Yes, Paul McCartney loved punk. The boy was a fan of Sex guns and so? mentioned by John Lydon himselfsinger of the band, who had the honor of being the protagonist of an embarrassing encounter with the beatles in the late 70s.
Lydon, better known as Johnny Rotten, was married (which is already gossip for history). The truth is that in the program Life stories He said he was driving with his wife through London and the alleged unexpected happened: “Two people ran across the road: they were Paul and Linda McCartney. They saw me and started banging on the car window.”
Rotten seems to have gotten scared as if the intruders were window cleaners: “I put the button to lock the doors, then swerved and ran. I couldn’t stand it. My shyness took over.”
Through the rearview mirror, Rotten could make out McCartney’s doggy gaze dangling across the asphalt.
The punk vein of the Beatles
100% Credible: helter skelter, The Beatles song of the year 1968, was composed by Paul McCartney. Scholars explain that due to its “dirty and aggressive” sound, the song included in the white album It is considered a “key piece” in the early development of styles such as heavy metal and punk rock.
And not only heavy metal and punk rock, but it also prides itself on being the first “hard rock” song. Another piece of information that reaffirms the origins? When they played in Hamburg, the Beatles were pretty punkrock reporters say.
And if that weren’t enough, helter skelter It was the scream that drove Charles Manson completely insane. In one such documentary, Manson syndicated the Paul McCartney theme as something of a “battle cry” for his August 1969 massacre, a milestone that made him world famous and the Heavenly Father of Netflix’s favorite genre.
All this without forgetting the best thing that Ringo recorded in the Beatles: “I’ve got blisters on my fingers” (I have blisters on my fingers!). Starr’s yell at the end of such a chaotic and avant-garde song is more important than Munch’s yell.
Paul said, “I think we should make a really beastly record.” And there he composed helter skelter.
The Beatles were fucking punks: the hidden gem event is that on August 26, 1966 they stopped playing live forever (the terrace thing is invalidated because they weren’t selling tickets).
In other words, More than half a century ago the first major rudeness towards the entertainment industry was carried out. A huge group, for which world tours were invented, would have retired, reinvented themselves, shrugged off their egos and stopped performing live forever.
Whether you lived in London or Buenos Aires, you only heard about the Beatles through their records. nothing more punk than that. Johnny Marcio? A breastfed baby.
The beginning of the end of his recitals began with performances at the Hollywood Bowl. George Martin, historic producer of the Beatles, explained that those concerts in Los Angeles had been “chaos”. He said there was no sound feedback, “so they couldn’t hear what they were singing.”
Punk before punk. The Sex Pistols were still a long decade away, yet the Beatles had already had the courage to get rid of their fans. The one that is said to have well laid eggs.
An unpublished fact and abused by essayism. Who renounces the crowd? Are there groups, soloists, avant-gardes, humans, anyone who gets a hit?
Lydon: ‘I never liked The Beatles’
On the Sex Pistols, McCartney inconsistently stated that the question deserved: “Listening to them, yeah, that’s the excitement for me. The music is very good rock and roll and you see that many other people choose it…”. What else, Paul? “You needed guys like that and the energy they could bring to rock. Great music,” he insisted.
In a televised interview, the PIL frontman and former Sex Pistols continued to show his disgust at Sir Paul McCartney’s debate-neutralizing praise. “I’ve never, ever liked The Beatles. My parents played their songs all day long… I’d say too much.”
Many years later, with new ingredients, the punk singer’s anecdote was heard again: “One day I was with my wife Dora. We were going to visit my brother in Tottenham. see Paul and Linda McCartney approaching our vehicle.”
“Paul started banging on the car window, so I locked the door, turned around like I didn’t see him, and walked away…”
Glen Matlock, a founding member of the Sex Pistols, was allegedly kicked out of the group for liking the Beatles. Rotten is said to have seen him booing Love me, do it and did not reward him. After all, it was a good decision because Syd Vicious replaced him and put the story in its right place.
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Source: Clarin