PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • When I'm 64
rdfs:comment
  • When ALF finds out that one his favorite actresses Louise Beaumont has moved into the Sunset Villa retirement home just a few blocks away, he sneaks out to meet her. When they meet, ALF finds that she is bitter and lonely, but convinces her to get of her room and have some fun.
  • When I'm Sixty-Four is a song by The Beatles Paul McCartney wrote the music for this when he was about 15, and used to play it when The Beatles were still known as The Quarrymen. He put lyrics to it later in honor of his father's 64th birthday. McCartney wrote and sang the lead vocals on this song which asks if a woman will still be with him when he got older, when he was 64 years old. On May 17, 2006, Paul and his then wife, Heather Mills, separated, finalizing the divorce in 2008. McCartney turned 64 on June 18, 2006, so the answer to his musical question with regards to Mills, would be no.
dcterms:subject
diff2 drums
  • no
diff2 guitar
  • no
diff bass
  • 0
diff2 vocals
  • no
diff2 harmonies
  • no
diff bass pro
  • no
diff harmonies
  • 3
diff2 keys
  • no
diff2 bass pro
  • no
diff guitar pro
  • no
diff2 keys pro
  • no
diff keys
  • no
diff2 guitar pro
  • no
diff vocals
  • 3
diff guitar
  • 3
diff2 band
  • no
diff drums
  • 5
harmonies nr
  • 3
diff2 drums pro
  • no
diff band
  • 2
diff drums pro
  • 5
diff keys pro
  • no
diff2 bass
  • no
dbkwik:music/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:rock-band/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:rockband/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Album
  • Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Genre
  • Rock
Featured in
  • Yellow Submarine, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Language
  • English
Title
  • When I'm 64
dbkwik:alf/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Cover
  • Sgt Pepper.jpg
PREV
Released
  • 1967
By
Gender
  • Male
Artist
  • The Beatles
Source
  • BRB
NEXT
Export
  • DLC
Rating
  • NR
abstract
  • When I'm Sixty-Four is a song by The Beatles Paul McCartney wrote the music for this when he was about 15, and used to play it when The Beatles were still known as The Quarrymen. He put lyrics to it later in honor of his father's 64th birthday. McCartney wrote and sang the lead vocals on this song which asks if a woman will still be with him when he got older, when he was 64 years old. On May 17, 2006, Paul and his then wife, Heather Mills, separated, finalizing the divorce in 2008. McCartney turned 64 on June 18, 2006, so the answer to his musical question with regards to Mills, would be no. John Lennon said of this: "I would never even dream of writing a song like that." George Martin arranged this in the style of a 1920's big band, which came to be known as "retro-rock." McCartney's vocal was sped-up a bit to add to the effect. This was the first song recorded for Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. This was used in the Robin Williams movie The World According to Garp. This was a favorite of The Beatles at their early club shows, where they were required to play for hours. When their amps overheated, they would sing this around the piano. Julian Lennon, John's son, recorded a version of this that was used in 2002 commercials for Allstate insurance. This was not typical of Julian, who usually shied away from his father's legacy. The title is also the name of a BBC television show starring Paul Freeman and Alun Armstrong as two older men who fall in love with each other. (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France, for above 2) A reference to this song appeared in the movie Shanghai Knights, starring Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson. In the scene where Roy O'Bannon (Wilson) is fantasizing about his future family and life with Chon Lin, he mentions his kids' names: "Vera, Chuck, and Dave." (thanks, Brittany - Virginia) In opening scenes of the 2007 musical Across The Universe, the main character, Jude, has his ticket stamped to New York by an elderly man who says that he would have left the city sooner when he was young, but he is now 64 and still working at the shipyard. It's a definite reference to McCartney's song that didn't make it into the movie, which features only Beatles songs.
  • When ALF finds out that one his favorite actresses Louise Beaumont has moved into the Sunset Villa retirement home just a few blocks away, he sneaks out to meet her. When they meet, ALF finds that she is bitter and lonely, but convinces her to get of her room and have some fun.
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