For decades, the legacy of The Beatles has cast a long and inescapable shadow. It’s a legacy built on innovation, cultural transformation, and music that continues to shape generations. But for a small group of individuals, that legacy has always been something more personal.
It’s their last name.
Now, Julian Lennon, Sean Lennon, Dhani Harrison, Zak Starkey, and James McCartney are reportedly stepping into a shared creative space—working together on a song titled “All That Still Remains.”
On paper, it’s a collaboration that feels almost inevitable. Five musicians, each connected to one of the most influential bands in history. But in reality, it’s something far more complicated.

Because this isn’t about continuing a legacy.
It’s about stepping outside of it.
According to those familiar with the project, the recording sessions have been intentionally stripped back. No grand production, no attempt to echo the sound that made their fathers icons. Instead, the setting is simple: a quiet room, a piano, and space—space for silence, reflection, and honesty.
That simplicity matters.
For artists who have spent their entire lives being compared to legends, creating something new isn’t just a creative challenge—it’s a personal one. Every note, every lyric, every decision carries an invisible weight. The expectation isn’t just to be good. It’s to live up to something that, in many ways, can’t be matched.
So they’re not trying to.
What’s emerging instead is something more introspective. The song is said to focus not on their fathers, but on their own experiences—what it means to grow up with a name that opens doors while also setting expectations that are impossible to ignore.
It’s a perspective rarely explored in such a direct way.
Listeners who have heard early versions describe a moment within the track where everything shifts. As the voices come together, there’s a brief, almost unintentional echo of the past—a reminder of where they come from. But it doesn’t linger. It fades, giving way to something distinct, something that belongs entirely to them.
That transition may be the most important part of the project.
Because for all the history attached to their names, these are artists with their own paths, their own influences, and their own stories to tell. This collaboration isn’t about recreating what once was—it’s about defining what comes next.
And that’s what makes it compelling.
It offers a rare glimpse into a shared experience that few can truly understand: growing up in the presence of greatness, while trying to find your own place within it. It’s not about rejecting the past, but about learning how to carry it without being defined by it.
If “All That Still Remains” reaches the public, it may not sound like what people expect.
But that’s exactly the point.
Because for one brief moment, it allows these five musicians to step out of the shadow—and simply be heard for who they are.