How do you follow up being a member of the Beatles? That’s an issue that John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr each struggled with, to different degrees, after the band ended their career in 1970.
Ringo had as much charisma – or more – than any of his bandmates. He was, and remains, a very underrated drummer. And over the years, he’s also developed as a singer/songwriter and bandleader.
2025 marks 55 years since Ringo’s solo debut, 1970’s Sentimental Journey. That album saw Ringo interpreting pre-rock and roll standards (four decades before McCartney did a similar album with 2012’s Kisses On The Bottom, by the way). Ringo’s solo catalog includes over 20 studio albums and EPs, not to mention a ton of live albums documenting his different “All-Starr” touring bands, which he has been leading since 1989, when he kicked off his first solo tour.
His latest release, 2025’s Look Up, is being billed as a country album, but country music is nothing new to Ringo; Starr sang on the Beatles’ cover of Carl Perkins’ “Honey Don’t” back in 1964 and their cover of Buck Owens’ “Act Naturally” in 1965. Ringo wrote and sang the country-tinged “Octopus’s Garden” from 1969’s Abbey Road, which is one of his most iconic vocal performances with the Beatles. And Ringo’s second solo album, 1970’s Beaucoups of Blues, was recorded in Nashville and reflected his love of country music.
Of course, his discography goes beyond country music, and here, we’re looking back at some of Ringo’s greatest moments as a solo artist; some of these songs were massive hits and others you might have missed.