Colin Wessman is a Philadelphia-based writer who's trying his hand at freelancing for Collider. He spent several years writing for a video game/education company and even more years writing for the ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Hoberman Publishing / Alamy Stock Photo Guitarists and keyboard players don’t have much ...
The Beatles have announced an expanded box set of Let It Be. The "Special Edition (Super Deluxe)" version of the set will include 57 tracks spread over five CDs and one Blu-ray. The discs will include ...
The Beatles’s final feature film, Let It Be, is fully restored and available for the first time in over 50 years. For director Michael Lindsay-Hogg, getting here has been a long and winding road.
The Fab Four's most troubled album finally arrives in digital form. By Tim Appelo On Tuesday The Beatles’ 2003 album, Let It Be… Naked made its digital debut on iTunes. The album is an attempt to undo ...
An elaborate new box set, book, and documentary series sheds new light on the final Beatles album and the end of the world's greatest band Ahh, Let It Be. No band would ever attempt to make a record ...
The songwriting was on the wall for The Beatles long before they officially called it quits. In fact, the Fab Four almost split up midway through the making of their final album, 1970’s “Let It Be,” ...
On May 13, 1970, fans got their final look at the Beatles as one cohesive unit when the documentary Let It Be was released. Unveiled roughly a month after the band had broken up - and a week after the ...
Many classic rock songs are about drugs. The Beatles’ “Let It Be” seems more innocuous than most drug songs. Paul McCartney discussed how substances influenced the track. During a 2011 interview with ...
The Beatles’ “Let It Be” evokes a majestic quality, from its serene and straight forward melody to its crescendo and eventual crash of instruments. Written by Paul McCartney, the iconic band recorded ...
A cinematic obsessive with the filmic palate of a starving raccoon, Rob London will watch pretty much anything once. With a mind like a steel trap, he's an endless fount of movie and TV trivia, borne ...