Paul McCartney
From Beatles Wiki - Interviews, Music, Beatles Quotes
“ | I lived in the suburbs in a nice semi-detached place with a small garden and doctors and lawyers and that ilk living around, not the poor slummy kind of image that was projected. I was a nice clean-cut suburban boy ... Paul, George and Ringo ... lived in government-subsidized houses. We owned our own house, had our own garden, and they didn't have anything like that. So I was a bit of a fruit compared to them. | „ |
—John Lennon, The Playboy Interviews, 1980 |
“ | When I met Paul he could play guitar, trumpet, and piano. ... I could only play the mouth organ and two chords on a guitar when we met. I tuned the guitar like a banjo. I'd learned guitar from my mother, who only knew how to play banjo, so my guitar only had five strings on it. Paul taught me how to play the guitar proper — but I had to learn the chords left-handed, because Paul is left-handed. So I learned them upside down and I'd go home and reverse them. ... That's what I was doing the day we met — playing on stage with a group, playing a five-string guitar like a banjo, when he was brought around from the audience to meet me. | „ |
—John Lennon, The Playboy Interviews, p.117, 1980 |
“ | Jann Wenner: When did you first realize [you were a genius]? When I was about 12. I used to think I must be a genius, but nobody’s noticed. I used to wonder whether I’m a genius or I’m not, which is it? I used to think, well, I can’t be mad, because nobody’s put me away, therefore, I’m a genius. A genius is a form of madness, and we’re all that way, you know, and I used to be a bit coy about it, like my guitar playing. | „ |
—John Lennon, Rolling Stone Interview, Dec 8, 1970 |
“ | People like me are aware of their so-called genius at ten, eight, nine... I always wondered, “why has nobody discovered me?” In school, didn’t they see that I’m cleverer than anybody in this school? That the teachers are stupid, too? That all they had was information that I didn’t need.
I got fuckin’ lost in being at high school. I used to say to me auntie “You throw my fuckin’ poetry out, and you’ll regret it when I’m famous,” and she threw the bastard stuff out. I never forgave her for not treating me like a fuckin’ genius or whatever I was, when I was a child. It was obvious to me. Why didn’t they put me in art school? Why didn’t they train me? Why would they keep forcing me to be a fuckin’ cowboy like the rest of them? I was different, I was always different. Why didn’t anybody notice me? A couple of teachers would notice me, encourage me to be something or other, to draw or to paint–express myself. But most of the time they were trying to beat me into being a fuckin’ dentist or a teacher. And then the fuckin’ fans tried to beat me into being a fuckin’ Beatle or an Engelbert Humperdinck, and the critics tried to beat me into being Paul McCartney. |
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—John Lennon, Rolling Stone Interview, Dec 8, 1970 |
“ | Do you have a picture of “when I’m 64”? No, no. I hope we’re a nice old couple living off the coast of Ireland or something like that – looking at our scrapbook of madness. | „ |
—John Lennon, Rolling Stone Interview, Dec 8, 1970 |