Yoko Ono On Beatles' 'Divorce': 'They Were Getting To Be Like Paul's Band, Which They Didn't Like'

Yoko Ono Says McCartney Mostly To Blame For Beatles Breakup
IMAGE DISTRIBUTED FOR HARD ROCK - Yoko Ono Lennon appears on the marquee of the Hard Rock Cafe New York, Monday, Nov. 19, 2012, in Times Square, to launch Hard Rock's fifth annual IMAGINE THERE'S NO HUNGER campaign. Proceeds from the campaign benefit WhyHunger and its grassroots partners combating childhood hunger and poverty worldwide. (Diane Bondareff/Invision for Hard Rock/AP Images)
IMAGE DISTRIBUTED FOR HARD ROCK - Yoko Ono Lennon appears on the marquee of the Hard Rock Cafe New York, Monday, Nov. 19, 2012, in Times Square, to launch Hard Rock's fifth annual IMAGINE THERE'S NO HUNGER campaign. Proceeds from the campaign benefit WhyHunger and its grassroots partners combating childhood hunger and poverty worldwide. (Diane Bondareff/Invision for Hard Rock/AP Images)

Newly released recordings of interviews with some of music's biggest names -- from Steven Tyler to Graham Nash -- reveal yet another wrinkle in the decades-long mystery of precisely why the Beatles called it quits.

In a recorded interview with industry bigwig Joe Smith (via Rolling Stone), John Lennon's widow Yoko Ono gets to the nitty gritty of what she described as a "divorce." While Ono maintained that Lennon was "feeling very good about" the breakup, she admitted that some tensions were forming within the band. "The Beatles were getting very independent," she said in the 1987 interview. "Each one of them [was] getting independent. John, in fact, was not the first who wanted to leave the Beatles. [We saw] Ringo [Starr] one night with Maureen [Starkey Tigrett], and he came to John and me and said he wanted to leave. George [Harrison] was next, and then John. Paul [McCartney] was the only one trying to hold the Beatles together. But the other three thought Paul would hold the Beatles together as his band. They were getting to be like Paul's band, which they didn't like."

Ono also said the breakup put some strains on her relationship with Lennon, noting that she felt the late icon missed his bandmates and "expected all that to be replaced by me."

All told, it's an account that matches up with McCartney's recent comments. In October, McCartney told David Frost that Ono "did not break the group up" because it was "already breaking up."

More recordings, including interviews with Harrison, McCartney, Mick Jagger, Ray Charles, David Bowie and many more are available at the Library of Congress' website.

In other Ono news, the musician and activist recently debuted a menswear line for Opening Ceremony, which has debuted to mixed reviews.

Photos courtesy of Robert Whitaker on behalf of LIFE Books

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