The Beatles’ 1969 Rooftop Concert

Beatles Rooftop Concert

On January 30, 1969, the Beatles went to the rooftop of Apple headquarters for their first live performance in more than two years. The impromptu show continued for 42 minutes until the band was shut down by the police.

The Rooftop Performance

The rooftop concert was part of The Beatles’ work on a project that was entitled Get Back at the time. The album would ultimately be entitled Let It Be, as would the film that included 21 minutes of the performance.

The performance was in some ways a last gasp of a group that was coming apart. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr were trying to get back to their roots with some help from keyboardist Billy Preston.

Of course, the performance did not save the band.  But it gave the world one more glimpse at the genius that was The Beatles. And they rocked.

On the roof that day, they performed several songs:  “Get Back,” “Don’t Let Me Down,” “I’ve Got a Feeling,” “One After 909,” and “Dig a Pony.”  Currently, the full performance is not available for embedding, but below is the Beatles performing “Don’t Let Me Down” on the roof.

Release of Let It Be

The Beatles released the album from the sessions, Let It Be, in May 1970.  The release came soon after the band had broken up.

Let It Be was the final studio album released by The Beatles. But it was not the last album they recorded.

They recorded their album Abbey Road after Let It Be.  Yet, Abbey Road was released in September (U.K.) and October (U.S.) 1969, several months before the release of Let It Be.

For more on the rooftop concert, check out Rolling Stone’s 15 Things You Didn’t Know about the performance.

Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Hear the Beatles Sing Without Music on “Abbey Road” Medley

    Beatles Abbey Road Medley A recent video isolates the vocals of the Beatles on their closing Abbey Road (1969) album “medley.” The song cycle features “You Never Give Me Your Money,” “Sun King,” “Mean Mr. Mustard,” “Polythene Pam,” “She Came in Through the Bathroom Window,” “Golden Slumbers,” “Carry that Weight,” “The End,” and the epilogue “Her Majesty.”

    I always enjoy hearing the Beatles in new ways. For great classic artists, we often get so used to hearing the songs in the same way, we lose the wonder we had for the first several times we heard the song. Hearing this medley without the music helps refresh our memory about why the Beatles were so great.

    Update:  The video with just vocals is no longer available, but the video below uses clips of the vocals-only recordings to analyze what the Beatles were doing in this song cycle.  Check it out.

    Other cool things about the isolated track include that you more clearly can hear what John Lennon says before the start of “She Came in Through the Bathroom Window” (around 8:25). Also, when the quiet parts come up, you may test yourself on whether you remember the musical breaks.

    Abbey Road was the final album recorded by the Beatles, although the earlier recorded Let It Be(1970) would be their last released. In the book Tell Me Why: The Beatles: Album By Album, Song By Song, The Sixties And After, author Tim Riley writes that side two of Abbey Road, which consists largely of the above song suite, “revives different stages of their career for a remarkable nostalgic resonance and comprises an ingenious manipulation of rock ‘n’ roll textures.” From inside the studio, though, John Lennon felt that the recording of Abbey Road was “torture.”

    Now, you may return to listening to the song cycle with music.

    What is your favorite part of the isolated vocal track? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • The Beatles’ 1969 Rooftop Concert
  • New Beatles ‘A Day in the Life’ Video
  • Paul McCartney Carries that Weight at 2012 Grammys
  • The Latest and Last Beatles Song: “Now and Then”
  • Ringo Starr Records a John Lennon Song (with a little help from Paul McCartney)
  • The Beatles: “Blackpool Night Out” Live Performance
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    Buy from Amazon

    More Online Timekillers IV: Abbey Road Edition

    Chimesfreedom's Pocket Watch

    We return to our periodic “Online Time Killers” feature of providing links to websites to occupy your time so you do not get any work done. Today’s online time killers feature a Beatles-related webcam and a fun game. Check them out.

    Abbey Road Beatles (1) Watch the Abbey Road webcam, which features the famous street crossing from the cover of the Beatles Abbey Road album. If you are lucky, you will catch some people trying to recreate the famous photo. From my time looking at the webcam, it appears that happens quite often.

    (2) In the Impasse online puzzle, you have to navigate the plus sign (+) to the check mark using your arrow keys. Once you see how it works, it seems easy at first, but the screens get more complicated and you have to figure out new ways to achieve your goal, such as realizing you can go off screen. Check it out.

    How far did you get in Impasse? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Paul McCartney Carries that Weight at 2012 Grammys

    Paul McCartney and Dave Grohl Grammys

    One of the highlights of this year’s Grammy Awards was Paul McCartney closing the show by singing the Beatles’ classic “Golden Slumbers”/”Carry That Weight”/”The End” set from Abbey Road (1969). Sir Paul also had some help on vocals and guitar from some other great artists, including Joe Walsh, Bruce Springsteen, and Grammy-winning Foo Fighter Dave Grohl.

    The guitar work at the end is a treat, but the best part is the final strains of the lyrics where Grohl is standing behind McCartney singing. Grohl has no microphone, but with a smile on his face he sings anyway for the joy of it, the way many of us have done in our bedrooms as kids listening to the album. But Grohl gets to do it onstage with a look on his face that shows he is thinking, “I can’t believe I’m playing with Paul McCartney!” On a night tinged with sad tributes to Whitney Houston and Glen Campbell (who gave his final Grammy performance on stage as he succombs to Alzheimer’s disease), that image of Grohl captures perfectly the point that host LL Cool J made at the opening of the show: It’s all about the music.

    “And in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make.”

    [February 2013 Update: The entire performance is no longer available, but in the short clip below you may see Grohl singing behind McCartney.]


    What did you think of last night’s Grammy Awards show and this closing set? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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