Every corner of the planet had discovered The Beatles by 1966, but it was the year when we would all discover who they were becoming. Steve Turner’s new biography Beatles ’66: The Revolutionary Year ...
In most Beatles history books, the section chronicling their activities in 1966 might take up a few dozen pages. But given how important and unique that year was compared to any other annum of their ...
9 September 2009 sees The Beatles' studio back catalogue re-released in remastered mono and stereo form across two CD box sets: The Beatles In Mono, and The Beatles Box Set: Remastered In Stereo. In ...
John Lennon never much liked the way Beatles material was marketed in America, and it’s doubtful that what Capitol-EMI has done with the newly issued “Beatles ’62-’66” and “Beatles ’66-’70” ...
Fifty years ago, in 1966, the Beatles did something that would forever change the way recording artists approach their work: they decided to quit touring and devote their creative energies to pushing ...
After I read Kevin Cullen’s column “Returning to the lyric little bandbox” (Metro, Sept. 23), in which he connected his childhood memories of seeing the Red Sox play with going to a game with his son ...
Neil Aspinall, a lifelong pal of the Beatles from their scuffling days in Liverpool who became their road manager and then spent nearly 40 years as the chief protector of the group's recorded legacy ...
A pile of new media - music, movies, books - continues to emerge, digging into every aspect of the unprecedented career of the Beatles. We take a look at a few of them here.
Neil Aspinall, a longtime friend of the Beatles who managed their business enterprises and helped make the group a moneymaking phenomenon decades after they split up, died Sunday in New York of lung ...
Neil Aspinall, who died Sunday at 66, was the Beatles’ original road manager and went on to run the group’s business empire for 40 years; he became their chief confidant and, although not the only ...