Cosmic Funnies
styofa doing anything

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TVSTRANGERTHINGS

@theartofmadeline
One Nice Bug Per Day
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AnasAbdin
todays bird

Kiana Khansmith

if i look back, i am lost

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

tannertan36
occasionally subtle
Peter Solarz

Love Begins
Misplaced Lens Cap
tumblr dot com
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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@peachybeatle
paul talking about the “secret code” part in days we left behind
paul mccartney at “the one show” (bbc), interviewed by lauren laverne (aired may 29th)
The interviewer asks Paul the earliest sounds he can remember hearing as a child:
“There are so many,” he says. “We could be here for a few hours.” At infant school, running indoors with his classmates. At 10 years old, living on Western Avenue in Speke, “hanging out on the grass verge of the dual carriageway, with girls, and listening to them chatting, and one of them said, ‘You’ve got great eyelashes!’”
I can gauge John’s reaction: that’s good, stick that in’: Paul McCartney on how old bandmates – and Oasis – inspired his nostalgic new album; The Guardian
Not a lip-reading expert, but it looks like Paul is saying "we're together" when referring to himself and George 👀
[London Airport - 13th March 1965]
Paul McCartney on Chicken Shop Date with Amelia Dimoldenberg (x)
February 1967; photo by Henry Grossman. “George always had a very pragmatic streak. He never let the so-called glamour of show-business seduce him. He always saw through phoney people very quickly. He was the practical one, the one who could mend the amplifier or change the fuse. And he is one of the most generous people I know. If you were a friend of George in need, he would reach into his pocket and give you his last penny. Equally, if it were a matter of principle, he would defend you to the last. If ever I were in trouble, George Harrison is the kind of person I would like to be able to turn to.” - George Martin, With A Little Help From My Friends: The Making of Sgt. Pepper (1994) “There was a time in the Nineties when Dad was very sick. He was confined to bed and things were fairly touch and go for a while. George [Harrison] was wonderful, simply wonderful; he came over to visit and brought Dad a Ganesh elephant symbol, telling him it would keep him safe and well. He was such a comfort to the whole family during a difficult time. He was a very keen gardener, the grounds of his home were just beautiful, still are, and he helped Mum a lot with our garden. He would drive over to see us with as many plants as he could fit on to the passenger seat of a McLaren F1! He meant a great deal to my dad; to all of us.” - Giles Martin, Express, May 27, 2012 “I spoke to George Martin recently, and he was talking about all the ‘20 years ago today’ stuff and The Beatles CDs, and he said, 'Never mind, George. It’ll soon be gone and we can go back into our shells.’” - George Harrison, The Observer Magazine, 1987 Q: “George Martin recently admitted he still felt embarrassed about not giving you more attention in the studio. He claimed he’d been ‘beastly to George.’” George Harrison: “He wasn’t beastly to me, but he spoke to me recently and said his only regret was that he didn’t realize sooner what I was. He already had enough to deal with, I suppose, with this band The Beatles who already had two guys out there writing and singing. He didn’t really need to try because in those days most groups had their songs written for them. It was all quite new. But only this summer he said to me, Will you ever forgive me, George? (Laughs) He’s such a gentleman! It was nice of him to say that, you know.” - Q, 1988
“I said to the boys, after we’d done a few takes of rather nondescript songs, I said, ‘Come into the control room and have a listen and see what we’ve been doing. And if there’s anything you don’t like, tell us.’ And George was the one who took the leap. And he said, ‘Well, I don’t like your tie for a start.’ And the others were horrified. They thought, God, he’s blown it. But of course, I fell around laughing. I thought it was — it was so cheeky, and so funny that I… you know, he endeared himself to me.” - George Martin, Living In The Material World (x)
PAUL MCCARTNEY + that hair thing
Stephen Colbert: “When you close your eyes, do you hear the girls screaming?”
Paul McCartney: “Yeah, uh-…”
👇>>> Beatlemania screams ensue <<<
Ohhhh, you can see the memories just washing over Paul as he listens to those screams in the Ed Sullivan Theater …. And basks in that adulation he adores & appreciates 🥲
He even looks a little teary-eyed at a certain point, when taking in the audience’s screams: all the feels for Paul, I think 😭🥹🫶 (see picture below video)
paul's voice breaking after he says "we'd loved each other all our lives" is the worst thing that's ever happened to me btw
i really do think that we as society don't speak often enough about this photo, bcs wtf man 😭😭😭😭what's better than hitting the proposal pose in front of your bestie (and a whole film crew. and cameras) while singing a love ballad which is certainly not about the very same bestie, nah-ah
Yes. And if it were only that picture, without all the surrounding context, I would probably just see it as them goofing around behind the scenes. Because we actually see similar playful behavior in the official If I Fell sequence from A Hard Day’s Night, when John is playing around and singing directly to Ringo. But if you watch closely, he repeatedly looks past Ringo toward Paul, who is standing on the other side. His attention keeps shifting back and forth between them, and when Paul finally looks back at him, John breaks into a wide smile. And it looks spontaneous, like it just naturally happened in the moment rather than being scripted. He was fixated on Paul both during the filming and behind the scenes, as the picture showed.
Another thing people don’t bring up enough is that Paul said in 1964 that If I Fell was his favorite song. Then, more than forty years later, in 2007, he still called it his favorite John song (it wasn't during an formal interview, he told it privately to someone while they were talking casually). That’s interesting, because in between these years, as well as afterwards and until this day, whenever he's asked (in more public mediums) to list his favorite songs by John, he mostly only mentions Beautiful Boy, Strawberry Fields Forever, Julia, and Across the Universe. Which makes you wonder why he never mentions If I Fell.
And there's something about the Valentine’s card that many overlook. A lot of people think that John used it as a draft while composing the song on the plane, but if you actually look at the card, the lyrics are written very neatly. There are no corrections, scribbles, or crossed-out lines like you’d expect in a draft. And it’s already the final version of the lyrics (well, more like 99%. There are like 3 words that are slightly different, but nothing that changes the meaning). It doesn’t look like someone actively composing on the spot. It looks like he already knew how the song was supposed to be, and deliberately chose to copy the lyrics down on that card. Which makes the whole thing more interesting. The card, as we all know, is addressed to Paul. And according to a guy who obtained one copy of the card, it’s signed with a “J.” He thinks the “J” stands for Jane, but of course, it could also stand for John.
But yes, going back to the picture you mentioned, it becomes much more emotionally loaded once you place it alongside all this other context. You notice how focused John seems on Paul while singing If I Fell, both in the actual filmed scene and in the behind-the-scenes photos. He keeps looking back at him over and over. Which, of course, could still mean nothing.
"It's....semi-autobiographical, but not that conscious, you know. It's really about....it's not about Cyn, my first wife." (John, 1980)
About the "if i fell" valentine card
It interesting that he suggest that Jane gave that letter to Paul, but at least we know that it says "for Paul"
The person who gave Paul the card signed themselves with "J" he said. So it could be Jane but it also could be John
I think the J is most likely stands for John, because he wouldn't risk writting his full name on a card for Paul. And I don't think that John used the card as a draft while composing If I Fell, because the card has the full lyrics without any corrections. He most likely composed the song much earlier.
THE BEATLES in Paris, 1964
watching paul's brain cell expire in real time bc john blew his mind with a little bit of science is probably one of my favorite Get Back exchanges
PAUL McCARTNEY at his High Park Farm, Campbeltown, Scotland, 1969. Photographed by LINDA McCARTNEY.
Dusty Springfield and The McCartneys
In March 1999, Dusty Springfield, the musical icon of the 1960s, would sadly die of breast cancer.
Nine months earlier, her friend, Linda McCartney, also diagnosed with breast cancer, had passed away.
According to Dusty's closest friends/caregivers, before she passed, Dusty would regularly hear from Linda (and Paul, who she had known since their rise to fame in the early 60s).
SIMON BELL: During that 14 months a lot of people in show business would call on the telephone, and Dusty found it hard to takes those calls... She spoke to Linda regularly, especially as Linda herself was dealing with her own cancer. PAT RHODES: Paul and Linda were lovely to Dusty, they'd send her little presents and her and Linda would chat on the phone… And I happened to switch the TV on one night and the message came through that Linda had died. SIMON BELL: It was a very big blow to Dusty because Linda was really an inspiration… And it was particularly poignant because that day flowers had arrived from Linda. Linda regularly sent beautiful bouquets and there was a real sadness that those flowers were there...
- Just Dusty (2009)
PAT RHODES: I unfortunately was the one who had to pass the news on to Dusty when Linda died, and it was horrific... cause Dusty just screamed down the phone 'no, you've got it wrong, you've got in wrong!' She couldn't believe Linda had gone... And Paul was very good to Dusty after Linda died, he still rang her for a while and kept her going.
- The South Bank Show: Dusty Springfield (2006)
When Dusty passed away the following March, a funeral was held in Henley-upon-Thames where she had lived, attended by hundreds of friends and fans. The news coverage showed the image of a sunflower bouquet and card sent by Paul.
Two weeks later, Paul and the, now, late-great Dusty were both inducted into the 1999 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Pictured:
Dusty with visiting friend, Marv, in front of house on the Thames. Photo credit Simon Bell.
Linda riding her Appaloosa stallion in the McCartney's East Sussex home. Photo credit Mary McCartney.
Bouquet and card sent by Paul to Dusty's funeral.
Paul McCartney, Dusty Springfield, Tom Jones and Ringo Starr at the Pop Poll Awards 1966. Unknown photographer.