3 SURVIVING BEATLES QUIETLY REUNITED IN A STUDIO — NOT FOR FAME, NOT FOR MONEY, BUT TO SAY GOODBYE TO JOHN LENNON. When John was shot on December 8, 1980, the whole world stopped. But for George Harrison, it wasn’t just a headline. It was the boy he met as a teenager in Liverpool. The one who laughed louder than anyone in the room. The one who dared him to dream bigger. They had survived everything together — Beatlemania, the madness of fame, the arguments, the breakup. It wasn’t always easy between them. But underneath all of it, something never broke. In 1981, George sat down and wrote “All Those Years Ago.” Ringo played drums. Paul joined in. Three old friends, together again in a recording studio — not for a comeback, but for a goodbye no one wanted to say. George didn’t do grief loudly. He meditated. He prayed. He held onto this quiet belief that the soul doesn’t just end. But in interviews, when he talked about John, his voice softened. “John was the one who made us laugh the most,” he said. “He had a way of seeing through everything.” Even in his own final years, battling cancer, George still spoke about John with a warmth that time couldn’t touch. What he left behind in that one song wasn’t just a tribute to a bandmate. It was something far more personal — a letter to a brother from Liverpool, wrapped in melody, that the world was allowed to overhear. And what George whispered about John near the end of his own life… that part still haunts anyone who truly listens.
3 Surviving Beatles Quietly Reunited in a Studio to Say Goodbye to John Lennon When John Lennon was shot on…