A guitar from Prince’s prime and some legendary Beatles lyrics sketched out by Paul McCartney are among the items going up for auction at a major music artifacts sale.
17.04.2020 - 23:09 / billboard.com
Many classic albums are surrounded in juicy, front-page-of-the-Daily Mail drama. Then there's Paul McCartney's debut solo album, McCartney -- released 50 years ago on April 17, 1970 -- which is in a league of its own. To some, it's The Album That Ended The Beatles. But, as is so often characteristic of rock lore, much of that drama overshadows the musical artifact and its true lasting legacy.
Let's not dwell -- the world has already done its share. Long story short: The members of the world's
A guitar from Prince’s prime and some legendary Beatles lyrics sketched out by Paul McCartney are among the items going up for auction at a major music artifacts sale.
A guitar from Prince's prime and some legendary Beatles lyrics sketched out by Paul McCartney are among the items going up for auction at a major music artifacts sale. Julien's Auctions announced Monday that the auction taking place June 19 and 20 in Beverly Hills and online will include a 1984 blue "cloud" guitar custom-made for Prince that he played in his prime period just after Purple Rain.
Mick Jagger is amused whenever Paul McCartney insists The Beatles were better than the Rolling Stones, because he is adamant there is no comparison.
Mick Jagger isn’t afraid of keeping the old Rolling Stones vs. Beatles rivalry going.
Sometimes you accidentally write a song that perfectly fits the moment. That's basically what Mick Jagger told Apple Music's Zane Lowe on Friday morning (April 24), in a chat that included the origin story of the eerily prescient new Rolling Stones single "Living in a Ghost Town," while touching on the rock icon's feelings about postponing the group's tour in light of the global COVID-19 pandemic and his answer to the newly revived Stones vs.
"One band is unbelievably luckily still playing in stadiums and then the other band doesn't exist"
Ringo Starr, the drummer for the Beatles, has been urging fans to tune into The Beatles' YouTube channel on Saturday, April 25, at 12 noon. The 79-year-old musician says he has a surprise for the audience and the fact that he teased The Beatles' channel and not his own has many fans speculating that Paul McCartney too could be a part of it.
Paul McCartney was part of the all-start lineup for tonight’s Global Citizen’s “One World: Together at Home” broadcast tonight. He sang a rendition of the Beatles classic “Lady Madonna.” Watch it happen below.
"I love the Stones, but I’m with you. The Beatles were better."
Paul McCartney paid a virtual visit to “The Howard Stern Show” on Tuesday, and the rock icon revealed that he and wife Nancy Shevell are quarantining separately.