Paul McCartney
(Liverpool, 1942) British composer and performer who was part of The Beatles and composed, along with John Lennon, most of the songs of the group. After the dissolution in 1970 of The Beatles, undoubtedly the most popular and influential rock and pop band of the 60s, Paul McCartney founded the group Wings with his wife Linda Eastman and guitarist Denny Laine and undertook a lengthy solo career.
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The “Beatlemania”
The "beatlemania" extended in 1964 to the United States, where songs like Love me do, She loves you or I want to hold your hand, wrapped up in their first tour in this country, reached the first place in the charts. The Guinness book of the records collects a very revealing data: in a same month, two albums and five singles of The Beatles led the respective American lists. Instead of, as was traditional, radiating its musical influence throughout the world, the United States suffered the so-called "British Invasion", with the Liverpool group as the bridgehead of a series of bands (The Animals, The Who or the Rolling Stones) that would also disembark in the new continent, dethroning the supremacy of American rock and roll.
George Harrison
(Liverpool, 1943 - Los Angeles, 2001) British pop music guitarist and composer, founding member of the Beatles. George Harrison was born on February 24, 1943 in Wavertree, a suburb of Liverpool, a city then devastated by Nazi aviators.
Ringo Starr
Richard Starkey, more known like Ringo Starr (Liverpool, England, 7 of July of 1940), is a musician, singer, composer and British actor who was the drummer of the rock band The Beatles. Before joining The Beatles, Starr was a member of another Liverpool band, Rory Storm & The Hurricanes. In August of 1962, Pete Best was fired and Ringo took his place. In addition to playing the drums,