By the summer of 1968, the atmosphere inside The Beatles had grown tense and emotionally draining. The band that had once seemed inseparable was now struggling under the pressure of fame, creative differences, and exhausting studio work. Recording sessions for their self-titled album—later known as the “White Album”—often stretched to 14 hours or more. Arguments over musical direction were common, and the camaraderie that once defined the group appeared to be fading.
For Ringo Starr, the strain became overwhelming.
Although he had always been known as the easygoing, steady presence in the band, Starr privately began to doubt himself. Surrounded by strong personalities and brilliant songwriters in John Lennon and Paul McCartney, he started to feel like he no longer belonged. According to later interviews, criticism of his drumming during the sessions left him feeling deeply discouraged.
“I felt like I wasn’t playing great anymore,” Starr would later recall. “And I felt like the others were really happy and I was an outsider.”
The situation reached a breaking point during the recording of the White Album. Instead of confronting the tension directly, Starr made a quiet decision that shocked the group—he walked away. Without dramatic announcements or public conflict, he simply left the studio and temporarily quit The Beatles.
Seeking distance from the growing turmoil, Starr traveled to the Mediterranean. In a twist that seemed almost cinematic, he borrowed a yacht belonging to actor Peter Sellers, who had become a friend of the band. The boat provided the perfect refuge: isolated, peaceful, and far removed from the relentless pressure of London’s recording studios.
For nearly two weeks, Starr lived aboard the yacht, surrounded by sunshine, calm seas, and the quiet rhythm of the ocean. After months of exhausting sessions and emotional tension, the solitude offered something he desperately needed—space to breathe and reconnect with himself.
During those days drifting across the Mediterranean, Starr spent hours relaxing on deck and observing the sea life beneath the clear water. One moment in particular stayed with him. Looking down into the ocean, he noticed an octopus moving along the seabed, carefully collecting stones and shells to build a small protective space.
The simple behavior fascinated him.
Watching the creature create its own safe and comfortable place sparked an idea that would soon turn into one of his most beloved songs. Inspired by the scene, Starr began imagining an underwater world where people could escape their troubles and live peacefully beneath the waves.
That vision eventually became “Octopus’s Garden.”
The song, later released on the Beatles’ 1969 album Abbey Road, carried a lighthearted, whimsical tone that contrasted sharply with the tension that had surrounded its origin. For Starr, it represented a moment of emotional recovery—a reminder that creativity could still flourish even during difficult times.
Back in London, the other Beatles quickly realized how much they missed him. Despite the arguments and frustrations, the band understood that Starr’s steady presence was essential. When he eventually returned to the studio, the group welcomed him back warmly. As a gesture of apology, they decorated his drum kit with flowers before he resumed recording.
The moment symbolized a rare instance of unity during one of the band’s most turbulent periods.
Looking back decades later, Starr’s brief Mediterranean escape stands as one of the most revealing episodes in Beatles history. It showed that even within the most famous band in the world, moments of doubt and emotional exhaustion were unavoidable. Yet it also proved that stepping away—sometimes literally sailing into the sunset—could restore clarity, inspiration, and the confidence needed to return stronger than before.