Paul McCartney watched the rehearsals for the Beatles’ “Love” show from Cirque du Soleil and this is one thing he had to say: “We were a great f-ing band.”
This moment is captured in the documentary “All Together Now,” which seems like it was supposed to have come out last fall, did or didn’t, and is being pushed this week. Regardless, I watched it over the weekend, and it’s wonderful. Beatles fans will just eat this up. What a pleasure.
First of all, you get a real sense of the main players involved: George Martin, who deserves a purple heart; his devoted and talented son Giles; McCartney, of course; and Ringo Starr. You also get a real sense of Olivia Harrison, George’s incredibly loyal and devoted widow; and Yoko Ono. And there are the people from Cirque du Soleil: from creators Guy Laliberte and director Dominic Champagne, to a South African dancer who’s struggling to fit in.
Director — yes, this was directed — Adrian Wills gets short shrift among all these creative geniuses. But he really pulls it together. McCartney is at most his disarmed in this film, a little gobsmacked I think, as he sees the enormity of the Beatles unfold on stage through Champagne’s vision. Ringo is his usual charming self. Yoko One comes off better than you’d think, though she’s not easy on Champagne as the production is getting ready to open. “She hates it,” Champagne says to an associate in French. It doesn’t matter.
The whole “Love” show with Cirque du Soleil came about because of George Harrison. He didn’t get to see the project realized. Instead, Olivia and their son Dhani played a big backstage role in bringing “Love” to fruition. Olivia is on camera quite a bit, and she makes the most sense as she and Yoko — thrown together in their joint widowhood — are often together.
“All Together Now” answers quite a few questions too: the whole father-son relationship between George Martin — who’s 84 years old! — and son Giles, who’s inherited the mantle of protecting the legacy; McCartney’s perspective on having created the body of work; Ringo’s memory of Brian Epstein knocking on his door one day with an offer to join the band; the one new creation in the show — “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” — to which Martin added a new violin score. He reveals that the musicians sent him two dozen roses upon completion. “Usually you just get invoices,” he jokes.
More than anything, you do get a real idea of George Martin’s role as the fifth Beatle (Billy Preston was sixth Beatle then). I loved a little anecdote he and McCartney share about Martin playing a harmonium on some song (”Penny Lane,” maybe) with the Beatles producing and giving him instruction. Their roles were reversed for once.
I was at the opening night of “Love” when all the parties mentioned were guests. I went back about a year later. It’s the best thing in Las Vegas, without a doubt. It’s a shame it can’t be brought to New York, Los Angeles, or London. I think people would be shocked about how extraordinary it is. Seeing “All Together Now” made me want to book a ticket immediately. In the meantime, we have the DVD and the CD, “Love,” which even yours truly — a Beatles purist — loves, loves, loves.
P.S. The documentary is properly dedicated to the memory of Neil Aspinall, who shepherded “Love” and ran the Beatles’ Apple Records for 40 years.






February 8th, 2010 at 10:45 am
Um….this documentary was shown on PBS (Great Performances?) at least a year ago. I’ve also seen the DVD for sale at Best Buy. Regardless it is a good doc.
February 8th, 2010 at 12:51 pm
“Love” is a fantastic show and a great way to re-live the Beatles music.
I’ve seen it twice and I don’t think I’ll ever get tired of it.
Long may it run!
February 8th, 2010 at 2:19 pm
I agree with you Burton, I have seen it twice as well and LOVED it.
As for the Beatles being a “great f…ing band”, no f…ing kidding!
February 8th, 2010 at 3:24 pm
“Paul McCartney watched the rehearsals for the Beatles’ “Love” show from Cirque du Soleil and this is one thing he had to say: “We were a great f-ing band.”
If you say so….can’t say I ever have been a fan of the Beatles,they had few songs I liked but I never was very crazy about them.
February 8th, 2010 at 7:29 pm
barb, which planet did you grow up on dear?
February 8th, 2010 at 7:50 pm
A great f—-ing band is absolutely right. The extent of their influence and their relevance after almost 50 years is unreal. I got to see them in Detroit in 1966 and I will never forget them. I played in bands for years and did a whole lot of Beatle music. They were the BEST. And just for the record I was in a lousy f—ing band, though I love music. Ron
February 9th, 2010 at 3:44 am
Barb, you either must have only heard a few of The Beatles over 100 great diverse songs,and they wrote,played and mastered every tpye of music,folk rock,pop rock,psychedleic rock,hard rock and even the first heavel metal in just a remarkable 8 year recording career,or you are hard of hearing,great timeless music,beautiful melodies and harmonies,great singing by John and Paul,and very good musicianship!
You are certainly in the minority.And yes The Beatles were a Great F*cking Band!Oh and I have been a huge highly impressed Beatles fan(specifically a big John and Paul fan since I started to collect their albums at age 9,I got my first Beatles book for my 11th birthday and I had every album by age 13,and I was born after 1964.
February 9th, 2010 at 4:22 am
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In 1962, an unknown group from Liverpool entered Abbey Road Studios to record their debut single. During the next eight years they created what is arguably regarded as the greatest collection of studio recordings of the 20th century. This special charts The Beatles’ extraordinary journey in the studio from “Please Please Me” to “Abbey Road” and reflects on how they developed as musicians, matured as songwriters and created a body of work that sounds as fresh in 2009 as the time it was recorded. Narrated entirely by John, Paul, George, Ringo and Sir George Martin, the documentary features over 60 classic songs, rare footage and photos from The Beatles’ archives and never heard before out-takes of studio chat from the “Abbey Road” recording sessions.
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February 9th, 2010 at 6:21 am
“can’t say I ever have been a fan of the Beatles,they had few songs I liked”?
Barb…
Here are the facts: The Beatles were, and remain, an extraordinary musical and cultural phenomenon. They have sold over a billion records, and their music and their lyrics have profoundly influenced several generations of musicians and music lovers alike. As such, the dimensions of their profound and enduring legacy in the Parthenon of music and culture is immeasurable.
So, in light of the facts, your comment beggars a question: If you weren’t ever a fan of the Beatles, and they only had a few songs you liked, then how is it that you feel qualified to comment about them at all?
Well, as it happens, that question answers itself: You feel qualified to comment about the Beatles because you have your head buried ever-so-deeply up your arse!
February 9th, 2010 at 10:19 am
So Barb, why are you here, then?
February 9th, 2010 at 11:11 am
As Barb said: If you say so….can’t say I ever have been a fan of the Beatles,they had few songs I liked but I never was very crazy about them.
O little lady, if you don’t like them get back to your Beyonce induced world. Smother yourself in your “who dares to be a popstar” world. If you don’t know and care about music, do not voice your opinion. The Beatles defined popular music, paved the road for anything that followed and set the bar so that nobody could ever limbo their way to the same heights.
February 9th, 2010 at 12:44 pm
Barb, who cares about your opinion?
February 9th, 2010 at 1:52 pm
Lennon and McCartney were great song writers. The Beatles were so-so as a band.
February 9th, 2010 at 3:43 pm
Your wrong. The Beatles were the best there is no competition.
Paul is right of course!
February 9th, 2010 at 5:05 pm
Hey,I just wasn’t into their type of music back then LOL Never said they weren’t talented.Just never felt they were the best either.Just one persons opinion,no big deal.
February 10th, 2010 at 5:21 am
Barb is right in a certain way…
The Beatles (recordings) were some of the finest pieces of work ever..even today these analogue recordings are superb…however, recording can be made to impress, or lock, something into an audio visual in a way..early Elvis is the same…nearly perfect. The Beatles intrigue came from their massive need for dynamic…they crushed microphones with deep need and intensity…because they knew that if they did not, they would have to go back to Liverpool
February 11th, 2010 at 6:00 am
“recording can be made to impress, or lock, something into an audio visual in a way..early Elvis is the same…nearly perfect. The Beatles intrigue came from their massive need for dynamic…they crushed microphones with deep need and intensity…”
WHAT?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
Boop…
The only sensible observation that one can make about your comments is that what you lack in intelligence you more than make up with astounding, mind-numbing STUPIDITY!
March 1st, 2010 at 12:20 am
THE BEATLES.The Greatest Icon in world music history. I was born in 1969. After the Phenomenom. Although the official split was 1970. I know not every body is the same and not everybody loves THE BEATLES. But if you are a Musician or a true music enthusiast and just love your music, you cannot escape THE BEATLES. 1962 – 1970 an 8 year period folks, produced the most amazing Transition in music history. Between 1962-1965 THE BEATLES with the help of the legendary George Martin some say the true 5th BEATLE,produced Please Please Me, With The Beatles, A Hard Days Night, Beatles For Sale and Help. Some of the finest original music ever recorded at the time With brilliant covers of songs from artists whome inspired THE BEATLES the most. All this considering they had to write songs at a phenomanal rate to keep their fans happy due to their overwhelming success. Then came Rubber Soul, Revolver, Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, Magical Mystery tour, THE BEATLES (WHITE ALBUM) Yellow Submarine had some great songs with the rest being the music score for the animated feature, Abbey Road although Recorded after Let it be.Listen to them all. Listen to the ground breaking music they produced from 65-70. They smashed through all barriers,they recorded music and sounds that no one ever dreamt of before. they paved the way for musicians till this very day.
and still no one has ever topped them, and no one folks, ever will.
If this planet is still turning in another 200 years and it probably will, they will still be talking about THE BEATLES. Most successful artist since the day list THE BEATLES as amongst their greatest influence and that includes all generes from rock to country,from metal to rap and hip hop. Tell me another band thats had that much impact on music. Go on, I dare you. If you don’t respect and admire THE BEATLES then don’t post here. As for Sir Paul saying “we were a great f…… band”. He is largely underating the Greatest music phenomenam of all time. THE BEATLES. P.S Sir Paul is just being modest.