miércoles, 30 de octubre de 2019

Peter Asher Shares Beatles Memories, Excerpt From His Inventive Fab Four Book

























 Peter Asher with Paul McCartney in 1968
(www.brianepstein.com)




www.billboard.com
Peter Asher Shares Beatles Memories, Excerpt From His Inventive Fab Four Book
by Steve Marinucci
10/28/2019


Peter Asher
Jay Gilbert

Peter Asher, known as half of the singing duo of Peter & Gordon and also a Grammy Award-winning record producer for artists such as James Taylor and Linda Ronstadt, says he never intended to write his new book The Beatles From A to Zed: An Alphabetical Mystery Tour (out Oct. 29), but it was his weekly SiriusXM Beatles Channel radio show that inspired him.
"After I'd been doing the From Me To You [radio show] for a while, I had this idea of trying an alphabetical system, taking a leaf out of Sesame Street's book. And so I did it letter-by-letter. Not just song titles but people, instruments and all kinds of different stuff using a particular letter. I did 26 of those shows and it was at that point that I was approached by a publisher." He said he'd resisted calls for a Beatles-related autobiography ("it seems like everyone Beatles-related has written a book"), but he said here, "I was (talking) more about music and songs, along with some stories."
The book covers the group's career as well as their solo careers, but it's also, he says, "about what influenced them and what made the music so great." It also gets into some musical analysis because he said that's what fans wanted to discuss. "I would always worry that I was getting too kind of nerdily involved. It turned out that, though, that when I did an examination of all the different time signatures they used and how they'd use them under the letter 'T,' I got more emails from people saying they liked that more than almost anything."

Black and white photo of Peter Asher in the studio with members of The Beatles.
PHOTO: Peter Asher in the studio with The Beatles. (Supplied)
Also included are his personal anecdotes. One is that James Taylor's song "Something In The Way She Moves," from his self-titled debut album on the Beatles' Apple label that Asher produced, inspired George Harrison's "Something." "James had written that song and George used that same line of lyrics, which James said was a compliment," he said. Also, "James pointed out that in (his) song he used the lyrics I feel fine."
He talks about his own career with Peter & Gordon, which intertwined with the Beatles. EMI A&R man Norman Newell asked the duo if knew of any songs they could record for their first album. "He had picked out some songs from our live show that he wanted us to record. He was thinking that we probably would be a bit folky. I think (he thought) we were going to be Britain's answer to the Kingston Trio. The Kingston Duo as it were." In America, Peter & Gordon were signed to Capitol Records, also the label of The Beatles.
"(So) that's when I thought back to 'World Without Love,'" which Asher was aware of because McCartney was going with Peter's sister, Jane Asher, and was living in the Asher family home. "I went back to Paul the following evening at home and asked him if anything had happened to the song. Nothing had happened. So I asked Paul if Gordon and I could work up a version of it and he said yes." The song also has a link to James Bond. "The guitarist doing this sort of death camp noodly part around the melody, Vic Flick, (is) also the guy who played the dum-dum-dum-dum-dum-dum-dum lick on the Bond movie theme."


Another Beatles connection to Asher, which he calls one of the surprising stories in the book, is that his mother taught oboe to a young George Martin at the Guildhall School of Music. It was, he says, "long before any of this ever happened."
Asher's recent work includes his appearance in a documentary, Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice, which he raves about, saying it "will lead to a reassessment of Linda's genius" and working with film composer Hans Zimmer. He will be on tour with his A Musical Memoir of the '60s and Beyond solo performances including Dec. 15 at Bimbo's 365 in San Francisco.
Asked to describe the Beatles as he knew them, Asher says, "Paul was the charmer … and is an amazing musician. John could be argumentative and cantankerous. But he could also be spectacularly brilliant.
"George was the quiet one in a way but (that) didn't mean he had didn't have strong views because he did. And Ringo is one of the most straightforward, funny smart and entertaining people. I talk a lot in the book about how much I think Ringo changed the whole nature of drumming in popular music and why so many of his drum spots have deservedly become classic.
"You know, any one of them would have been a giant star on their own without a doubt. What's so amazing is that the four of them were a band. It is just one of those perfect storms of art that happened when all the right people all get together and create something that's more magical than anything that's been before or since."



Below, find an excerpt from the Q section of Asher's new book, where he talks about quartets, how they related to the Beatles and also gives a little lesson in music appreciation:
Now let's really explore the letter Q. It is the beginning letter of quite a large number of musical terms, the most important of which, for our purposes, is quartet. Now what that word probably brings to mind is the idea of a string quartet, and the Beatles did indeed love and use string quartets. One might well imagine, if one had to guess, that a string quartet would consist of a violin, viola, cello, and bass, just as a vocal quartet would consist of soprano, alto, tenor, and bass. But a string quartet does not work that way. A traditional string quartet is first violin, second violin (playing a part a little bit lower), viola, and cello. And that lineup, the traditional and perfect classical lineup, is what one hears when one listens to Vivaldi's The Four Seasons or any of the other great string quartets that have been written, some of my favourites being Bartók's, which are a bit less obviously melodic and more intense, even punkish in their attitude. But I digress.
The string quartet the Beatles used most famously appeared on the song "Yesterday." That has become the exemplar of how to marry a pop song and a string quartet. No one did it better before, and I do not think anyone has done it better since. It is a masterpiece of a record and a great string arrangement by George Martin, who was essentially following direction from Paul McCartney and then applying his own genius and skill for orchestration. Once Paul figured out what a string quartet could do, he was clear about which lines and melodies and countermelodies and chords he thought would work with his song, and he was right.
I am sure you all know the story of the song, but if not, it is well worth repeating. Paul woke up with the melody in his head fully formed but without any lyrics. First, he thought it must be something he was remembering and asked everybody what tune it was. And when I say everybody, I include my mother, who was one of the first people he saw that day since he was living in our house. I was not there, but my mother (a musician herself, of course) told Paul that she did not recognize the tune and had never heard it before. After many other people said the same thing, Paul finally realized that he had written it magically in his head. Initially, he titled it "Scrambled Eggs" because he just wanted a temporary phrase that would fit that da-da-da scansion scheme, and eventually he came up with the brilliant lyrics about yesterday.
A string quartet has a beautiful, subtle, and emotional sound. But for "Eleanor Rigby," also to be arranged by George Martin, Paul wanted a more intense sound. They accomplished this by close-miking a double string quartet.
This is why the song sounds a lot less smooth than "Yesterday" and more crunchy and in your face. A brilliant arrangement. "Eleanor Rigby" combines a touching story, a great vocal, and above all eight extraordinarily good string players playing so beautifully and attacking each quarter note—or each crotchet, as we used to call them back in England—with a brio and precision that gives the song such extraordinary presence.
Speaking of quartets, there is, of course, a quartet sitting right in front of us. As plain as the nose on our face, as it were, and that quartet is the Beatles themselves. Now, of course in the records they made, the Beatles frequently overdubbed instruments, doubled their vocals, and did extra work, which could be seen as taking them above and beyond the quartet concept. But the essence of a rock and roll band is often a quartet. And in this case, it is two guitars, bass, and drums and a couple of singers. So here, I thought I'd track down a great pure quartet version of a Beatles song, and I chose the BBC recording of "Ticket to Ride" because it is just the four of them playing the song once—no overdubs, no studio adjustments or tricks, nothing beyond the four instruments and the live vocals. It is the Beatles at their "quartet-est" for the letter Q.
As we can hear on "Ticket to Ride," the Beatles sang very strongly. I imagine that this was something they picked up in Hamburg, where the clubs were undoubtedly noisy every night, and sound systems were not very good. Hearing them live in a regular unamplified environment was certainly very impressive. I distinctly remember sitting with John and Paul when they were learning something on the guitar or at the piano in our house, and their vocals were spectacular. Not just loud but intense, heartfelt, and accurate.
Image result for paul mccartney with peter asher


viernes, 25 de octubre de 2019

Paul McCartney, 77, looks every inch the handsome silver fox


































Ringo and Paul during the recording of "What's My Name" album




www.dailymail.co.uk
Hey, dude! Paul McCartney, 77, looks every inch the handsome silver fox as he sports designer stubble and wears VERY trendy outfit
By REBECCA DAVISON
FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 23 October 2019

Sir Paul McCartney cut a very trendy figure when he was pictured in Central London on Tuesday. 
The 77-year-old Beatles icon headed to his chauffeur driven car and looked every inch the handsome silver fox as he pulled a series of animated expressions.
The usually clean-shaven rocker was sporting designer stubble and had let the natural colour of his hair grow through.  
Hey, dude! Paul McCartney, 77, looked every inch the handsome silver fox as he sported designer stubble and wore a VERY trendy outfit in London on Tuesday
Hey, dude! Paul McCartney, 77, looked every inch the handsome silver fox as he sported designer stubble and wore a VERY trendy outfit in London on Tuesday

As he was: In 2016, Paul was clean-shaven and sporting redder hair
As he was: In 2016, Paul was clean-shaven and sporting redder hair

And it looks like his fashion designer daughter Stella may have helped him pick out his ensemble as he looked very cool in his outfit. 


He teamed a patterned bold blue top with a matching blazer and wore black trousers and blue shoes.
He draped a winter's coat over his arm and carried his belongings in a black overnight bag. 
Looking good: He teamed a patterned bold blue top with a matching blazer and wore black trousers and blue shoes
Looking good: He teamed a patterned bold blue top with a matching blazer and wore black trousers and blue shoes

Paul has a net worth of almost a billion pounds and so it comes as no surprise that he was dressed in such a stylish fashion. 
Meanwhile, earlier this month, it was reported that Sir Paul has donated a set of limited edition photographs by his late wife Linda to Glasgow Museums.
The set of 14 photographs includes images of Sir Mick Jagger and Brian Jones from her first professional photoshoot, as well as family portraits.
The Linda McCartney Retrospective – curated by Sir Paul with daughters Mary and Stella – is currently on show for the first time in the UK at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum.
In the genes: It looks like his fashion designer daughter Stella may have helped him pick out his ensemble as he looked very cool in his outfit (pictured on September 30)
In the genes: It looks like his fashion designer daughter Stella may have helped him pick out his ensemble as he looked very cool in his outfit (pictured on September 30)

Deputy leader of Glasgow City Council and chair of Glasgow Life David McDonald said: “The Linda McCartney Retrospective at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum has been very warmly received.
'We were delighted to be the first venue in the UK to show this exhibition and our greatest thanks go to Sir Paul McCartney for his incredibly generous gift.
'This wonderful addition to our collection ensures visitors to Glasgow Museums can continue to engage with and enjoy Linda McCartney’s stunning work for generations to come.'
Tribute: Meanwhile, earlier this month, it was reported that Sir Paul has donated a set of limited edition photographs by his late wife Linda to Glasgow Museums (pictured in 1978)
Tribute: Meanwhile, earlier this month, it was reported that Sir Paul has donated a set of limited edition photographs by his late wife Linda to Glasgow Museums (pictured in 1978)


jueves, 24 de octubre de 2019

35 Years Ago: Paul McCartney Stumbles With ‘Give My Regards’ Film

















ultimateclassicrock.com
35 Years Ago: Paul McCartney Stumbles With ‘Give My Regards’ Film
NICK DERISO
October 23, 2019




Paul McCartney's first solo movie project became his last, after Give My Regards to Broad Street became a critical and box-office disaster.
Released on Oct. 23, 1984, the film reunited McCartney with Beatles-era collaborators Ringo Starr and George Martin, but couldn't approximate the fizzy excitement of A Hard Day's Night – or even the shambolic but occasionally charming Magical Mystery Tour.
Roger Ebert, the esteemed movie critic, praised the soundtrack but admitted he couldn't make sense of the McCartney-written script – adding that it was "to put it charitably, idiotic." Even the Beatles Bible, typically a safe space, describes Give My Regards to Broad Street as "ill-conceived."    
McCartney starred as himself in a plot that recounts the search to find missing session tapes for a new album as a label-imposed deadline looms. It's loosely based on an actual incident when Sex Pistols lost the master for Never Mind the Bollocks back in the '70s, except with none of that group's chaotic originality.
Instead, McCartney muddles through a rock star's everyday life, interspersing it all with disjointed dream sequences that serve as platforms for the music. Even Starr's patented drollness couldn't save this one. "For some reason, he got the idea it was like a Beatles film," McCartney said in Ringo: With a Little Help. "Well, we'd had a few drinks."
The entire thing plays like that, actually – as if McCartney cooked this up on a cocktail napkin. And he kinda did.

Related image

"I didn't know anything about writing a screenplay, of course, but I just thought I'd try, and I got my pads and pencils and worked on it at odd moments over a year's time," McCartney told Ebert in 1984. That included one day when he was stuck in a traffic jam.
"I started scribbling and filled up something like 25 sheets of paper with ideas for a screenplay," McCartney told The New York Times in 1984. "At the time, I was commuting from the country into London to record, two hours each way, and I used those four hours a day to work on what eventually became Give My Regards to Broad Street."
Starr wasn't the only cast member whose obvious talents were wasted. British theater legend Ralph Richardson, in one of his last roles, steals every scene as a father-figure pub owner. "He is the only one who comes close to portraying a character in the normal sense of the word," the Associated Press sniffed in 1984.

Related image

Bryan Brown (Cocktail, Gorillas in the Mist, Along Came Polly), Jeremy Child (A Fish Called Wanda, The Madness of King George, Darkest Hour) and Starr's wife Barbara Bach (The Spy Who Loved Me, Force 10 From Navarone) rounded out the cast. But McCartney, despite his obvious love of the film-making process, hadn't provided them with nearly enough to work with.
"I've been trying to make a movie for a while," McCartney told the Oklahoman in 1984. "Just 'cause I like the sort of ambiance of movies, the idea of being in them. A lot of people wanna be in movies, you know, and I'm no different."

Listen to Paul McCartney's 'No More Lonely Nights'






Maybe that was the problem: McCartney's hardwired romanticism about the life of an actor created a blind spot. This tendency actually went back to the mop-top days.
"He loved the theater. He loved show business, as it were, in a way that the other three really didn't care," director Richard Lester, who was behind the cameras for two Beatles movies, said in a DVD extra for A Hard Day's Night. "I think this was a disadvantage to him. ... I think if he had been less enamored with the trappings of cinema and the theater, he might have been a bit more relaxed."
Constructed in fits and starts over 28 nonconsecutive weeks between November 1982 and June 1984, Give My Regards to Broad Street was initially conceived as a made-for-TV project – much like the Beatles' Let It Be, which at this point was McCartney's most recent film. Willy Russell and then Tom Stoppard initially worked on the script before McCartney decided to take over.

Image result for paul mccartney silly love songs give my regards

Somewhere along the way, he also elected to combine a few new songs – including the Top 10 ballad "No More Lonely Nights" – with a soundtrack dominated by senseless remakes of Beatles and solo tunes. "I know some fans will dislike the idea," McCartney admitted in a 1984 talk with Jam Magazine, "but they are great songs. Does that mean I can't ever sing them again?"
At one point, he's joined by members of Toto in a deeply weird scene where everyone appears as some sort of alien feline creatures while performing a redo of "Silly Love Songs." "We didn't know we were going to wear all of that makeup and shit, which was pretty funny," Toto's Steve Lukather said in 2014. "Then we realized he was doing it too. So, if it was good enough for Paul McCartney, it was good enough for us. We kept telling everybody, 'Hey, we're in the new McCartney movie.' And it comes out and we're unrecognizable!"

Image result for paul mccartney silly love songs give my regards
Jeff Pocaro with Paul & Linda McCartney & Steve Lukather

Director Peter Webb also wanted to include a new take on "Hey Jude," McCartney told the Times, but those plans were ultimately scrapped. "I was quite up for it," McCartney added, "but Ringo said, 'No, I've already done that one.'"
A few scenes stand out: McCartney is seen in a futuristic custom-designed car that's equipped – imagine this! – with a computer that reminds him of daily calendar items. The Victorian fantasy sequence he constructed around "Eleanor Rigby" is note-perfect. But the rest just collapses in a heap of episodic confusion.
As the scope of this debacle became clear, McCartney began to backpedal. "I don't make any sort of great claims of Broad Street as a great Shakespearean effort," he told Jam Magazine. But the damage was done – both at the box office and to McCartney's dream of movie stardom.
Other than a memorable cameo in 2017's Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, McCartney has never made another movie.



lunes, 21 de octubre de 2019

The Message The Beatles Were Sending on the 'Abbey Road' Album Cover


















www.cheatsheet.com
The Message The Beatles Were Sending on the 'Abbey Road' Album Cover
Eric Schaal
October 21, 2019

If you listen to a certain corner of the internet (it began offline long ago, actually), you’ll hear some interesting theories about The Beatles. We present a taste of those in the italics below.
There’s only one thing you need to know about Paul McCartney: He’s dead. In November 1966, he blew his mind out in a car. The following year, his replacement, named William, took over on Sgt. Pepper’s. (Billy Shears is just another way of saying, “Billy’s here.”)
It’s obvious. Otherwise, why would Paul wear a black carnation in Magical Mystery Tour while his bandmates wore red ones? And why would he be barefoot on the cover of Abbey Road? That’s a clear sign he’s dead. (George Harrison is obviously the gravedigger; Ringo is the undertaker.)
We won’t even touch the part of Paul holding a cigarette in his right hand on the album cover. Everyone knows he was left-handed, and thus would only hold cigarettes in his left hand.
But in all seriousness, the “Paul is dead” conspiracy theory somehow continues on 50 years later, and the cover of Abbey Road fanned its flames. The Beatles, on the other hand, didn’t plan to send any message at all with the cover.

Paul said he went barefoot because he ‘didn’t feel like wearing shoes’


Paul McCartney poses holding a cigarette (in his right hand) during a 1966 interview. | Fiona Adams/Redferns

Though caught off-guard at first, Paul was having fun with the conspiracy in a 1974 Rolling Stone interview. “Someone from the office rang me up and said, ‘Look, Paul, you’re dead. And I said, ‘Oh, I don’t agree with that.’ And they said, ‘Look, it’s a big thing breaking in America. You’re dead.'”
Paul also addressed the theory that his bare feet were a sign. “You know, so what? Barefoot, nice warm day, I didn’t feel like wearing shoes. So I went around to the photo session and showed me bare feet.” (Photos of Paul in sandals also exist from that same shoot.)
As for the right-hand cigarette hold, you can see from the photo above — taken June 1, 1966 — that Paul held cigarettes in that hand even before the date of his supposed death. Indeed, it’s normal for smokers to use a different hand.
To get to the root of these various theories, you have to go to a Detroit WKNR radio station, where a caller turned DJ Russ Gibb onto the conspiracy in October ’69. When John Lennon wanted to respond a few weeks later, he called the same station.


John scoffed at the idea his suit was ‘religious’


Beatles Abbey Road Billborad on Sunset Strip | Robert Landau/Corbis via Getty Images

No one could get exasperated quite like John Lennon, and he definitely didn’t disappoint on the subject of the Abbey Road cover and Paul’s “death.” John went straight to the source, calling the Detroit station from whence the theories had come.
“It’s the most stupid rumor I’ve ever heard,” John said. In fact, it was so idiotic he thought the folks behind his “bigger than Jesus” controversy were at it again. As for his white “preacher’s” suit, John seemed insulted (mostly from a fashion standpoint).
“They said I was wearing a white religious suit. I mean, did Humphrey Bogart wear a white religious suit?” he asked. “All I’ve got is a nice Humphrey Bogart suit.”
But maybe the best theory revolved around the license plate of the Volkswagen Beetle in the background (LMW 28IF). The “28IF” was supposed to represent Paul’s age had he lived. There was just one catch: Paul’s birthday was in June ’42. He wouldn’t be 28 until the summer of 1970 — some nine months after the release of Abbey Road.
Image result for beatles with abbey road record


jueves, 17 de octubre de 2019

THE BEATLES’ PAUL McCARTNEY REVEALS AN EXCLUSIVE SNEAK-PEEK ABOUT A SECRET PROJECT







































metalheadzone.com
THE BEATLES’ PAUL McCARTNEY REVEALS AN EXCLUSIVE SNEAK-PEEK ABOUT A SECRET PROJECT
By Enes K.
October 16, 2019



One of the most legendary stars of all time, Paul McCartney of The Beatles shared a new video on his official Instagram page today.
As you will watch the video below, Paul McCartney revealed a little known project about his late wife, Linda McCartney.
Here is what’s written on the video:
“Sneak peek of ‘Linda McCartney: The Polaroid Diaries’ in Osaka, Japan…”
You can watch Paul’s Instagram story video below.




Last week, Paul McCartney shared yet another photo on his verified Instagram page and announced encouraging news about himself.
As you will read the statement below, Paul said that he donated a set of limited edition Linda McCartney photographs.
Here is the caption:
“Paul donates set of limited edition @lindamccartney photographs to Glasgow Museum.”
You can click here to read the article.









www.instagram.com/yu_lucky

ポールの妻、リンダさんは有名な写真家&wingsの一員。もう亡くなって21年にもなるんですね…今回は、主にポラロイドカメラで撮った写真がたくさん展示されてた。

私は、ポールはビートルズ時代から大好きで、ポールのコンサートも3回行ってる。自分も昔に戻って懐かしい気持ちになった。

wingsも大好き。band on the runやあの子にお節介、Let Me Roll It、Silly Love Songsなどの曲も大好き。

ポール、リンダ、娘、息子などの楽しい家族時代の写真もいっぱいで素敵。

ポラロイド写真は小さいし、インパクトに欠けるかもしれないけど、ノスタルジーを感じるし、温かいし、あの時の大きな一時代を感じる世界だった。

そして、嬉しいお土産が!

リンダが撮った風景か、リンダのモットーとする言葉のどちらかを選んで、一緒にポラロイドを撮ってもらえるんです。
ちょっとわかりにくいけど、私は、言葉の方で撮ってもらいました。

大阪梅田阪急でやってます。
ショーウインドーはステラマッカートニーの洋服やグッズがお洒落〜‼️ #ビ


Paul's wife, Linda, is a  photographer & member of the famous Wings. It's been 21 years since she died ... This time there were a lot of pictures taken mainly with Polaroid cameras.

I've loved Paul since the Beatles era and have done Paul concerts three times. I felt nostalgic when I returned to the old days.

I also love Wings. I also love songs such as Band On The Run , Let Me Roll It, and Silly Love Songs.

There are lots of fun family photos of Paul, Linda, daughter, son and so on.

Polaroid photos are small and may not have an impact, but they were nostalgic, warm, and a world that felt a big era at that time.

And a nice souvenir!

You can choose either the scenery taken by Linda or the words that Linda's motto is, and you can take Polaroid together.
It was a little confusing, but I took it with the words.

I'm in Osaka Umeda Hankyu.
In the show window, Stella McCartney's clothes and goods are stylish ️ #Bi
























www.instagram.com/k.tt.k

素敵な家族。ポートレートのかけら。


Nice family. Portrait fragment.






















domingo, 13 de octubre de 2019

HEAR : Ringo Starr Covers John Lennon, With The Help Of Paul McCartney


























www.udiscovermusic.com
Ringo Starr Covers John Lennon, With The Help Of Paul McCartney
The flavour of a Beatles reunion on ‘Grow Old With Me’ is heightened by the presence, on bass guitar and backing vocals, of Paul McCartney.
By Paul Sexton
Published on October 12, 2019

Ringo Starr What's My Name packshot

Ringo Starr has released his highly poignant version of the John Lennon song ‘Grow Old With Me’ as another taster for his 20th studio album What’s My Name, which is out on 25 October. Its flavour of a Beatles reunion is heightened by the presence, on bass guitar and backing vocals, of Paul McCartney, and by another ingredient that Ringo explained recently.




The recording was part of a collection of Lennon demos, of which Starr only became aware recently. He explained that it had John saying “This will be great for you, Ringo” at the beginning. “The idea that John was talking about me in that time before he died, well, I’m an emotional person,” he said. “And I just loved this song. I sang it the best that I could. I do well up when I think of John this deeply. And I’ve done my best. We’ve done our best.
“The other good thing is that I really wanted Paul to play on it, and he said yes. Paul came over and he played bass and sings a little bit on this with me. So John’s on it in a way. I’m on it and Paul’s on it. It’s not a publicity stunt. This is just what I wanted. And the strings that Jack [Douglas] arranged for this track, if you really listen, they do one line from [George Harrison’s] ‘Here Comes The Sun.’ So in a way, it’s the four of us.”
‘Grow Old With Me’ was one of Lennon’s last compositions, written in Bermuda in 1980, a few months before his murder. He recorded it there as a demo but was unable to complete it in time for inclusion on the Double Fantasy album. The demo was included on the posthumous 1984 compilation Milk and Honey, which was produced by Jack Douglas.
The song has prompted several covers over the years, including one by Mary Chapin Carpenter that was part of the 1995 album Working Class Hero — A Tribute to John Lennon. Equally stirring was Glen Campbell’s version, which was on his Meet Glen Campbell set of 2008.




Ringo Starr’s What’s My Name is released on 25 October. Pre-order it here.