Paul McCartney's Story About Let It Be Inspired By Hamlet Karya
JAKARTA - Paul McCartney revealed how Christet by William totaled unconsciously inspired the song The Beatles, Let It Be.
McCartney told the story of the origin of the hit song Fab Four in the 1970s by showing that his mother, Mary McCartney, said the sentence "let it be" to him in a dream.
In an episode of the McCartney podcast: A Life in Lyrics, Macca revealed how Hamlet might inspire the song without him realizing it.
"At that time [at school], I had to memorize a speech. So I can still talk a little 'to be or not to be', or 'O that this too solid flow'," he said.
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And recently I was told that Hamlet, when he was poisoned, he really said, 'let it be'' the fifth half, the second scene. He said 'let it be' for the first time, then for the second time he said, Had I but time as thisfell sequence, Death, Is stripped in his arrest oh, I could tell you. But let it be Horatio', he continued.
"I was interested because I knew those words when I was studying mitigation so that years later the expression appeared before me in a dream with my mother who spoke to me."
McCartney's mother died of cancer in 1956 when the bassist was 14 years old. Talking about his dream where his mother said the sentence to him, he said: "I'm very happy to be able to visit him again. I feel very blessed to have that dream. So it made me write Let It Be."