(CNN) -- First the rumor went around that Michael Jackson was leaving
the Beatles catalog to Paul McCartney in his will. Then the rumor was
that McCartney was upset that Jackson didn't leave the Beatles catalog
to the Beatle in his will.

Michael Jackson didn't leave the Beatles catalog to Paul McCartney in
his will, McCartney says.

Neither is true, said McCartney in a posting on his Web site.

"Some time ago, the media came up with the idea that Michael Jackson
was going to leave his share in the Beatles songs to me in his will
which was completely made up and something I didn't believe for a
second," McCartney said.

"Now the report is that I am devastated to find that he didn't leave
the songs to me. This is completely untrue," he added.

The story of the Beatles song catalog is long and tangled. At the time
McCartney and writing partner John Lennon wrote their songs, they
retained only a portion of the rights in the publishing company
created by the Beatles' manager, Brian Epstein, and London music
publisher Dick James. (The company was called Northern Songs, a nod to
the Beatles' Liverpudlian roots.) The company went public in 1965.

According to the myth-busting site Snopes.com, Lennon and McCartney
each had 15 percent of the shares, Epstein (and his NEMS Enterprises)
had 7.5 percent, James and partner Charles Silver had 37.5 percent and
Beatles George Harrison and Ringo Starr had less than 2 percent. The
rest was available for public investment.

Over the years (and partly due to the group's legal battles) the
Beatles lost or sold their control, and the catalog of about 250 songs
-- almost all of Lennon/McCartney's creations -- ended up in the hands
of British media mogul Sir Lew Grade and his ATV Music Publishing. ATV
added the Beatles' songs to its holdings, a cache that eventually grew
to more than 4,000 songs. (Other songs in the catalog include those
recorded by the Kinks, the Moody Blues and Elvis Presley.)

In 1984, the catalog was put up for sale again. McCartney wanted to
buy his creations back, but for various reasons wasn't a front-runner.
Jackson -- who had taken to investing in music publishing at,
ironically, McCartney's recommendation -- came up with the winning bid
of $47.5 million. The sale went through in 1985.

In 1995, Sony paid Jackson $95 million to merge the catalog with its
Sony Music. Jackson maintained 50 percent control. In 2005, Sony/ATV
Music had more than 200,000 songs in its catalog, a CNN.com article
reported.

To finance his lifestyle, Jackson borrowed money, using the catalog as
collateral. Nevertheless, he never lost the asset. The entire catalog
was estimated to be worth between $600 million and $1 billion in 2005,
according to a 2005 article in USA Today.

As a songwriter, McCartney has continued to receive some royalties
from his work, as has Lennon's estate.

McCartney said in the posting that he and Jackson may have "drifted
apart," but "we never really fell out."

"At times like this, the press do tend to make things up, so
occasionally, I feel the need to put the record straight," he wrote.

McCartney then went on to say MJ's death was "a drag."

McCartney and Jackson recorded a pair of duets in the early 1980s,
"The Girl Is Mine" and "Say Say Say." The latter hit No. 1 in late
1983.
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