On April 2, 1970, Phil Spector put the final touches on the Beatles‘ Let It Be album, ending their time as a recording entity until the Anthology project in the mid-’90s.
According to Mark Lewisohn’s The Beatles Recording Sessions: The Official Abbey Road Studio Session Notes, 1962 – 1970, Spector and engineers Peter Brown and Roger Ferris were holed up in Room 4 of Abbey Road Studios and made stereo mixes of “The Long and Winding Road” and “Across the Universe,” both of which received orchestral overdubs the day before.

But by that time, the public had become aware of the Beatles’ break-up. Eight days after this last session, Paul distributed promotional information for his debut solo album, McCartney, where a self-written Q&A sheet revealed that he did not “foresee a time when Lennon-McCartney becomes an active songwriting partnership again.”
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