The Beatles’ last song becomes their 18th number one single

Entertainment

The Beatles’ last song has become their 18th number one single.

Now And Then was written and recorded by John Lennon in New York in the late 1970s, before being developed by the other band members, including George Harrison, in 1995.

Lennon’s wife Yoko Ono had given the recording to the remaining Beatles the previous year.

But technology at the time was more limited and the band were unhappy with the sound quality.

Beatles superfan, John Lennon, who changed his name by deed poll from Alan Williams in April 2022, holds the first copy of the newly released last Beatles song, Now And Then, following a special midnight launch event at HMV Liverpool, allowing fans in the home city of the four Beatles members to be the first to get their hands on the new music. Picture date: Friday November 3, 2023. Picture date: Friday November 3, 2023.
Image:
Beatles superfan John Lennon, who changed his name by deed poll, was the first to buy a copy of Now And Then

Now, however, with the help of AI, Sir Paul McCartney and Sir Ringo Starr have finished it, more than four decades after it was started.

Filmmaker Peter Jackson’s recent Beatles documentary used audio restoration technology. That allows music and vocals to be isolated, a technique that was used on Now And Then.

Jackson also directed the new music video for the song which was released on Friday.

In its opening weekend, the song has outsold the rest of the top five combined, according to the Official Chart Company.

It is the Fab Four’s first chart-topper in 54 years, the last being The Ballad Of John And Yoko in 1969.

Previous number ones include All You Need Is Love, Help!, and Hey Jude.

File photo dated 01/06/67 of The Beatles (left to right) Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Ringo Starr and John Lennon, at a recording studio in London. Sir Paul McCartney and Sir Ringo Starr have spoken of their "emotional" feelings ahead of the release of what they are calling the last Beatles song. Now And Then, written and sung by John Lennon and later developed by the other band members including George Harrison, has been finished by Sir Paul and Sir Ringo decades after the original recordin
Image:
The Beatles in June 1967

“I like the idea of not letting go of each other,” Sir Paul told The Sunday Times.

“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 say when somebody dies.

“They’re in your memory, always in your heart. And, yes, that’s certainly true of me and the boys.”

Sir Ringo said he would like the group to be remembered “with love”.

The drummer added: “How many streams did we do last year? One billion? Three billion? It blows me away. The beat’s still going on, you know?”

Articles You May Like

NASA’s Europa Clipper Probe Begins Deploying Science Instruments on Way to Jupiter
NASA Disasters Programme Uses Artificial Intelligence to Help Aid Response Efforts
‘Creating jobs with my bum’: Kate Nash says OnlyFans earnings are subsidising her tour
Starmer rules out another general election after petition reaches two million signatures
Trump’s pick for health secretary once called US vaccine rollout agency a ‘fascist’ enterprise