And Your Bird Can Sing( McLennon)
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  • Parts 16
  • Time 1h 6m
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Now and Then- π“‚π’Έπ“π‘’π“ƒπ“ƒπ‘œπ“ƒ cover
Is it too late? cover
Careless Talk cover
The Attic cover
Yesterday (McLennon) cover
While the guitar plays cover
For Tomorrow - McLennon AU cover
Its Getting Better All The Time cover
High on you cover
𝕃𝕖π•₯ 𝕀π•₯ 𝔹𝕖 | π•π• π•™π•Ÿ π•ƒπ•–π•Ÿπ•Ÿπ• π•Ÿ βœ… cover

Now and Then- π“‚π’Έπ“π‘’π“ƒπ“ƒπ‘œπ“ƒ

46 parts Ongoing Mature

On December ninth, 2030, Paul McCartney was found dead in his home. And how coincidental it was that he passed on the morning after the fiftieth anniversary of John Lennon's death. Having been the final remaining Beatle, and having not outlived Yoko Ono, Paul took initiative and filmed a final, grand statement to be released upon his death. He spoke about everything: starting with that fated summer in '57 at the festival in Woolton, and about all throughout his life and career as a rock legend. He would also revisit and refine his previous statements about John Lennon, who he sites as his sole muse for this documentary, finally unveiling the true nature of their complicated relationship and rumored love affair that had been continually denied, until now. He even spoke, at last, about what truly happened during the band's trip to India in 1968: the trip that undeniably changed the chemistry between the Beatles forever, especially between himself and Lennon. Because there were many things that Sir James Paul McCartney had not spoken truthfully of: both now, and then.