Entertainment Music Rock Music Ringo Starr on the Beatles' Recent Grammy Win 55 Years After They Broke Up: 'Felt Like John Was with Us' (Exclusive) The Beatles won a best rock performance Grammy in February for "Now and Then" By Rachel DeSantis Rachel DeSantis Rachel DeSantis is a senior writer on the music team at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2019, and her work has previously appeared in Entertainment Weekly and the New York Daily News. People Editorial Guidelines Updated on March 21, 2025 01:35PM EDT 7 Comments Ringo Starr at the Sunset Marquis in Los Angeles in 2023. Photo: Chris Pizzello/AP The Beatles may have broken up in 1970, but they’re still rocking on. In February, the group won a Grammy Award for best rock performance for “Now and Then,” a demo recorded by John Lennon that got a second life thanks to Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney and artificial intelligence technology. “I didn’t expect to win, but it was great,” Starr, 84, tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue of taking home the Grammy. “It just felt like John was with us.” The track beat out songs from The Black Keys, Green Day, Idles, Pearl Jam and St. Vincent for the win. George Harrison, Paul McCartney, John Lennon and Ringo Starr of The Beatles on November 14, 1963 at the ABC Cinema in Exeter. Reg Lewis/Daily Mirror/Mirrorpix via Getty Ringo Starr Jokes His Kids 'Get Fed Up' When He Talks Retirement: 'You've Told Us That for the Last 10 Years' (Exclusive) “Now and Then” originated as a ballad written and recorded by John Lennon in the late 1970s. Though he recorded a demo, he never finished it — and in 1994, his widow Yoko Ono shared it with Starr, McCartney and George Harrison as they worked on what would become the Beatles Anthology project. Though the trio worked on the song and completed a rough mix, the sound quality on Lennon’s vocals wasn’t up to snuff, and the song was ultimately shelved. Enter Peter Jackson. After the director used technology to help with the 2021 release of The Beatles: Get Back docuseries, he realized he could use similar advances to pull Lennon’s vocals from the demo. With the late star’s voice now ready to go, Starr and McCartney completed the song, with Starr playing a new drum part to accompany the guitar Harrison recorded in 1995. The track was released in November 2023, and touted as “the last Beatles song.” Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr reunited in December 2024 in London. Raph Pour-Hashemi/Mega Inside the Last Beatles Song: How 'Now and Then' Brought the Fab Friends Together One Final Time (Exclusive) Meanwhile, Starr also has plenty of new material. In January, he released the album Look Up, his second country record after 1970’s Beaucoups of Blues. To celebrate, he performed a pair of star-studded shows at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium, which are now streaming on Paramount+ as part of a two-hour concert special called Ringo & Friends at the Ryman. Though he has plenty of new songs to choose from, Starr did, of course, include some Beatles hits on the setlist, including “With a Little Help from My Friends.” “We put in a lot of hard work and a lot of emotion, and the tracks are still holding up today,” he says of the group’s enduring classics. For more on Ringo Starr, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribe here. Close Leave a Comment