The Beatles were managed by
Allan Williams—starting in May 1960—and he booked them into
Bruno Koschmider's Indra club in
Hamburg. McCartney's father was reluctant to let the teenage Paul go to Hamburg until Paul pointed out that he would earn two
pounds and ten
shillings per day. As this was more than he earned himself, Jim finally agreed.
The Beatles first played at the
Indra club, sleeping in small, dirty rooms in the
Bambi Kino, and then moved (after the closure of the Indra) to the larger
Kaiserkeller. In October 1960, they left Koschmider's club and worked at the "Top Ten Club", which was run by Peter Eckhorn. When McCartney and
Pete Best went back to the Bambi Kino to get their belongings they found it in almost total darkness. As a snub to Koschmider, they found a
condom, attached it to a nail on the concrete wall of their room, and set fire to it. There was no real damage, but Koschmider reported them for attempted
arson. McCartney and Best spent three hours in a local
jail and were deported, as was
George Harrison, for working under the legal age limit. Lennon's
work permit was revoked a few days later and he went home by train, but Sutcliffe had a
cold and stayed in Hamburg, and then flew home.
The group reunited in December 1960, and on
21 March 1961, played their first of many concerts at Liverpool's
Cavern club. McCartney realised that other Liverpool bands were playing the same cover songs, which prompted him and Lennon to write more original material. The Beatles returned to Hamburg in April 1961, and recorded "
My Bonnie" with
Tony Sheridan. Sutcliffe left the band after the end of their contract, so Paul reluctantly took over
bass. After borrowing Sutcliffe's Hõfner 333 for a short time, he bought a left-handed 1962 500/1 model
Höfner bass. On 1 October 1961, McCartney went with Lennon (who paid for the trip) to
Paris for two weeks.
The Beatles were first seen by
Brian Epstein at the
Cavern club on
9 November 1961, and he later signed them to a management contract. The Beatles'
road manager, Neil Aspinall, drove them to London on
31 December 1961, where they auditioned the next day, but were rejected by
Decca Records. In April 1962, they went back to Hamburg to play at the
Star-Club, and learned of
Stuart Sutcliffe's death a few hours before they arrived. The Beatles were ready to sign a record contract on
9 May 1962, with
Parlophone Records—after having been rejected by many record companies—but Epstein sacked Pete Best(at the behest of McCartney, Lennon and Harrison) before they signed the contract. "
Love Me Do" was released on
5 October 1962, featuring McCartney singing solo on the chorus line.
All Lennon-McCartney songs on the first pressing of
Please Please Me album (recorded in one day on
11 February 1963) as well as the "
Please Please Me" single, "
From Me to You", and its B-side, "
Thank You Girl", are credited to "McCartney-Lennon", but this was later changed to "Lennon-McCartney". They usually needed an hour or two to finish a song, which were written in hotel rooms after a concert, at Wimpole Street, at Cavendish Avenue, or at
Kenwood (John Lennon's house). McCartney also wrote songs for other artists, such as
Billy J. Kramer, Cilla Black, Badfinger, and
Mary Hopkin -and most notably he wrote two hit songs for the group Peter & Gordon-launching their career. One song, "World Without Love", became a #1 hit in the U.K. & U.S. (Peter was the brother of Jane Asher, McCartney's girlfriend at the time)
Lennon, Harrison, and Starr lived in large houses in the '
stockbroker belt' of southern England, but McCartney continued to live in central London: in
Jane Asher's parents' house, and then at 7 Cavendish Avenue,
St John's Wood, near the
Abbey Road Studios. It was at Cavendish Avenue that McCartney bought his first
Old English Sheepdog, Martha, which inspired the song "
Martha My Dear".
McCartney often went to nightclubs alone, which offered 'dining and dancing until 4.00 a.m.' and featured
cabaret acts. McCartney would get preferential treatment everywhere he went, which he readily accepted. He even once accepted an offer from a
policeman to be allowed to park McCartney's car. He later visited
gambling clubs after 4.00am, such as 'The Curzon House', and often saw Brian Epstein there. The
Ad Lib club (above the Prince Charles Theatre at 7 Leicester Place) was later opened for the emerging 'Rock and Roll' crowd of musicians, and tolerated their unusual lifestyle. After the Ad Lib fell out of favour, McCartney moved on to the
Scotch of St James, at 13 Masons Yard. He also frequented
The Bag O'Nails club at 8 Kingly Street in
Soho, London, where he met
Linda Eastman.
The Beatles stopped touring after their last concert at
Candlestick Park, San Francisco, on
29 August 1966. The other three Beatles had often talked about stopping touring, but after the Candlestick Park concert, and after having played so many concerts where they could not be heard, McCartney finally agreed that they should stop playing live concerts.
McCartney was the first to be involved in a musical project outside of the group, when he composed the score for the film
The Family Way in 1966. The soundtrack was later released as an album (also called
The Family Way), and won the
Ivor Novello Award for Best Instrumental Theme, ahead of acclaimed jazz musician Mike Turner. McCartney wrote songs for and produced other artists, including Mary Hopkin, Badfinger, and
the Bonzo Dog Band, and in 1966, he was asked by
Kenneth Tynan to write the songs for the
National Theatre's production of
As You Like It by
William Shakespeare (starring
Laurence Olivier) but declined.
McCartney later attempted to persuade Lennon, Harrison and Starr to return to the stage, and when they had a meeting to sign a new contract with
Capitol Records, McCartney suggested "going back to our roots," to which Lennon replied, "I think you're mad!" Although Lennon had quit the group in September 1969, and Harrison and Starr had temporarily left the group at various times, McCartney was the one who publicly announced
The Beatles' breakup on
10 April 1970—one week before releasing his first solo album,
McCartney. The album included a press release inside with a self-written interview stating McCartney's hopes about the future. The Beatles' partnership was legally dissolved after McCartney filed a
lawsuit on
31 December 1970.