No, John Lennon met Paul McCartney on Saturday July 6th, 1957, at Woolton Parish Church Garden Fete, Liverpool.
(A better answer by somebody else)
I think what the question was is... did they meet UP in the 70's after the breakup? Clearly with anyone with enough interest to ask this question knows The Beatles were a 60's band. So a first meeting in the 70's wouldn't make sense.
The answer is yes.
Paul and Linda did see John in NYC around Christmas 1975. However, they also apparently visited on Saturday April 24, 1976. On that date, as John described in an interview with Playboy, they were watching when Lorne Michaels offered the Beatles the tidy sum of $3000 to reunite on Saturday Night Live. John said they considred going down for laughs but changed their minds
In this order: Elton John Paul McCartney The Bee Gees
No. He was in The Beatles in the 1960s and Wings in the '70s.
He is currently a solo artist, but in the 70s he had a band called "Wings".
January 3, 1970 was the last time Paul, George, and Ringo met before John's death to record "I Me Mine". The last time all four played together was on "I Want You (She's So Heavy)" for the Abbey Road album. Throughout the 70s, Lennon would often play with Harrison and Starr on various albums, but the only time McCartney collaborated with another Beatle in the 70s was on the Ringo album. After Lennon's death, the other three would meet on special occasions to play together.
Lennon owned several cars, the first being a 1965 Ferrari. He had several Rolls-Royces, and an Aston Martin that he drove to Scotland on a 1969 vacation with Yoko Ono, his son Julian and her daughter Kyoko. Lennon crashed this car when he missed a turn sending each of them to the hospital, and stopped driving after that.
Yes, there was considerable enmity on the part of John Lennon towards the three others for various reasons, but principally because he wanted to go solo and be recognised as a great musician in his own right. He felt that the other members of the band were stifling his independent creativity, and were also critical of his marriage to Yoko Ono, which is why he left the group. Paul McCartney was angered by John's attitude, as he felt that John was taking too much credit for The Beatles' success whereas Paul had made an equal contribution to it, but his anger didn't last and the two reached an uneasy reconciliation in the late '70s. George and Ringo didn't hate anybody though.
Some of the biggest pop stars of the 70s were Paul McCartney, Elton John, The Bee Gees, The Carpenters, The Jackson 5, Stevie Wonder, Chicago, Three Dog Night, Neil Diamond, The Eagles, Rod Stewart, Barry Manilow, Olivia Newton-John - just to name a few.
Opinions vary. Some listeners believe his performance on Live Peace In Toronto 1969 was best. Others admired the stark confessional songs on John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, or his work on Imagine (his best-selling solo album), or Walls And Bridges, or his 70s-mode 50s remakes on Rock 'n' Roll. Milk And Honey also has its fans.
Some influential people of the 70s were Gerald Ford and John Ehrlichman
He was important because not only he was the member of The Beatles around the early 60s and 70s. He had made many lyrical politic songs like Imagine or Give Peace A Chance. Which not only sold millions on the album, but a philosopher kind of an artist that talks about peace and love.
John Forde.
Paul Reaney