EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW

Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr: We never thought the Beatles would last

The last remaining Beatles talk about losing John Lennon and George Harrison and their mission to keep the band’s music alive with a final song, Now and Then

The Beatles
The Beatles
MONTAGE BY TONY BELL. ORIGINAL IMAGES: GETTY IMAGES, ALAMY
The Sunday Times

Paul McCartney never thought the Beatles would last — pop music, after all, was not always such an old man’s game. “When we started,” he says, thinking back to 1960 in Liverpool, “we thought that, maybe, we’d have ten years — that was the maximum span for a rock’n’roll group.” In one way he was right. He jumped ship in 1970 and the Beatles soon split amid rancour and financial wranglings. In another way, though, his band never really went away. “I like the idea of not letting go of each other,” McCartney continues. “You know, when you have somebody you love so much. In many cases it’s a relative, and even though they go, you don’t want to let go — that’s what people