Behind the barbed lyrics and media-fueled tension, there was always something deeper between John Lennon and Paul McCartney—a bond forged in basements and broken strings, harmonies and heartbreaks. And though the world often saw their post-Beatles years as bitter, John Lennon would later peel back the anger to reveal what never changed.
In a rare and revealing moment, Lennon once spoke candidly about the infamous track “How Do You Sleep?”—a scathing song aimed squarely at Paul, released in the aftermath of The Beatles’ messy breakup. The lyrics were harsh, fueled by hurt, confusion, and the chaos of their dissolving partnership.
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But in hindsight, John didn’t just express regret—he offered a truth that cut through the noise:
“Paul was my best friend.”
That admission, quiet and unguarded, reframed everything. It wasn’t hate in that song—it was pain. The pain of losing not just a bandmate, but a brother. Lennon acknowledged that much of the venom came from a place of feeling misunderstood, abandoned, and heartbroken. Underneath it all, there was still love.

Over the years, both men softened in interviews, with Paul referring to John as his “soulmate in music.” And while “How Do You Sleep?” may remain one of rock’s most brutal diss tracks, John’s later words told the real story—of a friendship too complex, too deep, and too essential to be erased by one angry song.
“I said a lot of things I didn’t mean,” Lennon admitted. “But the truth is, I loved him. He was my best friend.”

In the end, it wasn’t about rivalry or records—it was about two boys from Liverpool who changed the world side by side, and whose bond, though battered, never truly broke.