On August 29, 1966, the Beetles played their last official concert at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, California, unofficially marking the beginning of the end of the legendary Beatles.

Contrary to what one might expect, the attendance at the concert venue was limited – of the 42,500 capacity stadium, only 25,000 tickets were sold – as an interview with John Lennon where had argued that the Beatles are now more famous than … Christ and an admission from Paul McCartney that he has used LSD, two facts that “disappointed” the conservative, American public.

The song “Long Tall Sally” was the one that closed the last Beatles concert leaving the audience with a bittersweet feeling

The Beatles story had come to an end. The reasons were internal disputes, conflicts, rivalries and the thorn that goes by the name of Yoko Ono, who had invaded John Lennon’s life in 1966. Then followed another four years of career until May 1970, when they officially disbanded and each of the four members pursued solo careers.