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  • Welbeck

The Beatles by Terry O'Neill: Five decades of photographs, with unseen images

Terry O'Neill

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Music reviews & criticism, Rock & Pop music, Individual composers & musicians, specific bands &, Prose: non-fiction

With more than 300 photographs and including quotes from Terry collecting his personal memories of working with the band, this is a visual portait of the story of John, Paul, George, Ringo and the music they made.

'An incredible photographer and good friend'
-RINGO STARR


The definitive collection of the breathtaking Beatles photographs of Terry O'Neill.

Iconic photographer Terry O'Neill worked with the Beatles across five decades, capturing the band at the beginning of their rise to the top and the solo years beyond.

From recording sessions, rehearsals and larking around town at the height of Beatlemania, to intimate shots at weddings, at home and on tour in the solo years after the band had split, O'Neill captured countless photographs many of which are being published for the very first time here.

With more than 300 photographs and including quotes from Terry collecting his personal memories of working with the band, The Beatles by Terry O'Neill is a unique visual portrait of the story of John, Paul, George, Ringo and the music they made.

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Terry O'Neill

Terry O'Neill is one of the most important photographers of his generation, taking iconic portraits of artists from The Beatles to The Rolling Stones, Elizabeth Taylor to Audrey Hepburn. He has worked with such icons as Michael Caine, Brigitte Bardot, Sean Connery, Terence Stamp, Ava Gardner, Paul Newman, Robert Redford, Raquel Welch, Roger Moore, Amy Winehouse, Nelson Mandela and hundreds of others. Frank Sinatra, whom O'Neill worked with for several decades, considered him a friend and O'Neill had a close working relationship with David Bowie, including photographing the iconic "Jumping Dog" image used for the promotion of Diamond Dogs. O'Neill's photograph of Faye Dunaway sitting by the pool the morning after winning the Academy Award in 1977 is widely considered to be the most iconic image of Hollywood. His work is included in permanent collections in museums, galleries and private collections worldwide.

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