The Beatles' 'Now and Then' may win record of the year. Is it singular for the academy, or a boomer-rock harbinger?
If any backstage pop institution deserves a biopic of his or her own, it would be Brian Epstein, the Beatles' tragic manager, champion, and supporter through rough and giddy times alike. Epstein has been portrayed here and there in films,
The Beatles bring Let It Be back to several charts in the U.K. this week, as the final release from the rockers is a bestseller once more in their home country.
The Beatles kept up a very prolific recording pace throughout their time together in the '60s. Even when they gave themselves a little breathing room between records, they pushed the pedal to the metal when they returned to action.
Lloyd, is an appealing actor (best known for his work on "The Queen's Gambit") who dramatizes the crispness of Brian's intelligence, and how his passion for the Beatles was a response to their magic that he converted into a kind of equation - about how those girls in the packed crowd at the Cavern Club could be leveled up to global scale.
While still a teenager in Winnipeg, Canada, Neil Young got up in his school cafeteria and let loose with some Beatles songs in his first live performance.
Jorge Pezzimenti (The Loving Paupers, The Pietasters) and Jay Nugent (The Slackers) explore the Fab Four's ska connection. Did The Beatles Invent Ska-Punk?: Podcast
From there, Starr had already been playing with the band in parts as a session drummer and was gaining an increasing sense for their music, so Harrison approached him to join the ranks full time. It might seem like a no-brainer with our benefit of hindsight,
John Lennon spoke angrily about The Beatles after their split. Still, he said he thought of them fondly by the early 1970s.
In a candid moment, Ozzy Osbourne said he had The Beatles' "She Loves You" to thank for his musical dreams and career.
All the nominations for this year's BRIT Awards have been revealed - as Charli XCX leads the way with five nods, followed by Dua Lipa and The Last Dinner Party
After hearing this Beatles song for the first time, Graham Nash concluded it was "one of the greatest songs ever written."