Paul McCartney and John Lennon formed a formidable creative partnership, collaborating on the vast majority of The Beatles' music under the joint credit Lennon-McCartney. As time passed, their writing process evolved - initially,
Mr. Frances, 66, lives in Sag Harbor on Long Island and is still a working photographer. He remembered photographing Lennon, but it was a traumatic memory. There were no pictures of John Lennon in the Friends Seminary yearbook because he had lost the negatives that very week. He didn’t even have the contact sheets.
Despite John Lennon not taking a liking to most of his past work, he admitted that some songs were made grinning through his teeth.
Ringo Starr and John Lennon remained on good terms after The Beatles split. Still, Starr once thought Lennon's comments went too far.
John Lennon recorded an album during his 'Lost Weekend.' When he looked back on it, he felt like it was cursed.
A pair iconic golden, stainless steel round glasses belonging to John Lennon were recently auctioned at a charity event for $52,000
John Lennon and Paul McCartney approached writing music differently, meaning their styles complemented one another, but also meant they misunderstood tracks.
A new documentary chronicling a crucial 18-month period in the lives of late Beatle John Lennon and wife/Plastic Ono Band co-leader Yoko Ono, One to One: John & Yoko, will be released exclusively in IMAX on April 11. The film directed by Kevin Macdonald will then make it’s streaming debut later this year on Max, according to Deadline.
The late president celebrated the impact and influence of the song, which decries war, nationalism, and the excesses of capitalism.
Next on the docket is a film resurrection of the “One to One” concerts involving his father and a reissue of the “Walls and Bridges” album. Sean, who lives and works in New York and is involved in a longtime relationship with musician and model Kemp Muhl, released his own album, “Asterisms,” this year.
Sir Paul McCartney and John Lennon's songwriting was the creative driving force behind The Beatles' success. Under the joint credit Lennon-McCartney, the two penned the vast majority of the band's tracks and boast a collection of hits that other musicians can only dream of.