OH JOHNNYYY š„°š„°
Jimi Hendrix in Ringo Starrs apartment in 1968
him sleeping with that crochet stuffed animal is one of my favorite photos of him, and that velvet blue suit looks so pretty
This is one of my favourite John & Paul moments ever, because John was shitting himself going on that tour, I mean he had that breakdown in front of Brian and Tony where cried and begged them, āWhatever you want me to say Iāll say itā - and hereās Paul, taking no prisoners, and just smugly declaringĀ āoh no, no itāll be absolutely fine, just you fucking watch you sensationalising bastards.ā
Paul, 1966 Revolver SessionsĀ
Is it normal to feel lesbian attraction towards john lennon and paul mccartney
"Well, believe it or don't, I don't really care what you believe. What I do care about is that the one outlet that I had has been taken from me, and that is no fun. I'm not really mad at her [Yoko], you know. I want to yell at her because I'm still popular, and I can't do anything about it. Sound funny? Look!" He held up an envelope. "This is from Francis Coppola. He wants me to do a score for a film he's working on. He says, 'I'm living in a volcano and it's wonderful. Wish you were here. Want to work on a movie?' Here's another one. Frank Perry wants a little Lennon touch on his Time and Time Again. It's a time-travel movie. Just my thing, right? But I don't have any music in me. Here's a guy who wants an interview, but I don't have anything to say. I got three offers here to perform, one to produce, and a million letters that just want to know how I'm doin'. That's popularity. And I don't have anything to give them, so I have to write back nice polite letters saying āThanks but no thanks' because on the off chance I ever do get out of this slump or block or whatever it is, if I ever do get the muse back, then I'm gonna need all these people. "So, you know what I say? I tell them that bit you and Yoko thought up for the Immigration press last year. I tell them that I'm fully employed minding the baby and playing househusband. Now that lie is getting a little stale. People have to wonder, don't they? I'm a bit surprised no one has caught on yet. 'He's got a maid, and a nanny, and a cook, and gofers, I wonder what it is that keeps him so busy?' But the public will believe what the public wants to believe. So I'm a househusband. And it galls the hell out of me to turn down offers that I'm dying to accept and am incapable of fulfilling."
John Lennon talking about losing his muse, as told by John Green in Dakota Days (1983)
JOHN: [Paul] even recorded that all by himself in the other room, thatās how it was getting in those days. We came in and heād ā heād made the whole record. Him drumming, him playing the piano, him singing. Just because ā it was getting to be where he wanted to do it like that, but he couldnāt ā couldnāt ā maybe he couldnāt make the break from The Beatles, I donāt know what it wasā¦. But weāre all, Iām sure ā I canāt speak for George, but I was always hurt when heād knock something off without⦠involving us, you know? But thatās just the way it was then.
(August, 1980: interview for Playboy with David Sheff)
āMore than anything,ā he says, āI would love the Beatles to be on top of their form and for them to be as productive as they were. But things have changed. ⦠I would have liked to have sung harmony with John, and I think he would have liked me to. But I was too embarrassed to ask him. And I donāt work to the best of my abilities in that situation.ā
(Paul McCartney, interview, Evening Standard, April 21-22, 1970)
PAUL: On 'Hey Jude', when we first sat down and I sang 'Hey Judeā¦', George went 'nanu nanu' on his guitar. I continued, 'Don't make it badā¦' and he replied 'nanu nanu'. He was answering every line - and I said, 'Whoa! Wait a minute now. I don't think we want that. Maybe you'd come in with answering lines later. For now I think I should start it simply first.' He was going, 'Oh yeah, OK, fine, fine.' But it was getting a bit like that. He wasn't into what I was saying. In a group it's democratic and he didn't have to listen to me, so I think he got pissed off with me coming on with ideas all the time. I think to his mind it was probably me trying to dominate. It wasn't what I was trying to do - but that was how it seemed. This, for me, was eventually what was going to break The Beatles up. I started to feel it wasn't a good idea to have ideas, whereas in the past I'd always done that in total innocence, even though I was maybe riding roughshod.
I did want to insist that there shouldn't be an answering guitar phrase in 'Hey Jude' - and that was important to me - but of course if you tell a guitarist that, and he's not as keen on the idea as you are, it looks as if you're knocking him out of the picture. I think George felt that: it was like, 'Since when are you going to tell me what to play? I' in The Beatles too.' So I can see his point of view. But it burned me, and I then couldn't come up with ideas freely, so I started to have to think twice about anything I'd say - 'Wait a minute, is this going to be seen to be pushy?' - whereas in the past it had just been a case of, 'Well, the hell, this would be a good idea. Let's do this song called "Yesterday". It'll be all right.'
( The Beatles Anthology, 2000)
āThereās no one whoās to blame. We were fools to get ourselves into this situation in the first place. But itās not a comfortable situation for me to work in as an artist.ā
(Paul McCartney, interview, Evening Standard, April 21-22, 1970)
āIt simply became very difficult for me to write with Yoko sitting there. If I had to think of a line I started getting very nervous. I might want to say something like āI love you, girlā, but with Yoko watching I always felt that I had to come out with something clever and avant-garde. She would probably have loved the simple stuff, but I was scared.ā āIām not blaming her, Iām blaming me. You canāt blame John for falling in love with Yoko any more than you can blame me for falling in love with Linda. We tried writing together a few more times, but I think we both decided it would be easier to work separately.ā
(Paul McCartney, interview, Evening Standard, April 21-22, 1970)
JOHN: "I was always waiting for a reason to get out of the Beatles from the day I filmed 'How I Won The War' (in 1966). I just didn't have the guts to do it. The seed was planted when the Beatles stopped touring and I couldn't deal with not being onstage. But I was too frightened to step out of the palace."
(John Lennon, Newsweek, September 29, 1980)
PAUL: As far as I was concerned, yeah, I would have liked the Beatles never to have broken up. I wanted to get us back on the road doing small places, then move up to our previous form and then go and play. Just make music, and whatever else there was would be secondary. But it was John who didnāt want to. He had told Allen Klein the new manager he and Yoko had picked late one night that he didnāt want to continue.
(Paul and Linda McCartney, interview for Playboy, December 1984)
PAUL: I must admit we'd known it was coming at some point because of his intense involvement with Yoko. John needed to give space to his and Yoke's thing. Someone like John would want to end The Beatles period and start the Yoko period; and he wouldn't like either to interfere with the other.
(The Beatles Anthology, 2000)
PAUL: I think, largely looking back on it, I think it was mainly John [who] needed a new direction ā that he then went into, headlong, helter skelter, you know, he went right in there, doing all sorts of stuff heād never done before, with Yoko. And you canāt blame him. Because he was that kind of guy, [the kind who] really wanted to live life and do stuff, you know. There was just no holding back with John. And it was what weād all admired him for. So you couldnāt really say, āOh, we donāt want you to do that, John. You should just stay with us.ā We felt so wimpy, you know. So it had to happen like that.
(Paul McCartney, November, 1983, interview with DJ Roger Scott)
The Beatles split up? It just depends how much we all want to record together. I donāt know if I want to record together again. I go off and on it. I really do. The problem is that in the old days, when we needed an album, Paul and I got together and produced enough songs for it. Nowadays thereās three if us writing prolifically and trying to fit it all onto one album. Or we have to think of a double album every time, which takes six months. Thatās the hang-up we have⦠I donāt want to spend six months making an album I have two tracks on. And neither do Paul or George probably. Thatās the problem. If we can overcome that, maybe itāll sort itself out. None of us want to be background musicians most of the time. Itās a waste. We didnāt spend ten years āmaking itā to have the freedom in the recording studios, to be able to have two tracks on an album. This is why Iāve started with the Plastic Ono and working with Yoko⦠to have more outlet. There isnāt enough outlet for me in the Beatles. The Ono Band is my escape valve. And how important that gets, as compared to the Beatles for me, Iāll have to wait and see.
(John Lennon, New Musical Express December 13, 1969)
PLAYBOY: In most of his interviews, John said he never missed the Beatles. Did you believe him? PAUL: I donāt know. My theory is that he didnāt. Someone like John would want to end the Beatle period and start the Yoko period. And he wouldnāt like either to interfere with the other. As he was with Yoko, anything about the Beatles tended inevitably to be an intrusion. So I think he was interested enough in his new life to genuinely not miss us.
(Paul and Linda McCartney, interview for Playboy, December 1984)
Yoko: Paul began complaining that I was sitting too close to them when they were recording, and that I should be in the background. John: Paul was always gently coming up to Yoko and saying: "Why don't you keep in the background a bit more?" I didn't know what was going on. It was going on behind my back. Yoko: And I wasn't uttering a word. It wasn't a matter of my being aggressive. It was just the fact that I was sitting near to John. And we stood up to it. We just said, "No. It's simply that we just have to come together." They were trying to discourage me from attending meetings, et cetera. And I was always there. And Linda actually said that she admired that we were doing that. John: Paul even said that to me.
(John Lennon interviewed by Peter McCabe and Robert Schonfeld at the St. Regis Hotel, September 5, 1971)
Paul: Theyāre onto that thing. They just want to be near to each other. So I just think itās just silly of me, or of anyone, to try and say to him, āNo, you canāt,ā you know. Itās like, ācause ā okay, theyāre ā theyāre going overboard about it, but John always does! And Yoko probably always does. So thatās their scene. You canāt go saying ā you know, āDonāt go overboard about this thing. Be sensible about it. Donāt bring it to meetings.ā Itās his decision, that. Itās ā itās none of our business, to start interfering in that. Even when it comes into our business, you still canāt really say much, unless ā except, āLook, I donāt like it, John.ā And then he can say, well, āScrew you,ā or, āI like it,ā or, āWell, I wonāt do it so much,ā or blablabla. Like, thatās the only way, you know. To tell John about that. Michael Lindsay-Hogg: Have you done that already? Paul: Well, I told him I didnāt like writing songs⦠with him and Yoko. Michael Lindsay-Hogg: Were you writing much more before she came aroundā? Paul: Oh yeah, sure. Michael Lindsay-Hogg: Or had you ā cooled it a bit, then? Before her. Ringo: Before Yoko got there. Paul: Yeah, cooled it, cooled it. Sure. Weād cooled it because⦠not playing together. Ever since we didnāt play together⦠Michael Lindsay-Hogg: Onstage, you mean? Paul: Yes. With the band. Because we lived together, and we played together. We were in the same hotel, up at the same time every morning, doing this all day. And this ā I mean, this, you know, it doesnāt matter what you do, [but] just as long as youāre this close all day, something grows, you know. In some ways. And when youāre not this close, only, just physically⦠something goes. Michael Lindsay-Hogg: Right. Paul: So then you can come together to record, and stuff, but you still sort of lose the⦠Actually, musically, you know, we really ā we can play better than weāve ever been able to play, you know. Like, I really think that. I think, like ā weāre ā weāre alright on that. Itās just that ā being together thing, you know.
(Paul McCartney, Get Back sessions, 13 January, 1969)
What actually happened was, the group was getting very tense, it was looking like we were breaking up. One day, I came in and we had a meeting, and it was all Apple and business and Allen Klein, and it was getting very hairy, and no one was realy enjoying themselves. It was ā weād forgotten the music bit. It was just business. I came in one day and I said, āI think we should get back on the road, a bit like what you and I were talking about before, small band, go and do the clubs, sod it. Letās get back to square one, letās remember what weāre all about. Letās get back.ā And Johnās actual words were, āI think youāre daft. And I wasnāt gonna tell you, but ā weāre breaking the group up. Iām breaking the group up. It feels good. It feels like a divorce.ā And he just sort of sat there, and all our jaws dropped.
(Paul McCartney, November, 1983, interview with DJ Roger Scott)
Wenner: You said you quit the Beatles first. John: Yes. Wenner: How? John: I said to Paul āIām leaving.ā John: I knew on the flight over to Toronto or before we went to Toronto: I told Allen I was leaving, I told Eric Clapton and Klaus that I was leaving then, but that I would probably like to use them as a group. I hadnāt decided how to do it ā to have a permanent new group or what ā then later on, I thought fuck, Iām not going to get stuck with another set of people, whoever they are. I announced it to myself and the people around me on the way to Toronto a few days before. And on the plane ā Klein came with me ā I told Allen, āItās over.ā When I got back, there were a few meetings, and Allen said well, cool it, cool it, there was a lot to do, businesswise you know, and it would not have been suitable at the time. Then we were discussing something in the office with Paul, and Paul said something or other about the Beatles doing something, and I kept saying āNo, no, noā to everything he said. So it came to a point where I had to say something, of course, and Paul said, āWhat do you mean?ā I said, āI mean the group is over, Iām leaving.ā ⦠So thatās what happened. So, like anybody when you say divorce, their face goes all sorts of colors. Itās like he knew really that this was the final thingā¦
(John Lennon, December 1970, interview with Jann Wenner for Rolling Stone)
PAUL: But what wasn't too clever was this idea of: 'I wasn't going to tell you till after we signed the new contract.' Good old John ā he had to blurt it out. And that was it. There's not a lot you can say to, 'I'm leaving the group,' from a key member. I didn't really know what to say. We had to react to him doing it; he had control of the situation.
(The Beatles Anthology, 2000)
Allen was there, and he will remember exactly and Yoko will, but this is exactly how I see it. Allen was saying donāt tell. He didnāt want me to tell Paul even. So I said, āItās out,ā I couldnāt stop it, it came out. Paul and Allen both said that they were glad that I wasnāt going to announce it, that I wasnāt going to make an event out of it. I donāt know whether Paul said āDonāt tell anybody,ā but he was darned pleased that I wasnāt going to. He said, āOh, that means nothing really happened if youāre not going to say anything.ā
(John Lennon, December 1970, interview with Jann Wenner for Rolling Stone)
And ā that was it, really. And nobody quite knew what to say, and we sort of then, after that statement, we then thought, āWell⦠give it a couple of months. We may decide. I mean, itās a little bit of a big act, to just break up like that. Letās give it a couple of months. We might all just come back together.ā And we talked for a couple of months, but it just was never going to be on.
(Paul McCartney, November, 1983, interview with DJ Roger Scott)
John: George was on the session for Instant Karma, Ringoās away and Paulās ā I dunno what heās doing at the moment, I havenāt a clue. Interviewer: When did you last see him? John: Uh, before Toronto. Iāll see him this week actually, yeah. If youāre listening, Iām coming round.
(John Lennon interview 6th February, 1970)
Interviewer: What about the Beatles all together as a group? John: ā¦You canāt pin me down because I havenāt got- thereās no- itās completely open, whether we do it or not. Life is like that, whether I make another Plastic Ono album or Lennon album or anything is open you know, I donāt like to prejudge it. And I have no idea if the Beatles are working together again or not, I never did have, it was always open. If someone didnāt feel like it, thatās it. And maybe if one of us starts it off, the others will all come round and make an album you know.
(John Lennon interview 6th February, 1970)
Interviewer: Why do you think he [Paul] has lost interest in Apple? John: Thatās what I want to ask him! We had a heavy scene last year as far as business was concerned and Paul got a bit fed-up with all the effort of business. I think thatās all it is. I hope so.
(John Lennon interviewed by Roy Shipston for Disc and Music Echo, February 28, 1970)
āAnyway, I hung on for all these months wondering whether the Beatles would ever come back together againā¦and letās face it Iāve been as vague as anyone, hoping that John might come around and say, āAll right lads, Iām ready to go back to workā¦ā
(Paul McCartney, interview, Evening Standard, April 21-22, 1970)
PAUL: For about three or four months, George, Ringo and I rang each other to ask: 'Well, is this it then?' It wasn't that the record company had dumped us. It was still a case of: we might get back together again. Nobody quite knew if it was just one of John's little flings, and that maybe he was going to feel the pinch in a week's time and say, 'I was only kidding.' I think John did kind of leave the door open. He'd said: 'I'm pretty much leaving the group, butā¦' So we held on to that thread for a few months, and then eventually we realised, 'Oh well, we're not in the band any more. That's it. It's definitely over.'
(The Beatles Anthology, 2000)
PAUL: I started thinking, 'Well, if that's the case, I had better get myself together. I can't just let John control the situation and dump us as if we're the jilted girlfriends.'
(The Beatles Anthology, 2000)
āJohnās in love with Yoko, and heās no longer in love with the other three of us. And letās face it, we were in love with the Beatles as much as anyone. Weāre still like brothers and we have enormous emotional ties because we were the only four that it all happened toā¦who went right through those ten years. I think the other three are the most honest, sincere men I have ever met. I love them. I really do.ā āI donāt mind being bound to them as a friend. I like that idea. I donāt mind being bound to them musically, because I like the others as musical partners. I like being in their band. But for my own sanity, we must change the business arrangements we haveā¦ā
(Paul McCartney, interview, Evening Standard, April 21-22, 1970)
āLast year John said he wanted a divorce. All right, so do I. I want to give him that divorce. I hate this trial separation because itās just not working. Personally, I donāt think John could do the Beatles thing now. I donāt think it would be good for him.ā
(Paul McCartney, interview, Evening Standard, April 21-22, 1970)
āI told John on the phone the other day that at the beginning of last year I was annoyed with him. I was jealous because of Yoko, and afraid about the break-up of a great musical partnership. Itās taken me a year to realise that they were in love. Just like Linda and me.ā
(Paul McCartney, interview, Evening Standard, April 21-22, 1970)
John: Well, Paul rang me up. He didn't actually tell me he'd split, he said he was putting out an album [McCartney]. He said, "I'm now doing what you and Yoko were doing last year. I understand what you were doing." All that shit. So I said, "Good luck to yer."
(John Lennon interviewed by Peter McCabe and Robert Schonfeld at the St. Regis Hotel, September 5, 1971)
I think he claims that he didnāt mean that to happen but thatās bullshit. He called me in the afternoon of that day and said, āIām doing what you and Yoko were doing last year.ā I said good, you know, because that time last year they were all looking at Yoko and me as if we were strange trying to make our life together instead of being fab, fat myths. So he rang me up that day and said Iām doing what you and Yoko are doing, Iām putting out an album, and Iām leaving the group too, he said. I said good. I was feeling a little strange, because he was saying it this time, although it was a year later, and I said āgood,ā because he was the one that wanted the Beatles most, and then the midnight papers came out.
(John Lennon, December 1970, interview with Jann Wenner for Rolling Stone)
Q: "Why did you decide to make a solo album?" PAUL: "Because I got a Studer four-track recording machine at home - practiced on it (playing all instruments) - liked the results, and decided to make it into an album." Q: "Were you influenced by John's adventures with the Plastic Ono Band, and Ringo's solo LP?" PAUL: "Sort of, but not really." Q: "Are all songs by Paul McCartney alone?" PAUL: "Yes sir." Q: "Will they be so credited: McCartney?" PAUL: "It's a bit daft for them to be Lennon/McCartney credited, so 'McCartney' it is." Q: "Did you enjoy working as a solo?" PAUL: "Very much. I only had me to ask for a decision, and I agreed with me. Remember Linda's on it too, so it's really a double act." ⦠Q: "What has recording alone taught you?" PAUL: "That to make your own decisions about what you do is easy, and playing with yourself is very difficult, but satisfying." ⦠Q: "Is this album a rest away from the Beatles or the start of a solo career?" PAUL: "Time will tell. Being a solo album means it's 'the start of a solo careerā¦' and not being done with the Beatles means it's just a rest. So it's both." Q: "Is your break with the Beatles temporary or permanent, due to personal differences or musical ones?" PAUL: "Personal differences, business differences, musical differences, but most of all because I have a better time with my family. Temporary or permanent? I don't really know." Q: "Do you foresee a time when Lennon-McCartney becomes an active songwriting partnership again?" PAUL: "No." Q: "What do you feel about John's peace effort? The Plastic Ono Band? Giving back the MBE? Yoko's influence? Yoko?" PAUL: "I love John, and respect what he does - it doesn't really give me any pleasure." ⦠Q: "What are your plans now? A holiday? A musical? A movie? Retirement?" PAUL: "My only plan is to grow up!"
(Paul McCartney, April 9th 1970, press release 'McCartney')
SCOTT: Did you not realize that this was going to happen to you after youād been the one to actually do it, and say, āRight, thatās itā? PAUL: No ā itās ā wrong. Wrong. Sorry. It wasnāt me, it was John. SCOTT: Well, he said it first, but he said it quietly, he didnāt let everybody know. PAUL: No no no no, but the point ā what Iām talking about is, see, this is ā see, I love this legend stuff, god, you know, you have to actually live with this stuffā¦
(Paul McCartney, November, 1983, interview with DJ Roger Scott)
Int: I asked Lee Eastman for his view of the split, and what it was that prompted Paul to file suit to dissolve the Beatles' partnership, and he said it was because John asked for a divorce. John Lennon: Because I asked for a divorce? That's a childish reason for going into court, isn't it?
(John Lennon interviewed by Peter McCabe and Robert Schonfeld at the St. Regis Hotel, September 5, 1971)
"And I've changed. The funny thing about it is that I think alot of my change has been helped by John Lennon. I sort of picked up on his lead. John had said, 'Look, I don't want to be that anymore. I'm going to be this.' And I thought, 'That's great.' I liked the fact he'd done it, and so I'll do it with my thing. He's given the okay. In England, if a partnership isn't rolling along and working -- like a marriage that isn't working-- then you have reasonable grounds to break it off. It's great! Good old British justice!
(Paul McCartney, Life Magazine, April 16, 1971)
ā⦠So, as a natural turn of events from looking for something to do, I found that I was enjoying working alone as much as Iād enjoyed the early days of the Beatles. I havenāt really enjoyed the Beatles in the last two years.ā
(Paul McCartney, interview, Evening Standard, April 21-22, 1970)
'Eventually,' McCartney recalled, 'I went and said, "I want to leave. You can all get on with Klein and everything, just let me out." Having not spoken to Lennon for several weeks, he sent him a letter that summer, pleading that the former partners 'let each other out of the trap'. As McCartney testified, Lennon 'replied with a photograph of himself and Yoko, with a balloon coming out of his mouth in which was written, "How and Why?" I replied by letter saying, "How by signing a paper which says we hereby dissolve our partnership. Why because there is no partnership." John replied on a card which said, "Get well soon. Get the other signatures and I will think about it.ā Communication was at an end.ā
(Peter Doggett, You Never Give Me Your Money, 2009 - P.88)
John phoned me once to try and get the Beatles back together again, after weād broken up. And I wasnāt for it, because I thought that weād come too far and I was too deeply hurt by it all. I thought, āNah, whatāll happen is that weāll get together for another three days and all hell will break loose again. Maybe we just should leave it alone.ā
(Paul McCartney, November 1995 Club Sandwich interview)
Int.: ⦠What else was Klein doing to try and lure Paul back? John Lennon: [laughs] One of his reasons for trying to get Paul back was that Paul would have forfeited his right to split by joining us again. We tried to con him into recording with us too. Allen came up with this plan. He said, "Just ring Paul and say, 'We're recording next Friday, are you coming?' " So it nearly happened. It got around that the Beatles were getting together again, because EMI heard that the Beatles had booked recording time again. But Paul would never, never do it, for anything, and now I would never do it.
(John Lennon interviewed by Peter McCabe and Robert Schonfeld at the St. Regis Hotel, September 5, 1971)
Thereās no hard feelings or anything, but you just donāt hang around with your ex-wife. Weāve completely finished. āCos, you know, Iām just not that keen on John after all heās done. I mean, you can be friendly with someone, and they can shit on you, and youāre just a fool if you keep friends with them. Iām not just going to lie down and let him shit on me again. I think heās a bit daft, to tell you the truth. I talked to him about the Klein thing, and heās so misinformed itās ridiculous.
(Paul McCartney interviewed by student journalist Ian McNulty for the Hull University Torch, May 1972 [From The McCartney Legacy, Volume 1: 1969 ā 1973 by Allan Kozinn and Adrian Sinclair, 2022)
JOHN: Weāre not ā weāre not fighting too much. Itās silly. You know I always remember watching the film with, uh ā who was it? Not Rogers and Hammerstein. Those British people that wrote those silly operas years ago, who are they? WIGG: Gilbert and Sullivan? JOHN: Yeah, Gilbert and Sullivan. I always remember watching the film with Robert Morley and thinking, āWeāll never get to that.ā [pause] And we did, which really upset me. But I never really thought weād be so stupid. But we did. WIGG: What, like splitting like they did? JOHN: Like splitting and arguing, you know, and then they come back, and oneās in a wheelchair twenty years laterā YOKO: [laughs] Yes, yes. JOHN: āand all that. [laughs; bleak] I never thought weād come to that, because I didnāt think we were that stupid. But we were naive enough to let people come between us. And I think thatās what happened. [pause] But it was happening anyway. I donāt mean Yoko, I mean businessmen, you know. All of them. WIGG: What, do you think they were ā do you think businessmen were responsible for the breakup? JOHN: Well, no, itās like anything. When people decide to get divorced, you know, you just ā quite often you decide amicably. But then when you get your lawyers and they say, āDonāt talk to the other party unless thereās another lawyer present,ā then thatās when the drift really starts happening, and then when you canāt speak to each other without a lawyer, then thereās no communication. And itās really lawyers that make⦠divorces nasty. You know, if there was a nice ceremony like getting married, for divorce, then it would be much better. Even divorce of business partners. Because it wouldnāt be so nasty. But it always gets nasty because youāre never allowed to speak your own mind, you have to talk in double-dutch, you have to spend all your time with a lawyer, and you get frustrated, and you end up saying and doing things that you wouldnāt really do under normal circumstances.
(John Lennon, Yoko Ono, October, 1971, St Regis Hotel, New York, interview with David Wigg)
Q: "If you got, I don't know what the right phrase is⦠'back together' now, what would be the nature of it?" JOHN: "Well, it's like saying, if you were back in your mother's womb⦠I don't fucking know. What can I answer? It will never happen, so there's no use contemplating it. Even is I became friends with Paul again, I'd never write with him again. There's no point. I write with Yoko because she's in the same room with me." YOKO: "And we're living together." JOHN: "So it's natural. I was living with Paul then, so I wrote with him. It's whoever you're living with. He writes with Linda. He's living with her. It's just natural."
(John Lennon, Yoko Ono, St. Regis Hotel, New York, September 5th, 1971, interview with Peter McCabe and Robert Schonfeld)
'Dear Mailbag, In order to put out of its misery the limping dog of a news story which has been dragging itself across your pages for the past year, my answer to the question, āWill The Beatles get together again?ā ⦠is no.ā
(Paul McCartney, Melody Maker, August 29, 1970)
āJust tell the people Iāve found someone I like enough to want to spend all my time with. Thatās meā¦the home, the kids and the fireplace.ā
(Paul McCartney, interview, Evening Standard, April 21-22, 1970)
George Harrison and Bob Dylan, Concert for Bangladesh, 1 August 1971; photo by Bill Ray (?).
Q: āOne of the coups of [the Concert for] Bangladesh was Dylanās appearance, because he had done so little since his motorcycle accident in 1966. Was he initially reluctant to do Bangladesh?ā
George Harrison: āHe was. He never committed himself, right up until the moment he came onstage. On the night before Bangladesh, we sat in Madison Square Garden as the people were setting up the bandstand. He looked around the place and said to me, āHey, man, you know, this isnāt my scene.ā Iād had so many months⦠it seemed like a long time of trying to get it all together, and my head was reeling with all the problems and never. Iād gotten so fed up with him not being committed, I said, āLook, itās not my scene, either. At least youāve played on your own in front of a crowd before. Iāve never done that.ā So he turned up the next morning, which looked positive. I had a list, a sort of running order, that I had glued on my guitar. When I got to the point where Bob was going to come on, I had Bob with a question mark. I looked over my shoulder to see if he was around, because if he wasnāt, I would have to go on to do the next bit. And I looked around, and he was so nervous ā he had his guitar and his shades ā he was sort of coming on, coming [pumps his arms and shoulders]. So I just said, āMy old friend, Bob Dylan!ā It was only at that moment that I knew for sure he was going to do it. After the second show, he picked me up and hugged me and said, āGod! If only weād done three shows.āā - Rolling Stone, 5 November 1987 (x)
DND au anyone??
i mainly use twitter but their beatles fandom is nothing compared to this so here i am
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