How The Beatles’ Decision to Stop Touring Impacted Their Music for the Better

While The Beatles broke up in 1970, they had stopped touring by 1966. While many fans were disappointed they could no longer see their favorite band perform live, the decision to stop touring was great for The Beatles’ music. In the four years where The Beatles stopped touring, the group was able to make their most commercially successful music.

The Beatles stopped touring in 1966

The Beatles’ final tour occurred in North America in the summer of 1966. The tour consisted of 18 concerts and ended at Candlestick Park in San Francisco. While the public was unaware this would be their last tour, The Beatles knew they needed to take time away from performing. The screaming from fans was becoming too much, and they no longer enjoyed the experience.

According to Rolling Stone, Paul McCartney said concerts stopped being fun, and they knew Candlestick Park would be their final show before they walked on stage.

“It wasn’t fun anymore, and that was the main point: We’d always tried to keep some fun in it for ourselves,” he shared. “In anything you do you have to do that, and we’d been pretty good at it. But even now America was beginning to pall because of the conditions of tour, and because we’d done it so many times. So by Candlestick Park it was like, ‘Don’t tell anyone, but this is probably our last gig.’”

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