The legendary music producer, who was often dubbed the Fifth Beatle due to his work with the Fab Four, passed away on 8 March (16) aged 90, and he was
Beatle People
“Never write the authorised biography,” goes one media adage; you are likely to find the most savoury sections of your tale excised. Philip Norman’s fulsome life of Paul McCartney, a
“Al just struck up a rapport with people,” says Martin Barnes, senior curator at the V&A Museum, of the photographer Al Vandenberg, whose new book, On a Good Day, depicts
Sir Paul McCartney and Yoko Ono were among guests at a memorial service held for the late George Martin. The
The late Mal Evans was, in tandem with Neil Aspinall, among the Beatles’ closest contacts throughout the sixties, being tasked
British author Mark Lewisohn, recognized as the world’s top Beatles expert and biographer, made an under-the-radar trip to Los Angeles
Tony Barrow – the man who coined the phrase “The Fab Four” for The Beatles – has died aged 80. Mr Barrow had worked for the Beatles in the 1960s


