Chords for Ringo Starr George Harrison Paul McCartney Interview 5/24/1997 Access Hollywood
Tempo:
77.9 bpm
Chords used:
D
G
A
F#m
F
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[A#] And will they [C] or won't they reunite?
[N] Paul, George and Ringo answer the question every Beatles fan wants [D] to know.
[G] Plus, John Travolta, [D] Tina Turner, Kurt Russell [G] and Joe Pesci.
It's an [Dm] hour of candid conversations and [D] rare old footage when [G] Access Hollywood [C] goes in-depth.
And later on, what's it [G] like to be part of the biggest band in the world?
Paul, George and Ringo remember their Beatles days.
We [D] love you, baby!
[G] [Em] [A]
[F#m] [C#m] Ah, [A] the [N] Fab Four.
Hi, everybody.
Welcome back to Access Hollywood
and our one-hour special where we are getting in-depth with the stars.
I'm Nancy O'Dell.
And I'm Larry Mendte.
When it comes to the Beatles, what's left to say about a world-famous band
that's broken just about every record in the books?
Well, plenty.
And Paul, Ringo and George are talking with us and answering that big question
when fans of the group are still asking, will there ever be a Beatles reunion?
Well, this little band got big and got bigger and got bigger and bigger and bigger.
[C] We love you, baby!
[D] Already [Dm] a musical phenomenon in [G] their British homeland,
the Beatles conquered [Bm] America in 1964.
[D] Oh, my God, that made me cry!
Fans cried, screamed and went crazy [F#m] over the four lads from Liverpool.
[Bm] Why does it excite them so [A#] much?
We don't know, really.
[D] If we knew, we'd form another group [B] and be managers.
[F#m] As time went on, each member [A] began to develop their own [G] individual musical style
and outside [F] interests.
[F] George Harrison fell in love with the music of the Far East.
Through his association with Indian [Fm] musician Ravi Shankar,
Harrison turned the other three Beatles on to Hindu music and teachings.
This gave me more depth, really.
But through my involvement with India, through yoga, meditation, all those things,
[F#] it showed me that there is actually a reason that we're [C] in these bodies.
[A] By the late [Am] 60s, the Fab Four had drifted apart.
Paul McCartney became [D] more and more interested in a solo career
and John Lennon's [F] marriage to avant-garde artist [Dm] Joko Ono
made him realize there was [A] more to life than just being a Beatle.
When the group broke up in 1970, one question [Cm] remained.
Will there ever be a reunion?
[D#] [F] In late 1980, [G] John Lennon returned to recording after a [G#] five-year break.
His comeback renewed speculation and hope [F] of a possible Beatles reunion.
But December 8, 1980, changed all that.
[Am]
Even with Lennon's death, rumors persisted that the remaining three would [G] still come together.
In 1995, [Am] it finally happened.
[A]
[F#m] [F] The Beatles Anthology, [A] a CD trilogy and TV documentary,
[F#m] brought us the history of the [D] Fab Four in their own words.
In it, [A] the impossible happened.
[F#m] A brand new Beatles [D] song, Free As A [G] Bird,
was originally a 1977 [C] tune recorded but never [E] released by John Lennon.
I heard it, and I was very emotional.
I thought, [F] wow, yeah, the boy, Johnny, you know, I loved him.
And I spoke to Ringo on the phone, and I said,
listen, you better keep your hanky handy with this one,
because it's [G] pretty emotional when you hear it.
[A] [F#m]
[F] [E] [A] [F#m]
[Dm] [E] [A]
[F#m] [Dm] It was [Em] fantastic for me, having John in the headphones.
It was like he was here.
Because when you're working, he would be in a booth over there,
and you're not necessarily looking at him.
He's [F#m] here in the headphones.
The Anthology [Am] was a huge success, [E] fueling rumors of a reunion tour.
Being a Beatles fan myself, I couldn't resist asking Ringo Starr,
if just maybe
I know you're asked this question all the time,
but you've been offered [N] so much money,
and the three of you have gotten together for different projects.
Why don't you tour together?
Well, because it's not us.
There were four of us.
Let's end this conversation.
There were four of us, and unless four of us go out, we're not going.
Really?
Really.
Well, even if they [E] wanted to, they would be hard-pressed to find the time.
What would you do if [F#m] I sang out of [G#m] tune?
Ringo [Em] Starr is currently getting a little help from friends like Peter Frampton
on his highly successful all [D]-star band tour.
George Harrison's association with Ravi Shankar
continues with the current release of Shankar's Chance of India,
an album produced by Harrison.
I'd love it if the whole world could listen to this sort of [Am] music.
I can see the world tonight
And Paul McCartney gets back to his Beatle roots in Flaming Pie,
his first album in four years.
After the Anthology, I'm much more comfortable with
admitting Beatle [E] influences.
George [G#m] Harrison and Ringo Starr also share [Bm] McCartney's enthusiasm
for the [C#] Beatles' legacy.
I [D] don't mind now.
I mean, I got tired with it [C] after the 60s,
but all this time later, it didn't bother me.
The Beatles, actually, they just keep selling.
And generation after generation gets into the music.
Thank goodness.
[N] Paul, George and Ringo answer the question every Beatles fan wants [D] to know.
[G] Plus, John Travolta, [D] Tina Turner, Kurt Russell [G] and Joe Pesci.
It's an [Dm] hour of candid conversations and [D] rare old footage when [G] Access Hollywood [C] goes in-depth.
And later on, what's it [G] like to be part of the biggest band in the world?
Paul, George and Ringo remember their Beatles days.
We [D] love you, baby!
[G] [Em] [A]
[F#m] [C#m] Ah, [A] the [N] Fab Four.
Hi, everybody.
Welcome back to Access Hollywood
and our one-hour special where we are getting in-depth with the stars.
I'm Nancy O'Dell.
And I'm Larry Mendte.
When it comes to the Beatles, what's left to say about a world-famous band
that's broken just about every record in the books?
Well, plenty.
And Paul, Ringo and George are talking with us and answering that big question
when fans of the group are still asking, will there ever be a Beatles reunion?
Well, this little band got big and got bigger and got bigger and bigger and bigger.
[C] We love you, baby!
[D] Already [Dm] a musical phenomenon in [G] their British homeland,
the Beatles conquered [Bm] America in 1964.
[D] Oh, my God, that made me cry!
Fans cried, screamed and went crazy [F#m] over the four lads from Liverpool.
[Bm] Why does it excite them so [A#] much?
We don't know, really.
[D] If we knew, we'd form another group [B] and be managers.
[F#m] As time went on, each member [A] began to develop their own [G] individual musical style
and outside [F] interests.
[F] George Harrison fell in love with the music of the Far East.
Through his association with Indian [Fm] musician Ravi Shankar,
Harrison turned the other three Beatles on to Hindu music and teachings.
This gave me more depth, really.
But through my involvement with India, through yoga, meditation, all those things,
[F#] it showed me that there is actually a reason that we're [C] in these bodies.
[A] By the late [Am] 60s, the Fab Four had drifted apart.
Paul McCartney became [D] more and more interested in a solo career
and John Lennon's [F] marriage to avant-garde artist [Dm] Joko Ono
made him realize there was [A] more to life than just being a Beatle.
When the group broke up in 1970, one question [Cm] remained.
Will there ever be a reunion?
[D#] [F] In late 1980, [G] John Lennon returned to recording after a [G#] five-year break.
His comeback renewed speculation and hope [F] of a possible Beatles reunion.
But December 8, 1980, changed all that.
[Am]
Even with Lennon's death, rumors persisted that the remaining three would [G] still come together.
In 1995, [Am] it finally happened.
[A]
[F#m] [F] The Beatles Anthology, [A] a CD trilogy and TV documentary,
[F#m] brought us the history of the [D] Fab Four in their own words.
In it, [A] the impossible happened.
[F#m] A brand new Beatles [D] song, Free As A [G] Bird,
was originally a 1977 [C] tune recorded but never [E] released by John Lennon.
I heard it, and I was very emotional.
I thought, [F] wow, yeah, the boy, Johnny, you know, I loved him.
And I spoke to Ringo on the phone, and I said,
listen, you better keep your hanky handy with this one,
because it's [G] pretty emotional when you hear it.
[A] [F#m]
[F] [E] [A] [F#m]
[Dm] [E] [A]
[F#m] [Dm] It was [Em] fantastic for me, having John in the headphones.
It was like he was here.
Because when you're working, he would be in a booth over there,
and you're not necessarily looking at him.
He's [F#m] here in the headphones.
The Anthology [Am] was a huge success, [E] fueling rumors of a reunion tour.
Being a Beatles fan myself, I couldn't resist asking Ringo Starr,
if just maybe
I know you're asked this question all the time,
but you've been offered [N] so much money,
and the three of you have gotten together for different projects.
Why don't you tour together?
Well, because it's not us.
There were four of us.
Let's end this conversation.
There were four of us, and unless four of us go out, we're not going.
Really?
Really.
Well, even if they [E] wanted to, they would be hard-pressed to find the time.
What would you do if [F#m] I sang out of [G#m] tune?
Ringo [Em] Starr is currently getting a little help from friends like Peter Frampton
on his highly successful all [D]-star band tour.
George Harrison's association with Ravi Shankar
continues with the current release of Shankar's Chance of India,
an album produced by Harrison.
I'd love it if the whole world could listen to this sort of [Am] music.
I can see the world tonight
And Paul McCartney gets back to his Beatle roots in Flaming Pie,
his first album in four years.
After the Anthology, I'm much more comfortable with
admitting Beatle [E] influences.
George [G#m] Harrison and Ringo Starr also share [Bm] McCartney's enthusiasm
for the [C#] Beatles' legacy.
I [D] don't mind now.
I mean, I got tired with it [C] after the 60s,
but all this time later, it didn't bother me.
The Beatles, actually, they just keep selling.
And generation after generation gets into the music.
Thank goodness.
Key:
D
G
A
F#m
F
D
G
A
_ [A#] And will they [C] or won't they reunite?
[N] Paul, George and Ringo answer the question every Beatles fan wants [D] to know.
[G] Plus, John Travolta, [D] Tina Turner, Kurt Russell [G] and Joe Pesci.
It's an [Dm] hour of candid conversations and [D] rare old footage when [G] Access Hollywood [C] goes in-depth. _
And later on, what's it [G] like to be part of the biggest band in the world?
Paul, George and Ringo remember their Beatles days.
We [D] love you, baby! _ _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ [Em] _ _ _ [A] _
_ [F#m] _ _ [C#m] _ _ _ Ah, [A] the [N] Fab Four.
Hi, everybody.
Welcome back to Access Hollywood
and our one-hour special where we are getting in-depth with the stars.
I'm Nancy O'Dell.
And I'm Larry Mendte.
When it comes to the Beatles, what's left to say about a world-famous band
that's broken just about every record in the books?
Well, plenty.
And Paul, Ringo and George are talking with us and answering that big question
when fans of the group are still asking, will there ever be a Beatles reunion?
Well, this little band got big and got bigger and got bigger and bigger and bigger.
[C] We love you, baby!
[D] Already [Dm] a musical phenomenon in [G] their British homeland,
the Beatles conquered [Bm] America in 1964.
[D] Oh, my God, that made me cry!
Fans cried, screamed and went crazy [F#m] over the four lads from Liverpool.
[Bm] Why does it excite them so [A#] much?
We don't know, really.
[D] If we knew, we'd form another group [B] and be managers. _
[F#m] As time went on, each member [A] began to develop their own [G] individual musical style
and outside [F] interests.
[F] _ _ George Harrison fell in love with the music of the Far East.
Through his association with Indian [Fm] musician Ravi Shankar,
Harrison turned the other three Beatles on to Hindu music and teachings.
This gave me more depth, really.
But through my involvement with India, through yoga, meditation, all those things,
[F#] it showed me that there is actually a reason that we're [C] in these bodies.
[A] By the late [Am] 60s, the Fab Four had drifted apart.
Paul McCartney became [D] more and more interested in a solo career
and John Lennon's [F] marriage to avant-garde artist [Dm] Joko Ono
made him realize there was [A] more to life than just being a Beatle.
When the group broke up in 1970, one question [Cm] remained.
Will there ever be a reunion?
[D#] _ [F] In late 1980, [G] John Lennon returned to recording after a [G#] five-year break.
His comeback renewed speculation and hope [F] of a possible Beatles reunion.
But December 8, 1980, changed all that.
_ [Am] _ _ _
_ _ Even with Lennon's death, rumors persisted that the remaining three would [G] still come together.
In 1995, [Am] it finally happened.
[A] _ _
[F#m] _ _ _ [F] The Beatles Anthology, [A] a CD trilogy and TV documentary,
[F#m] brought us the history of the [D] Fab Four in their own words.
In it, [A] the impossible happened.
[F#m] A brand new Beatles [D] song, Free As A [G] Bird,
was originally a 1977 [C] tune recorded but never [E] released by John Lennon.
I heard it, and I was very emotional.
I thought, [F] wow, yeah, the boy, Johnny, you know, I loved him.
And I spoke to Ringo on the phone, and I said,
listen, you better keep your hanky handy with this one,
because it's [G] pretty emotional when you hear it.
[A] _ _ [F#m] _ _
[F] _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _ _ [F#m] _
_ [Dm] _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _ _
[F#m] _ [Dm] It was [Em] fantastic for me, having John in the headphones.
It was like he was here.
Because when you're working, he would be in a booth over there,
and you're not necessarily looking at him.
He's [F#m] here in the headphones.
The Anthology [Am] was a huge success, [E] fueling rumors of a reunion tour.
Being a Beatles fan myself, I couldn't resist asking Ringo Starr,
if just maybe_
I know you're asked this question all the time,
but you've been offered [N] so much money,
and the three of you have gotten together for different projects.
Why don't you tour together?
Well, because it's not us.
There were four of us.
Let's end this conversation.
There were four of us, and unless four of us go out, we're not going.
Really?
Really.
Well, even if they [E] wanted to, they would be hard-pressed to find the time.
What would you do if [F#m] I sang out of [G#m] tune?
Ringo [Em] Starr is currently getting a little help from friends like Peter Frampton
on his highly successful all [D]-star band tour. _ _
George Harrison's association with Ravi Shankar
continues with the current release of Shankar's Chance of India,
an album produced by Harrison.
I'd love it if the whole world could listen to this sort of [Am] music.
I can see the world tonight
And Paul McCartney gets back to his Beatle roots in Flaming Pie,
his first album in four years.
After the Anthology, I'm much more comfortable with
_ admitting Beatle [E] influences.
George [G#m] Harrison and Ringo Starr also share [Bm] McCartney's enthusiasm
for the [C#] Beatles' legacy.
I [D] don't mind now.
I mean, I got tired with it [C] after the 60s,
but all this time later, it didn't bother me.
The Beatles, actually, they just keep selling.
And generation after generation gets into the music.
Thank goodness. _
[N] Paul, George and Ringo answer the question every Beatles fan wants [D] to know.
[G] Plus, John Travolta, [D] Tina Turner, Kurt Russell [G] and Joe Pesci.
It's an [Dm] hour of candid conversations and [D] rare old footage when [G] Access Hollywood [C] goes in-depth. _
And later on, what's it [G] like to be part of the biggest band in the world?
Paul, George and Ringo remember their Beatles days.
We [D] love you, baby! _ _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ [Em] _ _ _ [A] _
_ [F#m] _ _ [C#m] _ _ _ Ah, [A] the [N] Fab Four.
Hi, everybody.
Welcome back to Access Hollywood
and our one-hour special where we are getting in-depth with the stars.
I'm Nancy O'Dell.
And I'm Larry Mendte.
When it comes to the Beatles, what's left to say about a world-famous band
that's broken just about every record in the books?
Well, plenty.
And Paul, Ringo and George are talking with us and answering that big question
when fans of the group are still asking, will there ever be a Beatles reunion?
Well, this little band got big and got bigger and got bigger and bigger and bigger.
[C] We love you, baby!
[D] Already [Dm] a musical phenomenon in [G] their British homeland,
the Beatles conquered [Bm] America in 1964.
[D] Oh, my God, that made me cry!
Fans cried, screamed and went crazy [F#m] over the four lads from Liverpool.
[Bm] Why does it excite them so [A#] much?
We don't know, really.
[D] If we knew, we'd form another group [B] and be managers. _
[F#m] As time went on, each member [A] began to develop their own [G] individual musical style
and outside [F] interests.
[F] _ _ George Harrison fell in love with the music of the Far East.
Through his association with Indian [Fm] musician Ravi Shankar,
Harrison turned the other three Beatles on to Hindu music and teachings.
This gave me more depth, really.
But through my involvement with India, through yoga, meditation, all those things,
[F#] it showed me that there is actually a reason that we're [C] in these bodies.
[A] By the late [Am] 60s, the Fab Four had drifted apart.
Paul McCartney became [D] more and more interested in a solo career
and John Lennon's [F] marriage to avant-garde artist [Dm] Joko Ono
made him realize there was [A] more to life than just being a Beatle.
When the group broke up in 1970, one question [Cm] remained.
Will there ever be a reunion?
[D#] _ [F] In late 1980, [G] John Lennon returned to recording after a [G#] five-year break.
His comeback renewed speculation and hope [F] of a possible Beatles reunion.
But December 8, 1980, changed all that.
_ [Am] _ _ _
_ _ Even with Lennon's death, rumors persisted that the remaining three would [G] still come together.
In 1995, [Am] it finally happened.
[A] _ _
[F#m] _ _ _ [F] The Beatles Anthology, [A] a CD trilogy and TV documentary,
[F#m] brought us the history of the [D] Fab Four in their own words.
In it, [A] the impossible happened.
[F#m] A brand new Beatles [D] song, Free As A [G] Bird,
was originally a 1977 [C] tune recorded but never [E] released by John Lennon.
I heard it, and I was very emotional.
I thought, [F] wow, yeah, the boy, Johnny, you know, I loved him.
And I spoke to Ringo on the phone, and I said,
listen, you better keep your hanky handy with this one,
because it's [G] pretty emotional when you hear it.
[A] _ _ [F#m] _ _
[F] _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _ _ [F#m] _
_ [Dm] _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _ _ _
[F#m] _ [Dm] It was [Em] fantastic for me, having John in the headphones.
It was like he was here.
Because when you're working, he would be in a booth over there,
and you're not necessarily looking at him.
He's [F#m] here in the headphones.
The Anthology [Am] was a huge success, [E] fueling rumors of a reunion tour.
Being a Beatles fan myself, I couldn't resist asking Ringo Starr,
if just maybe_
I know you're asked this question all the time,
but you've been offered [N] so much money,
and the three of you have gotten together for different projects.
Why don't you tour together?
Well, because it's not us.
There were four of us.
Let's end this conversation.
There were four of us, and unless four of us go out, we're not going.
Really?
Really.
Well, even if they [E] wanted to, they would be hard-pressed to find the time.
What would you do if [F#m] I sang out of [G#m] tune?
Ringo [Em] Starr is currently getting a little help from friends like Peter Frampton
on his highly successful all [D]-star band tour. _ _
George Harrison's association with Ravi Shankar
continues with the current release of Shankar's Chance of India,
an album produced by Harrison.
I'd love it if the whole world could listen to this sort of [Am] music.
I can see the world tonight
And Paul McCartney gets back to his Beatle roots in Flaming Pie,
his first album in four years.
After the Anthology, I'm much more comfortable with
_ admitting Beatle [E] influences.
George [G#m] Harrison and Ringo Starr also share [Bm] McCartney's enthusiasm
for the [C#] Beatles' legacy.
I [D] don't mind now.
I mean, I got tired with it [C] after the 60s,
but all this time later, it didn't bother me.
The Beatles, actually, they just keep selling.
And generation after generation gets into the music.
Thank goodness. _