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Fifty six years ago, when Paul McCartney announced he had left the Beatles, the news dashed the hopes of millions of fans, while fueling false reunion rumors that persisted well into the new decade.

In a press release, on April 10, 1970, for his first solo album, “McCartney,” he leaked his intention to leave. In doing so, he shocked his three bandmates.

The Beatles had symbolized the great communal spirit of the era. How could they possibly come apart?

Few at the time were aware of the underlying fissures. The power struggles in the group had been mounting at least since their manager, Brian Epstein, died in August of 1967.

Was McCartney’s “announcement” official? His album appeared on April 17, and its press packet included a mock interview. In it, McCartney is asked, “Are you planning a new album or single with the Beatles?”

His response? “No.”

But he didn’t say whether the separation might prove permanent. The Daily Mirror nonetheless framed its headline conclusively: “Paul Quits the Beatles.”

The others worried this could hurt sales and sent Ringo as a peacemaker to McCartney’s London home to talk him down from releasing his solo album ahead of the band’s “Let It Be” album and film, which were slated to come out in May. Without any press present, McCartney shouted Ringo off his front stoop.

Lennon, who had been active outside the band for months, felt particularly betrayed.

The previous September, soon after the band released “Abbey Road,” he had asked his bandmates for a “divorce.” But the others convinced him not to go public to prevent disrupting some delicate contract negotiations.

Still, Lennon’s departure seemed imminent: He had played the Toronto Rock ‘n’ Roll Festival with his Plastic Ono Band in September 1969, and on Feb. 11, 1970, he performed a new solo track, “Instant Karma” on the popular British TV show “Top of the Pops.” Yoko Ono sat behind him, knitting while blindfolded by a sanitary napkin.

In fact, Lennon behaved more and more like a solo artist, until McCartney countered with his own eponymous album. He wanted Apple to release this solo debut alongside the group’s new album, “Let It Be,” to dramatize the split.

By beating Lennon to the announcement, McCartney controlled the story and its timing, and undercut the other three’s interest in keeping it under wraps as new product hit stores.

Ray Connolly, a reporter at the Daily Mail, knew Lennon well enough to ring him up for comment. Lennon was dumbfounded and enraged by the news. He had let Connolly in on his secret about leaving the band at his Montreal Bed-In in December, 1969, but asked him to keep it quiet. Now he lambasted Connolly for not leaking it sooner.

“Why didn’t you write it when I told you in Canada at Christmas!” he exclaimed to Connolly, who reminded him that the conversation had been off the record. “You’re the f–king journalist, Connolly, not me,” snorted Lennon.

“We were all hurt [McCartney] didn’t tell us what he was going to do,” Lennon later told Rolling Stone. “Jesus Christ! He gets all the credit for it! I was a fool not to do what Paul did, which was use it to sell a record…”

This public fracas had been bubbling under the band’s cheery surface for years. Timing and sales concealed deeper arguments about creative control and the return to live touring.

In January 1969, the group had started a roots project tentatively titled “Get Back.” It was supposed to be a back-to-the-basics recording without the artifice of studio trickery. But the whole venture was shelved as a new recording, “Abbey Road,” took shape.

When “Get Back” was eventually revived, Lennon—behind McCartney’s back—brought in American producer Phil Spector, best known for girl group hits like “Be My Baby,” to salvage the project. But this album was supposed to be band only—not embroidered with added strings and voices—and McCartney fumed when Spector added a female choir to his song “The Long and Winding Road.”

“Get Back”—which was renamed “Let it Be”—nonetheless moved forward. Spector mixed the album, and a cut of the feature film was readied for summer.

McCartney’s announcement and release of his solo album effectively short-circuited the plan. By announcing the breakup, he launched his solo career in advance of “Let It Be,” and nobody knew how it might disrupt the official Beatles’ project.

Throughout remainder of 1970, fans watched in disbelief as the “Let It Be” movie portrayed the hallowed Beatles circling musical doldrums, bickering about arrangements and killing time running through oldies. The film finished with an ironic triumph—the famous live set on the roof of their Apple headquarters during which the band played “Get Back,” “Don’t Let Me Down,” and a joyous “One After 909.”

The album, released on May 8, performed well and spawned two hit singles—the title track and “The Long and Winding Road”—but the group never recorded together again.

Their fans hoped against hope that four solo Beatles might someday find their way back to the thrills that had enchanted audiences for seven years. These rumors seemed most promising when McCartney joined Lennon for a Los Angeles recording session in 1974 with Stevie Wonder. But while they all played on one another’s solo efforts, the four never played a session together again.

At the beginning of 1970, autumn’s “Come Together”/“Something” single from “Abbey Road” still floated in the Billboard top 20; the “Let It Be” album and film helped extend fervor beyond what the papers reported. For a long time, the myth of the band endured on radio playlists and across several Greatest Hits compilations, but when John Lennon sang “The Dream is over…” at the end of his own 1970 solo debut, “John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band,” few grasped the lyrics’ implacable truth.

Fans and critics chased every sliver of hope for the “next” Beatles, but few came close recreating the band’s magic. There were prospects—first bands like Three Dog Night, the Flaming Groovies, Big Star and the Raspberries; later, Cheap Trick, the Romantics and the Knack—but these groups only aimed at the same heights the Beatles had conquered, and none sported the range, songwriting ability or ineffable chemistry of the Liverpool quartet.

We’ve been living in the world without Beatles ever since.
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Unlike many songs released over five decades ago, Led Zeppelin‘s 1971 hit “Stairway to Heaven” has managed to remain culturally relevant.

The song, which is off the band’s untitled fourth record, has been ranked as the number one “best rock song of all time” by Shortlist(More details: https://www.shortlist.com/lists/the-best-rock-songs-403324). The list, updated in January 2026, also highlighted several other notable rock tunes, such as Queen‘s “Bohemian Rhapsody,” released in 1975, Jimi Hendrix‘s 1967 “Purple Haze,” Metallica‘s 1991 “Enter Sandman,” and AC/DC‘s 1980 hit “Back in Black.”

The publication explained that the number one spot went to “Stairway to Heaven” because of the song’s strong lyricism, as well as the swell and intensity of the guitar.

In an October 2014 interview with BBC News, Led Zeppelin’s guitarist, Jimmy Page, explained how the band’s arguably most iconic song came to be. He said he had “wanted to try to put something together which started with quite a fragile exposed acoustic guitar.” In addition, he said the use of recorders in “the early part” of the song gave the tune a “slightly medieval feel.”

Page also said that “the idea of ‘Stairway’ was to have a piece of music, a composition, whereby it would just keep unfolding into more layers and more moods.” In addition, the musician said that the song was composed to “actually accelerate as it went through on every level, every emotional level, every musical level.”

“So it just keeps opening up as it continues through its sort of passage,” said Page during the BBC News interview.

Page also remarked upon the song’s lasting popularity. He said he believed “Stairway to Heaven” has remained so beloved because the band, which consisted of Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and John Bonham, had recorded the song with authenticity.

“I think the lasting quality of this music over all these years is the fact that everyone’s playing so honestly and with such conviction,” said Page in the interview.
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One of the hottest names in music today very likely doesn’t exist. Meet Sienna Rose, the artist with three songs in Spotify’s Viral 50–USA playlist and all the characteristics of something generated by artificial intelligence(More details: https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/sienna-rose-ai-artist-real-1235499068).

Rose’s Spotify bio(https://open.spotify.com/artist/6wq8iklwcF2dj0jtMpPvOJ), until recently, referred to the “neo-soul singer” with almost no social media presence as “anonymous.” But whatever was left of that anonymity vanished when human artist Selena Gomez posted an Instagram carousel from the Golden Globes to her 415 million followers using a track from Rose, prompting the internet to point out it’s almost assuredly AI.

Aventhis and The Velvet Sundown are AI music creations that attracted attention last summer due to their popularity on Spotify. Probably not coincidentally, Spotify announced stronger protections for flesh-and-blood creators in September that include:

* A new standard for credits to clearly state how AI was used in a track.

* Removing unauthorized voice clones.

* A spam filter that tracks mass uploads that look to game the payout system and prevents them from showing up in your recommendations.

Meanwhile, fellow music streamer Bandcamp announced a stricter policy on Tuesday, stating that music “generated wholly or in substantial part by AI is not permitted.”

However, Spotify struck licensing deals with Sony, Universal, and Warner in October to create “artist-first” AI music “in close consultation with artists, producers, and songwriters.
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4. The White Stripes, ‘Seven Nation Army’



5. Taylor Swift, ‘All Too Well’



8. Radiohead, ‘Idioteque’



9. Britney Spears, ‘Toxic’



18. Billie Eilish, ‘Bad Guy’



19. Adele, ‘Someone Like You’



21. Lady Gaga, ‘Bad Romance’



24. D’Angelo, ‘Untitled (How Does It Feel)’



26. The Killers, ‘Mr. Brightside’



28. Daft Punk, ‘One More Time’



31. Kelly Clarkson, ‘Since U Been Gone’



39. Eminem, ‘Lose Yourself’



41. The Weeknd, ‘Blinding Lights’



42. Carly Rae Jepsen, ‘Call Me Maybe’




52. Franz Ferdinand, ‘Take Me Out’



55. Katy Perry, ‘Teenage Dream’



57. U2, ‘Beautiful Day’



58. DJ Snake feat. Lil Jon, ‘Turn Down for What’



61. Bob Dylan, ‘Things Have Changed’



66. Wilco, ‘Impossible Germany’



67. ’NSync, ‘Bye Bye Bye’



71. Harry Styles, ‘As It Was’



72. Bon Iver, ‘Skinny Love’



74. David Bowie, ‘Blackstar’



85. Arctic Monkeys, ‘Do I Wanna Know?’



87. Chris Stapleton, ‘Tennessee Whiskey’



88. Madonna, ‘Hung Up’



89. Justin Timberlake, ‘Mirrors’



94. Dua Lipa, ‘Levitating’



96. My Chemical Romance, ‘Welcome to the Black Parade’



98. Carrie Underwood, ‘Before He Cheats’



99. The Hives, ‘Hate to Say I Told You So’



102. Lady Gaga, ‘Poker Face’



103. Florence + the Machine, ‘Dog Days Are Over’



104. Miley Cyrus, ‘Wrecking Ball’



107. Kylie Minogue, ‘Can’t Get You Out of My Head’



114. Taylor Swift, ‘Blank Space’



115. Little Big Town, ‘Girl Crush’



117. The Shins, ‘New Slang’



118. Childish Gambino, ‘Redbone’



120. Destiny’s Child, ‘Survivor’



121. Eminem, ‘Stan’



123. Fountains of Wayne, ‘Hackensack’



124. Mary J. Blige, ‘Family Affair’



127. Lorde, ‘Green Light’



128. The Postal Service, ‘Such Great Heights’



131. Gorillaz, ‘Clint Eastwood’



132. Avril Lavigne, ‘Complicated’



133. Rihanna feat. Jay-Z, ‘Umbrella’



134. Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee feat. Justin Beiber, ‘Despacito’



141. Coldplay, ‘The Scientist’



152. Pink, ‘So What’



155. Alicia Keys, ‘Fallin’’



157. Johnny Cash, ‘Hurt’



164. The Flaming Lips, ‘Do You Realize??’



165. Café Tacvba, ‘Eres’



166. Jay-Z and Linkin Park, ‘Numb/Encore’



167. Sabrina Carpenter, ‘Espresso’



169. Jimmy Eat World, ‘The Middle’



174. System of a Down, ‘Chop Suey!’



177. Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper, ‘Shallow’



182. Brandi Carlile, ‘The Story’



183. Billie Eilish, ‘Happier Than Ever’



187. MGMT, ‘Kids’



191. Phoenix, ‘1901’



192. Ed Sheeran, ‘The A Team’



195. Evanescence, ‘Bring Me to Life’



197. Toni Braxton, ‘He Wasn’t Man Enough’



199. Leonard Cohen, ‘You Want It Darker’



200. FKA Twigs, ‘Cellophane’



205. Green Day, ‘Jesus of Suburbia’



210. Usher feat. Lil Jon and Ludacris, ‘Yeah!’



211. Alabama Shakes, ‘Hold On’



213. Taylor Swift, ‘Love Story’



220. Ke$ha, ‘Tik Tok’



222. Paul Simon, ‘Rewrite’



225. Bright Eyes, ‘First Day of My Life’



226. 5 Seconds of Summer, ‘Youngblood’



230. Mastodon, ‘Blood and Thunder’



235. Foo Fighters, ‘Times Like These’



236. Shaboozey, ‘A Bar Song (Tipsy)’



242. Scarface, ‘My Block’



244. Warren Zevon, ‘Keep Me in Your Heart’



247. Avicii, ‘Levels’



250. Train, ‘Drops of Jupiter’




Full list of songs: https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/best-songs-of-the-21st-century-1235410452

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