Showing posts with label Ringo Starr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ringo Starr. Show all posts

Saturday

The Beatles’ legend lives on, 50 years after breakup


When The Beatles went their separate ways in the early 1970s, few thought that half a century later the pioneering band would still influence pop music culture.

But, with Friday marking 50 years since their unofficial breakup, the so-called “Fab Four” are still popular and present, in spirit if not in the flesh.

“The Beatles were said to have been the 20th century’s greatest romance, but no one then could have foreseen that such an already phenomenal accomplishment would extend into the next century,” band historian Mark Lewisohn told Agence France-Presse.

“Fifty years now after breaking up, The Beatles remain an artistic ultimate, leading creative people everywhere to the limitless playing field, open to all,” said the ardent author of “Tune in,” the first installment in a trilogy, “The Beatles: All These Years.”

Flashback to April 10, 1970, release of an interview with Paul McCartney, in which he suggested The Beatles were done making records together, and the band’s legacy seemed far less certain.

Given shortly before the release of his first solo album, McCartney stopped short of announcing the formal breakup of the band in the brief and ambiguous Q&A.

But asked if he foresaw a time when his prolific songwriting partnership with fellow Beatle John Lennon would restart, his blunt reply—”no”—spoke for itself.

“McCartney Breaks Off With Beatles,” The New York Times headlined.

A British High Court case later that year to dissolve the business partnership made it official.

‘Indestructible’

The band’s acrimonious split left fans inconsolable, recalled Philip Norman, who has written several books on The Beatles, including the official 2016 Paul McCartney biography.


“A whole generation had grown up with The Beatles… they had a Beatles album for every important stage in their life,” he said.

“A lot of people thought it’s just dreadful… it’s just a bleak future without them. It truly did feel that way.”

But the band’s bountiful catalogue has aged well.

They remain the best-selling music artists of all time, with enduring hits from “I Want to Hold Your Hand” and “Hey Jude” to “Yesterday” and “Let It Be” familiar to at least four generations of fans.

“They’re not over,” Norman told AFP. “They’re still everywhere. They’re still in our language. They’re in our headlines… quoted all the time, their music is still played.

“The charm is just indestructible.”

‘No off-switch’

After busting out of Liverpool, England, in 1960, The Beatles—Lennon, McCartney, drummer Ringo Starr and lead guitarist George Harrison—became a social phenomenon.

But by the late ’60s, with the band “more popular than Jesus”—as the late Lennon once quipped—so-called Beatlemania was taking its toll.

He confessed in a recently discovered interview that the 1965 song “Help!” was a cry for exactly that.


“It was real. I was singing ‘Help!’ and I meant it,” he said. “There is no off-switch. You are on 24 hours a day… everyone wants a bit of you.”

Meanwhile, relations within the band, especially between Lennon and McCartney, had frayed.

By the time of McCartney’s announcement, they had not played live in four years. Starr and Harrison had solo records as well, while Lennon and his Japanese artist wife, Yoko Ono, had formed the Plastic Ono Band.

McCartney formed Wings, which included his wife, Linda, in late 1971 and despite initial criticism, it eventually prospered.

He, Harrison and Starr had fruitful solo and collaborative careers, while Lennon and Ono increasingly devoted their attention to pacifist activism.

‘Giant talents’

The Beatles almost got back together in the mid-1970s, but issues involving rights could not be resolved, according to Norman.

Then, in 1980, Lennon was shot dead in New York by Mark David Chapman, believed to suffer from mental illness.

McCartney said in 2016 that he had fortunately patched things up with his former bandmate before tragedy struck.

In 1982 he wrote “Here Today,” and later explained it was his way of saying “I love you” to Lennon. 


The pair’s relationship had been The Beatles’ main creative force.

“Lennon and McCartney were giant talents and produce an absolutely magical product together,” said Norman.

“Very different individuals but (they) just combined perfectly like virgin olive oil and vinegar—the perfect dressing.”

For Lewisohn, The Beatles continue to shine in today’s more manufactured pop music climate.

“There’s a universe of difference between shallow celebrity… and the true artistry with which The Beatles and other creative talents nourish the soul and inspire joy,” he declared. CL /ra

Agence France-Presse

Thursday

Beatles end streaming boycott in time for Christmas


The Beatles, the top-selling band in musical history yet a persistent holdout on new technology, announced Wednesday they would end a boycott of streaming in time for Christmas.

The Fab Four's full catalog will be available on all major services including leader Spotify, removing the most glaring musical absence from the booming sector of streaming that allows unlimited on-demand music online.

The website of The Beatles -- who have sold some 600 million albums worldwide -- announced the move in a short video that featured a medley of the band's hits including "Let It Be," "Hey Jude" and "Help!"

"Happy Crimble, with love from us to you," said a statement, employing a slang term for Christmas used by The Beatles.

The Beatles catalog will start streaming at 12:01 am on Christmas Eve local time in each region of the world.

Ringo Starr, one of two surviving Beatles along with Paul McCartney, mentioned the streaming news on Twitter with a slew of  emojis, a means of expression more in line with a younger generation.

"We are coming to you from out of the blue," Starr wrote, adding, "Peace and love peace love."

- Also resisted iTunes -The Beatles were the top-selling and one of the most critically acclaimed groups of all time, releasing 13 studio albums including classics such as "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," "Abbey Road" and "Revolver" before breaking up in 1970.

Despite The Beatles' phenomenal success, the band has repeatedly taken a slow approach to new technology.

The streaming announcement came just five years after the Liverpool-born group's back catalog was first made available for purchase on Apple's iTunes.

The announcement means that fans will be able to listen to the band's songs on nine services -- Spotify, Apple Music, Slacker, Tidal, Groove, Rhapsody, Deezer, Google Play and Amazon Prime.

The Beatles already appear on Internet radio provider Pandora and satellite radio service Sirius XM which have different regulations.

The band's recordings are controlled by its own management company, Apple Corps, and music conglomerate Universal which took over the catalog from defunct label EMI.

- Few other streaming holdouts -The move is a major win for streaming companies, which have faced criticism from a string of artists over the amount of money they make.

Taylor Swift removed her whole back catalog from Spotify last year but agreed to put her blockbuster album "1989" on Apple Music when it launched in June.

Adele, however, is not streaming on any service her new album "25" which nonetheless is the fastest-selling record in the United States and Britain since tracking services started keeping statistics.

The British singer, in a recent interview with Time magazine, said she did not use streaming herself and considered it "a bit disposable."

Several other classic artists who initially resisted streaming have recently relented including Led Zeppelin and AC/DC.

Big names who maintain full or partial boycotts of streaming sites include folk rockers Neil Young and Bob Seger, Radiohead's experimental frontman Thom Yorke and country star Garth Brooks.

Since reports first emerged on The Beatles' streaming decision, the industry has speculated whether the Fab Four would reach a deal with only one service or, as the band ultimately decided, all of them.

Swift has released a film of her latest tour exclusively on Apple Music while Tidal, led by rap mogul Jay Z, has heavily promoted unique content including the full catalogue of Prince.

Tidal and Rhapsody both said that they planned interactive features to go along with The Beatles' music.

Streaming has opened up a new source of revenue to a long-stagnant music industry, but critics say it is not enough to offset declining CD sales.

Revenue from streaming has overtaken that from downloads in 37 countries around the world, according to the IFPI recording industry body, with subscription revenues worth 23 percent of the overall digital market. —Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com