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    How old is Paul McCartney and what is his net worth?

    PAUL MCCARTNEY is a well-known pop icon with a huge career both as a member of The Beatles and as a solo performer.But how much is he worth and what did he do when the Fab Four split? Here’s all you need to know.How old is Paul McCartney and is he married?Sir Paul McCartney was born in Walton, Liverpool on June 18, 1942.He attended Stockton Wood Road Primary School in Speke from 1947 until 1949.In 1949, he transferred to Joseph Williams Junior School in Belle Vale.In 1953, he passed the 11-plus exam, meaning he could attend the local grammar school. According to Celebrity Net Worth, Sir Paul has a net worth of $1.2billion (around £978.4million)Credit: GettyHe met bandmate George Harrison at school, and the pair quickly became friends.McCartney has been married three times – to Linda Eastman from 1969 until her death from breast cancer in 1998; to Heather Mills from 2002 until their divorce in 2008; before marrying his current wife Nancy Shevell in 2011.McCartney has five children.He legally adopted his first wife Linda’s daughter Heather and they went on to have Mary, Stella and James.He also had a daughter with his second wife Heather Mills, called Beatrice.Sir Paul turned 81 in June 2023.Read More on CelebrityWhat’s Paul McCartney’s net worth?Sir Paul is one of the richest musicians in the world.According to Celebrity Net Worth, he has a net worth of $1.2billion (around £978.4million).He will have earned the huge amount throughout his successful music career. Sir Paul confessed he considered giving up music altogether after The Beatles broke upCredit: GettyWhat did Paul McCartney do after the Beatles broke up?The Beatles would make for a pretty tough act to follow, but Paul had a hugely successful career after the legendary band parted ways.Following the break up, McCartney released his debut solo album in 1970: McCartney, before forming the band Wings with first wife Linda, and Denny Laine.Wings became one of the most successful bands of the 1970s, with more than a dozen international top 10 singles and albums.But Sir Paul later spoke about the depression he suffered after the Beatles broke up, confessing he considered giving up music altogether.

    “It was difficult to know what to do after The Beatles. How do you follow that?” he told BBC Radio 4.

    “I was depressed. You would be. You were breaking from your lifelong friends.”
    McCartney also admitted turning to alcohol  – and only pulled himself out of it after meeting Linda.
    He told GQ Magazine: “In truth, I just took to booze. There wasn’t much time to have mental health issues, it was just, f*** it, it’s boozing or sleeping.”
    When John Lennon was shot and killed outside his Manhattan home in 1980, McCartney was forced to take a decade out from touring over increased security concerns, but returned to music in the 1990s and 2000s.
    In 1997 he was knighted by The Queen “for services to music”.
    In 2020, he announced that he would be signing off on a new album McCartney III – 40 years after McCartney II.

    The release was named The Sun’s Album of the Year in 2020.Outside of music Sir McCartney has also been a strong advocate of vegetarianism and animal rights. Paul has been married three timesWhere can I watch The Beatles’ documentary Let It Be?The Beatles’ 1970 documentary Let It Be is coming to Disney+ in May.After decades out of circulation the documentary has been restored by Peter Jackson’s production company.Let It Be follows the recording sessions of the band’s final album.It was originally released weeks after the Beatles officially announced their split.In a statement Jackson said: “I’m absolutely thrilled that … Let it Be has been restored and is finally being rereleased after being unavailable for decades.”I’ve always thought that Let It Be is needed to complete the Get Back story.” More

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    Paul McCartney had wild threesome with two Beatles fans that lasted for three days, new book reveals

    SIR Paul McCartney romped with two female fans for three days in The Beatles’ heyday, says a book.The singer’s love-in ended when future wife Linda turned up at the Beverly Hills Hotel in Los Angeles, it is claimed.A new book has claimed Sir Paul McCartney had a threesome for three days with fans during The Beatles’ primeThe romp ended when future wife Linda turned up, it’s claimedRecord label executive Ron Kass, who died in 1986, was sharing a suite with Sir Paul and said: “There was this, bungalow. Paul was just in there for three days and three nights with these girls.“Then Linda arrived. Paul and Linda didn’t know each other that well, but she arrived and Paul and the two girls were still with him.“Paul got rid of the girls then he took Linda in, so Linda got in there during the night.” Also in the book, film director David Puttnam claims Paul was the biggest lothario in the band, ahead of John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.READ MORE ON PAUL MCCARTNEYMr Puttnam said: “Paul, he f***ed everything that moved and yet didn’t seem to want to.“Out of the bunch, they always regarded him as the beauty.”Never-before-published interviews with Paul, now 81, are also included in All You Need Is Love: The End of the Beatles.In one Paul admitted the band were “not in the least bit celibate”, adding: “There were many, many, many, many wild oats sewn from the word go.Most read in Celebrity“British tours, we used to have a little routine we worked out with the tour manager.“If there was someone getting particularly hot on the front row that you liked, he’d say, ‘Do you wanna go backstage and see the boys?’.. then they’d meet us.”Paris Jackson sits next to her dad’s old nemesis Paul McCartney at Stella McCartney show In the late 1960s actress Jane Asher broke up with Paul when she caught him in bed with scriptwriter Francie Schwartz.He also dated British model Anita Cochrane and German actress Gloria Mackh. He was wed to Linda from 1969 until her death in 1998. Paul married Heather Mills in 2002 but they divorced six years later. He is now married to Nancy Shevell.
    DO you have a story about a star? Call 0207 782 4104, email exclusive @the-sun.co.uk or text/ WhatsApp 07423 720 250.
    Also in the book, film director David Puttnam claims Paul was the biggest lothario in the bandCredit: Getty Images – Getty More

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    Sir Paul McCartney hands family 5-figure thank you fee after they returned £10m guitar he lost in 1960s

    SIR Paul McCartney has handed a hefty reward to a family who returned his beloved bass guitar 50 years after it was stolen.The Beatle, 81, has also sent his thanks to Cathy Guest, who found the four-string Höfner instrument — worth an estimated £10million — in her loft.Sir Paul McCartney has sent a hefty reward to an East Sussex family who found his beloved bass guitar 50 years after it was stolenCredit: EPACathy Guest found the guitar in her loft last year and realised it was Sir Paul’s after Googling itCredit: Ian Whittaker – The SunIt comes after weeks of negotiations between Cathy, 52, and his music publishing company MPL.We exclusively revealed last month that the Höfner 500/1 electric bass, Macca’s favourite guitar which he bought for £30 in Hamburg in 1961, had been returned to him. A source said: “They have now agreed a deal and the family have been given a very significant thank-you fee.“Sir Paul has also expressed his gratitude to Cathy and the family.”READ MORE ON THE BEATLESIt is understood the reward is a five-figure sum.Mum-of-two Cathy, of Hastings, East Sussex, said: “I can’t talk about the amount, but I won’t be moving or doing anything to change my life. My lifestyle won’t be changing.”After the guitar’s theft in West London, it was discovered the thief sold it to a pub landlord for “not much money plus a few free pints”.It was later given to Cathy’s late husband by his brother. Most read in MusicShe found it while clearing her loft last year and realised it was Sir Paul’s after Googling it. Cathy’s son holding the original guitarThe Beatles returned for a glorious last hurrah with new single Now And Then More

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    The Beatles to release FOUR separate biopics about each member by Oscar winning director

    AFTER a record-breaking return to the top of the charts with Now And Then, The Beatles are now hoping to break the box office.The Fab Four are teaming up with director Sam Mendes for a series of huge feature length films.
    Each one of The Beatles is set to have their own film with the same directorCredit: Getty
    Sam Mendes will direct the four biopics, expected in 2027Credit: Getty
    It is a massive move, as the band have never given their full support for a scripted film about their lives.
    It comes after the “last ever” Beatles song Now And Then was released in November last year, reaching No1.
    Sam, who is behind huge movies including James Bond film Skyfall and American Beauty, will direct four separate films telling the stories of Sir Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, John Lennon and George Harrison.
    As well as telling their individual stories, the films will reveal how each member of the group coped with their phenomenal rise and the aftermath of their split in April 1970.
    READ MORE FILM NEWS
    Insiders said Paul and Ringo had both given the nod for their stories to be told, while the families of the late legends John and George have also agreed.
    All four films are slated for release in 2027, giving Sam three years to complete the projects.
    A source said: “Sam has a mammoth task on his hands but Paul and Ringo trust him to do them justice.
    “The films will all be inter- connecting and will tell the story of the band from each of the group’s perspectives.
    Most read in Bizarre
    “All people can talk about now is who will be cast to play the Fab Four.
    “It’s likely Sam will find four British rising stars to step into their shoes but people are already talking about actors like Barry Keoghan and Will Sharpe.”
    Sam said of the project: “I’m honoured to be telling the story of the greatest rock band of all time, and excited to challenge the notion of what constitutes a trip to the movies.”
    Producer Pippa Harris added: “We intend this to be a uniquely thrilling and epic cinematic experience: Four films, told from four different perspectives which tell a single story about the most celebrated band of all time.
    “To have The Beatles’ and Apple Corps’ blessing to do this is an immense privilege.”
    There’s no denying their music is just as popular now as it was when the world was gripped by Beatlemania.
    And given the insane popularity of music biopics in recent years, including Sir Elton John’s Rocketman movie and Austin Butler’s Oscar nominated performance as Elvis Presley in the film about his life, I think there is more than an appetite for it.”
    I’ll get the popcorn in.
    I bought John Lennon’s tooth for £20k – now I’ve destroyed it for DNA to track down Beatle’s secret LOVE CHILDREN More

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    Mum of two who returned Sir Paul McCartney’s bass guitar 50 years on is hoping to get a reward

    THE mum of two who returned Sir Paul McCartney’s bass guitar to him after it was lost for 52 years is hoping to get a reward for her honesty.When Cathy Guest, 52, returned the Hofner 500/1 electric bass to the ex-Beatle she put a letter in the guitar case detailing her cash struggles — as she supports two kids at university.
    Mum Cathy Guest, who returned Sir Paul McCartney’s long lost bass guitar, is asking for a rewardCredit: Ian Whittaker
    Cathy said that Macca’s team had promised a reward for the return of the guitarCredit: Rex
    She is waiting to hear back but “is aware of Sir Paul’s gratitude”.
    The guitar was her late husband Hadyn’s, who got it off his brother Graham, and had been in her loft in Hastings, East Sussex, for 20 years.
    Stolen from a van in 1972, it was sold to a pub landlord for “a few pints” but is now said to be worth £10million.
    Cathy added: “My husband inherited it when another family member died and he’d had if for years.
    READ MORE CELEB NEWS
    “He had no idea where it came from.
    “He was a keen musician and used to play all the guitars at home, including Paul’s bass.
    “We both loved music and I still go to gigs every weekend.
    “I spoke to the security there and that’s how it all got started.
    Most read in Music
    “His people sent me pictures of the instrument they were looking for and I sent back pictures of the one I had.
    “They confirmed it was the actual bass they were looking for.
    Beatles star’s private island taken over by hippies before disaster struck
    “After that, they send somebody round to pick it up.”
    Cathy added that Macca’s team had promised a reward for the return of the guitar which he originally bought for £30 in Hamburg in 1961.
    She added: “I’ve still got the offer open with them and I’ve taken advice.
    “It’s part of rock n roll history and it’s not like they’re a small band.” More

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    ‘I thought, ‘I’ll make this best record since leaving The Beatles’, Paul McCartney on Band On The Run’s 50th anniversary

    EVEN before he turned up in Africa and was robbed at knifepoint of his precious demo cassettes, Paul McCartney was up against it.Rarely during his storied career were the odds stacked against him as much as they were on August 29, 1973.
    Paul McCartney recounts time with post-Beatles band Wings, fifty years on from album Band On The RunCredit: MPL
    Wife Linda was well known during this point of his careerCredit: MPL
    The next day, he was due in Nigerian capital Lagos to begin recording an album with his post-Beatles band Wings.
    “A couple of the guys rang me,” recalls Sir Paul today, a little over 50 years on.
    “Our drummer, Denny (Seiwell), and Henry (McCullough), the guitar player, just said, ‘We’re not coming’.
    “I never quite worked out why. Perhaps they thought Africa was a long way to go!”
    READ MORE PAUL MCCARTNEY
    Suddenly, Wings had been clipped to a trio — Macca, his inexperienced but endlessly supportive wife Linda and Denny Laine, a multi-instrumentalist who used to be in The Moody Blues.
    But, by summoning the indomitable spirit which helped carry The Beatles through the Sixties, he decided to board the flight.
    This was the era of sonic explorers. The Rolling Stones had, as McCartney puts it, “wandered off” to the South of France to record Exile On Main St and he had the travel bug . . .  “Wow! Africa! Lagos! Adventure! Let’s do it!”.
    ‘Prison escape’ concept
    “I’m the kind of person who won’t go, ‘Oh my God, I’ve got to rethink this.’ If I’m going somewhere, I like to stick to the plan,” he continues in a candid interview for his label, seen first by SFTW.
    Most read in Music
    “I thought, ‘Well, we’ve got Denny’s guitar, Linda’s vocals, Denny’s vocals, my vocals and I’ll drum because I drum a lot anyway.
    “Then I thought, ‘I’ll make this the best record I’ve made to date since leaving The Beatles.’”
    True to his word, Macca returned to the UK on September 23 with the bulk of one of his defining albums, Band On The Run.
    The timeless songs laid down in Lagos included the shape-shifting title track, Let Me Roll It “with vocals that sound a bit like John (Lennon)”, and a grand finale, Nineteen Hundred And Eighty-Five — all live staples to this day.
    The album’s other big song Jet, named after the McCartneys’ black Labrador puppy, was recorded back in Abbey Road, where else?
    The Band On The Run LP was housed in a memorable sleeve, inspired by Macca’s “prison escape” concept and realised by the creatives at Hipgnosis who were behind Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side Of The Moon iconic prism.
    Caught in a spotlight against a brick wall was an unlikely assortment of renegades all dressed in black . . . Paul, Linda, Denny, Michael Parkinson, Kenny Lynch, James Coburn, Clement Freud, Christopher Lee and John Conteh.
    To mark Band On The Run’s 50th anniversary, new vinyl and CD sets match the original LP with a raw “underdubbed” mix which comes minus orchestrations and various other embellishments (in vein of stripped back Let It Be . . . Naked).
    The releases are tinged with sadness because soon after they were announced, Laine died aged 79 in his adopted hometown of Naples, Florida.
    The passing of the Wings founder member, a pivotal contributor to the band’s phenomenal Seventies success, brought an emotional response from McCartney.
    “I have many fond memories of my time with Denny, from the early days when The Beatles toured with the Moody Blues,” he wrote on his website.
    “Denny joined Wings at the outset. He was an outstanding vocalist and guitar player.
    “He and I wrote some songs together, the most successful being Mull Of Kintyre, which was a big hit.
    ‘Peace and love Denny’
    “We had drifted apart but in recent years managed to re-establish our friendship and share memories of our times together.
    “Peace and love Denny. It was a pleasure to know you. We are all going to miss you.”
    Now let’s get back to late August, 1973, and the arrival of Paul, Linda and Denny in Lagos to more adversity.
    The depleted band, accompanied by former Beatles engineer Geoff Emerick, pitched up at the ramshackle EMI studio on Wharf Road in the city’s Apapa district.
    “It was crazy. The circumstances were just wild,” says McCartney.
    “Anybody else might have given up because, when we got there, the studio was only half built. We had to figure it all out.”
    He adds: “They make great music in Africa but, back then, they were not as technologically savvy as we were used to.
    “We expected it to be a proper EMI studio but they didn’t have vocal booths.”
    That said, he soon realised there was an upside to their unlikely surroundings.
    “The homemade vibe of the studio found its way into our attitude,” he affirms.
    “We adjusted our recording techniques and got it done.”
    Wings were fortunate not to face another major problem which could have scuppered their trip and endangered their health.
    Macca says: “When we got back home, there was a letter from EMI which said, ‘Dear Paul, under no circumstances go to Lagos. There’s been an outbreak of cholera in Nigeria.’”
    Had he seen the letter before their departure, he doubts they would have made the trip at all.
    As if that wasn’t enough, Paul and Linda endured a terrifying, life-threatening encounter in the early days of their time in Africa.
    “We’d been visiting some of our crew at their house and someone said, ‘Do you want a lift home?’ We said, ‘It’s such a beautiful night, we’ll walk.’”
    Adopting the reckless spirit of “desperados” in a foreign land, they ventured into a no-go area with “cameras, tape recorders, all my cassettes in a bag, and Linda’s photographic equipment”.
    A car approaches, “a guy winds down the window” and the McCartneys think they’re being offered a lift.
    Macca vividly recollects the moment: “I just say, ‘No, listen man, very nice of you but we don’t need a lift.’”
    The car containing “five or six local guys” drives off but suddenly stops again.
    “All of them get out. I said, ‘Holy cow. Wait a minute, they’re not offering us a lift.’ The penny drops. One of the guys is holding a knife at me.
    “We give them all our stuff and they get back in the car. Screech off. They go the wrong way. They come back and we’re going, ‘Oh no, they’re going to finish us off!’
    “Anyway, they zoomed off. Eventually Linda and I walked home. We just got into bed and said, ‘Forget it.’
    “The next day, we went to the studio and the manager said, ‘Man, you’re lucky you’re white. If you were black, they could have killed you because you might have recognised them.”
    As it turned out, McCartney didn’t need to be too bothered to lose his Band On The Run demos.
    “It meant I had to remember the album,” he says, a task in keeping with “a rule John (Lennon) and I had always had”.
    ‘Anything for easy life’
    “We didn’t have cassettes or recording devices back then (in The Beatles).
    “We used to say, ‘If you can’t remember it, how will the people remember it?’”
    Band On The Run has laidback music as well as a very Beatles-sounding numberCredit: Linda McCartney
    If the circumstances around Band On The Run were fraught, it’s hard to tell from the sublime, playful, laidback music.
    Aside from the songs already mentioned, we have the rich harmonies of Bluebird, Mrs Vandebilt with its “ho hey ho” chorus, the rhythmic pleasures of Mamunia and the most Beatles-sounding number, No Words.
    McCartney is asked whether the setbacks he relates actually pushed him to greater heights of artistic achievement.
    “I’ve never liked that thought,” he answers. “Anything for an easy life with me.”
    While accepting that Band On The Run turned out rather well despite whatever conspired against it, he draws attention to stress-free successes such as his monster-hit Bond theme, released a couple of months before the Lagos odyssey.
    “Live And Let Die was made with no struggle. That came easily and was a big success,” he says.
    “With a lot of The Beatles’ stuff, there wasn’t an awful lot of tension. When there was, I’m not sure better tracks came out of it.”
    Crucial to Band On The Run’s creation was budding musician Linda.
    By the end of the Sixties, she had become a renowned portrait photographer, having trained her expert eye on the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Mick Jagger and Aretha Franklin.
    After The Beatles split in 1970, Macca taught his partner to play keyboards and she threw herself into a second career alongside her superstar husband.
    She is co-credited with 1971 album Ram and became a fully-fledged founder member of Wings, contributing vocals and keys to their debut Wild Life (1971) and Red Rose Speedway (1973).
    When it comes to Linda’s part in Band On The Run, McCartney provides telling insights.
    “If I got stuck, I’d ask her for a suggestion so we ended up co-writing the songs,” he says.
    “We didn’t actually sit down with pencil and paper and write them bit by bit.
    “The lion’s share of the composing was probably mine but, if I needed a collaborator, Linda would be there. I could say, ‘What do you think of this? What’s another word for that?’
    “It was good fun to have someone to bounce off. But she wasn’t a writer like John — it wasn’t that kind of collaboration, obviously.”
    McCartney also acknowledges Linda’s growing stature and confidence as a member of Wings.
    “Her synthesiser part on Band On The Run, her vocals on Jet — they’re such integral parts of the songs,” he says.
    “She’d really grown as a musician at this point, but she really played instinctually.”
    He adds: “The thing about Linda is she really knew virtually nothing when we started.”
    He likens the early days of Wings as “almost like a college band. We just said, ‘Do you want to go on the road? Yeah, sure.’
    “When we started The Beatles, that’s kind of all it was, too. We made it up as we went along and we got better together.
    “Linda was a quick learner. I’d give her a vocal part and she’d take it, maybe massage it a bit.
    “She was particularly fond of the Moog (synthesizer). It’s right back in vogue now. She loved all that funky stuff.”
    McCartney is also full of praise for Linda’s vocals: “By Band On The Run, she was singing great and very distinctively too.
    “I remember years later when I worked with Michael Jackson, he said, ‘Who sang those harmonies?’
    “I said, ‘Well it’s me and Linda basically. And Denny some of them.’ He said, ‘Oh they’re great.’ She gained more confidence as she went on.”
    In summing up feelings about his first wife, who died tragically young from cancer at 56 in 1998, McCartney says: “We always said she would have been a good punk rocker: she had the edge.
    “In fact, we ended up giving ourselves punk rock names. She was Vile Lynn, violin, and I was Noxious Fumes — but it never came to anything.
    “As we went on, she learned a lot and became a good player and an integral part of the band.”
    Today, as he looks back across 50 years, McCartney assesses Band On The Run’s place as a key milestone in his long and winding road after The Fab Four went their separate ways.
    He says: “My big aim after The Beatles, once we decided to put a band together, was to do something different.
    “That was difficult because, for all those years, I’d been training Beatle-style.
    “So I had to avoid anything that sounded too Beatle-y and make a new style, which was to become the Wings style.
    “By the time we did Band On The Run, I felt we’d got it. It had echoes (of The Beatles), maybe inevitably because it was me, but we had established our own style.
    “Years later, I was doing an interview. We were talking about Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and they said, ‘My Sgt. Pepper’s was Band On The Run.’”
    When McCartney performed at Glastonbury in June, 2022, days after his 80th birthday, he turned to Band On The Run for four of the 38 songs.
    Foo Fighter-in-chief Dave Grohl joined him for a rousing rendition of the title track. “He sings it great,” says Macca.
    READ MORE SUN STORIES
    “And it’s great for me to see that song thrive — the final validation of what we were trying to do back then.”
    ’Hoffman dared me’I’LL never forget the moment a Beatle began writing a song in front of me.
    It was in 2008 when I met Paul McCartney at his Soho offices to talk about his second album with producer Youth under the moniker The Fireman.
    To illustrate how he could improvise on the spot, he leapt up, grabbed a travel book about East Africa from a shelf above me and started feverishly thumbing through it.
    For a few moments, Macca stared at a picture of a snow-capped peak before reading the accompanying text.
    “Majestic mountains, all right!” he exclaimed, putting down the book.
    Then he picked up an acoustic guitar, conveniently to hand, and began to strum and sing.
    “I climb majestic mountains, I’m travelling to your heart,” he crooned.
    And I was left thinking, “Did that really happen? Did a Beatle really start composing a song right there in front of me?”
    The reason I’m mentioning all this is because McCartney has form, notably around Band On The Run track Picasso’s Last Words (Drink To Me).
    He says the song was “a dare”. “Dustin Hoffman said to me, ‘Could you write a song about anything?’
    “I said, ‘I don’t know, maybe.’ He ran upstairs and came back with a newspaper article about the death of Picasso.”
    It included the artist’s last words: “Drink to me. Drink to my health. You know I can’t drink anymore”.
    Macca continues: “So Dustin said, ‘Can you write a song about that?’
    “I did happen to have my guitar with me. So I hit record and started singing a melody to those words. He was flabbergasted.”

    PAUL McCARTNEY & WINGS — Band On The Run
    50th Anniversary Edition with unreleased “Underdubbed” mixes, out now
    ★★★★★
    Band On The Run has received a re-release after 50 years
    And it includes previously unreleased mixes More

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    Son of ‘fifth Beatle’ George Martin goes behind Now And Then – the Fab Four’s last ever song

    “I’VE got this song, what do you think?”With that intriguing question from Paul McCartney, so began another magical mystery Beatles adventure for Giles Martin.
    The Beatles ‘now and then’ as they appear in Peter Jackson’s video for Now And Then
    Now And Then was another magical mystery Beatles adventure for Giles Martin – son of ‘fifth Beatle’ George MartinCredit: Getty
    It was the moment the producer son of the producer father, “fifth Beatle” George Martin, became involved with The Fab Four’s last ever song.
    Macca was telling Giles about Now And Then, which, as I write today, is here, there and everywhere.
    He thought of the John Lennon demo, handed over by his widow Yoko in 1994, as unfinished business because he, George Harrison and Ringo Starr had attempted to complete it but came up short.
    Giles, for his part, was only too happy to help the great man get the job done at last — and was sworn to secrecy.
    READ MORE ON NOW AND THEN
    “The funny thing about The Beatles is the way they work,’ he says. “Or the way WE work as I’m involved now.
    “We do stuff and, if it’s crap, we shelve it and no one need ever know.
    “It’s not even mystique. There’s no marketing plan where we go, ‘What we need for next year is a new Beatles record.’
    “And I’m sure Yoko didn’t think like that. I’m sure she just thought, ‘This is a really beautiful tune written by John and, if anyone should have it, it should be them.’”
    Most read in Music
    It’s incredible to think that Now And Then, featuring all four Beatles, is set to become their 18th UK No1 single.
    Recorded now and then, the wistful Lennon ballad arrives more than 54 years after their 17th chart topper, The Ballad Of John & Yoko.
    Its release a week ago has unleashed a fresh wave of global adulation for Britain’s greatest pop exports and it comes with a fascinating back story.
    With that in mind, I headed to Abbey Road — where else? — to meet Giles, 54, in his office at the studios where The Beatles recorded nearly all their stellar output under the calm influence of his dad.
    “I know Paul and he has an amazing memory. I’m sure it bothered him that they never finished it,” he tells me over a cup of builders’ tea, the sort the band were always partial to.
    “It’s taken time for a genius like him to realise that The Beatles was the best collaborative thing he ever did.
    “Whenever I talk to him, including during work on Now And Then, his insistence on respecting the other Beatles is paramount.”
    It’s fair to say that the Lennon-McCartney songwriting partnership remains unrivalled more than 50 years after it ended.
    “Paul knows he’s never going to find another John Lennon,” says Giles. “There’s not another John Lennon in the world.”
    Getting Now And Then done, achieving Macca’s long-held ambition, owes a huge amount to a long-haired New Zealander likened by Giles to a “wizard” from The Lord Of The Rings.
    Emile de la Rey and his team pioneered audio technology for Peter Jackson’s fly-on-the-wall 2021 documentary series Get Back which allowed them to demix vocals and instruments from mono recordings.
    So McCartney could employ the same AI programme to separate Lennon’s singing from his piano playing on a scratchy late Seventies cassette.
    The demo tape also included two other songs which were finished for their multimedia Anthology, Free As A Bird and Real Love, leaving Now And Then, which Giles calls “the best of the three”, languishing in a cupboard somewhere.
    Nearly 30 years later, Macca was able to just keep the parts of Now And Then he needed from those ’94 sessions including Harrison’s guitar.
    And with a little help from his friend and old bandmate Ringo, he added crystal clear Lennon vocals, a guitar solo, bass, drums, harmony singing and strings.
    “This project was all Paul. It was his chance to go back and ‘work’ with John,” says Giles.
    “I know he misses him and I know he misses working with him.”
    He continues: “You’ve got someone, who happens to be Paul McCartney, and he happens to have been in a band with his best mate, who was John Lennon.
    “There was a falling out, as everyone knows, but it wasn’t about their friendship. It was based on finance and business, nothing like the Gallagher brothers or The Everly Brothers.
    “It was unresolved though and John got shot ten years later — a relatively short period of time.”
    Giles says the Get Back footage, filmed in 1969, shows that Lennon and McCartney were still close even if, a year later, they went their separate ways amid talk of frustration and acrimony.
    “You can see that Paul and John still needed each other,” he affirms. “Both George and Ringo seemed more isolated.”
    Time, they say, is a great healer so when it came to finishing Now And Then, there was huge determination by the two surviving Beatles to honour the two who left us too soon. Giles says: “Everything Paul and Ringo did for this, they were thinking about John and George, without any question. That was on their minds more than anything else.”
    He dismisses the belief that Harrison thought Now and Then was “rubbish” and suggests that the quiet Beatle’s concerns were more about the sound quality.
    Since 2006, when father and son Martin co-produced The Beatles’ sound collage Love, Giles has been one of the chief custodians of the band’s precious legacy.
    He masterminded 50th Anniversary remixes of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, The White Album, Abbey Road and Let It Be as well as working on audio for the Get Back films.
    Last year, he was able to use the revolutionary AI technology to replace Revolver’s crude stereo mix with a sparkling makeover.
    Giles is hugely aware of the historic significance of those original recordings and is humble in his endeavours. “I take the Morris Minor to pieces. I prepare the engine, polish the wheels and put it back together again,” he says.
    “It’s still the Morris Minor but it may drive a little bit better. The Beatles were genuinely good!”
    Now, to coincide with Now And Then, he and Sam Okell have prepared expanded 50th anniversary reissues of 1962-1966 (The Red Album) and 1967-1970 (The Blue Album).
    More on those to come but first, Giles continues the story behind  the song everyone is talking about.
    “Paul played me what he’d started working on from the ’94 demo plus the extras he’d already done — new bass, piano, the guitar solo. Then we discussed whether to do more things with it.”
    They agreed to write a Beatles-style string arrangement of the sort Giles’s late father George was famous for.
    They brought in arranger Ben Foster to assist and recorded musicians at Capitol studios, Los Angeles, who thought they were working on a McCartney solo project.
    “We started off with a 22-piece string section,” says Giles. “But eventually I cut it down to eight for most of the song — a double string quartet of four violins, two violas and two cellos.
    “I was thinking, ‘What would dad have done?’ And I know he would have said, ‘You have to serve the song.’
    “So yeah, if I wanted to rip off my dad, do it for Now And Then by The Beatles.”
    Also in the mix are sampled “oohs” and “aahs” from Beatles classics Eleanor Rigby, Because and Here, There And Everywhere.
    Giles admits: “Paul was reticent about that, understandably so, because he didn’t want some gimmicky thing.
    “But I just thought, ‘The Beatles would do oohs here and I can’t get The Beatles to do them because two of the oohs are no longer with us.’
    ‘It’s how the older Beatles might sound’
    “So I said to Paul, ‘Let me just try it because I think it will sound right.’ He liked the idea in the end — it works for the song.”
    As to whether Lennon’s lyrics such as “I miss you” refer to his former bandmates, Peter Jackson is convinced that they are.
    But Giles says: “That’s what they might feel like now but Paul would never talk to me about it, so who knows?”
    Of the finished product spanning four minutes and eight seconds, he adds: “Now And Then does sound like a Beatles song but not one from back in the day.
    “It’s more how a Beatles song would sound now because they’re older. We didn’t try to hide that.”
    So what about the verdict from the most important listeners?
    “Paul was just really happy, as was Ringo,” replies Giles. “For me, that’s the job done. If everyone else hates it, it doesn’t really matter because they’re The Beatles.”
    He holds huge admiration for the affable drummer and says: “I sat with Ringo in London and we listened to it.
    “He looks amazing, very fit, and he has such a love of it all. His passion is infectious and he is very generous in his support.
    “He’s always been like that. He’s The Beatles’ conscience. It’s as if they look at Ringo and go, ‘Maybe we’re being arseholes.’ He has that look.” As for the love of Lennon’s life, Yoko, Giles reports; “She loves it, too.
    “She’s in her eighties and is just happy to hear John’s voice as it was again. And it’s a John song.”
    He also reserves praise for the two sons who lost their fathers, Sean Ono Lennon and Dhani Harrison.
    “They’re both very good musicians but it’s a big thing to step into Beatles world,” he says.
    “Any comments they make are really valid and it’s a blessing having them around.”
    Not only has the last Beatles song, Now And Then, appeared as a single backed by their first hit, 1962’s Love Me Do, but it is also the final track on an upgraded reissue of the 1967-1970 compilation, aka The Blue Album.
    Across that and 1962-1966, The Red Album, there are now 21 extra tracks to make a total of 75. Among worthy new inclusions are I Saw Her Standing There, Tomorrow Never Knows, Dear Prudence, Blackbird and Glass Onion. They were always fabulous collections because they rounded up so many great non-album singles — She Loves You, I Want To Hold Your Hand, We Can Work It Out, Paperback Writer, Strawberry Fields Forever, Penny Lane, Lady Madonna and Hey Jude among them.
    Giles says: “For people of my generation, the Red and the Blue albums are Beatles albums, not compilations.
    “I know the running orders of Red and Blue better than those of Revolver or Rubber Soul.”
    While the new Blue album mostly uses recent but pre-Peter Jackson mixes, the whole of Red benefits from the AI separation wizardry.
    Giles says of those early songs: “I probably wouldn’t have been able to mix them a year ago or maybe even six months ago.
    “A really good example is Twist And Shout which had guitar and drums all on the left-hand side and vocals on the right-hand.
    “Now, we have drums in the middle and guitars on the side and it gives you a much better sound.” Another marvel, reports Giles, is Day Tripper — “You can really hear that Ringo is whacking the drums now.”
    The Beatles in 1968, and now in 2023 they have released their last ever record
    Paul and Giles at work on the new single – set to be Number 1 this weekCredit: Apple Corps
    “The technology has been a revelation,” he continues. “They sound like 23-year-olds in a room, having a good time, as opposed to a 50-year-old record being played on your dad’s stereo.”
    Before we part, there’s one nagging question left. Is Now And Then really the last Beatles song or are there hidden gems in the archives waiting to be fully realised?
    “There might be but it wouldn’t be The Beatles,” he answers emphatically.
    “Now And Then wouldn’t be The Beatles had they not sat down in ’94 and worked with George. It wouldn’t be all four of them.
    “That’s his rhythm guitar playing which gave us the structure to base the song around.
    Read More on The Sun
    “On top of everything else they’ve achieved, The Beatles are lucky that their last ever song sounds like their last ever song.”
    It’s been a long and winding road — paved with music gold,

    EXPANDED 50TH ANNIVERSARY EDITIONS
    THE BEATLES 1962-66
    (The Red Album)
    ★★★★★

    THE BEATLES 1967-70
    (The Blue Album)
    ★★★★★ More

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    Baffled Beatles fans hoping to visit iconic Abbey Road zebra crossing in mix up with DLR station ten miles away

    BAFFLED Beatles fans need a little help to find the band’s famous Abbey Road zebra crossing.Many are buying a ticket to ride ten miles out of their way.
    Beatles fans need help to find the band’s famous Abbey Road zebra crossingCredit: Reuters
    Many are buying a ticket to Abbey Road DLR station in Newham, East LondonCredit: Sunil Prasannan
    Their error means they must make a ten-mile journey across the capital
    The group was pictured on the crossing near their Abbey Road studios in St John’s Wood, North London, for their iconic 1969 album named after the street.
    But hundreds of day trippers hoping to recreate the image in selfies have been turning up at Abbey Road DLR station in Newham, East London, instead.
    Their error means they must make a ten-mile, £3.40 journey across the capital, taking about 40 minutes, to get to the Fab Four’s actual crossing.
    Transport for London figures show there have been 2,411 trips made between the Docklands Light Railway station and the Jubilee Tube line at St John’s Wood since the start of 2021.
    READ MORE SHOWBIZ
    It is thought most are made by confused Beatles fans. There have been 853 journeys so far this year, with 876 last year.
    Abbey Road DLR station is surrounded by housing estates, warehouses and a rail depot.
    “Yesterday one frustrated fan reckoned: “I thought it was strange the studio was this far out of London but I saw the stop and assumed it was the right place.
    A poster to help those who need to get back to North London was put up at Abbey Road by TfL in 2013.
    Most read in Music
    It was upgraded to a display board in 2021 and is now a permanent and light-hearted fixture.
    It reads: “Feel like you’ve been here there and everywhere and on a magical mystery tour? Then don’t pass me by.
    “Unfortunately you are at the wrong Abbey Road. However we can work it out and help you get back to the correct location.”
    The photo of Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, John Lennon and George Harrison was taken in August 1969 for their 11th album.
    Last year a Google Maps blunder sent fans to the wrong crossing half a mile away.
    A poster to help those who need to get back to North London was put up by TfL in 2013Credit: Google More