50 years ago, John sent his son Julian to speak with George on his behalf while he went with Lee Eastman to negotiate.
Eastman told John that George hated him and would not speak to him again unless he signed the papers immediately. The meeting was over once John learned that George forgave him.
geooooorge... geoooorgggeeeeeee....
yuka
you should def draw brian for maximum love healing and strength !!! đââď¸ <333
I sweaaaaar I swear I read this story about Brian sneaking into a beatles concert to fangirl along with the audience am I insane did I get this from midas man. Either way here's our man having the time of his life
The Beatles at the ABC Cinema in Huddersfield, 29th November 1963 - part 3 (part 1, part 2, part 4, part 5) (x)
really big fan of those interview clips where john starts being really weird and obsessive about paul and yoko just cuts him off and it's really clear that she has to hear about this all the time at home
Ok, here it is. We've had the 'insane things Paul has said about John' list, now here's 'insane things John has said about Paul'*
*Note: Some of these are âJohn said to meâ quotes rather than words from John himself, so take these ones with a grain of salt.
And because so much of Johnâs Paul-induced insanity reflected in his actions, some (dis)honourable mentionsâŚ
Cutting up a girl's clothes and calling her a whore for sleeping with Paul (from the Beatles Anthology book)
Being mean to Jane when Paul first meets her
Defending Paul after the LSD controversy time and time again
Writing 'I'm always perfect' on a photo of Paul and 'funeral' on a photo of Paul & Linda's wedding
Getting upset about Too Many People and writing How Do You Sleep in response
Mocking the Ram photo with a pig
Using the 'Let Me Roll It' riff in Beef Jerky
Having a fight with Yoko and immediately running off to Paris
Other icebergsâŚ
Insane things Paul has said about John
McLennon - by @frodolives
Paul McCartney - by @frodolives
Sources, full quotes and some others that wouldn't fit under the cut!
"If I can't have a fight with my best friend, I don't know who I can have a fight with" - The Mike Douglas Show, 1972
"Things are still the same between us. He was and still is my closest friend, except for Yoko" - 1971 interview
"He said to me, 'Artie, you worked with your Paul recently ⌠I'm getting calls ⌠that my Paul wants to work with me and I'm thinking about it ⌠How did it go when you worked with Paul?'" - Art Garfunkel anecdote (submitted by @didwemeetsomewherebefore)
Mintz: There's one name that has not come up in our discussion [...] Paulie. John: Yes, we did! We got Paul in it. And I object to that 'Paulie' business - 1973 interview (submitted by @didwemeetsomewherebefore)
"If anybody said anything bad about Paul, John'd take a swing at you. He'd say, "You can't talk about Paul like that". Paul was his best buddy" - Alice Cooper anecdote
"I'm entitled to call Paul what I want to, and vice versa; it's in our family. But if somebody else calls him names I won't take it." - 1974 interview
"Paul was one of the most innovative bass players that ever played bass. And half the stuff thatâs going on now is directly ripped off from his Beatle period." - 1980 interview
After a late lunch, Linda launched into a long paean to the joys of living in England. When she was finished, she turned to John and said, âDonât you miss England?â âFrankly,â John replied, âI miss Paris.â - Loving John by May Pang (1983) (submitted by @big-barn-bed)
"The Boulevard Saint-Germainegreer shone in all its springbok glory as he stepped lightly on some French loafers toward the waiting arms of Comrade Amie" (and a lot more) - Skywriting by Word of Mouth
"My cheri my pau pau, do you remember when we were at a cafe on the left bank? You could not find your garter? Because it was on your little prod" - John's song demo (submitted by @thewalrusespublicist)
"I'm just like everybody else, Harry, I fell for Paul's looks." - Harry Nilsson anecdote (submitted by @thegirlwiththeaxe)
"He also looked like Elvis. I dug him." - John in Hunter Daviesâ The Beatles: The Authorised Biography (1968) (submitted by @lesbianjohnlennon)
As the limousine edged through the screaming fans outside the cinema, John said laconically, 'Push Paul out first, he's the prettiest.' - Victor Spinetti, Up Front: His Strictly Confidential Autobiography (2006) (submitted by @fishfingerpies)
I could even hear what they were saying off-mike; âOh Paul, youâre so cute tonight.â was met with the reply 'Sod off, Lennon.â - Joan Baez anecdote (submitted by @rabiessnail )
'Are those jeans tight, Paul?' That was John. 'What do you mean tight?' 'I can see your suspender belt through 'em and your stockings. You've got ladders in them.' Victor Spinetti, Up Front: His Strictly Confidential Autobiography (2006)
John: It sounds a vaguely good idea but I wouldnât have my wife or any of me friends wearing them. Paul: Well, youâve had us wearing them. John: I know, Paulie, but youâre so well-built - 1964 interview
Ringo: And I Love Her, yeah I love that one âŚand the way you sing it knocks me out, man. John: And the way that camera goes over your head⌠I thought, 'hello' - 1964 interview
"Meeting Paul was just like two people meeting. Not falling in love or anything. Just us. It went on. It worked." - John in Hunter Daviesâ The Beatles: The Authorised Biography (1968) (submitted by @i-am-the-oyster, @thewalrusespublicist)
"Hey! Did you dream about me last night? âŚVery strong dream. We both dreamt about it. It was amazing! Different dreams, you know, but I thought you mustâve been thereâŚ. I was touching you" - Let It Be sessions, 1969 (submitted by @adriennefrombrooklyn)
"We do need each other alot. When we used to get together after a month off, we used to be embarrassed about touching each other. Weâd do an elaborate handshake just to hide the embarrassment⌠or we did mad dances. Then we got to hugging each other. Now we do the Buddhist bit⌠arms around. Itâs just saying hello, thatâs all." - - John in Hunter Daviesâ The Beatles: The Authorised Biography (1968)
Houghton: How do you feel about Paul McCartney now? John: Uh, weâre â haha. [laughs] This is like a joke: âWeâre just good friends.â Weâre â weâre pretty close now, like I was telling you before. - 1974 interview
"Nobody ever said anything about Paul having a spell over me, when I was with him for a long time. Or me having a spell over Paul. They didnât think that was abnormal, two guys together. [âŚ] Why didnât anybody ever say, âHow come those guys donât split up? I mean, whatâs going on backstage? I mean, what is that Paul and John business? Why â you know, how can they be together so long?â - 1980 interview
"When Iâm up against the wall, Paul, youâll find I do my best" - Let It Be sessions, 1969 (submitted by @iiiiiiits-m)
"The plus is that your best friend, also, can hold you without⌠I mean, Iâm not a homosexual, or we could have had a homosexual relationship and maybe that would have satisfied it, with working with other male artists." - 1972 interview (submitted by @big-barn-bed)
âWhen we sang together, Paul and I would share the same microphone. Iâd be close enough to kiss him [âŚ] So weâd be playing these concerts, in front of thousands of people, but the only thing I could see was Paulâs face. He was always there next to me â I could always feel his presence. Itâs what I remember most about those concerts.â - Elliot Mintz, 'We All Shine On: John, Yoko & Me' (2024)
Paul: Thereâs a story. Thereâs another one â âDonât Let Me Downâ. âOh darling, Iâll never let you down.â Like weâre doingâ John: Yeah. Itâs like you and me are lovers. Paul: [reserved] Yeah. [pause] John: Weâll just have to camp it up for those two. Paul: Yeah. Well, Iâll be wearing my skirt for the show, anyway. - Let It Be sessions, 1969 (submitted by @alienoriana)
"The early stuff â the Hard Dayâs Night period, I call it â the early period, was the early equiâ seâ what Iâm â what Iâm equating it to is the sexual equivalent of the beginning of a relationship, of people in love. And the Sgt. Pepper-Abbey Road period was the period of maturity in the relationship. And maybe had we gone on together, maybe something more interesting would have come out of it." - 1980 interview (submitted by @thewalrusespublicist)
"I mean, there were quite a few women heâd obviously had that I never knew about. God knows when he was doing it, but he must have been doing it" - 1972 interview
âItâs just handy to fuck your best friend. Thatâs what it is. And once I resolved the fact that it was a woman as well, itâs all right. We go through the trauma of life and death every day so itâs not so much of a worry about what sex we are anymore. Iâm living with an artist whoâs inspiring me to work." - 1971 interview (note: I know the 'best friend' here is Yoko, but the implications, baby...)
"He rang up and said heâd got this job and couldnât come to the group. So I told him on the phone, âEither come or youâre out.â So he had to make a decision between me and his dad then, and in the end he chose me. But it was a long trip." - 1971 interview
"This song was written by an old estranged fiancĂŠ of mine called Paul" - Introducing 'I Saw Her Standing There' at Madison Square Garden, 1974 (submitted by @didwemeetsomewherebefore)
"The person I actually picked as my partner, who Iâd recognised had talent, and I could get on with, was Paul" - 1980 interview (submitted by @crepesuzette2023)
"It would not have been the same. It would have been a different thing. But maybe it wouldnât either. Maybe it was a marriage that had to end. Some marriages donât get through that â that phase. Itâs hard to speculate about what would have been." - 1980 interview (submitted by @thewalrusespublicist)
"I was living with Paul then, so I wrote with him. Itâs whoever youâre living with. He writes with Linda. Heâs living with her. Itâs just natural" - 1971 interview
"It's like when the lawyers come into the divorce, you know? And that makes it a whole different ball game, you know⌠'speak to my lawyer'" - 1973 interview
"It was never a legal deal between Paul and I. It was a deal we made when we were fifteen or sixteen, when we decided to write together, that weâd put both our names on âem, you know." - 1980 interview
"And âgo out and get her,â you know, and forget everything else. So subconsciously I take it that he was saying, âGo ahead.â On a conscious level, he didnât want me to go ahead. So subconsciously, he⌠The angel in him was saying, âBless you.â The devil in him didnât like it at all. Because he didnât want to lose his partner." - John talking about Hey Jude, 1980 interview
"When I slagged off the Beatle thing in the papers, it was like divorce pangs, and me being me it was blast this and fuck that" - 1974 interview
"And itâs really lawyers that make⌠divorces nasty. You know, if there was a nice ceremony like getting married, for divorce, then it would be much better. Even divorce of business partners. Because it wouldnât be so nasty." - 1971 interview
"Itâs like asking a divorced couple, âWhat day was it that â that decided you to â that the marriage wasnât going well?â I didnât â there was no date." - 1976 interview
"Iâve compared it to a marriage a million times, and I hope itâs⌠understandable for people that arenât married, or any relationship. It was a long relationship." - 1976 interview
"Iâve only selected to work with â for more than a one night stand, say with an odd thing with [David] Bowie, or an odd thing with Elton [John], or anybody who was hanging around â two people. Paul McCartney, and Yoko Ono. Okay?" - 1980 interview
"I seen through junkies, I been through it all, I seen religion from Jesus to Paul" - 'I Found Out' lyrics, 1970 (submitted by @johns-prince)
âIâm glad thatâs over. I feel like Iâve been keeping a vigil for him. Not that I care, you understand.â - John, according to John Green, Dakota Days (1983)
"One girl very shyly gave George a button badge which said âGeorge for PM.â âWhy would Paul McCartney want you?â said John to George.â - Hunter Daviesâ The Beatles: The Authorised Biography (1968) (submitted by @didwemeetsomewherebefore)
John: "I was trying to put it 'round that I was gay, you know-- I thought that would throw them off⌠dancing at all the gay clubs in Los Angeles, flirting with the boys⌠but it never got off the ground." Q: "I think I've only heard that lately about Paul." John: "Oh, I've had him, he's no good." - 1975 interview (submitted by @johns-prince)
And I had a little upstairs, an unusable upstairs, and I kept a radio up there. Very faint. All of a sudden John said, "Is that Paul?" I thought it was somebody he knew named Paul. I didn't see anybody walk by. I said, "No." On the radio, Paul McCartney. We never mentioned anything about The Beatles. This little, low sound you could barely hear, he picked it right up. So, it just made me aware of how much attuned he was with The Beatles after they broke up.. - Gary Tracy, John's optometrist
John: "I've always thought there was this underlying thing in Paul's 'Get Back.' When we were in the studio recording it, every time he sang the line 'Get back to where you once belonged,' he'd look at Yoko." - 1980 interview (submitted by @johns-prince)
But in mid-January 1973 Lennon and Ono quarrelled publicly at another party. âI wish I was back with Paul,â Lennon reportedly said. - Peter Doggett, You Never Give Me Your Money: The Battle for the Soul of The Beatles. (2009) (submitted by @notgrungybitchin)
'From time to time John would say to me ''I wonder what Paul is thinking about, right now.'' I said John, I've only met him a couple of times in my life you know ⌠I have no idea. And John would ask ''Do you think he thinks about me at all?''' - Elliot Mintz (submitted by @thewalrusespublicist )
âHe was always saying, âI wonder what Paul is doing.â When John and I were together, and this is about a week or two before our relationship ended, I remember him saying, âDo you think I should write with Paul again?â I said, âAbsolutely. You should because you want to. The two of you as solo performers are good, but together you canât be beaten.â - May Pang
âYeah, I miss Paul a lot. Itâs been a year since Iâve seen him. He came over with Linda to me place in New York. Course Iâd love to see him again. Heâs an old friend, isnât he?â - 1974 interview
"I never thought weâd come to that, because I didnât think we were that stupid. But we were naĂŻve enough to let people come between us." - 1971 interview
âPaul? My dear oneâ - 1980 interview (submitted by @didwemeetsomewherebefore)
"Iâve read cracks about, âOh, the Beatles sang âAll You Need Is Loveâ, but it didnât work for them,â but nothing will ever break the love we have for each other." - 1972 interview
'"I just saw a girl who said she saw John Lennon walking down the street in New York wearing a button that said, "I love Paul." She asked him: "Why are you wearing an 'I love Paul' button?", and he said: "Because I love Paul." - Harry Nilsson anecdote (submitted by @bluewater9)
i heart submarines â¤ď¸
Tony Bramwell on Brian:
- Brian dropped in at the Cavern and, spoiled for choice, fell in love at first sight with each of the Beatles in turn
- Brian almost promised to love, honour and obey them.
- He never publicly showed his embarrassment with poor deals, but one could tell something wasnât right because inside, he anguished. Chewed his knuckles and grew pale.
- He was a fiercely loyal and honourable friend to those he loved, and ruthless toward those he despised
- He was shy to the point of blushing and stammering, and theatrical to the point of ranting and frothing at the mouth
- His biggest problem, perhaps his only real problem, was that he was homosexual in a still very unenlightened era. It kept getting in the way. Whenever he sat down for a meeting with heavyweights like Sir Joseph Lockwood at EMI, or whoever, he felt they all knew. âTheyâre talking behind my back, Tony,â Brian said. âThey donât respect me.â
- Paul was fond of Brian and thought he was the best possible manager: one who was courteous, who didnât interfere with their private lives, but achieved all he said he would do. He never criticized himânone of us did. Brian was a god.  (It was only later that the façade cracked a bit, but even then we loved him. He was like family, and you accept your family for what they are and forgive them most anything.)
- his wonderfully fertile mind continuously thinking up innovative ideas and then worrying about them
- Brian was so different when around his beloved protĂŠgĂŠs. He became one of them. He was a friend, a chum, charming, trustworthy and kind. He set out to do what he promised and they all said it would never have happened without him.
- Brian bought an off-the-shelf company named Suba Films, which I virtually ran. It was way ahead of its time, the only independent company in England making music videos
- Whenever things got raunchy and out of hand around us, he would make his excuses and leave. At times, he almost ran.
- [on writing his biography]: âYou donât think John will think Iâm raining on his parade, do you?â he asked hesitantly.
- I believe that Brianâs paranoia over the Beatlesâ contract and his heavy use of drugs led him to think that it was only a matter of time before everything came tumbling down and he would be left standing in the ruins, with people pointing their fingers like kids in a playground.
- He was seriously ill and desperately sought to escape from the circus of his own creation.
- He was tormented by the idea of letting down his beloved Cilla and the Beatles, particularly John.
- He underwent deep sleep therapies at the Priory, being put under for days at a time with heavy drugs.
- Whether he managed the Beatles or not, he would still get 25 percent of their earnings from record sales for nine years. This subtlety had somehow escaped the Beatles, but it bothered Brian. It gnawed at his conscience because in his heart he knew he had conned them.
- [He] was abnormally distressed, convincing himself that they werenât going to sign up again because they loathed him. Going through months of paranoia, he looked for reasons and forlornly asked the question, âDonât they like me anymore?â
- It was so silly because it wasnât like that at all. At different times, all of them commented to me that they would never have signed another contract as âBeatlesâ but they would have signed individually with Brian.
- âNo, I think John hates me now. I donât know what Iâll do if they donât sign. What will people think? I can see the headlines now:Â EPSTEIN DUMPED BY BEATLES.â
- He was now seriously unhappy, not just troubled. His personality had radically changed.
- Brian had resident nurses, doctors who stayed, psychiatrists who lived in, all crowded into that little dollâs house, getting on each otherâs nerves. At times heâd make an effort. He would sweet-talk everyone and then escape when they werenât looking.
- [after Brian's death] Joanne was in shock. She had seen him first. The doors had been broken down and there he was, curled up on his side in bed with Saturdayâs mail lying next to him. âWe all knew at once that he was dead, but I heard myself say, âItâs all right, heâs just asleep. Heâs fine,â â she said.
- It was unbelievable that the man who had got all this goingâthe vast money-making machine and the culture shock that had changed the worldâwas gone.
- The Summer of Love was over and autumn coming.
- I have been asked many times why it was that the Beatles didnât just hire an office manager to handle their business affairs and pay him or her a salary. It would have made sense. But it never occurred to them. They just went blindly on, trying to find someone to replace Brian, like it was some kind of law. They seemed to think that they had to have a manager, to whom they had to give 25 percent of their gross income, or theyâd be arrested or drummed out of the Brownies.
i accept constructive criticism as long as it makes it funnier
i mainly use twitter but their beatles fandom is nothing compared to this so here i am
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