At Ringo’s Annual Peace & Love Birthday Celebration at Beverly Hills Garden Park, the Beatles legend revealed what inspired the genre shift.
Starr credits T Bone Burnett, the Grammy-winning country icon, telling Fox News Digital, “I met him [when] Olivia Harrison was reading poems for George.
There was about 100 of us there listening, and he was one of them, and I bumped into him [off and on] since the ’70s.
“He said, ‘What are you doing? I said, ‘Oh, well I’m doing this, EPs [extended play albums, which have more tracks than a single, but less than a record]. I’m getting people to write a song, put some music on it.”
Close up of Ringo Starr flashing peace signs
Ringo Starr decided to produce a country album after a chance meeting with a fellow music icon. (Arnold Jerocki/Getty Images)
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Starr had some pop songs written but said Burnett’s song was “absolutely one of the most beautiful country songs I ever heard. So, I thought, ‘I’m going to do a country EP.’”
But when he spoke to Burnett about doing more tracks, he revealed he actually had nine songs, so Ringo said, “I thought let’s make a real CD, so I’m back making a CD.”
In an interview earlier this year with Variety, Burnett had similar praise for Starr.
“He’s such a beautiful singer. Ringo was in a band with two of the best singers in rock ‘n’ roll history, so people never took him as seriously as a singer as they should,” Burnett told the outlet.
“If you listen to all the country stuff he did, ‘What Goes On’ and ‘Act Naturally’ and ‘Honey Don’t,’ he did so much great country music, even in the Beatles. And, you know, he’s called Ringo Starr because that’s a cowboy name, and he wanted to be a cowboy when he was a kid.