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Although Our World was originally recorded and transmitted in black-and-white, for its use in the 1995 TV special The Beatles Anthology, the Beatles' performance on the program was colourised, using colour photographs taken at the event as a reference. [11]
He originally offered it for the Our World broadcast, but the Beatles favoured Lennon's "All You Need Is Love" for its social significance. [79] McCartney later said he wrote the song as a production number for Magical Mystery Tour, [80] where it provides the film's closing, Busby Berkeley–style dance sequence. [81]
The Beatles arriving for concerts in Madrid, July 1965. From 1961 to 1966, the English rock band the Beatles performed all over the Western world. They began performing live as The Beatles on 15 August 1960 at The Jacaranda in Liverpool and continued in various clubs during their visit to Hamburg, West Germany, until 1962, with a line-up of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Stuart ...
5/5 Sorry Swifties, hard luck Elton, in your face Sphere – this is the musical event of the year and one of the greatest tear-jerkers in history
“Beatles ’64” opens with an extended sequence devoted to the early-’60s reign of John F. Kennedy — because, as has been noted so often, JFK was assassinated just a little over two months ...
The Night That Changed America: A Grammy Salute to the Beatles is a television program and tribute to English rock group the Beatles.It aired on CBS on February 9, 2014 (original) and February 12, 2014 (rerun) in the United States and ITV in the United Kingdom on May 2, 2014.
The Beatles in the U.S.A.," and formed the substance of the 1991 "The Beatles: The First U.S. Visit." (Bits and pieces have appeared in various Beatles docs over the years; it is foundational stuff.)
McCartney said that he and Lennon expanded the tour to make it magical, which allowed it to be "a little more surreal than the real ones", [3] and that the song was "very much in our fairground period". [4] There are also interpretations of the lyric as an explicit reference to drugs, since the Beatles were experimenting with acid in those years.