The Beatles on May 19, 1967, in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Jeff Hochberg/Getty Images)

Fans react to The Beatles earning a Grammy nomination for ‘Now And Then’

The official nomination does not, however, include John Lennon or George Harrison in the credits as they did not contribute newly-recorded elements to the song

by · NME

Fans have been reacting to John Lennon and George Harrison’s omission from The Beatles’ new Grammy nomination for ‘Now And Then’.

The 2023 song, dubbed ‘the last Beatles’ song, was released last November and was pieced together using an archive demo recording of Lennon that was recorded around 1977. It also included overdubs of guitar tracks laid down by Harrison in 1995.

Earlier today, the song was nominated for Record Of The Year at the 67th Grammy Awards, setting the record for the longest span between nominations for any artist in history. However, Lennon and Harrison, who died in 1980 and 2001 respectively, do not meet Grammy eligibility requirements as they did not contribute newly recorded elements to the track, and are not listed in the official nomination.

Lennon’s son Sean Ono Lennon celebrated the nomination on his X/Twitter account on Thursday, writing: “Amazing!!! Grammy Noms! Nom nom nom…”

However, some others have drawn attention to the use of AI to isolate Lennon’s original demo recording in the song. One post on X/Twitter noted (in Spanish): “Everything is fine with The Beatles…But this Grammy nomination is quite forced… And on top of that with AI to try to separate John Lennon’s vocals from the piano of the original demo.”

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“This nomination is already shameful, a win will be even more disgraceful and a huge slap to real artists,” added another.

This was countered by another X user, however, who argued: “The Beatles DID NOT USE AI to create a song but rather to isolate John Lennon’s voice from a record that already existed and recorded new parts in a traditional way. winning the Grammy would be the least they could do for the last song made by the greatest band of all time.”

Others have reacted to the omission of Lennon and Harrison from the official nomination, with one X user asking, “Beatles get Grammy nod for final song – but why aren’t Lennon and Harrison nominated?”

The nominations for the Grammy awards were announced in a YouTube livestream earlier today (November 8), with the winners set to be revealed at the 68th Grammy Awards ceremony on February 2, 2025 at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.

Beyoncé leads the way with 11 nominations, making her the most nominated artist of all time with a lifetime total of 99. She will compete against Billie EilishChappell RoanCharli XCXKendrick LamarSabrina Carpenter and Taylor Swift for the covered Record Of The Year prize, as well as the Fab Four for ‘Now And Then’.

Both Roan and Carpenter have been nominated for best new artist, meaning they are in the running for all four categories open to recording artists across genres. If either artist won that category as well as record, song and album of the year – they’d become the first to do that since Eilish’s landmark sweep in 2020.

In other Beatles-related news, McCartney paid his tributes to Quincy Jones this week, remembering his “very positive, loving spirit”.

It was also reported recently that Yoko Ono was warned that her late husband was “in danger” prior to his death.

A new Beatles documentary film Beatles ‘64 from producer Martin Scorsese and director David Tedeschi is also coming to Disney+ on November 29.