The Beatles changed the world by revolutionizing popular music, fusing different genres (rock, pop, psychedelia) and introducing innovative recording techniques.

The Beatles at the Ed Sullivan show on February 09, 1964.
They transformed youth culture, fashion and the recording industry, creating the phenomenon of Beatlemania and laying the foundation for modern popular music as a global phenomenon.

Some of the Beatles' cars.
In the 1960s, The Beatles were at the height of their fame, inspiring music and culture worldwide.

Paul McCartney's Radford Mini Cooper S de Ville (L), George Harrison's Mini Cooper S (C) and Ringo Starr's Mini Cooper S are displayed together at the London Classic Car show at Olympia London on February 24, 2023. The show in its ninth year, is an event for all discerning classic car buyers, collectors and enthusiasts. This year the show will celebrate 60 years since the launch of the legendary Porsche 911, the 70th anniversary of Corvette and the 60th anniversary of the Mini Cooper S with all three surviving Minis originally owned by the Beatles being reunited for the very first time in 55 years. Photo by John Keeble / Getty Images.
As they became wealthy, John, Paul, George and Ringo acquired an impressive collection of luxury cars, sports cars and customised vehicles.
George Harrison

Guitarist George Harrison of British rock group the Beatles with his new bride, model Pattie Boyd, at a press reception at the headquarters of NEMS Enterprises in the West End of London, the day after their wedding, 22nd January 1966. Photo by Central Press / Hulton Archive / Getty Images.
He wrote immortal songs like ‘Something’ and ‘My sweet Lord’, brought Indian spirituality to Europe and organized the first major benefit concert in history. And he was also a film producer.
They called him "The quiet one", but without him the Liverpool Four would never have been the same.
He was the first Beatle to reach number one in the US, with a song that is a religious hymn (and which earned him accusations of plagiarism).
The guitarist passed away in 2001 at just 58 and his greatness, always overshadowed by Lennon and McCartney, exploded after the group's breakup.

George Harrison cruising in style with his Ferrari 275GTB — pure 1966 elegance.
His second wife, Olivia Trinidad Arias, said that, when he passed away on 29 November 2001, the room lit up intensely.

George Harrison sitting in the cockpit of James Hunt's McLaren M23 Formula 1 car.
George Harrison was a huge motorsport enthusiast and a big Formula 1 fan in the '70s, personal friend of several legends of the sport, such as Jackie Stewart and Emerson Fittipaldi.
His fascination with all things vehicular led him to spend the best part of a year following the Formula One World Championship around the world.

Beatles lead guitarist George Harrison and his wife Pattie Boyd on their way to Nice in September 1969. Photo by SSPL / Getty Images.
It’s possible he took a little too much inspiration from his Grand Prix idols, because he had his licence taken away twice for reckless driving, the second time after an accident that nearly killed his wife, Pattie. His passion for racing was immortalized in the song ‘Faster’, released in 1979.

Former British F1 driver Damon Hill looks at a decorated Mini Cooper owned by the late Beatles bassist George Harrison near a garden dedicated to his memory, 'From life to life, a garden for George', which represents the different stages of his life, on display at the Chelsea Flower Show in London. Photo by Fiona Hanson - PA Images / PA Images via Getty Images.
Nobody seems to know how many cars Harrison owned over the years, such was the frenzied abandon with which he bought and sold them.
Among the many are a Jaguar E-Type/XKE, a 1964 Aston Martin DB5 and an Austin Mini Cooper S.

1964 Jaguar E type 3.8 fixed head coupe ex George Harrison owned. The story goes that Brian Epstein bought George Harrison an E-Type for his 21st birthday. Certainly this car was first registered on 28 February 1964, three days after Harrison turned 21. The customised car even featured a dash-mounted record-player. Photo by National Motor Museum / Heritage Images / Getty Images.

In 1965, Harrison bought his first ever extravagant car – a white Aston Martin DB5. Paul McCartney, also something of a petrol head (though nothing in comparison to his band mate), bought a DB6 that same year. In December 2011, Harrison’s DB5 was finally sold at auction, to an anonymous Beatles collector, for £350,000. Photo by National Motor Museum/Shutterstock.

The most iconic of the lot. In 1965, Brian Epstein teamed up with Terry Doran (supposedly “the man from the motor trade” mentioned in “She’s leaving home”) to buy Minis at cost price to give to all four Beatles. Harrison’s Mini was customised by coach-builder Harold Radford with a full-length sunroof, horizontally-mounted Volkswagen tail lights and hood-mounted rally fog lamps. In 1967, he had it decorated with psychedelic images inspired by the book Tantra Art. Later that year, the car came to prominence when it featured in the film Magical mystery tour, before being given to Eric Clapton. Harrison regretted parting with the car and Clapton returned it to him years later. Photo by Heritage Images.
In 1969, Harrison bought a dark blue Ferrari 365 GTC. Legend has it that George wrote 'Here comes the sun' in this Ferrari. It was clearly an inspirational car, as George's friend Eric Clapton claimed that it was seeing George's 365 GTC that kick-started his own famous love for the Italian brand.

Ex-George Harrison 1968 Ferrari 365 GTC.
Other notable cars owned by George Harrison include a yellow Ferrari Dino GTS, produced in the early 1970s.

It may have ‘GT’ in its name, but in reality the baby Ferrari doesn’t really fit into the gran turismo genre: where are the requisite four seats for a start? And, unlike the other cars here, this particular car also harks – just – from the post-Beatles era. But in every way the Dino is a pure rock star’s car: two seats – one for the driver, the other for a random groupie – and performance that will far outshine any illegal high you care to fire into your system. Enzo Ferrari famously called the Jaguar E-type “the most beautiful car in the world”, but give me a Dino any day – and preferably in Giallo Fly, surely its most striking colour. George Harrison could pick his favourite from personal experience, The Beatles’ biggest petrolhead having owned an E-type FHC before his friend Rodney Turner – car dealer to the stars – supplied the Ferrari to him in the early 70s.

Today it’s owned by Jeff Amos, who bought the car a decade ago from marque specialist Jeff Fosker: “George had the Dino for four years, selling it when he cleared out. That’s a long time for someone like that to keep a car and he was often seen around Henley in it. When I’m not driving it I am conscious of its history, but on the road I tend to forget because it’s such a great machine. Every drive is a pleasure. It sounds great and is amazingly balanced: you can corner with the tips of your fingers. Plus, other people are very kind - four young lads in a loud Corsa told me that it had made their day just seeing it.”

Styled by Pininfarina and built in Modena by Ferrari-owned Scaglietti, every line works together in pure harmony. The best view, however, is from the driver’s seat, staring out over that gorgeous and delicately sculpted nose.
The 2418 cc V6 has an unusual 65º vee, giving room to accommodate the carburetors and intake manifolds. It’s based on the original 1.6-litre Dino engine and developed by Ferrari.

The V6 explodes into action, pouring an intoxicating fusion of fizzes, pops and timing gear machinations directly into your ears. It can be driven like a GT, the combination of soft springs and firm dampers giving a comfortable ride, but the engine simply forbids it; above 1500 rpm it takes off on a smooth, free-revving journey that continues long after many a sports car has hit the redline. The resulting yowl is simply fabulous, stirred by a five-speed dogleg box that demands a positive hand to smoothly mate the synchromesh. Throw in a wide track and low centre of gravity, plus the kind of helm response matched only by a Lotus Elan and you have the recipe for an automotive legend.

Ferrari Dino 246 GTS once owned by George Harrison.
You can forgive a beautiful classic a lot and one that also has a soul is the pinnacle of the specialist carmaker’s art. No wonder the fickle Harrison kept his beloved Dino for so long.
John Lennon

John Lennon.
John Lennon, The Beatles dreamer, was born in Liverpool on October 09, 1940 and was killed in New York on December 08, 1980.
He was a famous British singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and activist, co-founder, lead singer and guitarist of the Beatles. A rock and pacifist icon, he is known for his solo work (such as the anthem ‘Imagine’) and his social commitment.

John Lennon and his 1965 Rolls Royce Phantom V.
John Lennon's cars are pop icons, especially his 1965 Rolls-Royce Phantom V, famous for its psychedelic ‘Yellow submarine’ paint job and modified interior (bed, TV, refrigerator). A symbol of the Swinging Sixties, the car was an act of nonconformity. Other vehicles he owned include a Ferrari 330 GT and a Mercedes-Benz 230SL.

John Lennon's 1965 Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.
4-litre V12, 300 hp, 0-60 6.3 sec., top speed 152 mph. Lennon's choice for his first car was bought hours after he passed his road test! They say Ferraris are like fine wine: some vintages are better than others.

John Lennon’s Ferrari 330 GT.
The Beatle bought the blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe, which boasted electric windows and a sun roof, in February 1965 after passing his driving test, which made national news.
In ‘John Lennon – A life’, Philip Norman wrote: "within hours, every luxury car dealership in the Weybridge area, hoping for business, jammed the road outside Kenwood’s security gates with Maseratis, Aston Martins and Jaguar XK-E.”
"John strolled out to inspect this gleaming smorgasbord, eventually selecting a light blue Ferrari."
The sports car was the start of Lennon’s collection of vehicles, including his famous Rolls Royce, which he had delivered two months later and a Mini.
Beatles’ cars were bought via Brydor Cars, a company created by their manager, Brian Epstein, to take advantage of trade discounts. Thus the 330 GT’s list price of £6521 17s 6d was reduced to the £5986 17s 6d paid by cheque from Brydor on March 16th. A month later Brydor Cars billed Lennon £112 8s (£112.40p) for fitting the radio and centre console that are still in place, then returned the car to Maranello Concessionaires to rectify a defective water pump. The Ferrari was finally delivered to Lennon at Kenwood, his home on St George’s Hill, Weybridge, in early May.
Bonhams to sell the Ferrari that was John Lennon's first car on 12 July 2013.

Ex-John Lennon, 1965 Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe’.
The Ferrari personally selected by Beatles singer/songwriter John Lennon as his first car is the latest important motor car to join the line-up for the Bonhams auction at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in Chichester, UK, on Friday 12th July.
In February 1965 The Beatles recorded Ticket to ride, a song that would become one of their biggest hits, topping both the UK and US singles charts. By happy coincidence, that same month, the news that Lennon had passed his driving test made headlines across the country. Within hours, the road outside the security gates of his Kenwood home in Weybridge, Surrey, was jammed with Maseratis, Aston Martins and the Jaguar E-type, as luxury car dealerships – hungry for business – spotted an opportunity to secure a high-profile client.

Ex-John Lennon, 1965 Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe’.
The singer, by then a father to 22-month-old Julian by his first wife Cynthia, strolled out to inspect the cars and chose a right-hand drive Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupé finished in Azzurro blue paint, with a blue interior, priced at £6,500 (equivalent to just over £110,000 in today's money).
Motor vehicles were to become a passion for Lennon, none more so than this Ferrari, which he used for the best part of three years, until October 1967, covering more than 20,000 miles.
By the late 1980s, this special car was with the famous Modena Ferrari dealership, from where it was acquired by its current owner. Painted red and separated from its number plate, it was then lovingly restored to its original specification.
Offered for sale by Bonhams with its original DUL 4C registration restored by the DVLA, this matching-numbers motor car is one of only 500 of its type built and is estimated to realise between £180,000 and £220,000 at the auction. It is offered for sale along with an extensive history file documenting its provenance and restoration, which also includes correspondence with Lennon.
Sholto Gilbertson, senior specialist in the Bonhams motor car department, said: "it is a wonderful commentary on the early excitement generated by 'Beatlemania' that John Lennon didn't even have to leave his house to buy his first car.”
"We are delighted to be offering a car associated with such an icon of contemporary popular culture at the first of our Goodwood series of auctions in 2013. Already our Festival of Speed sale is shaping up to potentially eclipse last year's record-breaking total."
The Bonhams Goodwood Festival of Speed sale is known for attracting top prices for Ferraris, with a right-hand drive Ferrari Classiche-certified 1965 Ferrari 275 GTS Spyder selling for a world auction record £561,500 last year.
Paul McCartney

Paul McCartney completes a crossword puzzle with Patti Boyd (right) and another extra on a train from Marylebone Station during the filming of 'A hard day's night' in April 1964. Photo by Mark and Colleen Hayward / Redferns.
Paul McCartney (Liverpool, 1942) is a legendary British singer-songwriter, bassist and composer, best known as a founding member of the Beatles. An icon of 20th-century pop/rock music, he and John Lennon formed one of the most influential songwriting duos in history. After the band's breakup, he pursued a brilliant solo career and with Wings.
As everyone knows, the only thing The Beatles liked more than n.1 hits was funny haircuts. The only thing they liked more than funny haircuts was fashionable clothes. And the only thing they liked more than fashionable clothes was drugsamazing cars.
John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr all liked to do it in the road, but looking back at Paul McCartney's collection it is clear the man really did have a rubber soul.
Among the most representative cars in Paul McCartney's collection are a 1964 Aston Martin DB5, a Mini Cooper S de Ville from 1965 and an Aston Martin DB6 from 1966.

McCartney ordered the Aston Martin DB5 in the summer of 1964 just as his driving ban was coming to an end and The Beatles were starting their world tour. He picked it up from his accountant on 22 September… just five days before the premiere of Goldfinger, in which the DB5 had a starring role. The price tag was just under £4,000 and McCartney ordered his in Sierra Blue with a black leather interior and a bespoke Philips Auto-Mignon record player. He kept the car until 1970. Subsequently, the DB5 was purchased by Chris Evans who added the “64 MAC” registration plate to the car. Years later it was fully restored, repainted in James Bond silver birch and given a Mulberry red leather interior. At auction in 2017, the car was sold for £1,345,500. Photo by Lewis Whyld.

In 1965, Beatles manager Brian Epstein ordered four Minis for the band, but they were far from ordinary. The cars were modified by British coachbuilding company Harold Radford & Co, who were better known for their work on Bentleys. However, after showing what they could do with the humble Mini, Epstein commissioned the company to work their magic on a series of top-spec 1,275 cc Mini Cooper S models and McCartney's was a beauty. Finished in California sage green, it came with a Webasto sliding sunroof, a pair of extra front-mounted fog lamps, Aston Martin taillights and an immaculate woodgrain interior. McCartney liked it so much it appeared in the Beatles Magical mystery tour movie. When it was sold at auction in 2018, it fetched £182,000… a then world record for a Mini. Photo by Pictorial Press Ltd / Alamy Stock Photo.

Having acquired a taste for Aston's a couple of years earlier, McCartney splashed out on a DB6 in 1966. The successor to the DB5, it had improved aerodynamics, was slightly bigger (it was designed with grand touring in mind) and featured a Kammback rear end for more luggage space. It came with a six-cylinder 3,995 cc engine, producing 282 bhp and McCartney chose his in ‘Goodwood green’. However, the most famous thing about Macca's DB6 is that, instead of installing a record player (as he had in his DB5), he specified a reel-to-reel tape recorder. Photo by dov makabaw / Alamy Stock Photo.
Ringo Starr

Ringo Starr in Paris in 1965.
Ringo Starr, born Sir Richard Starkey (Liverpool, 1940), is a famous British musician, singer and actor, best known as the drummer for The Beatles from 1962 to 1970. He is recognized as one of the most influential and iconic drummers in rock history, celebrated for his unique style and charm and later pursued a long-running solo career.

Ringo Starr's wife Barbara Bach, born on 27 August 1947 in New York City, on a Ferrari 275 GTS in 1968. She is best known as the Bond girl Anya Amasova, from the James Bond film "The spy who loved me". Entertainment Weekly ranks her as the fifth best Bond girl.
Ringo Starr is known for his collection of prestigious and customized cars, including a 1966 Mini Cooper S modified with a tailgate to carry his drum kit.

Ringo Starr’s 1966 Radford Mini Cooper S, customized with a burl interior, a Webasto sunroof and a special rear modification to accommodate the battery, was sold at auction in 2017 for a substantial sum. Radford's Minis all featured custom leather seats, a sliding sunroof, a new radiator grille (with two additional recessed lights), lambswool carpets, additional sound insulation, electric windows, walnut dashboards with all manner of additional instrumentation and, last but not least, a cigar lighter. Then there were the customer's special requests and Ringo Starr made his own specific requests. Like a good musician, he requested that his Mini be able to accommodate a complete drum kit to be stowed in the back of the little English car. It didn't seem like a simple task given the Mini's compact dimensions but Harold Radford, by designing a folding rear seat and the construction of a tailgate that incorporated the rear window and opened upwards for easy loading and unloading, more than succeeded. The interior was well appointed with contoured sports seats and a beautiful wooden dashboard, Moto-Lita steering wheel, electric windows, wooden door moldings, twin fuel tanks (a Cooper S hallmark), a canvas sunroof, a high-performance Cooper S engine and, of course, a full instrument panel that makes the cabin sporty yet very elegant at the same time.
Ringo Starr was involved in a horror car crash earlier in his career. By Jennie Buzaglo Showbiz & TV Reporter and Hollie Beale on 07 Jul 2025.

Beatles drummer Ringo Starr had a frightening near-death experience after being involved in a terrible car accident. In 1980, Starr, now 85, met Barbara Bach on the set of the movie Caveman and the pair quickly formed a bond.
Just a few months later, they were en route to a party in Surrey when their visibility was hampered by thick fog. As they approached a notorious black-spot at the Robin Hood Roundabout on the A3 at 60 mph, Starr had to swerve to avoid an oncoming truck.
This caused the couple to skid fifty yards, leading to Starr's white Mercedes crashing head-on into two lampposts. Despite injuring his leg, Starr managed to get his partner out of the car to safety.
After extracting his Bond star girlfriend from the wreckage, the musician reportedly went back to the car to grab a pack of cigarettes.
Photo gallery
The Beatles

The Beatles.

The Beatles pose for a portrait circa 1962. Photo by Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images.

Policemen and women help to keep the teenagers back while queueing for tickets for the Beatles at Liverpool Empire Theatre in November 1963. Photo by Owens / Mirrorpix via Getty Images.

Teenage girls scream with enthusiasm as they watch their heroes, The Beatles, perform at the Washington, DC Coliseum in February 1964.

Beatles fans at a Beatle concert in Copenhagen in 1964. Photo by Imagno / Getty Images.

A woman wearing stockings printed with images of the British pop group The Beatles and a guitar motif in 1964. Photo by Evening Standard / Getty Images.

British disc jockey and television presenter, Annie Nightingale, relaxing at her home in Brighton with a copy of the Beatles album 'With the Beatles' on 14 December 1964. Photo by John Pratt / Keystone Features / Getty images.

The Beatles' car mobbed by fans in the street in Paris on 20 June 1965. Photo by Reporters Associés Gamma - Rapho via Getty Images.

Policemen form a line to restrain female fans during the premiere of the new Beatles film 'Help!' at the London Pavilion, Piccadilly Circus, 29th July 1965. Photo by Express / Hulton Archive / Getty Images.

New York City policemen try to restrain hordes of teenagers, mostly of the female variety, from crashing into the Warwick Hotel, the Beatles' New York residence, on 12 August 1965. Photo by Getty Images.

An unidentified teenaged woman reads the program prior to the concert with The Beatles at Shea Stadium in New York, on 15 August 1965. The show was The Beatles first stadium concert performed. Photo by Oscar Abolafia / TPLP / Getty Images.

The Beatles on 26 October 1965.
George Harrison

1964 Jaguar E type 3.8 fixed head coupe ex George Harrison owned. Photo by National Motor Museum / Heritage Images / Getty Images.

The engine of the 1964 Jaguar E type 3.8 fixed head coupe ex George Harrison owned. Photo by National Motor Museum / Heritage Images / Getty Images.

1964 Jaguar E type 3.8 fixed head coupe ex George Harrison owned. Photo by National Motor Museum / Heritage Images / Getty Images.

The interior of the 1964 Jaguar E type 3.8 fixed head coupe ex George Harrison owned. Photo by National Motor Museum / Heritage Images / Getty Images.

George Harrison and Pattie Boyd's wedding on 21 January 1966, a 1960s love story.

George Harrison and Patricia Anne Pattie Boyd talking to racing driver Jim Clark while visiting Monte Carlo, Monaco, on 22 May 1966. Photo by Wolfgang Kuhn / United Archives via Getty Images.

Colin Chapman, Lotus team owner, third placed Graham Hill, BRM and Keith Greene talk with Beatle George Harrison at the Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo on 22 May 1966. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

George Harrison and his wife Patti Boyd wearing traditional Indian attire in Bombay on 29 September 1966. Harrison was wearing churidar pyjamas and Boyd was wearing a kurta. Photo by Getty Images.

George Harrison and Patti Boyd Harrison at the London Pavillion for the London premiere of The Beatles' film Yellow submarine. Photo by Hulton - Deutsch Collection / Corbis via Getty Images.

George Harrison with his wife, model Pattie Boyd, in London in 1969. Photo by Central Press / Hulton Archive / Getty Images.

George Harrison pictured with his wife Pattie Boyd and two minders as they walk through a terminal at Heathrow Airport in London in 1970. Photo by Rolls Press / Popperfoto via Getty Images.

Seventh placed James Hunt with his girlfriend Jane Birbeck and George Harrison at the United States Grand Prix West in Long Beach on 03 April 1977. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

James Hunt with George Harrison at the United States Grand Prix West in Long Beach on 03 April 1977. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

James Hunt with George Harrison at the United States Grand Prix West in Long Beach on 03 April 1977. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

James Hunt, McLaren, with George Harrison at the United States Grand Prix West in Long Beach on 03 April 1977. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

Jackie Stewart, Patrick Depailler, Tyrrell and George Harrison, former Beatle, at the Spanish Grand Prix in Jarama on 08 May 1977. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

George Harrison enjoys a cigarette and a chat with race retiree James Hunt, McLaren, in the Marlboro motorhome as Nina Rindt plays backgammon, at the Spanish Grand Prix in Jarama on 08 May 1977. Photo by David Phipps / Getty Images.

George Harrison enjoys a cigarette and a chat with race retiree James Hunt, McLaren, in the Marlboro motorhome at the Spanish Grand Prix in Jarama on 08 May 1977. Photo by David Phipps / Getty Images.

George Harrison enjoys a cigarette and a chat with race retiree James Hunt, McLaren, in the Marlboro motorhome at the Spanish Grand Prix in Jarama on 08 May 1977. Photo by David Phipps / Getty Images.

George Harrison enjoys a cigarette and a chat with race retiree James Hunt, McLaren, in the Marlboro motorhome at the Spanish Grand Prix in Jarama on 08 May 1977. Photo by David Phipps / Getty Images.

George Harrison enjoys a cigarette and a chat with race retiree James Hunt, McLaren, in the Marlboro motorhome at the Spanish Grand Prix in Jarama on 08 May 1977. Photo by Getty Images.

George Harrison with John Watson in the pit lane at the French Grand Prix in Dijon-Prenois, 1st - 3rd July 1977. Photo by Autocar / LAT Images.

James Hunt, McLaren, talks with Beatles legend George Harrison at the United States Grand Prix West in Long Beach on 02 April 1978. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

James Hunt, McLaren, talks with Beatles legend George Harrison at the United States Grand Prix West in Long Beach on 02 April 1978. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

James Hunt, McLaren, talks with Beatles legend George Harrison at the United States Grand Prix West in Long Beach on 02 April 1978. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

Third placed Patrick Depailler, Tyrrell, talks with George Harrison, former Beatle and F1 fan, at the United States Grand Prix West in Long Beach on 02 April 1978. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

George Harrison was a visitor on the grid before the start of the Spanish Grand Prix in Jarama on 04 June 1978. Photo by David Phipps / Sutton Images.

George Harrison made only one public appearance driving a racing car in an ex-Stirling Moss Lotus at the Gunnar Nilsson Memorial Meeting in Donington Park on 03 June 1979. Photo by LAT Images.

George Harrison made only one public appearance driving a racing car in an ex-Stirling Moss Lotus at the Gunnar Nilsson Memorial Meeting in Donington Park on 03 June 1979. Photo by LAT Images.

Michele Alboreto poses with Barry Sheene and George Harrison during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 03 November 1985. Photo by Ercole Colombo / Studio Colombo / Getty Images.

Michele Alboreto poses with Barry Sheene and George Harrison during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 03 November 1985. Photo by Ercole Colombo / Studio Colombo / Getty Images.

Ron Dennis with Beatles star George Harrison during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 07 November 1993. Photo by LAT Images.

John Watson, George Harrison and Gerhard Berger during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 07 November 1993. Photo by Ercole Colombo / Studio Colombo / Getty Images.

George Harrison with Gerhard Berger during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 07 November 1993. Photo by Ercole Colombo / Studio Colombo / Getty Images.

George Harrison with Gerhard Berger during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 07 November 1993. Photo by Ercole Colombo / Studio Colombo / Getty Images.

George Harrison and Jean Alesi during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 07 November 1993. Photo by Ercole Colombo / Studio Colombo / Getty Images.

George Harrison and Jean Alesi during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 07 November 1993. Photo by Ercole Colombo / Studio Colombo / Getty Images.

Damon Hill with George Harrison in the pits on 31 July 1994. Photo by Steve Etherington - Empics via Getty Images.

Beatles star George Harrison talks with Damon Hill on 31 July 1994. Photo by Sutton Images.

George Harrison with Gerhard Berger during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 13 November 1994. Photo by Ercole Colombo - Studio Colombo / Getty Images.

George Harrison with Gerhard Berger during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 13 November 1994. Photo by Ercole Colombo - Studio Colombo / Getty Images.

Flavio Briatore with Niki Lauda and George Harrison during the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide Street Circuit on 12 November 1995. Photo by LAT Images.

George Harrison visits the Stewart team, Jackie Stewart, Paul Stewart and Jan Magnusson, at the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on 09 March 1997. Photo by Sutton Images.

George Harrison talks to Jean Alesi at the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on 07 March 1999. Photo by Sutton Images.

Mario Illien, George Harrison and Emerson Fittipaldi in the paddock during the British Grand Prix at Silverstone on 11 July 1999. Photo by Rainer Schlegelmilch / Getty Images.

George Harrison with BMW Motorsport Director Gerhard Berger at the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal, Quebec, 16 - 18 June 2000. Photo by LAT Images.
John Lennon

John Lennon.

John Lennon.

John Lennon.

A new woman arrives in John's life, Cynthia Powell.

John Lennon with his wife Cynthia in the back of a car on 26th May 1964. Photo by Victor Crawshaw - Daily Mirror / Mirrorpix via Getty Images.

John Lennon.

John Lennon.

John Lennon.

John Lennon and Cynthia Powell.

John Lennon passes his driving test in Weybridge on 15 February 1965. Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and George Harrison are there to congratulate him. Photo by Daily Herald / Mirrorpix via Getty Images.

John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

The interior of John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

The interior of John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

The interior of John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

The engine of John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

The engine of John Lennon’s beautiful blue Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe.

John Lennon snapped by a fan outside Kenwood in 1966.

John Lennon.

John Lennon at EMI Studios on 21 March 1967.

John Lennon, wearing a hat decorated with feathers, takes part in filming of the television musical film 'Magical mystery tour' on 14 September 1967. Photo by David Redfern.

John Lennon in a psychedelic Radford Mini de Ville owned by George Harrison at West Malling Airfield, Kent, on 07 November 1967. The Beatles are at the Aerodrome for work on their TV film 'Magical mystery tour'. Photo by Keystone Features / Hulton Archive / Getty Images.

John Lennon and George Harrison shown at London (Heathrow) Airport with their wives Cynthia (next to John) and Pattie (right) on 15 February 1968. Between George and Pattie is her sister, Judy Boyd, who is accompanying the four to India to meditate with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Photo by Getty Images.

John Lennon in 1970.
Paul McCartney

Paul McCartney, taking advantage of some relaxation time on the Beatles' 1964 concert tour, splashes in the Atlantic at Miami Beach with two girls on 15 February 1964. Photo by Getty Images.

The 1964 Aston Martin DB5 previously owned by Sir Paul McCartney that is expected to fetch up to pound 380,000 at a private view ahead of an auction of classic cars at Battersea Evolution Marquee in London. Photo by Lewis Whyld / PA Images via Getty Images.

Paul McCartney and his wife Linda attend a special screening of the documentary 'Get back' at the Baronet Theater, circa 1991 in New York City. Photo by RG / Images Press / Getty Images.

Paul McCartney watches from the pit during the qualifying session for the Abu Dhabi F1 Grand Prix at Yas Marina circuit on 12 November 2011. Photo by Agencies.

Paul McCartney watches from the pit during the qualifying session for the Abu Dhabi F1 Grand Prix at Yas Marina circuit on 12 November 2011. Photo by Agencies.

Paul McCartney watches from the pit during the qualifying session for the Abu Dhabi F1 Grand Prix at Yas Marina circuit on 12 November 2011. Photo by Agencies.
Ringo Starr

Ringo Starr.

Ringo Starr and his wife Maureen at Heathrow Airport leaving for Nice in June 1969. Photo by Watford / Mirrorpix via Getty Images.

Ringo Starr and his wife, Maureen, arrive on 27 June 1969 on their way to a nearby vacation resort. Photo by Getty Images.

Ringo Starr with his wife Maureen Starkey (later Maureen Starkey Tigrett) at Heathrow Airport on 27 January 1970. Starr is wearing a badge with the phrase 'Sink the magic Christian', promoting the film 'The magic Christian' in which he stars. Photo by George Stroud / Daily Express / Hulton Archive / Getty Images.

Beautiful Raquel Welch is a special guest as a slave priestess in charge of a bevy of topless girl rowers aboard a luxury liner in Commonwealth United's The magic Christian. in 1970. She is pictured with Ringo Starr who co-stars in the comedy film with Peter Sellers. Photo by Getty Images.

Beatles drummer Ringo Starr and his wife Maureen Cox at an airport on 01 August 1972. Photo by SSPL / Getty Images.

English drummer Ringo Starr, formerly of the Beatles, with his wife, American actress Barbara Bach, in London in 1981. Photo by Michael Putland / Getty Images.

Ringo Starr and his wife Barbara Bach, circa 1981. Photo by Tony Korody / Sygma via Getty Images.

Ringo Starr, formerly of the Beatles, kissing his wife Barbara Bach in London in 1981. Photo by Michael Putland / Getty Images.
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