Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Beatles in a screenshot from the trailer for their 1965 film Help!. The Beatles were an English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1960. With a line-up comprising John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr, they are commonly regarded as the most influential band of all time. [1]
This is the first time Apple Corps Ltd. and The Beatles have granted a scripted film expansive life story and music rights, so it’s a pretty big deal. Here’s what we know about the movie ...
Two of Us is a 2000 television drama (and the third original VH1 film [1]) which offers a dramatized account of April 24, 1976, six years after the break-up of the Beatles and the day in which Lorne Michaels made a statement on Saturday Night Live offering the Beatles $3,000 to reunite on his program.
On the Beatles' 2006 remix album Love, the three-minute guitar coda from "I Want You (She's So Heavy)" is attached to "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!", and snippets of that song and "Helter Skelter" are mixed in with the repeated guitar riff. The abrupt ending of the original is retained, but it cuts to wind-like white noise, not to silence ...
"Back Off Boogaloo" is a song by the English rock musician Ringo Starr that was released as a non-album single in March 1972. Starr's former Beatles bandmate George Harrison produced the recording and helped Starr write the song, although he remained uncredited as a co-writer until 2017.
For casual listeners of The Beatles work, the soundtrack for "Across The Universe" may be a joyous experience. For those that adore the classic Beatles' catalog, it may prove to be an infuriating listen." [7] Peter Hartlaub of SFGate wrote "With Taymor playing DJ, the 33-song soundtrack includes a nice mix of obscurities and surefire crowd ...
In February 1964, the Beatles will make their debut performance on Ed Sullivan's show, which broadcasts out of New York City. In Maplewood, New Jersey, Janis, a folk music devotee, detests the Beatles, unlike her friends Rosie and Pam. Janis's other friend, Grace, wants to rent a limousine, pull up to the Beatles' hotel and get exclusive photos of the band.
Speaking in 1999, Starr said of "It's All Too Much": "that's the [track] that really sets the mood of the movie ... that's where the music and the movie really gel." [96] The film represented the final episode in the Beatles' psychedelic period, although the band had already returned to making more roots-based music at the start of 1968. [97]