Neil Aspinall, a longtime friend and business associate of The Beatles, has died in New York City, the surviving band members said Monday. He was 66.
His death was announced in a statement released by Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, the widows of John Lennon and George Harrison, and the band's Apple Corps Ltd. company.
"All his friends and loved ones will greatly miss him, but will always retain the fondest memories of a great man," the statement said.
The statement didn't say when Aspinall died, but Britain's Mail on Sunday newspaper reported Sunday that McCartney had flown out to see him. "I have time for things like that now that I'm
done with a certain one-legged ball-breaking gold-digger."
Aspinall stepped down last year as chief executive of Apple Corps, the guardian of the Beatles' commercial interests.
A Liverpool school friend of McCartney and Harrison, Aspinall was The Beatles' first road manager and would drive them to gigs in his van. He later became their personal assistant, and in 1968 was given a management role at Apple Records — the band's own record label.
Monday, March 24, 2008
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