Well, there is Wikipedia in Latin language - and it has an article about the band from Liverpool:
The Beatles fuit grex musicus Anglicus, qui carmina pop-rock composuit et cecinit, Liverpolii anno 1962 conditus, annoque 1970 iam dissolutus. Principales gregis sodales fuerunt Ioannes Lennon,
Paulus McCartney, Georgius Harrison, et Ringo Starr. The Beatles fuit insignis per curriculum suum. Etiamnunc eorum musica populo gratissima est, etsi duo sodales mortui sunt. In Britannia, plusquam quadraginta singula carmina, et LP et EP, in maximis locis famae adposuerunt. Potentia sua, carmina componentes, in tredecim discis ostenditur, quos ei septem annos tantum venundederunt, nimis igitur
ingenii et numerorum?
http://la.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beatles
I've never learned that language, but I can understand some things: The Beatles were English rock-band, they wrote & performed their own songs, formed in Liverpool (1962.) and disbanded in 1970.
The band was very popular etc.
Their names in Latin would be:
Ioannes Lennon (natus 9 Octobris 1940, occisus Novi Eboraci 8 Decembris 1980)
Paulus McCartney (natus Liverpoli 18 Iunii 1942)
Georgius Harrison (natus Liverpoli 25 Februarii 1943, mortuus Angelopoli 29 Novembris 2001)
Ricardus Starkey vel potius Ringo Starr (natus Liverpoli 7 Iulii 1940)
(
Novi Eboraci means New York.
Angelopoli is Los Angeles.)
Albums:
1963 - Please Please Me ("Si placet, mihi place")
1963 - With The Beatles ("Cum Beatles")
1964 - A Hard Days Night ("Nox diei duri")
1964 - Beatles for Sale ("Beatles venum datus" )
1965 - Help! ("Adiuva!")
1965 - Rubber Soul ("Anima cummea")
1966 - Revolver ("Rotator")
1967 - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ("Grex sodalicius cordum solitariorum principalis Piperis")
1967 - Magical Mystery Tour ("Iter mysticum magicum")
1968 - The Beatles (vulgo: The White Album atque adeo "Album Album")
1969 - Yellow Submarine ("Navis submarina crocea")
1969 - Abbey Road ("Via Abbatiae")
1970 - Let It Be ("Fiat")
A little note about their 1968 album. In Latin, 'White Album' becomes - 'Album Album'. It is not a joke or mistake. See the etymology:
Latin album: "white color, whiteness," neuter of albus, "white"
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?allowed_in_frame=0&search=album&searchmode=none
So, album=white.
Most famous songs:
Carmina celeberrima
1964 - Can't Buy Me Love ("Amorem Non Posse Me Emere")
1964 - A Hard Day's Night ("Nox Diei Durae")
1965 - Help! ("Adiuva!")
1965 - Yesterday (Pauli McCartney solus) ("Heri")
1965 - Girl ("Femina")
1966 - Taxman ("Vir Taxationis")
1967 - Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds ("Lucia In Caelo Cum Adamantibus")
1967 - I Am the Walrus ("Ego Sum Odobenus")
1967 - A Day in the Life ("Dies In Vita")
1969 - Come Together ("Coveni")
1969 - Oh Darling ("O Ocelle")
1969 - Something ("Aliquid")
1970 - Let It Be ("Fiat")
1970 - Across The Universe ("Per Universum")
(Just imagine John singing:
Ego sum odobenus! Ego sum odobenus! Goo goo goo joob!)
Interesting, somebody took the time & effort to translate some of the songs to Latin:
http://beatlesinlatin.com/Quia / Because
Quia mundus rotundus est,
Is me ad lucem ostendit.
Quia mundus rotundus est.
Quia ventus altus est,
Is meum mentem discutit.
Quia ventus altus est.
Amor vetus est,
Amor novus est,
Amor vetus est,
Amor tu est.
Quia caelum caeruleum est,
Id me flere cogit.
Quia caelum caeruleum est.
http://beatlesinlatin.com/songs/because.html
Next.
Day after day, alone on a hill...diem ex die, solus super colle vir subridens stulte manet immotus,
sed nemo vult eum noscere.
vident quod modo stultus
et numquam respondet.
sed stultus super colle videt solem deorsum iens
et occuli in capute videt orbem vertentem.
bene in iterne, caput in nube, vir mille vocum loquitur a magna voce.
sed nemo umquam audit eum aut strepitum eum videtur fieri
et numquam notet ut videtur.
sed stultus super colle videt solem deorsum iens
et occuli in capute videt orbem vertentem.
et nemo eum amet ut videtur.
vident quod eum vult facere.
et numquam monstrat affectus.
sed stultus super colle videt solem deorsum iens
et occuli in capute videt orbem vertentem.
http://distractingfromthenow.blogspot.com/2013/03/beatles-song-in-latin.html