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Her ground-breaking performances, overshadowed by her relationship with John Lennon, gain fresh life
The advanced technology of the desk allowed the group to make their classic album
New Apple TV+ documentary revisits that night in New York when the former Beatle was shot outside his home
Written at a low point for the Beatle, the song went through many iterations — and was transformed by David Bowie
A tour takes fans through the formative Liverpool addresses of Fab Four founders John Lennon and Paul McCartney
This two-volume collection offers a rewarding portrait of the artist, despite its literary pretensions
Researchers at Harvard analysed 8 songs to find out which Beatle wrote them
How a famous love match inspired a landmark album - in the couple’s own words - and photographs
The song is an outlier among the more sing-songy, Paul McCartney-penned tracks on 1967’s Magical Mystery Tour
Covered by many, the song is a touchstone for bands trying to show sensitivity and maturity
John Lennon’s song went on a journey that began in the foothills of the Himalayas
A 50th anniversary edition of The Beatles album hopes to recapture the spirit of the original
Songwriter looks to claim ownership of ‘Love Me Do’ and other songs from 2018
Ron Howard’s documentary covers the band’s journey from early years to last concerts
She earned fame as the ‘topless cellist’ — but this exhibition aims to restore her artistic respectability
Paul Tickell’s kaleidoscope of 1966 shows moments of nostalgic recognition alternate with incredulous embarrassment
‘Grown-up’ who steered the Fab Four to stardom
Band’s legacy supports more than 2,000 jobs as fans take ticket to ride
The tune became part of the Beatles’ repertoire and the Flying Lizards made a hit of it in 1979
Peter Aspden meets the man behind the new adaptation of the Beatle’s book of absurdist rhymes
Al Pacino as an ageing folk-rock star will have you reaching for a hanky — if only to stifle guffaws
Ono made her name as an artist before John Lennon, but MoMA fails to make a case for her career as a whole
King whipped up crowds to the point of ecstasy; his music a release for hard-working lives
Tariq Ali’s ‘The Extreme Centre’ can be read as an examination of the frustrations of the left
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