7 Insights you can learn about creativity from the Beatles
November 30, 2021
Gail Bower in Creativity, Get Back, The Beatles, creativity
If you’ve begun watching the new film about the Beatles, called The Beatles: Get Back, you probably already sense that you can learn a lot about creativity.
 
Image of Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, John Lennon, and George Harrison in the studio filmed in the move The Beatles: Get Back. Screenshot from trailer.
The film, which launched on Friday, is a marathon.
 
Director Peter Jackson, famous for his Lord of the Rings trilogy, culled 60 hours of footage that had been hidden away in a vault and previously unseen into a nearly eight-hour film.
 
Yes, eight hours!—in an era of 140-character tweets and 30-second TikTok videos!
 
The film takes us on a journey with John, Paul, George, and Ringo, along with a cast of entertainment industry characters, to develop new songs for an album, a TV show, and a performance within a month.
 
We as viewers are flies on the wall watching this process unfold. 
And it’s not always pretty.
 
Creativity is a loaded word. Some people choose to think that they are not creative (not true). Others associate a creative state with nirvana (it’s not).
 
Everyone has the capacity to be creative, whether you’re an artist, a teacher, a business executive, a nonprofit leader, a student, an athlete, a new parent, or anything in between.
 
At the same time, the creative process has highs and lows. We have a brilliant idea. We rush to execute it. But then we get stuck. Or lose our way.
 
We may give up.
 
Or we push through and find a new solution and a new path forward.
 
And this process is even more complex when we’re collaborating.
 
For the Fab Four, their relationship was on rocky ground at this point in their careers. Their lives were more complex—new interests, romantic partners, and goals.
 
We can see the strain on their working relationship. And initially the creative output is not terribly robust.
 
And a few things they do to get it back:
 
We’re only about half-way through the entire Get Back marathon. On one hand, it seems ridiculous to watch this process. It’s a little tedious. And long. On the other hand, wow! What a thrill to step into their world and watch the songs most of us know and love being made.
 

Questions for you:

Do you have a creative process? Are your expectations of yourself and your own creativity realistic? Do you know what to do to get things back on track when things go astray? Are you making time and space in your calendar for thinking or freeing your mind so ideas have an open field in which to land?

 

Article originally appeared on Gail Bower (https://gailbower.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.