The site of Apple Corps and the band's final concert will be turned into the first official Beatles fan experience.
The Beatles are turning the building where they played their last ever gig into an exhibition space, where fans can experience seven floors of memorabilia and never-before-seen archive material. A ...
3 Savile Row, the London building that served as The Beatles‘ Apple Corps HQ in the late ’60s and where they performed their famous rooftop gig in 1969, is becoming a Beatles museum which will open in ...
Museum plans for the site of the Beatles’ final concert have run into opposition from neighbours who claim it would block out ...
Visitors to 3 Savile Row will be able to see a re-creation of the basement recording studio where the Beatles worked on their final album "Let It Be" and stand on the roof where the band thrilled Lond ...
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Plans for Beatles rooftop experience stalls after neighbours claim it would block their sunlight
Next-door neighbours of the proposed Beatles rooftop experience are not saying Here Comes the Sun - instead, they claimed the ...
Beatles fans will soon be able to visit the London rooftop where the Fab Four played their final live performance. The exterior of the Savile Row recording studio has long been a site of pilgrimage ...
On a cold January morning in 1969, four men from Liverpool climbed onto a Mayfair rooftop and played until the police made them stop. No one knew it then, but it was the last time the Beatles would ...
Insofar as three-quarters of The Beatles were concerned, touring would remain a thing of the past, but for Paul McCartney, there was a growing belief that the longer the group distanced themselves ...
Starstruck reactions to celebrities have a way of defying all logic and, in some cases, survival instincts. Not even people who regularly work with superstars are immune to these irrational feelings, ...
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The Beatles' rooftop concert: How one cold London afternoon became their final live performance
Insofar as three-quarters of The Beatles were concerned, touring would remain a thing of the past, but for Paul McCartney, there was a growing belief that the longer the group distanced themselves ...
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