As time went on, Paul McCartney and John Lennon became very different songwriters, leading to Lennon being "not interested" in one McCartney song.
It remains a fascinating exercise to wonder how John Lennon and Paul McCartney felt about each other’s songs. Bands, and ...
Here, There And Everywhere remains McCartney's favourite song he's written, when under pressure to answer, running Yesterday ...
John Lennon's love letter to The Beatles, "Now and Then," reworked and released in 2023, may win a Grammy—for Paul and Ringo, ...
It also seems that John was worried that Paul was trying to damage his own work, as cracks began to show in their ...
Paul McCartney is a master of injecting profound meaning into unsuspecting pop songs, but one track from his post-Beatles ...
Paul McCartney's favorite John Lennon track harkens back to the same kind of relationship that inspired the Beatles' "Hey Jude." ...
Credited to Lennon-McCartney, 'Hey Jude' was written by Paul during a time of turbulence in The Beatles' professional and ...
John Lennon and Paul McCartney were an unrivalled song-writing partnership but their relationship soured in the late 1960s.
The song's supposed drug references meant it was initially banned by the BBC. The lines "I'd love to turn you on" and "found ...