Stream This | The Black Album – Post-Beatles Compilation
By Scott Bernstein Jul 21, 2014 • 2:00 pm PDT


The compilation, which was put together by Linklater and Hawke, contains what in their eyes are the best tracks of John, Ringo, George and Paul’s post-Beatles career. The folks at BuzzFeed have shared The Black Album, which you can stream below. Hawke also shares the liner notes he originally wrote for his real-life daughter, but adapted for his son in the film.
Take a listen to The Black Album:
Here’s the tracklist for the mix:
Disc 1:
1. Paul McCartney & Wings, âBand on the Runâ
2. George Harrison, âMy Sweet Lordâ
3. John Lennon feat. The Flux Fiddlers & the Plastic Ono Band, âJealous Guyâ
4. Ringo Starr, âPhotographâ
5. John Lennon, âHow?â
6. Paul McCartney, âEvery Nightâ
7. George Harrison, âBlow Awayâ
8. Paul McCartney, âMaybe Iâm Amazedâ
9. John Lennon, âWomanâ
10.Paul McCartney & Wings, âJetâ
11. John Lennon, âStand by Meâ
12. Ringo Starr, âNo No Songâ
13. Paul McCartney, âJunkâ
14. John Lennon, âLoveâ
15. Paul McCartney & Linda McCartney, âThe Back Seat of My Carâ
16. John Lennon, âWatching the Wheelsâ
17. John Lennon, âMind Gamesâ
18. Paul McCartney & Wings, âBluebirdâ
19. John Lennon, âBeautiful Boy (Darling Boy)â
20. George Harrison, âWhat Is Lifeâ
Disc 2:
1. John Lennon, âGodâ
2. Wings, âListen to What the Man Saidâ
3. John Lennon, âCrippled Insideâ
4. Ringo Starr, âYouâre Sixteen Youâre Beautiful (And Youâre Mine)â
5. Paul McCartney & Wings, âLet Me Roll Itâ
6. John Lennon & The Plastic Ono Band, âPower to the Peopleâ
7. Paul McCartney, âAnother Dayâ
8. George Harrison, âIf Not For You (2001 Digital Remaster)â
9. John Lennon, â(Just Like) Starting Overâ
10. Wings, âLet âEm Inâ
11. John Lennon, âMotherâ
12. Paul McCartney & Wings, âHelen Wheelsâ
13. John Lennon, âI Found Outâ
14. Paul McCartney & Linda McCartney, âUncle Albert / Admiral Halseyâ
15. John Lennon, Yoko Ono & The Plastic Ono Band, âInstant Karma! (We All Shine On)â
15. George Harrison, âNot Guilty (2004 Digital Remaster)â
16. Paul McCartney & Linda McCartney, âHeart of the Countryâ
17. John Lennon, âOh Yoko!â
18. Wings, âMull of Kintyreâ
19. Ringo Starr, âIt Donât Come Easyâ
Disc 3:
1. John Lennon, âGrow Old With Me (2010 Remaster)â
2. Wings, âSilly Love Songsâ
3. The Beatles, âReal Loveâ
4. Paul McCartney & Wings, âMy Loveâ
5. John Lennon, âOh My Loveâ
6. George Harrison, âGive Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)â
7. Paul McCartney, âPipes of Peaceâ
8. John Lennon, âImagineâ
9. Paul McCartney, âHere Todayâ
10. George Harrison, âAll Things Must Passâ
11. Paul McCartney, âAnd I Love Her (Live on MTV Unplugged)â
Read the letter that Ethan Hawke wrote for his son in the movie:
Mason,
I wanted to give you something for your birthday that money couldnât buy, something that only a father could give a son, like a family heirloom. This is the best I could do. Apologies in advance.
I present to you: THE BEATLESâ BLACK ALBUM.
The only work Iâve ever been a part of that I feel any sense of pride for involves something born in a spirit of collaboration â not my idea or his or her idea, but some unforeseeable magic that happens in creativity when energies collide.
This is the best of John, Paul, George, and Ringoâs solo work, post-BEATLES. Basically Iâve put the band back together for you. Thereâs this thing that happens when you listen to too much of the solo stuff separately â too much Lennon: suddenly thereâs a little too much self-involvement in the room; too much Paul and it can become sentimental â letâs face it, borderline goofy; too much George: I mean, we all have our spiritual side but itâs only interesting for about six minutes, ya know? Ringo: Heâs funny, irreverent, and cool, but he canât sing â he had a bunch of hits in the â70s (even more than Lennon) but you arenât gonna go home and crank up a Ringo Starr album start to finish, youâre just not gonna do that. When you mix up their work, though, when you put them side by side and let them flow â they elevate each other, and you start to hear it: T H E B E A T L E S. Just listen to the whole CD, OK?
I guess it was the fact that Lennon was shot and killed at 40 (one of Lennonâs last fully composed songs was âLife Begins at 40,â which he wrote for Ringo â I couldnât bring myself to include it on the mix as the irony still does not make me laugh) and that I just turned 40 myself that conjured this BLACK ALBUM. I listen to this music and for some reason (maybe the ongoing, metamorphosing pain of my divorce from your mother) I am filled with sadness that John & Paulâs friendship turned so bitter. I know, I know, I know, it has nothing to do with me, but damn it, tell me again why love canât last. Why do we give in to pettiness? Why did they? Why do we so often see gifts as threats? Differences as shortcomings? Why can we not see that our friction could be used to polish one another? I read a little anecdote about when Johnâs mother died:
He was an angry teenager â a switchblade in his pocket, a cigarette in his lips, sex on his mind. At a memorial service for his âunstableâ and suddenly dead mom (whom heâd just recently been getting close to), he â pissed off and drunk â punched a bandmate in the face and stormed out of the memorial reception. Paul, several years his junior â a young boy, really, who didnât yet care about girls, who was clearly UNCOOL, and who was let into the band despite his lack of badass-ness and sexual prowess due to the fact that even at 14 he could play the shit out of the guitar â chased John out onto the street saying, âJohn, why are you being such a jerk?â
John said, âMy mumâs fuckinâ dead!â
Paul said, âYou never even once asked me about my mum.â
âWhat about her?â
ââŚMy mumâs dead too.â
They hugged in the middle of the suburban street. John apparently said, âCan we please start a fucking rock ânâ roll band?â
This story answered a question that had lingered in my brain my whole music-listening life: If The Beatles were only together 10 years and the members of the band were so young that entire time, how did they manage to write âHelp,â âFool on the Hill,â âEleanor Rigby,â âYesterday,â âA Day in the Lifeâ? They were just 25-year-old boys with a gaggle of babes outside their hotel room door and as much champagne as a young lad could stand. How did they set their minds to such substantive artistic goals?
They did it because they were in pain. They knew that love does not last. They knew it as extremely young men.
With the BLACK ALBUM, we get to hear the boys write on adult life: marriage, fatherhood, sobriety, spiritual yearning, the emptiness of material success â âStarting Over,â âMaybe Iâm Amazed,â âBeautiful Boy,â âThe No No Song,â âGodâ â and still they are keenly aware of this fact: Love does not last.
I donât want it to be true. I want Lennon/McCartney to write beautifully together forever, but is that really the point? I mean if the point of a rose was to last forever, it would be made of stone, right? So how do we handle this idea with grace and maturity? If youâre a romantic like me, itâs hard not to long for some indication of healing between the two of them. All signs point that way.
When Paul went on SNL recently, he played almost all LENNON. And he did it with obvious joy.
Listen to McCartneyâs âHere Today.â
Can you listen to âTwo of Usâ (the last song they wrote side by side) and not hurt a little? What were those two motherless boys who hugged in the middle of the road so long ago thinking as they wrote âThe two of us have memories longer then the road that stretches out aheadâ?
The dynamic of their breakup, like any divorce, is mysterious. Some say that Paul, the pupil, had surpassed John, the mentor, and they couldnât reach a new balance. Some say Paul was a little snot who bought the publishing rights out from underneath the other three. Others say without Brian Epstein there was no mediator between their egos. Who knows.
I played Samantha âHey Judeâ the other day, and of course she listened to it over and over. I told her the song had been written by McCartney for Lennonâs son after Lennonâs divorce and she listened even more intently. George once said that âHey Judeâ was the beginning of the end for the Beatles. Brian Epstein had just died and John & Paul were left alone to run the brand-new Apple label. They recorded âHey Judeâ and âRevolutionâ as a single. Normally, Brian would decide which song was the A-side and which was the B-side, but now it was up to the boys. John thought âRevolutionâ was an important political rock song and that they needed to establish themselves as an adult band. Paul thought âRevolutionâ was brilliant but that The Beatles were primarily a pop band and so they should lead with âHey Jude.â He knew it would be a monster hit and that the politics should come on a subversive B-side. They had a vote. âHey Judeâ won 3-1. George said that John felt Paul had pulled off a kind of coup dâetat. He wasnât visibly upset but he began to withdraw. It was no longer his band.
The irony/punch line of this story is another story I once heard: When the âHey Judeâ/âRevolutionâ single was hot off the press, the boys had the mischievous idea of bringing their own new single to a Rolling Stones record-release listening party. Mick Jagger says that once the Fab Four arrived and let word of their new single slip â just as Side 1 of the Stonesâ big new album was finishing â everyone clamored to hear it. Once The Beatles were on, they just kept flipping the single over and over. Side 2 of BEGGARS BANQUET never even found the needle.
So no matter how mad John was, he wasnât that madâŚ
Once when John was asked whether he would ever play with Paul again, he answered: âIt would always be about, âPlay what?â Itâs about the music. We play well together â if he had an idea and needed me, Iâd be interested.â
I love that.
Maybe the lesson is: Love doesnât last, but the music love creates just might.
Your mom and I couldnât make love last, but you are the music, my man.
âAnd in the end, the love you take is equal to the loveâŚâ
I love you. Happy birthday.
Your Dad