Paul McCartney ‘couldn’t talk’ about John Lennon after his death: ‘It was too deep’


Paul McCartney has revealed why he “couldn’t talk” about John Lennon after his tragic death in 1980.

McCartney, 80, opened up about how he got home from the studio after Lennon’s murder and turned on the TV to see people reflecting on his friend’s impact — but it was “too difficult” for him to do the same.

The icon revealed that the sudden loss of Lennon “hit me so much that I couldn’t really talk about it,” he said in a new interview with Sirius XM’s The Beatles Channel about the making of his 1982 solo album “Tug of War.”

“I remember getting home from the studio on the day that we’d heard the news he died. Turning the TV on and seeing people say, ‘Well, John Lennon was this,’ and ‘,What he was, was this,’ and, ‘I remember meeting him,’” he continued.

“I was like, ‘I can’t be one of those people. I can’t go on TV and say what John meant to me.’ It was too deep. I couldn’t put it into words.”

Earlier this year, Paul McCartney honored John Lennon at the Spokane Arena for the first show of his “Get Back” tour.
Harry Durrant/Getty Images

McCartney shared how “once the emotions had sort of settled a little bit,” he was able to process his grief through writing “Here Today.”

“I was in a building that would become my recording studio, and there were just a couple of little empty rooms upstairs,” he remembered. “So I found a room and just sat on the wooden floor in a corner with my guitar and just started to play the opening chords to ‘Here Today.’”

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One of the lyrics in the song says, “What about the night we cried?” — which McCartney revealed was about a time when he and Lennon had a drunken heart-to-heard and “told each other a few truths.”

Lennon died on Dec. 8, 1980 at 40 years old when he was shot outside his home he shared with his wife Yoko Ono in New York City by Mark David Chapman.

Chapman is currently serving a 20-years-to-life sentence at Green Haven Correctional Facility in New York’s Hudson Valley.

Paul McCartney and John Lennon hold their guitars while on the set of The Ed Sullivan Show at the CBS television studios in Manhattan, where the Fab Four are performing their nationwide television debut.
Paul McCartney revealed that the sudden loss of John Lennon “hit me so much that I couldn’t really talk about it.”
Bettmann Archive

Earlier this year, McCartney honored his late friend at the Spokane Arena for the first show of his “Get Back” tour — by bringing him back to life for a duet.

Footage of Lennon from director Peter Jackson’s Disney+ documentary “The Beatles: Get Back” played on the big screen behind McCartney while he sang, resulting in a beautiful duet of “I’ve Got A Feeling.”



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