Saturday, April 4, 2015

Postcards from Paradise launch new album Ringo … – ElTiempo.com

The musician Ringo Starr admitted that “miss” their “brothers” of the Beatles and was very “proud” of the music they made, which at first was rejected by record labels.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4, with the launch of his album ‘Postcards from Paradise’, also explained that when fights between the quartet gave, he often exercised mediator and solved at home.

“I was in a group with three brothers. Yes, I miss, you can not not miss your brothers,” he told the station .

Although Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and he had a very close relationship, sometimes there were tensions, told the singer and drummer of 74 years.

“I was able to keep the peace. If there was an explosion inside the Beatles, we usually were making up in my house, so it was,” he said.

” We all had personality. We were four brothers. We wanted deep, but sometimes you wake up one morning, these cranky, but we exceeded and things happen, “he told the radio show.

Starr, who, like McCartney, has a successful solo career, he recalled the time when the record against music quartet from Liverpool, which became a mass phenomenon between 1962 and 1970, when they separated.

“We show them they were wrong, the music is more important than the name. We made very good music and I’m still very proud of that, “Starr, who, with McCartney, is the only surviving Beatles, after the murder of John Lennon in 1980 and died of cancer in 2001 George Harrison said.

On his latest album, which featured the March 31, explained it as “an autobiography”, who preferred count on a disc instead of writing on paper.

‘Postcards from paradise’, where he sings and plays drums, keyboard and guitar, was recorded in personal study of exbeatle in Los Angeles (USA), together with the members of the band “All . Starr Band “
Starr has published five papers since 2005: since the release of ‘Choose Love’ (2005), signed ‘Liverpool 8′ (2008), ‘Y Not’ (2010) and ‘Ringo 2012 ‘(2012), along with’ Postcards from Paradise ‘.

EFE

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