Nowhere man . Strawberryfeilds forever. yes it is
That would be John Lennon and Paul McCrtney, who "together" wrote about 84% of the songs from 1964 to 1970. This is mostly because early in their career, Lennon and McCartney agreed to take co-credit of songs either of them wrote separately, doubling the output seemingly.
John Lennon
Yes.
mostly every song the beatles did he and paul wrote
John Lennon, during 1968.
John Lennon and Paul McCartney.
yes he wrote songs songs are poems
John Lennon and Paul McCartney.
Michael Jackson.
John Lennon and Paul McCartney wrote most of the Beatles' songs and, as Paul pointed out, most of the Beatles' songs were love songs.
That would be John Lennon and Paul McCrtney, who "together" wrote about 84% of the songs from 1964 to 1970. This is mostly because early in their career, Lennon and McCartney agreed to take co-credit of songs either of them wrote separately, doubling the output seemingly.
John Lennon
Yes.
mostly every song the beatles did he and paul wrote
John Lennon, during 1968.
John Lennon wrote the song.
Lennon/ McCartney wrote most of the Beatles songs, though Starr did write 1 of the most well known ones, Octopuses Garden. Lennon and McCartney had a handshake agreement going back to their earliest days that all songs either of them wrote for the band would carry the authorship of "Lennon/McCartney". In the bands earlier days - up until the time they really "hit it big" - many (not all) of their songs were genuine collaborative efforts. "She Loves You" is a typical example. But from that point on, it is more accurate to say that one or the other wrote the song, with the one who didn't being a "consultant". To be fair, Lennon wrote the lion's share of the groups big hits, but when McCartney wrote a winner, he really wrote a winner ("Michelle", "Yesterday", "And I Love Her", "Hey Jude".) Another good example of a collaborative effort is "We Can Work it Out". The main chorus "Try to see it my way . . . " is McCartney. The counterpoint view in the bridge ("Life is very short . . . ") is Lennon.