Books on the beatles biography 1969
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And in the End: The Last Days of the Beatles
First off, it's depressing to read about this particular part of The Beatles history. inom always feel a joy and excitement in my heart reading about their childhoods and rise to fame, but books about their död eller bortgång are a slow moving tragedy. As this book begins The Beatles are embarking on recording and filming what became the "Let it Be" planerat arbete . It was a very gray and melancholy time in their career. George Harrison often referred to it as "the winter of discontent". Paul
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The Beatles: The Authorized Biography.
The Beatles: The Authorised Biography
Review:A document of our century. -- Marshall McLuhan
A document of our century.--Marshall McLuhan
A document of our century. --Marshall McLuhan
A document of our century. --Marshall McLuhan"
[Davies s] hard work and the obvious trust the Beatles have in him allow us to see the young musicians for the first time as interesting, fallible, corporeal creatures, each quite different from the others, each with his own history and hang-ups and hopes."
[Davies's] hard work and the obvious trust the Beatles have in him allow us to see the young musicians for the first time as interesting, fallible, corporeal creatures, each quite different from the others, each with his own history and hang-ups and hopes.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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The Beatles: The Authorised Biography
Authorised biography of the Beatles by Hunter Davies
The Beatles: The Authorised Biography is a book written by the British author Hunter Davies and published by Heinemann in the UK in September 1968. It was written with the full cooperation of the Beatles and chronicles the band's career up until early 1968, two years before their break-up. It was the only authorised biography of the Beatles written during their career. Davies published revised editions of the book in 1978, 1982, 1985, 2002, 2009, and 2018.
Background
[edit]In 1966, Hunter Davies was working as the Atticus columnist for the Sunday Times newspaper and had written two books, one of which was the novel Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush. Moved by the Beatles' song "Eleanor Rigby", he visited Paul McCartney at the latter's house in St John's Wood, in September 1966, intending to make the song the focus of his newspaper column. At a subsequent meeting at the house,