For as much as the world had its spotlight fixed on Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr during the bandโs infamously contentious breakup, there was another man standing nearby, just outside of the lightโs perimeter: Allen Klein. The frank and brash New York City businessman was one of the final nails in The Beatles coffin, both emotionally and professionally. That McCartney distrusted Klein while the other three wanted him as their manager was one of the driving forces of separation amongst the musicians.
Lennon, Harrison, and Starr signed a contract appointing Klein as The Beatlesโ business manager in early 1969. McCartney refused to sign, and by 1970, the Fab Four was no more. Interestingly, in July 1969, Klein did an interview with The Evening Standard that seemed to foreshadow this split in a strange, painfully ironic way.
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During his interview, Klein admitted McCartney asked him point-blank why people didnโt like the businessman. โJust like that,โ Klein said. โWell, you know, I suppose I donโt play the game in one sense. I donโt have friends in the business, and I donโt belong to the Variety Club. I fight for my clients. And no artist I ever handled walked out on me. Itโs been said I screw my clients. You just find one artist whoโll say that. Not one. Not one, I tell you. Because itโs not true. You can say I make a lot of money or Iโm a bastard or whatever you want. But you canโt say I screw my clients.โ
Of course, this then begs the question, why did McCartney feel like he was being screwed?
Allen Klein Foreshadowed the Beatles Split Without Even Trying
When Allen Klein sat down with The Evening Standard in 1969, everything probably felt like it was coming up Allen. The New York City businessman believed he was the best person for the job of getting The Beatles the compensation they deserved. And his twenty percent cut was the compensation he felt he deserved, too. Paul McCartney wasnโt so sure. Confrontational questions about why no one seemed to like Klein were among the many indications that he felt that way.
Even after his three bandmates signed a contract appointing Klein as their manager, McCartney said, โThe thing is, I am not signed with Allen Klein because I donโt like him. I donโt think he is the man for me, however much the other three like him. The truth is, he only has three quarters of The Beatles and, in fact, he doesnโt have The Beatles. He is definitely the manager of John, George, and Ringo. But I have asked him and I have told him that he doesnโt manage me.โ
McCartney would butt heads with Klein several times after that, including the following year when the soon-to-be ex-Beatle sent a letter to Klein demanding he modify changes to โThe Long and Winding Roadโ that producer Phil Spector had implemented. He included a numbered list of modifications, the last of which read, โ4. Donโt ever do it again.โย
In hindsight, Kleinโs interview from 1969 seemed to read with the stereotypical bravado of an entertainment businessman, particularly as he clued the world in to McCartneyโs suspicions months before they were made public.
Photo by Jones/Evening Standard/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
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LONDON – 1966: (L-R) Sonny Bono (1935-1998), an American singer-songwriter, producer, actor, and politician who with his then-wife Cher was one half of an American rock duo in the 1960s and 1970s. The couple started their career in the mid-1960s as R&B backing singers for record producer Phil Spector, in London, England, 1966. (Photo by Jeff Hochberg/Getty Images)







