Maybe he said but I don’t believe him.Īnd what you said about “Hey Jude”. ![]() Paul played the organ but who said that he composed what he played. Only because Paul played the Mellotron intro of “Strawberry Fields” it doesn’t mean that he wrote it. I think Paul showed him what he wanted to have. But what is your source concering the composer. John played the piano on “Obladi-Oblada”. Elsewhere he said it was mainly Johns song (which is true in my opinion) and he just had the middle section. “The verse about the politician blowing his mind out in a car we wrote together.” Take a look at the article of “A Day in the Life” on this page. He wrote great songs – Penny Lane, HelloGoodbye, Hey Jude, Let it Be – only a few examples. Nevertheless I’m sometimes a bit angry with him. Example: the only co-written song on the “White Album” is “Birthday”. ![]() And that makes me angry.īy the way: in the last three years (1967-1970) they worked rarely together. But sometimes he gets unreliable.Īnd: It’s kind of odd that he is only saying he contributed after Lennon died, but when he was still alive he never said he contributed to any of these songs. He is the composer of “Eleanor Rigby” and he helped to finish “Norwegian Woods”. I don’t think that everything what Paul said is wrong. ![]() John never mentioned him when he talked about “Lucy in the Sky”. I mean is there a song Paul McCartney doesn’t take credit for? And the source is who? HIMSELF! He is the only one who said so. But in this book Paul claims to have have worked on “Help!”, “Lucy in the Sky”, the first half of “A Day in the Life”, “I Feel Fine”, “Being for the Benefit of Mr. There are so many songs which are generally seen as solo numbers of John. I think this booklet is a more reliable source than an authorized biography by Mr McCartney.
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