More than four decades after John Lennon wrote one of the most intimate songs of his life, two of his closest collaborators have brought it back to life.
In an emotional reunion that has stirred Beatles fans across generations, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr have joined forces to record a new version of “Grow Old With Me,” a song Lennon wrote shortly before his death in 1980.
Originally released in 1984 on the posthumous Lennon album Milk and Honey, the song has long held a special place in Beatles history. Written as a quiet meditation on love and aging, its lyrics were inspired in part by a poem by Robert Browning, and its gentle melody carried the reflective tone that defined Lennon’s later songwriting.
For years, however, fans believed the song might one day receive a different kind of treatment — one involving the other Beatles.
That possibility first emerged in the mid-1990s during the creation of The Beatles Anthology project. At the time, McCartney, Starr, and George Harrison reunited in the studio to work on unfinished Lennon demos, eventually releasing “Free as a Bird” and “Real Love.” Among the songs reportedly considered during those sessions was Grow Old With Me.

But the recording never happened.
Until now.
The newly released version places Ringo Starr at the center of the performance. Starr sings the lead vocal and plays drums, bringing a warm, understated presence that fits naturally with the song’s reflective tone.
Paul McCartney contributes bass and backing vocals, reuniting the familiar musical partnership that helped define the Beatles’ sound during the band’s most influential years.
Additional guitar work is provided by Joe Walsh of the Eagles, while longtime Lennon collaborator Jack Douglas produced and arranged the recording.
Yet the emotional significance of the project extends beyond the musicians involved.
During the launch press conference, Starr explained that the idea for the recording came from a deeply personal place.
“I’m an emotional man, and I love this song,” Starr said. “I did the best I could to sing it. We all did the best we could.”
He then revealed that one of his biggest hopes was convincing McCartney to join the project.

“I really wanted Paul to play on it — and thankfully he agreed,” Starr said. “He plays bass and sings with me. So it’s like John, Paul and me are all on the track.”
But the most touching detail may be one that many listeners will only notice upon closer listening.
Within Douglas’s orchestral arrangement lies a subtle musical quotation from George Harrison’s “Here Comes the Sun.”
The inclusion is brief and understated, but its symbolism is unmistakable.
With Lennon as the songwriter, Starr on vocals, McCartney on bass, and Harrison’s melody woven quietly into the arrangement, the recording carries the presence of all four Beatles — even if only two of them were physically in the studio.
For fans who have followed the band’s story for decades, that detail transforms the recording into something more than a cover.
It becomes a tribute.
More than fifty years after the Beatles changed the course of popular music, the bond between its members continues to resonate. While time has inevitably altered the group’s lineup, the emotional connection between the musicians — and between the band and its audience — remains remarkably strong.
In the end, Grow Old With Me may represent something the Beatles themselves rarely spoke about publicly: the idea that their story did not end with a breakup in 1970.
Instead, it continues through moments like this — quiet reunions, shared memories, and songs that still carry the voices of friends who once changed music together.
And for a few minutes, listening to this new recording, it almost feels as if the band never truly left the room.
