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Paul McCartney has revealed how he was able to rebuild his friendship with John Lennon before the latter’s death.
Speaking as part of the Audible series Words + Music in an episode titled The Man on the Run, McCartney reflected not only on their reconciliation, but on the deep and very public fallout that made that reconciliation so significant.
The breakdown of McCartney and Lennon’s friendship was inseparable from the collapse of The Beatles, whose split in 1970 remains one of the most infamous breakups in music history.
By the late 1960s, tensions within the band had reached boiling point. The death of their manager Brian Epstein in 1967 removed a stabilising force, leaving the group without clear leadership at a time when their ambitions were growing rapidly. Creative differences intensified, with Lennon increasingly drawn to more experimental work alongside Yoko Ono, while McCartney leaned towards structure and maintaining the band’s cohesion.
Financial disagreements, particularly around management—with McCartney favouring Lee Eastman and the others backing Allen Klein—further deepened divisions.
What had once been a close, almost brother-like bond between Lennon and McCartney began to unravel in public.
Their partnership, responsible for some of the most celebrated songs ever written, turned sour as they exchanged thinly veiled jabs through their solo music. Lennon’s track How Do You Sleep? was widely seen as a direct attack, while McCartney’s Too Many People hinted at his frustrations. Interviews during the early 1970s saw both men speak candidly—and often harshly—about one another, cementing the perception that their relationship had completely broken down.
Against that backdrop, the idea that the two would find their way back to each other might have seemed unlikely at the time. Yet by the mid-1970s, distance, maturity and changing personal circumstances began to shift things.
Lennon stepped away from the music industry during what he later described as his “househusband” years, focusing on raising his son Sean after his birth in 1975.
McCartney, meanwhile, had settled into family life with Linda and was navigating his post-Beatles career with Wings. It was this shared experience of domesticity that quietly rebuilt a bridge between them.
McCartney has now described how their renewed connection was grounded not in music or fame, but in ordinary life. Conversations about baking bread, raising children and everyday routines replaced the ego and rivalry that had once defined their dynamic.
“The things that we had in common were just ordinary, little domestic things,” he recalled. “Somehow that was peaceful. It was nice that we had that in common. And we weren’t fighting anymore.” He added that he would visit Lennon, and that their interactions—as well as those with George Harrison and Ringo Starr—had become far more amicable in the years leading up to 1980.
That reconciliation would take on an even deeper meaning in the wake of Lennon’s death.
On December 8, 1980, Lennon was shot and killed outside the Dakota building in New York City, in a moment that stunned the world. The reaction was immediate and global: fans gathered in silence, radio stations suspended regular programming, and tributes poured in from across the music industry.
For many, Lennon was more than a musician—he was a cultural figure who had helped define an era of social and artistic change. His death marked not just the loss of an individual, but the end of any possibility of a full Beatles reunion.
For McCartney, the grief was compounded by the history they shared, but also softened—at least in part—by the knowledge that they had made peace. “I thought, ‘Thank God we got it back together’. I don’t know what I would have thought if we hadn’t and we were still warring,” he said, describing their repaired friendship as “the only consolation” in the aftermath.
The enduring impact of The Beatles helps explain why that story still resonates so strongly today.
The band fundamentally reshaped popular music, pioneering new approaches to songwriting, recording and album-making that continue to influence artists decades later. From the cultural explosion of Beatlemania to the experimental ambition of albums like Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, their evolution mirrored—and often led—the changing landscape of the 1960s. Their influence extended far beyond music, shaping fashion, film and youth culture on a global scale.
That legacy continues to be explored through a steady stream of documentaries and upcoming film projects.
In recent years, The Beatles: Get Back, directed by Peter Jackson, offered an unprecedented, intimate look at the band’s final days, challenging long-held narratives about their breakup by showing moments of warmth and collaboration alongside the tension.
Looking ahead, director Sam Mendes is developing a major series of interconnected biopics, with each Beatle set to be portrayed in their own film—an ambitious project that reflects the continued global appetite for their story.
McCartney, for his part, remains an active force in music well into his 80s. He continues to tour internationally, bringing Beatles classics and solo material to new generations of fans, while also releasing new work and revisiting his back catalogue through remastered editions and archival projects. His recent performances have been widely praised for their energy and emotional resonance, underscoring his status as one of the last living links to a transformative period in music history.
Ultimately, McCartney’s reflections serve as a reminder that behind the mythology of The Beatles were deeply human relationships—complicated, strained, but capable of healing. The fact that he and Lennon were able to reconnect, even briefly, adds a note of closure to a story that might otherwise have been defined solely by conflict.
Sir Paul McCartney has candidly admitted he once “bought into” the criticism that he was responsible for the breakup of The Beatles, describing himself as “overbearing” during the band’s final years.
The 83-year-old music legend made the remarks while discussing his new Prime Video documentary, Paul McCartney: Man On The Run, directed by Oscar-winner Morgan Neville. The project charts McCartney’s life in the immediate aftermath of The Beatles’ split in 1970 and follows his determination to rebuild — both personally and professionally — through his solo work and later with his band Wings.
Reflecting on decades of public scrutiny, McCartney said: “Whenever I hear someone damning Paul McCartney, I tend to agree with them.”
He added: “So when everyone was saying I broke up the Beatles, and I was just overbearing and all of that, I kind of bought into it.”
For years, McCartney was widely perceived as the driving force behind the band’s final fractious period, particularly following the death of manager Brian Epstein in 1967. Tensions between McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr had escalated during the recording of the White Album and Let It Be, culminating in McCartney announcing his departure in April 1970.
In more recent years, however, McCartney has sought to clarify the narrative, insisting that it was Lennon who first expressed a desire to leave the group privately in 1969. In interviews surrounding earlier archival projects, he has said he felt unfairly cast as “the villain” in the Beatles’ story.
The new documentary revisits that turbulent period but places particular focus on what came next — a chapter often overshadowed by Beatlemania. Man On The Run explores McCartney’s retreat to Scotland with his late wife Linda McCartney, his struggles with confidence, and the commercial uncertainty he faced launching a solo career while the shadow of The Beatles loomed large.
In previous interviews about that era, McCartney has admitted he experienced bouts of depression after the band’s split, once recalling: “I was pretty broken up. I thought, ‘That’s it. This is the end.’” The documentary reportedly revisits that vulnerability, highlighting how forming Wings in 1971 became both a creative outlet and a personal lifeline.
@paulmccartney
After the break-up of the biggest band in the world, what comes next? ‘Man on the Run’, the new documentary featuring rare unreleased music and footage from Paul McCartney, premieres February 25 on @PrimeVideo.
♬ original sound - Paul McCartney
Wings would go on to achieve major global success throughout the 1970s, with albums such as Band on the Run restoring McCartney’s critical and commercial standing. Yet, as the film shows, he continued to wrestle with the perception that he had fractured the world’s most famous band.
The emotional weight of the story has also surfaced during promotional events. At a screening in London earlier this year, McCartney admitted he felt “emotional” watching footage of Linda, who died in 1998. Her presence is central to the documentary, which portrays their partnership not only as romantic but as creative and stabilising during one of the most uncertain periods of his life.
Director Morgan Neville, known for intimate music portraits, has described the project as an examination of reinvention — how one of the most recognisable musicians in history navigated public blame, shifting cultural tastes, and the pressure to prove himself all over again.
Now more than half a century on from the Beatles’ breakup, McCartney’s reflections suggest a man at peace with the complexity of that moment. While he acknowledges that he could be “overbearing” in his drive to keep the band productive after Epstein’s death, he also recognises that the narrative was never as simple as one person ending a cultural phenomenon.
For fans, Paul McCartney: Man On The Run offers not just nostalgia, but a deeper look at resilience — and at the personal cost of being part of the most influential band in modern music history.
The new film directed by Morgan Neville documents McCartney's career as he exits The Beatles and forms his band 'Wings' with his late wife Linda.
'Paul McCartney: Man On The Run' will be available in selected cinemas today (February 19th) and on Amazon Prime on February 27th.
Amazon MGM said in a statement that "the film chronicles the arc of McCartney's solo career as he faces down a myriad of challenges while creating new music to define a new decade." They promised to provide "unprecedented access to previously unseen footage and rare archival materials" as it aims to capture McCartney's "transformative post-Beatles era through a uniquely vulnerable lens".
The documentary has so far received a flood of positive reviews with The Guardian awarding it 4/5 stars and stating that "it’s an engaging film, and there is always something mesmeric in McCartney’s face: cherubic, and yet sharp and watchful."
NME also awarded the film 4/5 stars and praised director Neville for the "excellent job" he did at "capturing the weight of expectations laid at McCartney’s door in April 1970, when he casually revealed that the Beatles were no more – despite the fact that John Lennon had quietly requested a “divorce” from the group seven months earlier."
According to NME, the full soundtrack will be released on February 27th, and is available here.
1. ‘Silly Love Songs (Demo)’ – Wings
2. ‘That Would Be Something (2011 Remaster)’ – Paul McCartney
3. ‘Long Haired Lady (2012 Remaster)’ – Paul and Linda McCartney
4. ‘Too Many People (2012 Remaster)’ – Paul and Linda McCartney
5. ‘Big Barn Bed (2018 Remaster)’ – Paul McCartney and Wings
6. ‘Gotta Sing Gotta Dance’ – Paul McCartney
7. ‘Live And Let Die (Rockshow)’ – Wings
8. ‘Band On The Run (2010 Remaster)’ – Paul McCartney And Wings
9. ‘Arrow Through Me (Rough Mix)’ – Wings
10. ‘Mull Of Kintyre (2016 Remaster)’ – Wings
11. ‘Coming Up (2011 Remaster)’ – Paul McCartney
12. ‘Let Me Roll It (2010 Remaster)’ – Paul McCartney and Wings
Written by Louise Ducrocq
Louise is an expert content creator, and online author for Radio Nova. She's evolved in a few different fields, including mental health and travel, and is now excited to be part of the wonderful word of Radio.




