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Seriously.
A bit of background to this: I'm a HUGE Beatles fan, and of course there are things that I wish had gone differently. I really do wish they had released one more album after Abbey Road or maybe between a properly done Get Back/Let it Be and Abbey Road. And, of course, I've contemplated what solo songs should have been Beatles songs. Among them, George's All Things Must Pass, Isn't it a Pity, Apple Scruffs, and What is Life; John's Gimme Some Truth, Jealous Guy, Love; and Paul's Back Seat of My Car, Maybe I'm Amazed, Junk, and Come and Get it (Okay, actually a Badfinger song, but Paul wrote it).
Still, in hindsight, it's a very good thing they broke up. Sure, I wish it could have happened more smoothly - my fantasy album from the preceding paragraph + a nice farewell concert. And it's not too farfetched to believe that if Brian Epstein hadn't died, maybe they would have endured another year or two.
But a prolonged Beatles' life would have been painful. The Beatles were incredible, but they were inevitably growing apart. By the end of it, John, Paul, and George hated each other's guts and all were pursuing totally different musical styles. The music would have deteriorated badly overtime. Sure, Paul's stuff from the mid-70s on and John's last album before his death are perfectly competent - but does anybody really want to see the Beatles, as a group, singing domestic songs like Woman, or Beautiful Boy (both good songs, but NOT Beatles songs). And thank God for sparing us a Beatles version of Silly Love Songs.
By short-circuiting in 1970, the Beatles forestalled any possible decline. Every album was good (some were bad relative to the others, but objectively, each was quite strong). And that makes a difference. It preserves the image of a pure, perfect Beatles, not a rocky, inconsistent one that would have emerged had they endured. Can you imagine how horrible it would have been if the Beatles had been like the Stones, releasing bad, ignored albums, without much popularity?
Furthermore, the Beatles were a SIXTIES phenom. Their music wasn't really suited to the 70s, and I don't think any '70s Beatles music would have fit coherently with the rest of their career.
I do wish that John Lennon hadn't been killed, of course, and a reunion in the '90s may have been good, but I think the Beatles were wise to breakup. Doing so has helped contribute to their greatness.
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