Mandatory Credit: Photo by Scott K MacLeod/Shutterstock (10511415c)The Beatles 1970 LP vinyl album Let it Be, by Apple and EMI on a plastic cloth.Beatles albums, New Zealand - 12 Aug 2019
Cover Mandatory Credit: Photo by Scott K MacLeod/Shutterstock (10511415c) The Beatles 1970 LP vinyl album Let it Be, by Apple and EMI on a plastic cloth. Beatles albums, New Zealand - 12 Aug 2019

Even 50 years after their separation, the Beatles continue to make headlines. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and George Harrison will be at the heart of a new book in which they recall the recording of their last original album, "Let It Be." On the program: long hours in the recording studio, friction and lots of rock'n'roll.

"The Beatles: Get Back" is a 240-page account of the creation and recording of the Fab Four's 12th album, "Let It Be," which many fans believe contributed to the split of the British band in 1970.

This is an erroneous view of the Beatles' history according to English writer Hanif Kureishi, who wrote the introduction to "The Beatles: Get Back."  

"In fact this was a productive time for them, when they created some of their best work. And it is here that we have the privilege of witnessing their early drafts, the mistakes, the drift and digressions, the boredom, the excitement, joyous jamming and sudden breakthroughs that led to the work we now know and admire," writes Kureishi in the introduction.

More than 120 hours of conversations recorded during the creation of "Let It Be" in Twickenham and Apple Corps movie studios were transcribed for "The Beatles: Get Back," the first official Beatles book published in two decades. 

This collector's book also includes many photos of the British band taken by Ethan A. Russell and Linda McCartney, Paul McCartney's first wife, that have never been published before.

Fans of the Fab Four will be able to get their hands on "The Beatles: Get Back" starting August 31, 2021, the same week as the North American release of the documentary about John Lennon and his bandmates by New Zealand director Peter Jackson.