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According to writer Ian MacDonald, the joint credit was also John's way of thanking Paul for working with him on 'The Ballad ...
John Lennon and Paul McCartney notoriously had varying musical opinions; however, they both agreed that these singers were ...
After The Beatles disbanded in 1970, Paul McCartney and John Lennon pursued separate solo careers — a situation that stirred ...
The Beatles were a united front throughout the 1960s, but things took a sour turn in the final years of the decade and in the ...
Paul and John, who were The Beatles' primary songwriters and often wrote in tandem in the early years of the 1960s, had their ...
John Lennon issued that insult to many Paul McCartney songs, but there is one hit in particular that Lennon once called "meaningless." ...
John Lennon and Paul McCartney may have been musically conjoined in The Beatles, but was 'The Intellectual Beatle' jealous of ...
Paul McCartney on loving John Lennon, the Beatles break-up and his Irish family It’s a big misconception ‘that I broke The Beatles up … Once a headline is out it sticks’ Expand ...
Sir Paul McCartney has said he “never got round” to telling John Lennon he loved him, but it feels “great” to realise he does now. The Beatles star said he and Lennon “grew up together ...
Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr reflected on their unique friendship in a new interview. The last surviving members of The ...
Lennon's comment seemed to be a sneer at Let It Be's whiff of sanctity. In any case, Let It Be made the number one position on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on April 11, 1970, 50 years ago.
Born in Liverpool in 1942, James Paul McCartney lost his mother, Mary, when he was 14 — an experience that strengthened his bond with the similarly bereaved John Lennon.