The beatles were not fans of paul mccartney's first solo album

The beatles were not fans of paul mccartney's first solo album


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Fifty years ago, The Beatles split up after their final studio album Let It Be hit the charts. While in the same year Paul McCartney released his self-titled first solo album. However, his


bandmates were hardly fans of his 1970 debut. Speaking with Rolling Stone a year later, John Lennon was as candid as ever, calling the McCartney album “rubbish”. The late Beatle said: “I


think he’ll make a better one, when he’s frightened into it. “But I thought that first one was just a lot of … remember what I told you when it came out? Light and easy.” Lennon is also


believed to have called it: “Engelbert Humperdinck music.” READ MORE: THE BEATLES WERE ‘SO SERIOUS’ ABOUT STARRING IN LORD OF THE RINGS He added: “Because I can hear other people play better


drums and guitars and things. “And the arrangements of some of these songs like... Teddy Boy, and Junk, and stuff -- with a little bit more arrangement they could've sounded better. “I


suppose it was the only thing he felt he could do at the time, you know, and he started off just testing his machine. “Eddie Cochran did something like that, though, didn't he.


Summertime Blues and Come On Everybody he played bass, guitar, drums.” McCartney had been insistent that his solo album release on April 17, 1970, a week before The Beatles’ Let It Be.


According to The Telegraph, Ringo hand-delivered a letter from Lennon and George Harrison to McCartney at his St John’s Wood home. The contents said that releasing the two albums so close


together was “stupid” and so The Beatles had told the record company to postpone McCartney’s solo album until June 4. In Beatles book The One You Make, it’s reported by a source that


McCartney “flew into a rage” at the news. Allegedly, McCartney “went completely out of control”, shaking his finger at Ringo and shouting, “I’ll finish you all! You’ll pay!” In the end, The


Beatles drummer told Lennon and Harrison they should let him have the April 17 date, so Let It Be was moved to early May.