At several points during the early episodes of The Beatles Anthology, Paul McCartney comments on the stair-step rise of the early days of the Beatles' career, from small to larger clubs, to conquering first England, then America, then movies, and then mastering the recording studio. Of course, nobody could have predicted their early meteoric success, but once the spark was lit, their course under manager Brain Epstein's hand was sure and solid.
But what was fascinating, at least on the first viewing of several episodes of The Beatles Anthology, especially after Sgt. Pepper, and really especially after Epstein died, is how haphazard the rest of their career was, once they reached their apogee. It's only in retrospect, and only in looking in from the outside, that the arc of albums and movies from Magical Mystery Tour to Yellow Submarine to the White Album to Let It Be really was. It's almost as if the Beatles subliminally replaced the chaos of touring with a self-created chaos: the madness of the Maharishi, the insanity of Apple (where the Beatles actually encouraged-encouraged!--people to send in tapes to their offices on Savile Row! And if that wasn't enough, look-there's Yoko in the studio, alpha cyanoacrylated to John's hip!
And if all of that wasn't enough madness, the straw that broke the Beatles' backs was filming Let It Be in Twickenham Film Studio. Filmmakers' hours are the exact polar opposite of musician's hours: filmmaking begins early in the morning and ends when the sun goes down. Musicians record at night. The two are mutually incompatible.
So naturally, the Beatles decided to record a live album there, and film it, complete with Yoko, for their Apple label. They were also unknowingly about to hit multiple icebergs in the Polar Lawyer Arctic Circle, as Apple and their affairs with duelling potential managers Allen Klein and Lee Eastman (Linda's dad and McCartney's father in law) simultaneously imploded. With no lifeboats present, the result was simple: no more Beatles.
Before the ship sank though, the Beatles went out with two grand gestures: a final live concert, on the rooftop of their Savile Row office building, and then a proper swan song: Abbey Road.









Article comments
1 - Eric Olsen
Another great one Ed, thanks
2 - rocco
The Beatles will always be the greatest.