Los Angeles Times

All he needs is ‘peace and love’

Ringo Starr turns 77 with a celebrity crowd that helps him invoke ‘peace and love.’

- By Randy Lewis

Ringo Starr turned lucky 77 on 7/7/17 and made a wish.

When a Beatle talks, people listen.

That maxim was proved true anew on Friday as Ringo Starr drew hundreds of fans and dozens of fellow musicians, including Jenny Lewis, as well as friends and family members to his annual “Peace and Love” birthday celebratio­n, centered this year once again in Hollywood.

On the day he turned 77, the senior member of the Fab Four acknowledg­ed the violence that continues to erupt around the world as well as the rancorous tone of much the day’s political discourse. But he insisted that his yearly exhortatio­n for more peace and love in the world is not falling on deaf ears.

“The great thing is that it’s continuing to grow,” Starr told The Times a few minutes before stepping outside the Capitol Records tower to lead the crowd in chanting “peace and love” precisely at noon, repeating a ritual that was carried out in each time zone across the globe.

“When this started in Chicago in 2008, there were maybe 60 or 100 people,” he said. “But it keeps getting bigger every year. My dream — my fantasy — is that one day in the future everyone on the planet will stop at noon and say, ‘Peace and love.’

“A few days before my birthday I was being interviewe­d and someone said, ‘What would you like for your birthday?’ I don’t know where it came from, but I said, ‘I’d like more peace and love, and I’d love it if at noon on my birthday everyone would say, ‘Peace and love.’ ”

This year the number of commemorat­ions around the globe is bigger than ever, with events in numerous U.S. cities as well as in England, Russia, India, South Sudan, Brazil, Costa Rica, Germany, New Zealand, Panama, El Salvador, Haiti and even Antarctica.

The internatio­nal flavor was reflected in performanc­es that preceded his arrival by Haitian singer Emmanuel Jal and South Sudanese rapper Paul Beaubrun. Jal served up a reggaesoak­ed rendition of Starr’s 1971 hit “It Don’t Come Easy,” with its occasionfr­iendly refrain, “Please remember peace is how we make it.”

Between Jal’s sung verses of Starr’s 2010 song “Peace Dream,” Beaubrun, who introduced himself as “an exchild solder,” rapped about some of the horrors he has witnessed.

Then the stakes were raised as singer-songwriter Lewis led a quartet featuring composer-arranger Van Dyke Parks on accordion, superstar session drummer Jim Keltner, bassist-record executive Don Was and keyboardis­t Mike Bearden in “Walk With You,” a ballad from Starr’s 2010 album “Y Not” that Starr and Parks co-wrote.

A raft of music and entertainm­ent world luminaries turned out, among them: filmmaker David Lynch, Starr’s actress-wife Barbara Bach, musician-producer Peter Asher, Eagles guitarist-singer Joe Walsh (who also happens to be Starr’s brother-in-law), comedian Richard Lewis, singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams, exGuns N’ Roses drummer Matt Sorum, actor Ed Begley Jr., producer songwriter Glen Ballard and longtime “Breakfast With the Beatles” radio show host Chris Carter.

Many current and former members of Starr’s touring All-Starr Band also appeared: guitarist Nils Lofgren, drummer Gregg Bissonette, and guitarists-singers Richard Page and saxophonis­t Edgar Winter.

Starr at the event also discussed the just-announced thematical­ly related new album he’ll release on Sept. 15, “Give More Love.” Starr noted that Paul McCartney contribute­d to two tracks on the new collection.

“I love him, of course,” Starr said while seated at the mixing board in Capitol’s Studio A, ”but I also love the way he plays bass. He’s the most melodic bass player in the world.”

From his vantage point of 77 years, Starr said he looks beyond the daily headlines in carrying out his mission.

“The world has always been violent,” he said. “All you can do is your part; all I can do is my part, and part of that is to keep saying, ‘Peace and love.’”

randy.lewis@latimes.com Twitter: @RandyLewis­2

 ?? Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times ?? IT’S AN ANNUAL tradition now. Ringo Starr, center, and friends gathered Friday to wish for peace and love.
Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times IT’S AN ANNUAL tradition now. Ringo Starr, center, and friends gathered Friday to wish for peace and love.

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