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Beatles News

50 years of Beatle mania 12 June, 2012 - 0 Comments
The revolution that would change music, fashion and youth culture forever started quietly enough in a London studio on June 6, 1962, when four young Liverpudlians performed Love Me Do. The ground-breaking songs that followed drove fans to hysteria and musical rivals to despair. Beatlemania had begun...
Sir Paul McCartney has confirmed he will end the opening ceremony of the London Olympic Games on July 27.

Speaking on BBC Radio 5 Live he said "I've been booked," and added that he would be "closing the opening".

SIR Paul McCartney brought a star studded concert in tribute to the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee to a close last night.

The royals all stood as he started off with a Beatles favourite Magical Mystery Tour.

Exec producer Ken Ehrlich gives details about the behind-the-scenes film that details the 48 hours before this year's Grammys, including Paul McCartney's performance revamps and Whitney Houston's death.
Sir Paul said he spent time on Kintyre, Scotland, to escape the 'hassles of the corporate world'

Said he had the freedom to drink whenever he fancied it and he got 'fuzzy' making it difficult to write

He drank whisky in the evenings which was 'in large supply in Scotland'

Says he's quit smoking cannabis because of his daughter Beatrice

Before The Beatles became the Fab Four as fans know them today–John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr–the band had two other members. One of these was Pete Best, the band’s original drummer who was a Beatle from 1960 until 1962, and the other was the original bassist Stuart Sutcliffe, who played in the band for only a year before leaving to pursue a career is an artist. Sutcliffe, and The Beatles’ early days, is the storyline on which Backbeat focuses.
FORMER Beatle Sir Paul McCartney stepped back in time to visit bandmate John Lennon’s old art college after it was bought by his fame school. The Grade II-listed Liverpool College of Art building, on Hope Street, is steeped in Beatles history – it was where Lennon, his future wife Cynthia and The Beatles’ original bassist Stuart Sutcliffe all studied in the 1950s.
The bestselling book BackStage Pass VIP says George Harrison had symptoms of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. Author Debra Sharon Davis says, "His need for order, extreme neatness and disciplining his life to be controlled and predictable was stifling, a burdensome form of self-imprisonment."
Don't you wish the Beatles could reunite? So do we, but that would be impossible. However, since Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre performed alongside a projection of Tupac at the Coachella Music Festival last month, bands have been flirting with the idea of bringing their dead brethren back on stage.
After battling for three years to preserve the humble terraced house in Madryn Street, Liverpool, fans have won a battle to save the home Ringo Starr from demolition and it will be turned into a tourist attraction. It had been scheduled for destruction in a controversial housing renewal scheme and described as "of no significance".
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