When you first get money, you buy all these things so no one thinks you're mean, and you spread it around. You get a chauffeur and you find yourself thrown around the back of this car and you think, I was happier when I had my own little car! I could drive myself!
If slaughterhouses had glass walls, everyone would be a vegetarian.
So, if I'm cooking, I'll be steaming vegetables, making some nice salad, that kind of stuff.
None of us wanted to be the bass player. In our minds he was the fat guy who always played at the back.
I used to think that anyone doing anything weird was weird. I suddenly realized that anyone doing anything weird wasn't weird at all and it was the people saying they were weird that were weird.
The rumors of my death have been greatly exaggerated.
In the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make.
Think globally, act locally.
Nothing pleases me more than to go into a room and come out with a piece of music.
I've got to admit it's getting better. It's a little better all the time.
Somewhere down the line everyone must pay for their misdeeds.
I don't work at being ordinary.
There are only four people who knew what the Beatles were about anyway.
Somebody said to me, 'But the Beatles were anti-materialistic.' That's a huge myth. John and I literally used to sit down and say, 'Now, let's write a swimming pool.'
I think people who create and write, it actually does flow-just flows from into their head, into their hand, and they write it down. It's simple.
I never look forward, because I have no idea about how any of it happened to getting here. I've no idea how the next five years are going to be.
Where I come from, you don't really talk about how much you're earning. Those things are private. My dad never told my mum how much he was earning. I'm certainly not going to tell the world. I'm doing well.
I'm not religious, but I'm very spiritual.
It's time to end the cruel slaughter of whales and leave these magnificent creatures alone.
When I sit down to write a song, it's a kind of improvisation, but I formalize it a bit to get it into the studio, and when I step up to a microphone, I have a vague idea of what I'm about to do.
I hate the idea of success robbing you of your private life.
I think I always had a musicality, and I think I could tell a good song from a bad song. And I would appreciate hearing something that was new to me.
One of my biggest thrills for me still is sitting down with a guitar or a piano and just out of nowhere trying to make a song happen.
Buy, buy, says the sign in the shop window; Why, why, says the junk in the yard.
I definitely did look up to John. We all looked up to John. He was older and he was very much the leader; he was the quickest wit and the smartest.
I can take pot or leave it. I got busted in Japan for it. I was nine days without it and there wasn't a hint of withdrawal, nothing.
I used to think anyone doing anything weird was weird. Now I know that it is the people that call others weird that are weird.
We were pretty good mates until the Beatles started to split up and Yoko came into it. It was more like old army buddies splitting up on account of wedding bells.
When we were starting off as kids, just the idea of maybe going to do this as a living instead of getting what we thought was going to be a boring job, was exciting.
Someone like John would want to end the Beatle period and start the Yoko period. He wouldn't like either to interfere with the other.
I have not practiced how to be a singer without an instrument.
Lyricists play with words.
I saw that Meryl Streep said, I just want to do my job well. And really, that's all I'm ever trying to do.
It was Elvis who really got me hooked on beat music. When I heard 'Heartbreak Hotel' I thought, this is it.
Love is all you need.
We were a savage little lot, Liverpool kids, not pacifist or vegetarian or anything. But I feel I've gone beyond that, and that it was immature to be so prejudiced and believe in all the stereotypes.
But with writers, there's nothing wrong with melancholy. It's an important color in writing.
To keep the record straight, it wasn't always John and Yoko. We've all accused one another of various business things; we tend to be pretty paranoid by now, as you can imagine. There's a lot of money involved.
Being in the audience actually looks like quite a lot of fun.
Microphones are just like people, if you shout at them, they get scared.
If children are studying the 20th century, I'm in their text books.
George Martin, he's very good at a very sort of lush, sweet arrangement.
Why would I retire? Sit at home and watch TV? No thanks. I'd rather be out playing.
I'm often reading a magazine and hearing about someone's new record, and I think, 'Oh, boy, that's gonna be better than me.' It's a very common thing.
I look a lot busier than I am, as I'm actually a rather sporadic, random person and I'll play a few gigs and then disappear for a while.
She is the rock 'n' roll queen. Weirdly enough, that is one of the things her reign will be remembered for. Queen Elizabeth I, we remember Raleigh; Queen Elizabeth II it's gonna be the Beatles.
I got my first guitar when I was 15, and I just used to fool about with it, more or less, as time went by, though, I got more interested.
But you know, as a kid I would have thought of a vegetarian as a wimp.
My dad was a particularly polite kind of guy, very courteous.
My old school in Liverpool is now a performing-arts school, and I kind of teach there - I use the word lightly - but I go there and talk to students.
And I loved Fats Waller. I love his instrumental abilities, his vocal abilities and his sense of humor.
It's also not unusual for writers to look backward. Because that's your pool of resources.
John's time and effort were, in the main, spent on pretty honorable stuff. As for the other side, well, nobody's perfect, nobody's Jesus. And look what they did to him.
I like the idea that people hear my stuff, and if it's commercially successful, that's a good sign that it's being heard.
I never really got on that well with Yoko anyway. Strangely enough, I only started to get to know her after John's death.
I used to think that all my Wings stuff was second-rate stuff, but I began to meet younger kids, not kids from my Beatle generation, who would say, We really love this song.
Look, people are allowed their own opinions and they don't always coincide with yours. As an artist you just have to keep plugging on.
Putting two songs together, I've always loved that trick when it works.
At the end of the Beatles, I really was done in for the first time in my life. Until then, I really was a kind of cocky sod.
I think the pop industry is still a young man's game.
I'm the worst on facts about me or facts about the Beatles.
I don't ever try to make a serious social comment.
I had this song called Helter Skelter, which is just a ridiculous song. So we did it like that, 'cuz I like noise.
I feel that if I said anything about John, I would have to sit here for five days and say it all. Or I don't want to say anything.
I was still 15 when I met John Lennon at a village fete in Woolton, in Liverpool.
George wrote Taxman, and I played guitar on it. He wrote it in anger at finding out what the taxman did. He had never known before then what could happen to your money.
I knew the words to 25 rock songs, so I got in the group. Long Tall Sally and Tutti-Frutti, that got me in. That was my audition.
My dad, bless him, was a musician. And his dad had thought that his music was rubbish.
With the Beatles, we'd been very spoiled because we had George Martin who worked for the record label we were going to be signed to. That was very fortunate, because we grew together.
I can't deal with the press; I hate all those Beatles questions.
I'm a pretty hands-on dad and make the most of my custody. I take care of my little one whenever I can, and she determines what I can do and where I can do it.
My so-called career is a haphazard thing.
I love the past. There are parts of the past I hate, of course.
Looking back, I think I was always musical. My dad was very musical, and I think my mom was musical.
The Stones also still have a huge following. Mick Jagger leaps around like a crazy dude. And Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts are playing great too.
You see, my mother was a district nurse until she died when I was 14, and we used to move from time to time because of her work.
I don't take me seriously. If we get some giggles, I don't mind.
I'm always writing songs, and I've got a bunch that I want to record.