“We Never Finished That Line…” — Paul McCartney Revisits Lennon, Loss, and a Lyric That Was Left Behind – nh

Los Angeles, CA —
There are few relationships in music more mythologized than the one between Paul McCartney and John Lennon. From their early teenage days strumming  guitars in Liverpool to the cultural tidal wave known as The Beatles, their partnership changed the world — and then ended in heartbreak.

Now, in a powerful new video, filmed ahead of the “Lennon & McCartney: The Unfinished Song” exhibit in Los Angeles, Paul opens up in a way that feels less like a documentary and more like a confession.

“We were brothers,” Paul says, his voice catching.
“We argued like brothers. We laughed like brothers. And when we broke up… I lost a piece of myself.”

Unseen Photos, Unspoken Memories

The L.A. exhibit features more than 200 previously unreleased photographs, handwritten notes, original lyrics, and candid video footage from the Beatles’ most intimate years — curated from private archives and family collections.

But one item has drawn particular attention:
A mysterious, folded scrap of paper, found tucked inside the pocket of one of Paul’s old tour jackets. On it — in Lennon’s unmistakable handwriting — is a half-written verse. No title. No date. Just a few lines and a blank space beneath them.

“It was like John had paused mid-thought,” Paul says.
“And I never saw it. Never even knew he gave me that jacket.”

A Lyric Left Behind

The fragment reads:

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“We could’ve gone / down to the sea / and started again…”

Paul stares at the paper in the video, tears welling.

“That’s John. That’s us. We never finished that line.
Maybe we never got the chance.”

No one knows when the note was written. It could’ve been from their final days as a band — or perhaps from the silent years afterward, when Paul and John were slowly, tentatively reconnecting before Lennon’s tragic death in 1980.

“We’d started talking again,” Paul says.
“It wasn’t perfect. But there was love. There was always love.”

The Weight of Unfinished Business

This isn’t the first time Paul has spoken publicly about Lennon, but it may be the rawest.

In the video, he shares how “Here Today”, the 1982 ballad he wrote for John, came pouring out one night when the grief finally hit. He plays a few chords from it, then quietly adds:

“But this note… this unfinished lyric…
it’s like John was still writing to me.”

Why This Exhibit Matters Now

The “Unfinished Song” exhibit isn’t about rehashing Beatlemania or debating who broke up the band.
It’s about what remains when the music stops: love, regret, memory — and the moments that never got to be.

Visitors walk through recreated studio spaces, handwritten lyrics with coffee stains, and reel-to-reel recordings with playful banter. But it’s the little things — the inside jokes scrawled in margins, the ticket stubs, the unmailed postcards — that hit hardest.

“We think we know these men,” says curator Sophie Leland.
“But what we’re seeing here are the quiet rooms of their friendship — not the stage, not the legend, just the friendship.”

A Bond That Never Left

When asked what he would say to John now, Paul doesn’t hesitate.

“I’d say, ‘I saw the note. I still hear the music.
And I love you, mate.’”

The silence that follows speaks louder than any song.