“Bang, Gone” — Neil Young’s Blunt Verdict on The Beatles vs The Rolling Stones Pulls Back the Curtain on Why One Band Changed Music Forever in Just Five Explosive Years While the Other Survived Chaos, Reinvention, and Time Itself to Become Immortal in a Way No One Expected

Neil-Young

Neil Young explains the difference between The Beatles and The Rolling Stones

When The Beatles rose to global fame in the 1960s, the world quickly decided they needed a rival. Someone to play the other side in a story of musical competition. c

Ultimately, they were contemporaries, pushing the boulder of music influence up the hill together.

“That was a great period,” Lennon said, as he remembered the heady days of the 1960s. “We were like kings of the jungle then, and we were very close to the Stones. I don’t know how close the others were but I spent a lot of time with Brian and Mick.”

The secret messages between The Beatles and The Rolling Stones hidden in their album covers Far Out Magazine
(Credits: Far Out / Bent Rej / Alamy / The Beatles / The Rolling Stones)

He continued, “I admire them, you know. I dug them the first time I saw them in whatever that place is they came from, Richmond. I spent a lot of time with them, and it was great.”

The truth is, The Beatles were a little ahead of The Stones in the 1960s. When The Beatles were bending the boundaries of experimentation, The Rolling Stones were still finding their feet as a rock band, so to speak, crafting their performances on the back of blues rock covers. It wasn’t until The Beatles broke up in 1969 that The Stones really started to become an original rock and roll band, ready to rival the globetrotting success of Beatlemania.
Công bố bản thu âm cuối cùng của The Beatles với giọng của John Lennon được  AI khôi phục

While Neil Young of all people should know better than to compare the two bands, he takes his opportunity to do so. But importantly, he does it through the lens of their best work, remarking how their careers were wildly different yet equally as successful.

“The Rolling Stones, now there was something, because they kept going. They didn’t just last for five years. It took them longer to make a great contribution,” he said. “The Beatles made their contribution in about five years, bang, gone—right? The Rolling Stones came out with ‘Miss You’ way after, years after the Beatles broke up—and when you think of the Rolling Stones, that’s one of their best things, that Some Girls album—and that’s with Ron Wood, y’know. They’d gone through a lot of changes.”
Rolling Stones: Their 50 Best Songs Ranked - Backstage Country

The Rolling Stones made the 1970s their own, just as The Beatles did in the 1960s. In that, they proved just how different from The Beatles they really were and carved a legacy that was rightly viewed away from the lens of comparison.

0 Shares:
Leave a Reply

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

You May Also Like
Beatles-on-the-Rooftop
Read More

“The Beatles’ Most Dangerous Song Was Played Once — Then Locked Away Forever” — heard by hundreds in 1967, dismissed by insiders, feared by bandmates, and still guarded decades later, this fully recorded experiment remains the one piece of Beatles history fans aren’t allowed to hear — and the real reason it’s never been released may be more divisive than anyone ever admitted.

‘Carnival of Light’: The mysterious Beatles recording that still hasn’t been released The Beatles – Carnival of Light. Picture:…
Robert-Plant-
Read More

At 76, Robert Plant walked onto the stage like he always has. Calm. Grounded. No drama. Then the crowd started chanting his name. He didn’t sing. He didn’t move. He just covered his face and stood there. For a few quiet seconds, the man who once ruled the biggest stages in the world looked small. Not weak. Just human. Years of noise, miles, and memory hit him all at once. When he finally looked up, his eyes were wet. The crowd softened. And something rare happened — legend and people met in the same heartbeat.

Robert Plant Moved to Tears by Fans’ Love During Emotional Glastonbury Performance In a deeply touching moment at…
paul
Read More

THE SPEECH NO BILLIONAIRE SAW COMING — AND PAUL McCARTNEY DELIVERED IT WITH A WHISPER THAT SHOOK THE ROOM. It was meant to be just another elegant Manhattan gala — soft lights, gentle applause, and billionaires listening intently. But when 82-year-old Paul McCartney stepped up to the microphone, the entire hall sank into silence. What followed stunned even the world’s most powerful figures. Cameras caught Musk shifting in his seat, Zuckerberg looking down, and executives murmuring in disbelief as Paul began to speak — calm, steady, like a man who has spent six decades delivering hard truths through melody. Then came the moment that shook the room — Paul announced he would donate $11 million of his own money to music-therapy programs and housing for veterans and children. And with a single quiet line, he stripped away the room’s polished arrogance: 💬 “If you can spend billions reaching Mars… you can spare millions saving Earth.” No drama. No theatrics. Reporters teared up. The crowd rose to its feet. Even the billionaires had nowhere left to hide. 👇 Watch the full moment, reactions, and the clip everyone is talking about — all in the first COMMENT… before it disappears.

It was meant to be nothing more than another glitter-dipped Manhattan gala — a night of champagne bubbles,…