The Scotsman

Mccartney says post-beatles feud ‘pretty hurtful’ but was never hateful

- By ALEX GREEN newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Sir Paul Mccartney has described his post-beatles feud with John Lennon as “pretty hurtful”, but denied that the band ever “hated” each other.

The Beatles split in 1970, after a decade of recording pop classics and touring the world, prompted by Sir Paul filing for the dissolutio­n of their contractua­l partnershi­p.

Speaking to British GQ, Sir Paul said it was natural that the band would argue because they were like a “family” and a “gang”.

He also appeared to blame The Beatles’ then-manager Allen Klein for the band’s demise.

Sir Paul said: “I suppose that when The Beatles broke up, perhaps there was a misconcept­ion that we all sort of hated each other.

“What I realise now is that, because it was a family, because it was a gang, families argue. And families have disputes. And some people want to do this and some people want to do that.

“So I think what came about after that... the only way for me to save The Beatles and Apple - and to release Get Back by Peter Jackson and which allowed us to release Anthology and all these great remasters of all the great Beatles records - was to sue the band.

“If I hadn’t done that, it would have all belonged to Allen Klein. The only way I was given to get us out of that was to do what I did.

“I said ‘Well, I’ll sue Allen Klein,’ and I was told I couldn’t because he wasn’t party to it. ‘You’ve got to sue the Beatles.’”

Sir Paul, who was due to headline Glastonbur­y’s 50th anniversar­y festival this summer, appears on the cover of the September issue of British GQ, photograph­ed during lockdown by his daughter Mary.

He recalled hearing Lennon’s widow Yoko Ono playing down his involvemen­t in the band’s later albums.

Sir Paul said: “I remember reading an article, an interview with Yoko, who, OK, she was a big John supporter, I get that, but in this article she goes, ‘Paul did nothing. All he ever did was book studio.’

“And I’m going, ‘Err? No...’ And then John does this famous song, How Do You Sleep?, and he’s going, ‘All you ever did was Yesterday...’ “And I’m going, ‘No, man.’ “But then you hear the stories from various angles and apparently people who were in the room when John was writing that, he was getting suggestion­s for the lyrics off Allen Klein.

“So, you see the atmosphere of ‘Let’s get Paul. Let’s nail him in a song...’ And those things were pretty hurtful.”

Sir Paul also dismissed rumours he could do a residency in Las Vegas like Sir Elton John.

 ??  ?? 0 The Beatles in their heyday, eft to right, Paul Mccartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr and George Harrison
0 The Beatles in their heyday, eft to right, Paul Mccartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr and George Harrison

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom