Paul McCartney: I always looked at life from a point of view of the public. I think Iāve got a good sense of that. The Beatles split up and we were sort of all equal. George did his record, John did his, I did mine, Ringo did his. It was as we were during the Beatlesā times. We were equal. When John got shot, aside from the pure horror of it, the lingering thing was, OK, well now Johnās a martyr. A JFK. So what happened was, I started to get frustrated because people started to say, āWell, he was The Beatles.ā And me, George and Ringo would go, āEr, hang on. Itās only a year ago we were all equal-ish.ā Yeah, John was the witty one, sure. John did a lot of great work, yeah. And post-Beatles he did more great work, but he also did a lot of not-great work. Now the fact that heās now martyred has elevated him to a James Dean, and beyond. So whilst I didnāt mind that ā I agreed with it ā I understood that now there was going to be revisionism. It was going to be: John was the one. That was basically the thing. And when I would talk to mates theyād say, āDonāt worry. People know [the truth]. Itās OK, they know what you did.ā But then strange things would happen. Like Yoko would appear in the press, and Iād read it, and it said [comedy Yoko accent], āPaul did nothing! All he did was book the studio…ā Like, āFuck you, darling! Hang on! All I did was book the fucking studio?ā Well, OK, now people know thatās not true. But that was just part of it. There was a lot of revisionism: John did this, John did that. I mean, if you just pull out all his great stuff and then stack it up against my not-so-great stuff, itās an easy case to make.
What happened, when we were kids we were looking for what to call our songs. We had a meeting with Brian Epstein, John and me. I arrived late. John and Brian had been talking. āWe were thinking we ought to call the songs, Lennon and McCartney.ā I said, āThatās OK, but what about McCartney and Lennon? If I write it, what about that? It sounds good, too.ā They said, āOK, what weāll do is weāll alternate it: Lennon and McCartney, McCartney and Lennon.ā Well, that didnāt happen. And I didnāt mind. Itās a good logo, like Rogers and Hammerstein. Hammerstein and Rogers doesnāt work. So I thought, āOKā. But what happened was the Anthology came out [in 1996, with Epstein and Lennon now long dead]. And I said, āOK, what theyāre now saying is, āSong by John Lennon and Paul McCartney.āā I said, if youāre doing that, itās not Lennon and McCartney, itās not the logo any more. So, in particular cases like ‘Yesterday’, which John actually had nothing to do with, none of the other Beatles had anything to do with ā I wrote it on my own, sang it on my own, theyāre not on the record, nobody is even involved with it, and they didnāt mind that and I didnāt mind, nobody minded, but thatās very much mine ā so I said, āCould we have āBy Paul McCartney and John Lennonā, wouldnāt that be a good idea? And then on āStrawberry Fieldsā weāll have, āBy John Lennon and Paul McCartneyā. āNowhere Manā, āJohn Lennon and Paul McCartneyā. āPenny Laneā, āPaul McCartney and John Lennonā. Seeing as weāre breaking it up, can we do that?ā And at first Yoko said yeah. And then she rang back a few days later and she had this guy Sam Havadtoy who she was living with ā she was co-Havadtoying ā and she said sheād decided it wasnāt a good idea and no, no, no, no. And it became a bit of an issue for me. Particularly on that particular song, because the original artwork had ‘Yesterday’ by John Lennon and Paul McCartney and a photo of John above it. And I went, āArgh! Come on, lads!ā Anyway they wouldnāt do it.
Well, what happened was there was a backlash from people who didnāt see where I was coming from. āDancing on a dead manās graveā was one of the phrases that came up. āWhat a bighead!ā āWhy does he want his name in front of Johnās?ā But it was nothing to do with bighead. Itās just to do with identifying who wrote what. John did a really good Playboy interview where he did that: āThis is mine, this is Paulās.ā So I thought, āJust use that! John said it!ā I thought that was perfectly reasonable and I still do, by the way. But I donāt think itās achievable for some reason. The arguments I used was these days Iāll get a cinema ticket and I will go to a film called āMiss Congeni-ā. The ā-alityā is missed off. What starts to happen is, āA song by John Lennon and-ā. You know how on your iPad thereās never enough room? So itās kind of important who comes first. Late at night I was in a hotel room looking online and I happened to see this music book, which has got all the songs in it, and it was ‘Hey Jude’ by John Lennon andā¦ā and the space ran out. Thereās a poetry book, Blackbird by John Lennon and Paul McCartney.ā No! He didnāt write those lyrics! So, at the risk of seeming like⦠I tell you what, if John was here he would definitely say thatās OK. Because he didnāt give a damn. It wasnāt anything that worried him. But Iāve given up on it. Suffice to say. In case it seems like Iām trying to do something to John.
Via Esquire