Why Ringo Starr didn’t think the Beatles would be successful

Why Ringo Starr didn’t think the Beatles would be successful

Ringo Starr thought that, after the failure of the Fab Four, ‘Paul would write, I would open a hairdresser, George would get a garage’

One of the most important and influential bands in history, Beatles I didn’t have much hope for the future Ringo Starrdrummer of Fab Fouralso formed by Paul McCartney, John Lennon It is George Harrison.

During an interview with The Sunday Times, Starr It is McCartney recalled the beginnings of the rock group, which released “Now and Then,” considered the “last song” of Beatleslast Thursday, 2. At the beginning, Paul thought that Fab Four it would last 10 years if he was lucky – and it was a pretty accurate prediction, given that the band lived between 1960 and 1970.

“None of us thought it would last a week! Paul I was going to write, I was going to open a hairdresser, George I would get a garage,” the drummer explained. “But it continued and then it ended. And at the right time, I think. But, you know, that didn’t stop us from playing with each other.”

How many reproductions [em serviços de streaming] did we do last year? One billion? Three billion? It surprises me… the beat still goes on, you know?

Source: Rollingstone

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