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McCartney's 2002 live album, Back in the U.S., also used the credit "Paul McCartney and John Lennon" for all of the Beatles songs. [46] When Ono objected to McCartney's request for the reversed credit to be used for the 1965 song " Yesterday ", McCartney said that he and Lennon had agreed in the past that the credits could be reversed, if ...
This core catalogue contains all 217 tracks [a] intended for commercial release, either as album tracks, EP tracks, or singles, that were put out by the Beatles from 1962 to 1970. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The Beatles' international discography is more complicated due to different versions of their albums sometimes being released in other countries ...
In June 2023, McCartney announced plans to release "the final Beatles record" later in the year, using Jackson's de-mixing technology to extract Lennon's voice from an old demo of a song that he had written as a solo artist. [339] In October 2023, the song was revealed to be "Now and Then", with a physical and digital release date of 2 November ...
It all makes a sort of sense together, though, and even the album’s most chipper and playful Lennon-McCartney song, “Eight Days a Week,” featured the innovative flourish of a fade-in intro ...
An album by McCartney's brother Michael and Roger McGough. McCartney co-produced the album and backing vocals on "So Much". 1968 James Taylor: James Taylor: Bass on "Carolina in My Mind" 1969 Post Card: Mary Hopkin: Producer on the whole album. Acoustic guitar on "Lord of the Reedy River" and "Voyage of the Moon". Bass on "Happiness Runs ...
The album's 14 tracks include cover songs and original material written by the partnership of band members John Lennon and Paul McCartney. The Beatles had signed with EMI in May 1962 and been assigned to the Parlophone label run by Martin.
John Lennon was a British singer-songwriter and peace activist, best known as the co-founder of the Beatles.After three experimental albums with Yoko Ono, using tape loops, interviews, musique concrète, and other avant-garde performance techniques, Lennon's solo career properly began with the 1969 single "Give Peace a Chance".
Conflicts over the release of McCartney's album further estranged him from his bandmates, as he refused to delay the album's release to allow for Apple's previously scheduled titles, notably the Beatles' album Let It Be. A press release in the form of a self-interview supplied with UK promotional copies of McCartney led to the Beatles' break-up.