There's been a lot of ink about Ringo Starr in the last week or so, spurred on by yet another return engagement of Mr. Starkey's All Starr Band. The opinions shared in these digital pages have been split. My colleague Rich Abdill recently gave the ex-Beatle some love relative to his role in A Hard Day's Night, but lamenting the fact that Ringo seemed all but overshadowed by his All Starrs in concert.
But as Rich so rightly pointed out, Ringo's always been diminished in every historical perspective. That's not so much through his own doing, mind you -- he was, in retrospect, a damn decent drummer -- but because anyone would naturally pale in comparison to the combined genius of Lennon, McCartney and Harrison. He himself noted this sarcastically the other night following a run through of "Don't Pass Me By," the first song he ever wrote: "Lennon and McCartney, here I come!"
The guy is a senior statesman, after all, given that he's turning the big
7-2, in a case of unusual longevity in a profession that often only values
its young. In fact, if one looks back beyond A Hard Day's Night, there are plenty of other reasons to put him on a pedestal. Here are but a few:
1) Ringo was the only one of John Lennon's former compadres to visit his widow Yoko after Lennon was killed. He interrupted a Bahamas vacation, hopped a jet, braved the mob scene outside the Dakota, and spent time playing with the then-baby Sean. That's loyalty.
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