Lloyd, is an appealing actor (best known for his work on "The Queen's Gambit") who dramatizes the crispness of Brian's intelligence, and how his passion for the Beatles was a response to their magic that he converted into a kind of equation - about how those girls in the packed crowd at the Cavern Club could be leveled up to global scale.
The Beatles bring Let It Be back to several charts in the U.K. this week, as the final release from the rockers is a bestseller once more in their home country.
The Beatles already have a healthy lineup of classics, so George Martin didn't necessarily gravitate towards everything they did.
The Beatles' George Harrison was against the group's final performance on a London rooftop in 1969 - but it seems he was convinced to take part in the legendary set
Amanda Palmer would stare at The Beatles' 'Sgt. Pepper Lonely Hearts Club Band' cover for 45 minutes at a time.
While The Beatles will never be eclipsed in rock history, Ian Anderson felt that there was more adventurous things out there than the Fab Four.
With Bruce Springsteen and the Beatles next up for biopics following Timothée Chalamet's successful turn as Bob Dylan, we dive deep on the future of music movies
The Beatles' "Blackbird" flies into the top 40 for the first time on the U.K. charts, hitting that region on a pair of lists at the same time.
The most successful band of all time connecting with the most acclaimed record producer of the era: What could possibly go wrong? Well, as it turned out, Phil Spector producing The Beatles didn't go as smoothly as anyone expected.
On "Look Up," his first full album in nearly six years, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Ringo Starr has taken a country turn -- which he did with the band by singing Buck Owens' "Act Naturally" on on his own with his second solo album,
Kiss’ Gene Simmons had a revelatory experience that made him want to be one of The Beatles. His initial interest in the Fab Four had little to do with music. Interestingly, Kiss once covered a great, underrated song by a former Beatle.
The Band were the ultimate rock & roll fantasy of brotherhood, and Garth Hudson was the glue guy who made the fantasy real. Rob Sheffield pays tribute