One quiet admission just changed how fans see The Beatles forever. For decades, the story of the band has been wrapped in harmony, genius, and brotherhood — but now Paul McCartney is opening up about a far more complicated truth. In a candid reflection, he admits there were moments when he would “often talk down” to fellow bandmate George Harrison — a confession that’s sending shockwaves through the music world. What did that dynamic really look like behind closed doors? How did it affect George at a time when his talent was still fighting to be fully recognized? And why is Paul choosing to speak about it now, after all these years? Fans are re-examining old interviews, lyrics, and studio moments with fresh eyes — and many say this changes how they understand the tensions, the breakups, and the quiet pain that lived beneath the world’s most famous songs. This isn’t about blame. It’s about honesty. And it reveals a side of Beatle history that’s rarely discussed — but impossible to ignore once you hear it

Beatles

Paul McCartney believes he would “often talk down” to George Harrison while the pair were in The Beatles.

McCartney would make this clear during an episode of The Beatles’ Anthology series, and was open with how his relationship had fared with Harrison. The Something and While My Guitar Gently Weeps hitmaker would also suggest their relationship had not changed after The Beatles broke up, with Harrison alluding to McCartney being slightly older as the reason. The pair had lived nearby to one another and attended the same grammar school before they joined The Beatles. Speaking during the Anthology documentary series, McCartney said: “In fact, he was about one and a half years younger than me. That’s quite a big age difference at that time.

Sir Paul McCartney claims he has been speaking to late George Harrison through a TREE | Daily Mail Online

“I suppose I used to talk down to him a bit, as you do to a kid who’s one and a half years younger than you. He was fourteen-and-a-half and I was sixteen. It might have been a failing of mine, to tend to talk down to him because I’d known him as a younger kid.”

Harrison added: “He was always nine months older than I. Even now, he’s still nine months older than me.” Despite the difference in age, the pair would join The Beatles alongside John Lennon and later Ringo Starr.

Despite the strained relationship, McCartney would name one of Harrison’s recordings as one of his all-time favourite songs. McCartney confirmed Here Comes the Sun from Abbey Road was one of his all-time favourite recordings from Harrison.

The Wings frontman also confirmed Brainwashed, Harrison’s posthumous release, which dropped in 2002, was among his favourite albums. In a Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything) to promote his 2020 album, McCartney III, McCartney confirmed Here Comes the Sun was one of his favourite songs from Harrison. He wrote: “It is a brilliant song and the kind of song that’s really good in times like these.”

The “times like these” McCartney refers to in his comment is the lockdown the United Kingdom, and other countries across the world, experienced due to the Coronavirus pandemic. A previous compilation release from McCartney saw the legendary songwriter name a Brainwashed track as another favourite from Harrison’s discography.

Paul McCartney says he would 'often talk down' to fellow Beatles member George Harrison | Cult Following

The album Paul McCartney’s Glastonbury Groove compiled some of McCartney’s favourite songs. Compiled by McCartney himself, the album featured classics like God Only Knows by The Beach Boys, Cheek to Cheek by Fred Astaire, and George Harrison’s Marwa Blues.

Marwa Blues released on November 18, 2002, a year after Harrison’s death. It went on to win the Best Pop Instrumental Performance award at the Grammy Awards, and featured Jeff Lynne of Electric Light Orchestra on keyboards and acoustic guitar. Harrison’s son, Dhani Harrison, also features on acoustic guitar.

The one lyric change that saved The Beatles from disaster

The Beatles’ legendary songwriter has frequently shared his love for Pet Sounds and the work of Brian Wilson, too, but one song stands out for the Get Back and Hey Jude mastermind.

0 Shares:
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like
Hank Marvin
Read More

“Behind the most famous red guitar in the world was a man almost no one truly knew.” Ben Marvin didn’t grow up with the Hank Marvin history remembers — the pioneer with the crimson Stratocaster, the musician who rewrote the language of modern sound. He grew up with a father who remained partly hidden, even at home. And now, six decades after Hank changed music forever, Ben begins a gentler pilgrimage of his own. No applause. No documentaries. Just quiet conversations in familiar rooms, memories shared only when the world isn’t watching. And slowly, the legend softens — revealing a tender, intricate soul who laughed, faltered, and felt the weight of life like any other man. A father the world never truly met, but a son is finally getting to know.

Six decades after his sound changed everything, Hank Marvin’s story takes a quiet turn. We’ve always seen the…
neil diamond
Read More

“I never left — the songs just waited.” Neil Diamond didn’t plan to return. No stage announcement. No grand speech. Then Hugh Jackman sang “Song Sung Blue,” and suddenly his voice was everywhere again. On charts. In playlists. In quiet rooms where people remember old dances and long drives home. It doesn’t feel like nostalgia. It feels like something waking up. These songs lived in the background of so many lives — weddings, radios, nights when survival needed a melody. Now a new generation is hearing what longtime fans always knew. Some music doesn’t fade. It just waits.

A Quiet Return Nobody Planned Neil Diamond never announced a comeback. There was no press conference, no carefully…