Automoderated users, Autopatrolled users, Bureaucrats, Comment administrators, Confirmed users, Forum administrators, Interface administrators, Moderators, Rollbackers, Administrators
117,086
edits
m (update links) |
Looney Toons (talk | contribs) (work->creator, creatortropes, tropenamer) |
||
Line 1:
{{
[[File:the-beatles.jpg|frame|Clockwise from bottom left: [[Paul McCartney]], [[Ringo Starr]], [[John Lennon]] and [[George Harrison]].]]
{{quote|''And in the end
''The love you take
''Is equal to
''The love you make''|"[[Grand Finale|The End]]"}}
Four lads from Liverpool -- [[John Lennon]], [[Paul McCartney]], [[George Harrison]], and [[Ringo Starr]] -- who released some albums in [[The Sixties]], and are credited by many for changing the face of rock music, while for others they were at least major pioneers of the new style of pop rock, and a major force of [[The British Invasion]]. For many people, they are also the face of [[The Sixties]]. Which is not bad work, really.
''[[Sgt. Pepper's
The Beatles were the first band in history to make music video equivalents to their own songs, which every musician does now. They played themselves in three fictional films: the [[Mockumentary|pseudo-documentary]] ''[[A Hard Day's Night|A Hard Days Night]]'' (1964), the [[James Bond (film)|James Bond]] parody ''[[Help!]]'' (1965), and the critically-panned surrealist television film ''[[Magical Mystery Tour]]'' (1967); they were also the subject of the [[Documentary]] film ''[[Let It Be]]'' (1970). Their [[Celebrity Toons]] equivalents starred in two very different [[Band Toon
The band broke up in 1970 under [[Creative Differences|circumstances painful to think about]]. Everyone went on to solo careers. The dissolution was finalized in 1974, but Apple Corps (the Beatles' management company) was left intact. For perhaps fifteen years, few people saw any purpose for that...
Line 18 ⟶ 17:
But then a second wave of Beatlemania gradually hit -- too late for John Lennon, who sadly had been getting the [[Dead Artists Are Better]] effect since 1980 when he was murdered by a crazed fan, but everyone else got to see it. The events leading to this, in order: the initial release of the British Beatles catalog on CD in 1987; Paul McCartney finally embracing his Beatles heritage fully in 1989, in the process settling the last couple of lawsuits and freeing Apple Corps to ''act''; and most noticeably, ''The Beatles Anthology'' in 1995, with Beatles singles "Free as a Bird" and "Real Love" (though the latter [[Covered Up]] a Lennon version). Since then, Beatles-related stuff has come out just often enough to keep second-generation fans on their toes and the fandom active and aggressive.
George Harrison died of cancer in 2001. Sir Paul McCartney (he was knighted in 1997 and handled it in a way that ensured ''no one'' would let him [[Never Live It Down|live it down]]) and Ringo Starr are still out there touring, doing a bunch of miscellaneous projects, and occasionally making records -- and they both still write
The legacy lives on. An installment of ''[[Rock Band]]'' was made featuring Beatles songs and ''only'' Beatles songs. Not quite coincidentally, the entire catalog has been remastered and was rereleased on CD the same day.
Line 25 ⟶ 24:
After years of legal disputes having to do with the "Apple" label, [[And the Fandom Rejoiced|iTunes has added Beatles music in 2010!]]
----
Their complete discography (as available in the 9/9/09 remastered box sets) is:
* ''Please Please Me'' (1963)
* ''With The Beatles'' (1963)
Line 66 ⟶ 64:
----
{{tropenamer}}
* [[Abbey Road Crossing]] (The album cover from ''Abbey Road'')
* [[Bigger Than Jesus]] (Although [[John Lennon]] [[Beam Me Up, Scotty|didn't actually say that]])
Line 79 ⟶ 76:
----
{[creatortropes}}
* [[Alliteration]]: Mean Mr. Mustard and Polythene Pam.
** Bungalow Bill and Rocky Raccoon. And Sexy Sadie.
|