in which he ensured that they would “never” fake the late John Lennon’s vocals for the new track, which instead uses AI to clean up previously recorded snippets.

    The song will also feature the voice of the late George Harrison, Starr confirmed.

    Paul McCartney says a ‘final’ Beatles song is coming

    “This was beautiful,” he said, noting, “it’s the final track you’ll ever hear with the four lads. And that’s a fact.”

    McCartney attempted to clarify last month how artificial intelligence is being used on what he said will be the “final” Beatles song.

    “We’ve seen some confusion and speculation about it,” he wrote in a note posted on his verified Instagram story at the time. “Seems to be a lot of guess work out there.”

    “Can’t say too much at this stage but to be clear, nothing has been artificially or synthetically created. It’s all real and we all play on it,” he added. “We cleaned up some existing recordings – a process which has gone on for years.”

    In a June 13 interview with BBC Radio 4’s “Today” program, the legendary musician, 81, said that AI technology was being used to release a “new” track featuring all four Beatles, including fellow band members Lennon and Harrison, who died in 1980 and 2001, respectively.

    “When we came to make what will be the last Beatles record – it was a demo that John had that we worked on and we just finished it up, it will be released this year – and we were able to take John’s voice and get it pure through this AI,” McCartney said. “So then we were able to mix the record as you would normally do.”

    Starr, meanwhile, is about to celebrate his 83rd birthday on July 7.

    The music icon, who just finished a spring tour with his All-Starr Band, told Rolling Stone that he’s feeling great. “You never know when you’re gonna drop, that’s the thing,” he added. “And I’m not dropping yet.”

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  • Rediscovering Paul McCartney’s photos of The Beatles’ 1964 invasion

    Rediscovering Paul McCartney’s photos of The Beatles’ 1964 invasion

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    Paul McCartney used his Pentax camera the same way he used his guitar: with total freedom. And in early 1964, the 21-year-old took his new camera on perhaps the most momentous musical journey of the 20th century: The Beatles’ invasion of America.

    paul-mccartney-self-portrait-1280.jpg
    On The Beatles’ first visit to the United States, Paul McCartney brought his Pentax camera. The pictures he took, long though lost, were recently found, and are the basis of a new book and photo exhibition. 

    Paul McCartney


    Hundreds of photographs from that trip were recently rediscovered in McCartney’s archive: “It was really nice,” he said, “because I thought they were lost.”

    The images, collected in the new book, “1964: Eyes of the Storm,” will be on view later this month at the National Portrait Gallery in London. 

    He offered a tour of the exhibit to correspondent Anthony Mason.  

    McCartney explained his process: “Taking photographs, I’d be just looking for a shot. And so, I’d aim the camera and just sort of see where I liked it, you know, oh, that’s it.  And invariably, you pretty much take one picture.

    “We were moving fast. So, you just learned to take pictures quickly.”

    paul-mccartney-photo-exhibit.jpg
    Paul McCartney gives correspondent Anthony Mason a personal tour of an exhibition of the former Beatle’s photographs at the National Portrait Gallery in London.

    CBS News


    One picture was taken as the group arrived at the Deauville Hotel in Miami. Mason said, “I think your quote in the book was, ‘I can almost hear her scream.’”

    “Yeah, you can!” McCartney laughed. “The cop is going to restrain her, you know?”

    paul-mccartney-miami-fans.jpg
    Fans greet The Beatles in Miami in 1964.

    Paul McCartney


    “I also love the cop in the foreground who just sort of looks puzzled by everything,” said Mason.

    “I like the architecture of that hotel,” said McCartney. “But, you know, as we were saying before, that had to be taken really quickly, just to snap that.”

    “But, you have to have an eye to take that.”

    “It’s my left one!”

    The Beatles had started their trip in Paris. “And it was in Paris that we got the telegram, ‘Congratulations, boys, number one in the U.S. charts.’”

    “And you’d said you won’t go to America unless you have a number one?”

    “I know. And that was pretty spunky to kind of think that. But I’d seen quite a few of our major stars go to the States, and we’re going, ‘Wow, he’s going to leave us now. He’ll be made famous over there.’ But then they’d come back and they weren’t famous. So I said, ‘Well, if we go over there, you know, I really don’t want to come back with our tail between our legs.’”

    paul-mccartney-setting-up-for-ed-sullivan-show.jpg
    Setting up for their first appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show” in New York City. 

    Paul McCartney


    In America they played “The Ed Sullivan Show.” Seventy-three million people would tune in. It was, McCartney writes, “the moment all hell breaks loose.”

    Mason said, “To look at those pictures, it’s kind of you looking at the world, looking at you. You seemed very comfortable with it.”

    “Yeah. I mean, you know, you got to think about it: We’re kids from Liverpool. And we’re trying to get famous, and it’s not easy. And we were like stars in America, and people loved us. So, we loved it. And having that number one was really the secret – because, if the journalists, you know, New York journalists, ‘Hey, Beatle! Hey, Beatle! Why you are here?’ whatever. We say, ‘We’re number one in your country!’ Bingo!”

    paul-mccartney-new-york-fans.jpg
    Beatlemania in New York City.

    Paul McCartney


    McCartney captured the commotion on the streets around New York’s Plaza Hotel, and the crowd that chased them when they snuck out the side door.

    Mason said, “There was one reporter who said you were like prisoners with room service?”

    “Yeah,” McCartney laughed. “That was kind of true. But we liked room service. You know, we’d never had it before!”

    From New York, The Beatles travelled by train to Washington, D.C. McCartney’s camera took the ride, too.

    paul-mccartney-railroad-worker.jpg
    As they traveled South, Paul McCartney took this picture of a railroad worker: “I love this guy. He is like from where I’m from. He looked great. And he’s got his hand up, a little smile. It’s nice. It’s a great memory, you know?” 

    Paul McCartney


    So many of McCartney’s pictures were taken on the move, including shots from his car of a policeman in Miami who’d pulled up next to him: “And that was basically what I saw. And we’d never seen policemen with guns. We just didn’t have that in England.”

    Paul McCartney


    But in Miami, McCartney broke out the color film. “For us, it was like going on holiday,” he said.

    The Fab Four even had a few days off.

    Mason said, “There are some great shots of you with, like, it looked like terry-cloth jackets.”

    “Yeah, the hotel supplied them,” McCartney said. “You normally, like, get a robe, but this place, because it was Miami, had these little cool, little short things – and hats! We lived in them for days. Even Brian [Epstein], our manager. We thought they were really cool items of clothing.”

    paul-mccartney-miami-jackets.jpg
    John Lennon, Brian Epstein, George Harrison and Ringo Starr in Miami. 

    Paul McCartney


    He caught George relaxing with an anonymous admirer: “In that picture, yeah, I don’t think I was trying to protect her identity,” McCartney said. “I love her bathing costume. So great. And, you know, there is George, like I keep saying, living the life. He’s got a drink which is probably a scotch and Coke. He’s got a tan, the girl in the yellow bikini. For lads from Liverpool, that was exceptionally wonderful!”

    paul-mccartney-george-with-yellow-bikini-woman.jpg
    George Harrison with an admirer in Miami.

    Paul McCartney


    The band went back home to England in late February. By early April, The Beatles had the top five songs on the U.S. charts. McCartney writes, “We spent the months and years after holding on for dear life.”

    eyes-of-the-storm-ww-norton-cover.jpg

    Liveright


    Mason asked, “Did you remember all these when you saw them?”

    “Kind of,” McCartney replied. “It was a very memorable period, you know?”

    “But there was so much going on, I’m amazed you could process it and keep it all.”

    “Yeah, so am I!”

    McCartney’s not only looking back at photos of his past; he announced last week to the BBC that this fall he’ll be releasing what he says is “the last Beatles record” – a John Lennon demo tape that McCartney is re-mixing using the latest artificial intelligence technology. The music, like Paul McCartney’s pictures, all part of The Beatles’ enduring legacy.

    McCartney said, “For me, it is like a little slice of American history. And it’s my history, is that it’s Beatles history. So, it was great to rediscover these pictures.”

           
    For more info:

           
    Story produced by Ed Forgotson. Editor: Joseph Frandino. 

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  • Alan Cross says it’s time to bring back matinee concerts – National | Globalnews.ca

    Alan Cross says it’s time to bring back matinee concerts – National | Globalnews.ca

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    The Beatles played Toronto three times (1964, 1965, and 1966), all at Maple Leaf Gardens. Demand for tickets was huge and the band was on a tight touring schedule. They needed to get in and get out while performing for as many people as possible. Adding a second night wasn’t in the cards so the only thing they could do is play two shows on the same day: the usual evening gig preceded by a matinee performance. In between, they grabbed a bite to eat and held a press conference.

    Matinees (usually as part of a doubleheader) were common back then. All the early rock pioneers — Elvis, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, The Rolling Stones, The Who et al — did them. It was exhausting for the act but the effort made good business sense. Not only did the scheduling of a matinee double a fan’s chances of being able to see a show, but if you were too young to go out at night, there was a chance your parents would let you attend an afternoon show.

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    Read more:

    Alan Cross remembers when instrumentals still ruled the charts

    Matinee concerts continued for years. I recall in the 1990s when some bands insisted on playing an early all-ages show followed by a licensed event in the evening. Punk bands were especially good at serving their younger demo with early sets. It was a great way to satisfy both the adults (who could avail themselves of the bar) and the kids (and the venue didn’t have to worry about underage drinking because the bar was closed to alcohol sales).

    But as the rock business matured, afternoon performances slowly disappeared. Today, they’re all but gone. Unless you’re at a festival, it’s extremely rare to find an artist who’s willing to play an afternoon slot.

    This is unfortunate because these days, it’s not just underage kids who want shows at that time of the day but also a growing number of adults.

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    Look, just because you’re on the lee side of 30 doesn’t mean you’ve given up on the live music experience. You’d love to see more shows but life always seems to get in the way. There are the kids, getting up for work the next morning, and the enormous scheduling conflicts.

    And let’s be honest: After a certain age, you’re kinda tired of waiting until 10:30 pm on a Tuesday night for a band to hit the stage. Heck, I’m in bed most nights long before that.

    By not catering to the demo that doesn’t want/can’t afford to be out late, artists and promoters are leaving a lot of money on the table. And let’s not forget that the older demos are the ones with more money to spend at shows.

    Read more:

    In defence of Ticketmaster’s ‘dynamic pricing’ model for concert tickets

    There are two solutions. First, gigs could start earlier. Rather than heading home or killing time before a show, people could go straight from work. If the lights were to go down at, say, 7 pm, everything could be done by 9:30. Everyone who has to get up in the morning can get to bed at a reasonable hour while those who want to continue the night still have hours before them. I know I’d see a lot more club shows if they started and finished earlier.

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    The second solution is to re-introduce matinees. Obviously, this isn’t practical on weekdays, but what about weekends? Hey, theatre productions have offered matinee performances for decades. A big, big chunk of professional sports are held in the afternoon. Casinos offer matinee performances. So why not big-name concerts? I’d be more inclined to see acts like Bruce Springsteen. Does the Boss want to play a five-hour show? Fantastic! Just start at 3 p.m. so I can be home to wind down before bed.

    Jamie Lee Curtis recently ranted about the lack of matinees. Appearing on NBC’s Today show recently, she vented “Why are there no matinees? For instance, I love Coldplay. I would love to go see Coldplay. The problem is, I’m not going to go see Coldplay if they start their show at nine o’clock and there’s an opening act. I want to hear Coldplay at 1 p.m. I think if we filled a stadium with people who want to see a matinee of Coldplay, I think we would start a trend.”

    Love it. Instead of dinner and a show, it’s a show and dinner. Then it’s back home to dismiss the babysitter, play with the kids, deal with the dog, and get to bed at a reasonable hour. Not very rock’n’roll in a traditional sense, but I’m OK with that.

    Sure, load-in/load-out procedures and touring schedules would have to be adjusted, but that’s not an insurmountable barrier. Where there’s money, there’s a way. And I’m sure many heritage acts — and there’s a growing number of them — would like to wrap up their day earlier, too.

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    I repeat: This has nothing to do with being old, infirm, crotchety, and not loving live music. It has everything to do with being practical and inclusive. The population is aging and society needs to adjust.

    Who’s with me?

    Alan Cross is a broadcaster with Q107 and 102.1 the Edge and a commentator for Global News.

    Subscribe to Alan’s Ongoing History of New Music Podcast now on Apple Podcast or Google Play

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Alan Cross

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  • Model and photographer Pattie Boyd on new book and being a

    Model and photographer Pattie Boyd on new book and being a

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    Pattie Boyd has lived many lives — as a photographer, model and even a muse for some of the most famous rock songs in the world. Now, she’s adding author to her list of accolades with her new book, “My Life in Pictures.”

    Boyd became one of fashion’s first models to be recognized by name back in the 1960s.

    “I loved it because I was a different person each time there was a shoot,” Boyd said about her modeling career. “I love dressing up. It’s such a sort of girly thing to do.”

    Things changed in 1964 when she got a small acting role in the Beatles-led film “A Hard Day’s Night.” She said she panicked when her agent told her she got the part, but was reassured when all she had to say was one word: “Prisoners.”

    It would end up changing her life.

    “The end of filming, George [Harrison] asked me out and I said ‘no’ because I was seeing my boyfriend,” Boyd said. “That could’ve been it, but then, as luck would have it, or as fate would have it, a week later we were called to Twickenham Studios for one last shot with the Beatles. That’s when I dumped my boyfriend.”

    George Harrison And Pattie Boyd in 1966
    George Harrison of the Beatles pictured with Pattie Boyd in 1966.

    Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images


    The dumped boyfriend was photographer Eric Swayne. One of his portraits is on the cover of Boyd’s book.

    Boyd and Harrison would marry in January 1966. He wrote the song “Something” for her. Frank Sinatra called it the “greatest love song of the last 50 years.”

    In the 1970s, with Eric Clapton, who would become her second husband, she inspired two more memorable love songs, “Layla” and “Wonderful Tonight.”

    Asked which was her favorite song written about her, Boyd replied, “I don’t know.” But she added, “The one that I understand, because I was there during the process, was ‘Wonderful Tonight.’ Because Eric [Clapton] wrote that as I was getting ready, and then I came downstairs thinking he’s going to be so livid with me because I’ve taken so long.”

    'Tommy' Premiere
    Eric Clapton pictured with Pattie Boyd in 1975.

    Michael Putland/Getty Images


    Instead, Clapton asked her to listen to the song that he wrote.

    “Oh my God, I’m off the hook,” Boyd recalled thinking. “He’s written a song.”

    Clapton wrote “Layla” while Boyd was still married to Harrison. She explained the song is based on a book by a 17th-century Persian poet. 

    “It was obviously a beautiful, beautiful love story,” she said. “Eric just fell in love with it and was sort of in love with me, but it was slightly unrequited.”

    “My Life in Pictures,” though, isn’t just about her love life. She highlights her passion for photography and how she taught herself how to be behind a camera during a career spent in front of one.

    She said once she earned enough money from modeling, she purchased her first camera — a Pentax. Boyd would bring it to photography studios and ask for help and advice.

    Boyd first spoke with CBS News on CBS “Sunday Morning” when her personal memoir, “Wonderful Tonight,” was released in 2007. She showed off a selection of personal prints, many of which are included in her upcoming book.

    “My Life in Pictures” includes a photograph of Harrison taken after their split. It would be the last one she took of him.

    “But then he came to see me much later,” Boyd said. “Just before he died, six months or so before he died. As he drove off, I knew that would be the last time I’d see him.” Harrison died of cancer in 2001.

    Reflecting on her life and the years she shared with Harrison and Clapton, she said, “I feel that I had the most wonderful and fabulous experience being married to the two unreservedly talented geniuses, really.”

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  • Ringo Starr Has Covid-19 Rebound, Cancels 2022 Tour

    Ringo Starr Has Covid-19 Rebound, Cancels 2022 Tour

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    You know it don’t come easy. That’s what legendary singer, songwriter, and drummer Ringo Starr first sang in 1971. It’s also what can often be said about having Covid-19, especially when you suffer a Covid-19 rebound, something that Starr apparently now is experiencing. And this rebound has prompted Starr to cancel the rest of his 2022 North American tour. That’s essentially what the rock super-Starr tweeted on October 13:

    Starr’s recent battle with the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) began when he was diagnosed with Covid-19 sometime before an October 3 press release. That press release had indicated that Starr’s Covid-19 diagnosis would force him and his All Starr Band to cancel shows from October 2 through October 9. This included shows in the U.S. (Minnesota) and Canada (Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia.)

    Then seven days later, on October 10, Starr posted on Instagram that he’s “On the road again I will see you in Seattle on Tuesday the 11th Portland Wednesday I am negative peace and love everybody thanks for waiting Ringo [sic]” as you can see here:

    Presumably “negative peace” didn’t mean war but instead meant that he had tested negative for Covid-19 and would be having fans lend them his ears so that he could sing them a song in Seattle on October 11. But that resumption turned out to be short-lived as three days later instead of singing “Back Off Boogaloo,” the drumming Starr indicated on Twitter that he was back with Covid-19.

    The 82-year-old Starr, who first rose to prominence in the 1960’s as the drummer for a band that you may or may not have heard of called The Beatles, is at higher risk for more severe Covid-19 outcomes given his age. However, he has gotten at least the primary two-dose series of Covid-19 vaccines. That’s based on what he had told Patrick Ryan in a interview published in USA Today on March 17, 2021. Back then Starr had said, “I’ve got both jabs and I’m feeling groovy.” When Ryan had asked him about side effects from the vaccine, Starr had replied, “Bad arm for the first one. And then the second one, with the doctor telling you, “You may feel fluish.” Nothing! Nothing! I felt let down.” Star added the following as well: “It was difficult trying to sleep on that side, but by 5 o’clock (the next day), it had gone. So I got away lightly, thank you, Lord. I think that’s because of the broccoli.,” referring to his blueberries, broccoli, and other veggies and fruit diet. Yes, whenever anything good happens in life, it’s always because of the broccoli, right.

    That was before recommendations for Covid-19 boosters had emerged. Having gotten vaccinated should offer him at least some protection against more severe Covid-19. But the level of protection will depend on how long ago his last Covid-19 vaccine dose was, no matter how much broccoli you eat.

    Staying up to date on Covid-19 vaccinations is important because, guess what, the Covid-19 pandemic ain’t over. It’s still going on, no matter what some political leaders may try to drum into your heads. And the concern right now is that yet another Covid-19 surge may right around the corner.

    Remember, while vaccination can offer you protection against more severe Covid-19, it’s not like being in a Yellow Submarine with the virus being outside. Vaccination won’t offer you 100% protection. With upswings in Covid-19 already occurring in Europe, you’ll need a little help from you friends in the coming months. It will help to not only maintain Covid-19 precautions such as wearing a face mask while indoors, maintaining appropriate levels of social distancing, and staying up-to-date on vaccination but also have others around you to do such things too. Recall all that “we’re all in this together” talk back in 2020? Well, it hasn’t become “every person for himself or herself” or “bleep everyone else.”

    Starr’s Covid-19 rebound also is a reminder that a negative Covid-19 test may not mean that you are done with Covid-19 after being infected with the SARS-CoV-2. False negatives can occur. Plus, by now, you’ve probably heard of quite a few Covid-19 rebound cases where people first test positive then test negative only to test positive again later. So even though it may not come easy to keep yourself isolated for a little longer (at least ten days) than is being recommended by some and confirming that you indeed are staying Covid-19 negative, doing so can be make sure that you aren’t giving the SARS-CoV-2 a tour around other people.

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    Bruce Y. Lee, Senior Contributor

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