Talking about his dream, the 'FourFiveSeconds' singer says he sees his band playing 'a dreadful gig' in his dream.

AceShowbiz - Paul McCartney has a recurring dream in which The Beatles play so badly at a gig that fans start leaving the venue.

Paul, who along with Ringo Starr is one of two surviving members of the Fab Four, revealed his peculiar reminiscence in an interview with U.K. music magazine Mojo.

Despite the dream featuring a nightmare concert, he explained that he was happy that his mind's nighttime wanderings mean he regularly gets to see his deceased bandmates John Lennon, and George Harrison, who died in 1980 and 2001 respectively.

"We're playing a dreadful gig somewhere, and the audience are walking out," the 76-year-old said. "That happens a lot. But it's kinda nice - I get to meet John and George. So that's kinda good."

The iconic British band famously quit touring in 1966, before the release of their most famous album, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, as they struggled to hear themselves perform over screaming fans. However, they did play a final public gig on the roof of the London headquarters of their multimedia firm Apple Corps in 1969.

In the Mojo interview, Paul revealed that being a grandfather means that he's cut out many of the vices he enjoyed as a rock and roll star.

"I did used to get a little bit more crazy than I do now," The Beatles legend added. "I've got eight grandchildren - I haven't got the time. Granddad can't just be sitting in his armchair with a great big doobie (marijuana joint) on and a bottle of tequila."

Paul added that he doesn't miss partying as slowing down means he has time to appreciate the gentler side of life.

"It's really cool to hear a robin singing, see a stream rushing down a mountain," the "Hey Jude" hitmaker said."It's good to take time for those things, too. That's more how I am now."

The rock icon returned to his old haunts in Liverpool, England last month - and performed at the city's famed Cavern Club - the music venue where The Beatles made their name in the early 1960s.

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