If Beatles recorded in 1980.

“OK, guys. Paul, you need to switch to 5-string and give us more of a funky beat. Ringo, let’s get some action going on those drums. You’re too laid-back. Also, we’re bringing in Greg Hawke so we have some nifty keyboard riffs to fill in those dead spots. And remember…they’ve got to be able to dance to it.”

If by ‘doing decently’ you mean hitting #1 on the UK album chart, #3 on the U.S. chart. And two years later he released ‘Tug of War’, which went to #1 on charts around the world and platinum in the U.S., and followed it a year later with ‘Pipes of Peace’, which wasn’t my cup of tea but was a worldwide platinum smash.

Well, that’s a bit of cherry picking. Harrison released George Harrison just a year earlier, which went gold has was critically well received. And in 1987 he released Cloud Nine, which contained some of his best work, went platinum, and was his best-selling album since All Things Must Pass. He was far from washed up.

Those two albums, by the way, outsold John Lennon’s most popular two albums by more than 2 million records.

Ringo put out three albums between 1978 and 1981 - tied with Paul for most releases in that period.

That isn’t even close to being true. Double Fantasy was the only album John put out in five years. It benefited critically and in sales from his death, but the 1980 John was barely working, isolated, living in an apartment in New York with Yoko and not doing much. All the other Beatles were recording, touring, making movies, and even working with each other on projects.

Actually, they did work together. Ringo played on every other Beatle’s albums at some point. Again, it was John Lennon who was the outlier, who never played with another Beatle after 1975. The rest of them continued playing together selectively right up until today. In fact all three played on Somewhere in England and Ringo’s Stop and Smell the Roses in the 1980-1981 timeframe we are talking about.

John was the anti-social recluse who was barely making music. The rest of them were in the middle of thriving careers in 1980, and would have major successes for years to come.

Collaborations between ex-Beatles