Bettmann Archiveīut as McCartney goes inside The Beatles’ playbook, it’s clear that there was no method to crafting titanic tunes, and in fact, they were sometimes born in the most inopportune moments. Pepper,’ ” says McCartney, adding that playing “alter egos of ourselves” - in an Edwardian-era military band - took the pressure off of The Beatles at a time when expectations were sky-high: “This was just some other band.” The Beatles (from left, Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, John Lennon and George Harrison), circa 1965. “We heard ‘Pet Sounds,’ and, ‘All right, we’ve got to do something better than that.’ So we did ‘Sgt. McCartney also shares that the Beach Boys’ 1966 album “Pet Sounds” inspired The Beatles to make their own masterpiece in “Sgt. Paul McCartney (right) spills Beatles secrets to über-producer Rick Rubin in a new docuseries. The story behind that album title is just one of the secrets about the Fab Four that McCartney, 79, spills to legendary producer Rick Rubin over the course of the six-part docuseries that reveals how The Beatles really worked it out - and made the magic happen. Pepper.’ … So we had a laugh about that, but then the more I thought about it, ‘Sgt. And he said, ‘Could you pass the salt and pepper?’ ” says Paul McCartney in the new docuseries “McCartney 3, 2, 1,” which premieres on Hulu Friday. “I was on a plane with our roadie, and we were eating. “Salt and Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” doesn’t have the same ring to it.īut if it weren’t for a moment of confusion about condiments, the 1967 Beatles classic - one of the greatest albums in rock history - would have never become “Sgt. Old Oscars memory: Harvey Weinstein wanted ‘Catcher in the Rye’ film rights ‘You took advantage’: John Lennon’s ‘Lost Weekend’ love was set up by his wife How Little Richard went from sex fiend to repentant Bible thumper Sting claims he has no BTS envy: ‘I’m not desperately trying to get on the K-pop charts’
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