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Friday, March 24, 2017

Tis Better To Have Loved and Lost Than To Never Loved At All. Alfred Lord Tennyson – Part 15


The time has come to uncover this series last album in search of avowed mutual love vs. declared unrequited love, sited within the gifted melodic phrasing stanzas written by my favorite most influential heroes, John, Paul, and George. Next up, I unveil the tracks about love found listed on the Past Masters Volume 2 CD. The singles!!!

15th LP – Past Masters 2 (Mutual Love Songs / 4 vs. One-Sided / 0 )

Track 1 – Day Tripper:  I don’t see this as a love song, maybe a bit of lust where as she’s a big teaser, she only plays one night stands.

“Day Tripper” was a subject John Lennon talked about much in interviews, comments that give us a good amount of detail regarding its writing.  In 1969 he states: “’Day Tripper’ was (written) under complete pressure, based on an old folk song I wrote about a month previous.  It was very hard going, that, and it sounds it.”  Since the song was recorded in October of 1965, its genesis must have begun in September of that year as written entirely by John.  The mention of it deriving from a “folk song” suggests it as another attempt at mimicking Bob Dylan, at least in its early incarnation.  The “pressure” was probably due to this being an attempt at writing their next single, which both John and Paul admitted in a 1966 interview that the composition was "forced."  However, when asked later that year to re-confirm this, they denied it.

While he appeared to claim sole authorship in 1969, he continued to change his tune in later interviews.  To Hit Parader magazine in 1972, his response to who wrote this song was: “Me, but I think Paul helped with the verse.”  To Playboy magazine in 1980, he reversed the story, saying, “Mine.  Clearly.  The lick, the guitar break and the whole bit.”

Paul McCartney and Barry Miles’ book “Many Years From Now” sheds some interesting first-hand knowledge about the writing of the song to substantiate John’s 1972 recollections.  After Barry Miles describes “Day Tripper” as “co-written in October 1965 at (John’s home in) Kenwood,” Paul relates the following: “That was a co-written effort; we were both there making it all up, but I would give John the main credit.  Probably the idea came from John because he sang the lead, but it was a close thing.  We both put a lot of work in on it.”  In referring to a sexual reference included in the song, Paul continues, “We thought, ‘That’d be fun to put in.  That was one of the great things about collaborating; you could nudge-nudge, wink-wink a bit, whereas if you’re sitting on your own, you might not put it in.  You know, ‘I’d love to turn you on,’ we literally looked at each other like, ‘Oh, dare we do this?’  It was a good moment; there was always good eye contact when we put those things in.”

As to its meaning, John explained in 1970:  “It wasn’t a serious message song.  It was a drug song.  In a way, it was a day tripper – I just liked the word…I’ve always needed a drug to survive.  The (other Beatles) too, but I always had more, I always took more pills and more of everything, ‘cause I’m more crazy.”  In his 1980 Playboy interview, he adds:  “It’s just a rock’n’roll song.  Day trippers are people who go on day trips, right?  Usually on a ferryboat or something.  But the song was, kind of, ‘You’re a weekend hippie.’  Get it?”

Paul explains further:  “This was getting toward the psychedelic period when we were interested in winking to our friends and comrades in arms, putting in references that we knew our friends would get but that the Great British Empire might not.  So ‘she’s a big teaser’ was ‘she’s a prick teaser.’  The mums and dads didn’t get it, but the kids did.  ‘Day Tripper’ was to do with tripping.  Acid was coming in on the scene, and often we’d do these songs about ‘the girl who thought she was it.’  Mainly the impetus for that used to come from John.  I think John met quite a few girls who thought they were it and he was a bit up in arms about that kind of thing…But this was just a tongue-in-cheek song about someone who was a day tripper, a Sunday painter, Sunder driver, somebody who was committed only in part to the idea.  Whereas we saw ourselves as full-time trippers, fully committed drivers, she was just a day tripper.”

Track 2 – We Can Work It Out: A mutual love song with baggage, and headstrong personalities between the at odds couple.

The initial writing of the song was by Paul, one of a trio of compositions inspired by his then turbulent relationship with girlfriend Jane Asher (“I’m Looking Through You” and “You Won’t See Me” being the other two).  “The lyrics might have been personal,” Paul recollects.  “It is often a good way to talk to someone or to work your own thoughts out.  It saves you going to a psychiatrist; you allow yourself to say what you might not say in person.”

The problem stemmed from Jane determined to continue pursuing an acting career, something she began well before ever meeting Paul.  She decided to join the Bristol Old Vic Company in October of 1965, which meant that she moved from her hometown of London (where she lived with Paul in her family home) to the west of England.  Not being content just to be a girlfriend of a Beatle, an opportunity that most female fans would give their right arm for, this caused a good degree of insecurity in Paul who, with his group, just began work on the “Rubber Soul” album.

Two other songs written at this time expressed much bitterness. (“I have had enough, so act your age” from “You Won’t See Me” and, “I thought I knew you, what did I know” from “I’m Looking Through You”), Paul here expresses confidence that they can “work it out.”  However, because of possibly not being used to any indifference in past romance, his lyrics are written as absolute testimony that his opinion is the correct one and hers is the wrong one.

The beginning stanzas of the song were conceived at Rembrandt, which was a house Paul purchased for this father in July of 1964 in Heswall, Cheshire.  According to Barry Miles in his official McCartney biography “Many Years From Now,” this five-bedroom home “was a large mock-Tudor house with a decent size garden in a leafy suburb about 15 miles from Liverpool.”  As to the actual writing of the song, the book continues:  “There was a piano in the dining room where Paul often tinkered with new tunes.  If he were composing on the guitar, however, he would usually go to the back bedroom to get away from everyone.”  Since Paul recorded a demo of the song on acoustic guitar, we can rightly assume it was written in the back bedroom of the house (for those of you who need to know every detail).  This is not to say that Paul wrote the entire song.  When asked in 1972 by Hit Parader magazine who wrote the song, John commented “Paul, but the middle was mine.”  Paul corroborates and also embellishes this:  “I wrote it as a more up-tempo thing, country and western.  I had the idea, the title had a couple of verses and the basic idea for it, then I took it to John to finish it off, and we wrote the middle together.  Which is nice:  ‘Life is very short.  There’s no time for fussing and fighting, my friend.”

Track 3 – Paperback Writer: This tune misses the mark as a love song, however, as was the habit during the recording of an album, the group needed to identify what song had commercial appeal then earmarked as their next single and, thereby, removed from the album.  “George Martin received a memo from the EMI brass,” recalls engineer Geoff Emerick, “reminding him that a new Beatles single was soon due.” Since their last British single, “We Can Work It Out/Day Tripper,” was released way back in early December of 1965, and the group was on hiatus for a few months to rest up from their incredibly hectic schedule the previous year, pressure was high to get a new Beatles single in the shops.  “John and Paul immediately set themselves to work,” Emerick continues.  “Whoever wrote the stronger song – with George Martin as referee – would win the prize:  the prestigious A-side.”

They began recording their next album on April 6th, 1966 and were concentrating more on studio technique than ‘cranking out hits.’  By April 13th, the only song they had completed was the Indian-influenced George Harrison track “Love You To,” which obviously wouldn’t fit the bill for their next single (as good of a song as it was).  Much work fiddled about on the psychedelic experiment entitled “Tomorrow Never Knows,” although even this was yet complete.  Preliminary tracks were also laid down for “Got To Get You Into My Life,” but nowhere near ready for release.

The fourth song they recorded, however, hastened more quickly and most believed suitable for a quick release as a single.  While it did have many of the usual hallmarks of a hit pop record of the time, such as the catchy melody line and a melodic guitar riff, the lyrical content was very much out in left field for 1966.  Instead of romance, the only mention of a relationship was of “a dirty man” whose “clinging wife doesn’t understand.”  Nonetheless, “Paperback Writer” was rushed out as their next single, topping the charts internationally.

Track 4 – Rain: Nothing inside these lyrics point to love, so let me just share a tiny portion of what John and Paul had to say in regards to Track 4. “This is a song I wrote about people who are always moaning about the weather all the time,” Lennon stated, “you know, whatever it is, it’s OK, it’s meant to be.”  McCartney concurs:  “Songs have traditionally treated rain as a bad thing and what we got on to was that it’s no bad thing.  There’s no greater feeling than the rain dripping down your back.”  Paul reprised this positive opinion in his Wings song “Mamunia,” which contains the lyric “you never felt the rain, my friend, till you felt it running down your back.”

While John’s above quote credits himself entirely for its composition, as he also did in his 1972 “Hit Parader” interview, Paul insists that he definitely played a part in writing “Rain.”  The book “Many Years From Now” quotes Paul as saying:  “’Rain’ was a co-effort with the leaning slightly towards John.  I don’t think he brought the original idea, just when we sat down to write, he kicked it off…tilted 70-30 to John.”

Track 5 – Lady Madonna: This tune avoids all reference toward romance, yet a mother’s love for her children makes way.


After 1967 had come to an end, the Beatles felt a need to reinvent themselves once again, but this time not forgetting the groundwork they previously laid in 60's rock music. Growth as songwriters and musical stylists was fine, but they ultimately felt most comfortable as a rock band.  And so, 1968 saw them put aside their “hippy” clothes, both literally and figuratively, and move ahead in the direction that they felt suited them best. Within this mindset came "Lady Madonna."

The negative publicity that The Beatles received in the British press about the December 1967 debut of their film "Magical Mystery Tour" on BBC television did not appear to deter McCartney in the least.  In January of 1968, he went to work composing what would become their next British #1 single.

Paul has cited different lyrical influences throughout the years.  According to Steve Turner's book “A Hard Day's Write,” a recollection of American singer/guitarist Richie Havens tells an interesting story about the song.  Havens happened to be with McCartney in a Greenwich Village club watching a Jimi Hendrix performance when someone came up and asked Paul if America was the inspiration for “Lady Madonna.”  Paul was said to reply, “No, I was looking through this African magazine (National Geographic issue, January 1965) and I saw this African lady with a baby. And underneath the picture, it said 'Mountain Madonna.'  But I said, oh no – 'Lady Madonna' – and I wrote the song.”

Track 6 – The Inner Light: A song based on passages taken from a book titled, “Lamps Of Fire” that contains a compilation of religious writings. George shares some further insight, “The words of 'The Inner Light' came from that book, page 66, 48a, which presents The “Tao Te Ching,” translated as “The Great Way,” was said to have been written by Lao Tzu roughly in 400 BC and is claimed by many as being one of the most insightful pieces of literature ever written.  The 47th verse of this 81 verse writing states as follows:

“Without going out the door, know the world.
Without looking out the window, you may see the ways of heaven.
The farther one goes, the less one knows.
Therefore, the sage does not venture forth and yet knows,
does not look and yet names,
does not strive and yet attains completion.”

Although there is much room for interpretation of this ancient spiritual text, it's generally agreed that these lyrics depict how we don't need our physical senses nor any physical action on our part to experience true knowledge or enlightenment. Through our raised consciousness’s, "we can know all things on earth" without traveling anywhere.  In fact, "the farther one travels, the less one knows."  But "we can know the ways of heaven" through meditative reflection, not needing the physically use the eyes to peer even "out of your door." Anything of real value in our life experience can be attained from within, hence "do all without doing."

Track 7 – Hey Jude: Although love in the sense of romance takes a holiday from this song, heartbreak in a young son losing contact with his father abounds then brings endearing encouragement for far better times ahead.

A new single, “Hey Jude,” released on the Beatles innovative Apple Records with its stunning green label, took over the airwaves as well as our television screens.  The majority of music fans today who were alive at that time have vivid and cherished memories related to hearing the song, some remembering the first time they heard it. The impact was so great that it only took three weeks for it to reach #1 on the U.S. Billboard singles chart and stayed there for a remarkable nine weeks, becoming the most successful American single of their career.  It also ranked as the most popular record of the sixties, according to Billboard Magazine.

If anything had tarnished the reputation of The Beatles to any degree up to that point in history, they went way above and beyond to redeem themselves in most people's eyes with the release of “Hey Jude” in the fall of 1968.  And to this day, the respect generated by this one song is astronomical, of which there is no hint of that respect abating any time soon. John Lennon even hailed Hey Jude as Paul’s best song in 1972 and around 1980 he again referred to it as Paul’s masterpiece.

Track 8 – Revolution: Protest, let your voice be heard in what you believe in, join a movement with like-minded masses who support your cause. Hence, has nothing to do with romance.

John has been very vocal throughout the remaining years of his life regarding his intentions in the lyrics of the song. In 1968 he explained: “What I said in 'Revolution'...is 'change your head.'  These people that are trying to change the world can't even get it all together.  They're attacking and biting each other’s' faces, and all the time they're all pushing the same way.  And if they keep going on like that it's going to kill it before it's even moved.  It's silly to bitch about each other and be trivial. They've got to think in terms of at least the world or the universe, and stop thinking in terms of factories and one country.”

Continuing, he states: “The point is that the Establishment doesn't really exist, and if it does exist, it's old people.  The only people that want to change it are young, and they're going to beat the Establishment.  If they want to smash it all down and have to be laborers as well to build it up again, then that's what they're going to get.  If they'd just realize the Establishment can't last forever. The only reason it has lasted forever is that the only way people have ever tried to change it is by revolution.  And the idea is just to move in on the scene, so they can take over the universities, do all the things that are practically feasible at the time.  But not try and take over the state, or smash the state, or slow down the works.  All they've got to do is get through and change it because they will be it.” 

Track 9 – Get Back: Here ushered in the Beatles' 19th British single, known as, Get Back, and it was the first release by the group from their 1969 'back-to-basics' phase.

Background Fun Facts: Geez, what you're about to read sounds like present day America–– The song began as a satirical and critical look at attitudes towards immigrants in Britain. McCartney intended to parody the negative attitudes that were prevalent among politicians and the press.

Race issues evidently played on McCartney's mind during the Get Back sessions. He led The Beatles through Commonwealth, an unreleased improvised satire loosely based on British politician Enoch Powell's notorious 'Rivers of blood' speech.

The most infamous of the unreleased Get Back versions is known as No Pakistanis and contained the line "Don't dig no Pakistanis taking all the people's jobs." While mostly unfinished, the song did include a mumbled rhyming couplet which paired the words 'Puerto Rican' with 'Mohican.' However, Paul shares some further insight, “When we were doing Let It Be, there were a couple of verses to Get Back which were actually not racist at all - they were anti-racist. There were a lot of stories in the newspapers then about Pakistanis crowding out flats - you know, living 16 to a room or whatever. So, in one of the verses of Get Back, which we were making up on the set of Let It Be, one of the outtakes has something about 'too many Pakistanis living in a council flat' - that's the line. Which to me was actually talking out against overcrowding for Pakistanis... If there was any group that was not racist, it was the Beatles. I mean, all our favorite people were always black. We were kind of the first people to open international eyes, in a way, to Motown.
Paul McCartney
Rolling Stone, 1986

Last but not least, concerning track 12, John believed Jo Jo was a code name for Yoko, (Get back to where you once belong, Yoko), although, it’s clear Paul has stuck to his story that Jo Jo is just a fictional character.

Track 10 – Don’t Let Me Down: A strong mutual love song, by John written for Yoko on how thrilled he is to be in love for the first time, but fears the common path of rejection with great anxiety, to the point he practically screams into the microphone “Don’t Let Me Down.

Although Lennon was revealing his feelings and fears in song as far back as 1964's If I Fell and I'm A Loser, Don't Let Me Down was one of the first examples of the raw soul-baring that would reach a peak on Cold Turkey and the John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band album. Paul recalls a portion of the mind frame John was heading in while this song took shape, “It was a very tense period: John was with Yoko and had escalated to heroin and all the accompanying paranoias, and he was putting himself out on a limb. I think that as much as it excited and amused him, and the same time it secretly terrified him. So, Don't Let Me Down was a genuine plea... It was saying to Yoko, 'I'm really stepping out of line on this one. I'm really letting my vulnerability be seen, so you must not let me down.' I think it was a genuine cry for help. It was a good song.
Paul McCartney
Many Years From Now, Barry Miles.

Track 11 – The Ballad Of John And Yoko: About the clearest most pin-pointed mutual love song on the LP, based on the desire toward nuptial marriage.

The song was written in the days immediately following Lennon and Ono's wedding. John gives us his take,“I wrote that in Paris on our honeymoon. It's a piece of journalism. It's a folk song. That's why I called it The Ballad Of. It was very romantic. It's all in the song, The Ballad Of John And Yoko if you want to know how it happened, it's in there. Gibraltar was like a little sunny dream. I couldn't find a white suit - I had sort of off-white corduroy trousers and a white jacket. Yoko had all white on.
John Lennon.

Track 12 – Old Brown Shoe: A mutual love song based on the lyrics such as Baby, I’m in love with you I’m so glad you came here, it won’t be the same now when I’m with you.

The string of opposites within the lyrics, a method used by Paul, comes directly from the religious views Harrison had clung onto––things like we must free ourselves from the material world’s illusory. According to these Hari Krishna teachings, once absorbed into the divine consciousness, right vs. wrong, body vs. soul, and spirit vs. matter no longer exists.

Track 13 – Across The Universe: Across The Universe was John Lennon's first composition to be recorded by The Beatles since I Am The Walrus five months earlier. The words were written before the music and came to Lennon in the early hours one morning at his home in Kenwood. “I was lying next to my first wife in bed,” says John, “you know, and I was irritated. She must have been going on and on about something, and she'd gone to sleep, and I'd kept hearing these words over and over, flowing like an endless stream. I went downstairs, and it turned into sort of a cosmic song rather than an irritated song; rather than a 'Why are you always mouthing off at me?' or whatever, right? ... “But the words stand, luckily, by themselves. They were purely inspirational and were given to me as boom! I don't own it, you know; it came through like that. I don't know where it came from, what meter it's in, and I've sat down and looked at it and said, 'Can I write another one with this meter?' It's so interesting: 'Words are flying [sic] out like [sings] endless rain into a paper cup, they slither while they pass, they slip away across the universe.' Such an extraordinary meter and I can never repeat it! It's not a matter of craftsmanship; it wrote itself. It drove me out of bed. I didn't want to write it, I was just slightly irritable, and I went downstairs, and I couldn't get to sleep until I put it on paper, and then I went to sleep. It's like being possessed; like a psychic or a medium. The thing has to go down. It won't let you sleep, so you have to get up, make it into something, and then you're allowed to sleep. That's always in the middle of the bloody night when you're half-awake or tired, and your critical facilities are switched off.”
John Lennon, 1980
All We Are Saying, David Sheff

Track 14 – Let It Be: A song centered around mother’s love and comfort rather than romantic love.

Paul gives us an eye-opener on how this tune developed, and I quote, “One night during this tense time I had a dream I saw my mum, who'd been dead ten years or so. And it was so great to see her because that's a wonderful thing about dreams: you actually are reunited with that person for a second; there they are, and you appear to both be physically together again. It was so wonderful for me, and she was very reassuring. In the dream, she said, 'It'll be all right.' I'm not sure if she used the words 'Let it be' but that was the gist of her advice, it was, 'Don't worry too much, it will turn out OK.' It was such a sweet dream I woke up thinking, Oh, it was really great to visit with her again. I felt very blessed to have that dream. So that got me writing the song Let It Be. I literally started off 'Mother Mary', which was her name, 'When I find myself in times of trouble,' which I certainly found myself in. The song was based on that dream.”
Paul McCartney
Many Years From Now, Barry Miles

It was perhaps inevitable - even fortuitous for the group - that Let It Be took on religious overtones, with many listeners interpreting it as referring to the Virgin Mary. Again, Paul comments so, “Mother Mary makes it a quasi-religious thing, so you can take it that way. I don't mind. I'm quite happy if people want to use it to shore up their faith. I have no problem with that. I think it's a great thing to have faith of any sort, particularly in the world we live in.”
Paul McCartney
Many Years From Now, Barry Miles

Track 15 – You Know My Name Look Up The Number: I reject this tune as a love song based on the much too vague lyrics that leave the listener nothing to build any meaningful relationship. (Tongue in cheek.)

Well, there you have it, all the UK albums, all the original compositions, all the underlined scoop pointing to unrequited love draws closer to reality compared to mutual love, even on top of the shoulders connected to the imaginary writings fastened to the loveable Beatles melodies. And yet, each of the famous four did embrace true love ecstasy alongside of Yoko, Linda, Olivia, and Barbara.  

Next week, I plan to include and uncover, as much as I can, those deleted, left on the cutting room floor scenes from the ‘A Hard Day’s Night’ motion picture, then reveal a couple of them in sequential order within the film’s continuity for a number of weeks. Be sure to join me and prepare for some fun reading.


Saturday, March 18, 2017

Tis Better To Have Loved and Lost Than To Never Loved At All. Alfred Lord Tennyson – Part 14


All right, time to move ahead to the next album in search of unrequited love vs. mutual love, positioned within the gifted melodic phrasing stanzas written by my favorite most influential heroes, John, Paul, and George. Next up, I unveil the tracks about love found listed on one of my favorite releases, the Past Masters Volume 1 CD. The singles!!!


14th LP – Past Masters 1 (Mutual Love Songs / 4 vs. One-Sided / 11)

Track 1 – Love Me Do: An unreciprocated love song by Paul, penned at the age of sixteen, based on the lyrical portrayal, all three verses plead, ‘So please, love me do.’ Also, lyrics within the bridge, written by John, uncover the potential of loving someone new.

Background Fun Facts: Written around 1958 inside Paul’s parlor room on Frothlin Road and inspired by his then girlfriend Iris Caldwell, sister of Rory Storm. Rumors foretold this title spun from the Elvis Presley film, Love Me Tender released in 1957, and the beat duplicated Buddy Holly’s, Maybe Baby hit single released in 1958.

Brian had sent news to Hamburg about an audition for EMI and requested the lads work on new material clear up to their final show May 31, 1962. Part of the rework modernized McCartney’s Love Me Do arrangement. The key changed from A to G, easier strumming slowed the tempo some, and because of Bruce Channel’s newly #1 pop song, Hey Baby, John added harmonica, with hopes of being the first British Band incorporating the blues sound to their music.

First Recorded on June 6, 1962. When the song carried its melody through the studio speakers, George Martin couldn’t fathom John singing the title without the word “do.” You see, after the long drawn out plea of vocalizing, PLEASE, John sang only two words––“love me,” and skipped the word, “do,” to blow out the notes on his harmonica. That hideous plan drove Martin crazy and immediately switched the lead to Paul right then and there inside the sound room. You can hear an unsettled very nervous Paul slip out the three words just after the first pause when the music abruptly stops on the Anthology 1 CD, track 22. Pete Best played the drums for this session.

Second time recorded on September 4, Martin had no idea Ringo joined the band, but to be safe, the producer hired session drummer Andy White for a third session rerecording the song on September 11, and Mr. Starr, feeling rejected, was demoted to playing tambourine. Eighteen takes finally captured a decent recording. However, version number two graced the A-side on the single released October 5, 1962, and Ringo couldn’t have been happier. Once the public fan base received notice, the single began climbing the charts in just two days and peaked at #17. Click here for a listen to version two: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrkrOHn46qk

Note: Version three with Andy White on drums appears on the Beatles debut LP. The added tambourine is a dead giveaway.

Bonus Track – P.S. I Love You:  A unified love song by Paul, based on the lyric portrayal he sends all his love to her while away, and to treasure his promise until they’re together, staying in love forever, whether apart or beside one another. Background Fun Facts: Written in Hamburg, 1961. This track became the B-side for the lads for single backing Love Me Do. Just to show how fanatic we American Beatle fans are, this song became a Capitol Records single and reached the top ten Billboard Charts three years after released in London. By the way, I always thought George Martin invented the trick of using the bridge of a song as the introduction (Can’t Buy Me Love), however, hear is the proof Paul started the unique gimmick.

Track 2 – From Me To You: A one-sided love song based on never knowing how the singer’s love interest feels toward his promised devotion.

The highly anticipated, Please Please Me album had arrived at the record shops on March 22, 1963, soaring the new pop stars to the #1 spot on the UK album chart and did almost as well across the channel where it peaked at #4 in Germany. Producer and Manager, Martin and Epstein, conceived an electrifying workable plan to release a new single every third month and two albums a year performed by the sensational Beatles. The lads had just completed their country tour with Helen Shapiro on March 3 and needed a day off. However, management booked a session at Abbey Road for March 5 because Martin wanted a new single. He indeed got what he required.

John and Paul brought with them to the session, ‘From Me To You, written during the British National Tour while on the bus wheeling from city to city. Inspiration poured from the pages of the weekly pop newspaper, New Musical Express, inside the letters to the editor section known as, “From You To Us.” After the boys had read a few remarks, the lyrics developed quite easy.

In closing Track 2, let me add a bit of humor for you. Remember Kenny Lynch; he was the singer who offered to record ‘Misery’ since Helen Shapiro’s producer rejected the tune. Anyway, Mr. Lynch heard the lads rehearsing ‘From Me To You’ and stopped them directly after the harmony falsetto shrilled the word “ooooh” in line with the Isley Brothers gimmick on ‘Twist and Shout.’ Kenny objected something fierce saying, “You can’t do that, you’ll sound like a bunch of fairies.” But the lads said, “It’s okay, the kids will like it.” And in fact, the girls LOVED it. Imagine Kenny Lynch telling the Beatles what they can’t do, ridiculous and hilarious.  

Click here for Today’s Tune presented at the Royal Variety Performance: https://binged.it/2kCNJn3

Track 3 – Thank You Girl: A mutual love song based on the lyric portrayal the singer boasts, “I know little girl only a fool would doubt our love.”

Extra surprising links await you throughout this track’s review, so read on. When in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one 45 rpm single to have an A-side with an adjoining B-side, the Beatles determined to record originals rather than release a familiar cover song. So, to follow their plans, while on tour with Ms. Shapiro, John and Paul continued to create the type of music that would soon put the world at the pop stars’ feet in admiration. The working title for this particular ditty; Thank You Little Girl.

Both songs EMI pressed on the Beatles newest single received a private live demonstration between Helen Shapiro and the two songwriters requesting her opinion as to which one rated the A-side. She picked the same song the boys favored, ‘From Me To You.’ However, the real intent of writing the lyrics for Today’s Tune, ’Thank You Girl,’ had nothing but gratitude in mind toward acknowledging the uncountable female fans who not only purchased their records but also sent hordes and hordes of cards, letters, and gifts.

Receive welcomed passage into the Abbey Road Studio dated March 5, 1963, while the lads recorded alternate takes by clicking here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyK6nFYH4aU

Incidentally, American fans got a bonus when this song turned up on the Beatles Second Album. John played the harmonica during the bridge, and also at the very last measure to end the song, but when the single version first came out, the harmonica bit never made it onto the mono mix. Listen to Past Masters Volume 1, track 3, to hear the emptiness without the added mouthpiece.

Just for fun, see if you remember these novelty songs. . .
We Love You Beatles by the Carefrees: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ec6HpzJ8gRI

A Letter To The Beatles by the Four Preps: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qxXPkFemYUc

Track 4 – She Loves You: A one-sided love song, in that the singer’s friend gets word the girl he had hurt so badly, almost losing her mind, still loves him.

“You can’t end a song with a major sixth,” said George Martin, on July 1, 1963, after he heard the new number written by John & Paul. But the lads disagreed and claimed it was such a great sound.  A sound so spectacular, ‘She Loves You’ held the title throughout their career as highest selling single released by the Beatles in their home country, over 1.3 million copies.

A giddy Mr. Harrison showed up in great spirits that afternoon for reasons this marked the first recording session he brought along his brand new Gretsch Country Gentleman guitar, the same used by Chet Atkins. By the way, young George thought of the mesmerizing harmony idea, and it’s his voice who sings the sixth while John sings the third and Paul takes the fifth, no not the fifth amendment, Paul sings the harmony fifth note.

From start to finish, this song received a John and Paul joint effort with the composition between June 26 and 27, however, Paul used ‘Forget Him, sung by Bobby Rydell that charted at #13 in the UK during May of 1963, as a model. Click Here for a listen:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IKpA__9kTU

John, on the other hand, worshiped the way Elvis used the words “Mm mm mm, mm mm, yay, yay, yeah” in ‘All Shook Up,” as a bit of inspiration to adapt the yeah, yeah, yeah homage. An iconic phrase that forever linked itself with allegiance to the Fab Four and zoomed their new musical hit right to #1 on the singles chart–– for the third time in a row. But then again, who first led the way in bringing, yeah, yeah, yeah to the pop music scene? Remember the Sherman Brothers, famous composers with the Walt Disney Studio? They wrote a song (Let’s Get Together) for Hayley Mills featured in the 1961 film, The Parent Trap. Take a listen and see if you can spot the yeah, yeah, yeah sung by the young starlet: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F1IyrZZQd0g

Fun song, right? Okay, ‘back to She Loves You.’ How did America miss the boat during 1963? While interviewed for the Anthology, Paul recounted the hard shell to crack on USA soil where ‘Please Please Me’ flopped. ‘From Me To You’ flopped. Even ‘She Loves You’ flopped, but it was no surprise, really, being that no one from England had ever made it big in the States, huh, except maybe Hayley Mills.

Click here for a live version of Today’s Tune as George plays his new 6-string axe:                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QoF-7VMMihA

Track 5 – I’ll Get You: A one-sided love song based on the lyric portrayal has singer reveals, “Well, there's gonna be a time when I'm gonna change your mind, so you might as well resign yourself to me, oh yeah.”

Intended for their next A-side single, ‘I’ll Get You’ had the same beat as ‘From Me To You’ and the lads believed they had another winner ready for George Martin. In the event that ‘She Loves You’ didn’t exist as yet and the young songwriters were extremely proud with what they concocted, ‘I’ll Get You always held a position as one of Paul’s favorites.

This tune grew from beginning to end in just a two to three-hour span, written at Aunt Mimi’s home on Menlove Avenue. Paul received a bit of inspiration from the chord changes found on an early 60’s Joan Baez single called “All My Trials.” Click here for a listen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIH1KccVlHk

A revamp of ‘All My Trials’ shifted its lyrics into an updated version called ‘All My Sorrows,' recorded by the Shadows in 1961 and the Searchers in 63. Click here for those links: Shadows - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFAEo9wkpyA

The Searchers version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5iKZLa9-48

Did you know Paul even performed a version of ‘All My Trials’ in 1990 while on tour, a fabulous rendition, click here for chills up and down your spine, especially if you’ve listened to the others first: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wQMJKra1Hk8

Yes, a great song is worth repeating––now watch what you're about to read closely. The first word on ‘I’ll Get You’ is what? Right you are. Imagine! And the chords on the first line for ‘I’ll Get You’ are C, Cmaj7, F, and G. Now, did you know the chords on the first line for Lennon’s fabulous song called, “Imagine” are also C, Camj7, and Fmaj7?  Yep, great songs are worth repeating.

Enjoy a moment as the Beatles perform ‘I’ll Get You’ for a BBC television program:        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-K65wYAx-0Y

Track 6 – I Want To Hold Your Hand: A one-sided love song based on the lyric portrayal, “Oh please say to me, you'll let me be your man.”

This dynamic song first hit the American airwaves December 17, 1963, thanks to a young teenage girl from Washington DC demanding to know why her favorite radio station wasn’t playing the fabulous pop sensations from Liverpool. The DJ, Carroll James, made arrangements for a flight attendant from Britain to supply him a copy of the Beatles newest single and before laying down the needle onto the plastic, invited the young teenager, Marsha Albert, inside his studio so she could introduce the new song to the public. For the day, Mr. James continued to play his new treasure and constantly interrupting it with the phrase “This is a Carroll James exclusive” so that no one could tape the song off of the air to use elsewhere.  An uninterrupted tape recording of the song had transferred to a disc jockey in Chicago who also played it on the air and received great response from their listeners.  They, in turn, sent a tape copy of the song to a radio station in St. Louis who also had the same favorable experience.  This outcry for more all happened within days of its’ first broadcast. 

Background Fun Facts: Written by John and Paul together in September 1963 at Jane Asher’s parents’ home on Wimpole Street, #57. Recorded on October 17, 1963, and for the first time, the control room arranged to use their top of the line 4-track recording console that usually served more serious orchestrated symphonic material, never privileged for flash in the pan pop music.  Seventeen takes within the span of about ninety minutes were needed to get everything just right.

Click Here for a live rendering on British Comedy Television:                             https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46_yYR6tGOI

Track 7 – This Boy: A one-sided love song based on the singer losing his true love to another boy.

This Boy just so happens to be my all-time favorite Beatles song, a repeated confession to my audiences every chance I sing it for Happy Hour venues, private parties, and assisted living communities.

While interviewed in the mid 70’s, John recalls he gave himself an exercise to write a three-part harmony number the band could showcase centered around a single microphone and dazzle the females. The song began its birth on a September 1963 afternoon around 1:00 pm. Two hours later, he finished the piece using substantial influence from Smokey and the Miracles, “I’ve Been Good To You,” released as the B-side from their 1961 top forty single, “What’s So Good About Goodbye.” Click Here to compare it with ‘This Boy.’ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1WlhgbqG3g

Lennon brought his new song to George Martin on October 17, 1963, and the exceptionally trained musician/producer refined the third-part notes using a piano for young Harrison to learn his bit. After fifteen takes, recorded between 9 and 10 pm, Mr. Martin felt satisfied with the performance. He then reset the winning track spooled to the middle of the last verse for two final overdubs that consisted of Harrison adding the octave guitar parts that descend the scale near the finish.

For a fly on the wall experience in the studio, listen to the lad’s record take 1 here: https://binged.it/2lE3uLH

Now, watch ‘This Boy’ performed on the Ed Sullivan Show: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7oYB45ZU7A

Tracks 8 & 9 are I Want To Hold Your Hand, and She Loves You remakes only sung in native German language. Moving on.

Track 10 – Long Tall Sally: A one-sided love song based that Uncle John cheats on Aunt Mary.

This energized McCartney-led romp em sock em of Little Richard's rock 'n' roll classic captured perfection in a single take during the sessions for A Hard Day's Night. The tune was originally released by Little Richard in March 1956 and was a staple of The Beatles' live set from 1957 right up to their final show in San Francisco in 1966 - the most enduring of any of their songs.

John shares a thought, “Little Richard was one of the all-time greats. The first time I heard him a friend of mine had been to Holland and brought back a 78 with Long Tall Sally on one side, and Slippin' And Slidin' on the other. It blew our heads - we'd never heard anybody sing like that in our lives and all those saxes playing like crazy.”
John Lennon
Anthology

The group had played with Little Richard in England and Hamburg during the early 1960s, and McCartney was especially proud of his ability to mimic his hero's vocal delivery. Listen to what frustrated Paul as he grips about authenticity, “One of the things I didn't like about the film Backbeat is that they gave Long Tall Sally to the John character. I was not amused. I always sang that: me and Little Richard.”
Paul McCartney
Anthology

It is possible some considered “Sally” for inclusion in the film, nicely fitted during the live finale, but the film required a certain play length and having only original compositions rather than cover songs made better sense. By the way, John plays the first guitar solo, then George dazzles our head bopping emotions on the second solo.

Track 11 – I Call Your Name: A one-sided love song based on the singer’s heartthrob left him.

Originally intended for Billy J. Kramer as the B-side to his single, “Bad To Me, John shares some insight, “That was my song. When there was no Beatles and no group. I just had it around. It was my effort as a kind of blues originally, and then I wrote the middle eight just to stick it in the album when it came out years later. The first part had been written before Hamburg even. It was one of my first attempts at a song.”
John Lennon, 1980
All We Are Saying, David Sheff

Click Here for this song heard on the BBC:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7PuDDaEDm6g

Take a listen to Bill J. Kramer’s single here:                              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nc9w6OryY_I

Click Here for a fabulous alternate take recorded by The Beatles: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMZT7mwTalk

Track 12 – Slow Down. A one-sided love song based on the singer wants one more chance to try and save their romance, but she can’t be faithful.

This right out of the gate hard rocker had been a part of The Beatles' live repertoire between 1960 and 1962, and the group had stopped playing it by the time they revived it during the A Hard Day's Night sessions. An old favorite of John’s written and released by Larry Williams. Specialty Records, who was known for signing Little Richard, signed Williams to the label to be groomed as Richard's replacement since he was leaving music to pursue his ministry at the time.  After scoring a respectable #11 hit on the Billboard R&B charts with his first release, "Just Because," he hit it big with his second Little Richard-like single "Short Fat Fannie."  It peaked at #1 on the R&B charts and #5 on the pop charts in the US. Slow Down turned out to be Williams B-side on the 1958 single Dizzy Miss Lizzy, another song the Beatles covered.

Take a listen to the beat that grabbed John:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHuJAC_XbhQ

Now, listen to the Beatles recorded July 1963 for Pop Go the Beatles. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7PuDDaEDm6g

Track 13 – Matchbox: Not considered a love song at all.

When researching dominate recording artists that inspired The Beatles in their formative years, the name Carl Perkins pops up quick.  "There have only been two great albums that I listened to all the way through when I was about sixteen," John Lennon recalled in 1980.  "One was Carl Perkins's first or second, I can't remember which...I really enjoyed every track."  McCartney described Perkins as "our big hero, who had written 'Blue Suede Shoes.'"  When they all came up with pseudonyms during their brief Scotland tour backing Johnny Gentle, George Harrison came up with the name Carl Harrison in tribute to Carl Perkins.  It was John Lennon who first purchased a copy of "Matchbox," which was Britain's second long-awaited Carl Perkins single.  John bought the single upon release in 1957 at the age of 16, having purchased his first single "Blue Suede Shoes / Honey Don't" the year before.

Matchbox had been Pete Best's solo vocal spot in The Beatles' live shows from 1961 and was taken over by John Lennon when Ringo joined the group. Come July 1963 The Beatles recorded Matchbox for the radio show Pop Go The Beatles, with Ringo Starr singing and comes included on the Live At The BBC collection. While the group considered which songs to record for their third long player, A Hard Day's Night, Matchbox had consideration as intended to be Ringo's feature on the album but was later deemed surplus to requirements, and so it appeared on the Long Tall Sally EP. George Martin couldn’t deny he fancied just Beatles originals showcase the new album, so scrapping away any cover songs brought joy.

Click Here for Carl Perkins singing his composition, Matchbox:       https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYBIx58rH_0

Click Here for Ringo singing Matchbox on the BBC:        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_1ao_HzJKw

Track 14 – I FELL FINE:  A mutual love song based on lyrics such as, “I’m in love with her, and “she’s in love with me.”

The Beatles were scrambling to find a song that was good enough to release as an end-of-the-year single for 1964.   Lennon explains:  "Going into the studio one morning I said to Ringo, 'I've written this song but it's lousy,' but we tried it, complete with riff, and it sounded like an A-side, so we decided to release it just like that." The song John was describing above was "I Feel Fine," which wound up ending 1964 with a great big bang.

Background Fun Facts: Written in October 1964 by John while off work inside his home, he basically perfected the new guitar riff intro. However, Mr. Lennon finished the song on October 6 during down time recording ‘Eight Day’s A Week,’ of which you can hear Lennon pick the iconic expression of notes between takes. The bridge section received minor changes through Paul’s input.

Back in the very early sixties, the Beatles added a favorite song of John’s to their playlist called, ‘Watch Your Step’ released in 1961 by Bobby Parker, the very song that influenced John’s dynamic guitar riff heard on Today’s Tune.

Click here and listen to ‘Watch Your Step.’ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TvtabNAb_wE

For those who haven’t a clue how the strange feedback shrieks from the tune’s onset, one of George Martin’s handy engineer brings us to light. In his book "Here, There And Everywhere," Geoff Emerick gives us an interesting detail that clarifies the origin of the introductory sound on the record.  "Norman (Smith) later explained to me that they had discovered that sound purely by accident at a previous session, the night they recorded 'Eight Days A Week.'  It was just serendipity: during a break, John had leaned his guitar against his amp but had neglected to turn down the volume of the pickup.  Just at that moment, for no particular reason, Paul had plucked a low 'A' on his bass and, from across the room, the sound waves set John's guitar feeding back.  They loved the resultant howling, so much so that Lennon had apparently been fooling around with the effect ever since.  And with his new song, entitled 'I Feel Fine,' he was determined to immortalize the sound on record...years before Jimi Hendrix ever started doing it."

Paul suggested the beat used throughout the drum set follow the style heard on the hit single, ‘What’d I Say,’ released by Ray Charles in 1959, of which Ringo had proven to the other lads he could certainly match the same finesse Mr. Charles’ drummer achieved.

Click here for ‘What’d I Say’ then watch and listen to the drummer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cr_rj8KC-Qs

Click here for ‘I Feel Fine’ take 1, played in A as Lennon strains on the high notes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QynKQXK_dsI

Track 14 – She’s A Woman: A mutual love song based on the singer claims, “She is happy just to hear me say that I will never leave her, she don't give boys the eye. She gives him all her loving.”

As to the style of the Today’s Tune, McCartney gives us some detail in the direction of his inspiration on writing ‘She’s a Woman,’ and I quote. "Like 'Can't Buy Me Love,' this was my attempt at a bluesy thing.  We always found it very hard to write the more rock'n'roll things.  It seemed easy for Little Richard to knock 'em off, penny a dozen, but for us it wasn't quite so easy, being white boys who'd not been to a gospel church in our lives.  So instead of doing a Little Richard song, whom I admire greatly, I would use the style I would have used for that but put it in one of my own songs, so this was about a woman rather than a girl.  Bluesy melody is quite hard to write, so I was quite pleased to get that."

Another big Influence, especially how John attacks the chord progression intro, came from the 1964 rocker, ‘Sugar Bee’, released by the Sir Douglas Quintet. Believe it or not; the Quintet grew their inspiration to write, ‘She’s About A Mover’ from none other, then Paul and John’s ‘She’s a Woman––turnabout is fair play.

Click here for Sugar Bee and note the close comparison:   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBdWoE_nqM0

Lennon recalls his assistance creating the new piece, "We had one verse, and we had to finish it off quickly.  That's why it's got such rubbishy lyrics. That's Paul with some contribution from me on lines, probably.  We put in the words 'turns me on.'  We were so excited to say 'turn me on' - you know, about marijuana and all that...using it as an expression."  It was only five weeks before this date that The Beatles smoked pot for the first time, being introduced to it by Bob Dylan during their first meeting with him at the Delmonico Hotel in New York City while on tour.

Click here for a seat inside the Abbey Road control room while the lads tackled the new session, this time without George, to record She’s A Woman, takes 1 – 4:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8_AzxE4eFM

Click here for take 7 that shows promise, but then the three mop-tops veer off improvising with a unprompted jam session.   
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLNKKKAw9uI

Track 16 – Bad Boy: Not a love song at all.

Notice issued in urgency from EMI Studios that the Beatles needed to pick up the pace and record a couple of songs came by request from America.  The Beatles were especially grateful to Capitol Records in the US for finally agreeing to release their records in the States.  Therefore, if they were requesting more material, The Beatles wouldn't hesitate to oblige. The easy thing to do at this short notice was to unearth two favorite stage songs from their early Hamburg/Cavern days, both of these being songs originally recorded by one of John's favorite rockers, Larry Williams. "Bad Boy," which mimicked many features of "Yakety Yak," such as the topic of an adolescent who constantly needs to be told "now, junior, behave yourself" and a recurring low voice reminiscent of the Coasters' "don't talk back" which repeats "he's a bad boy." Unfortunately, the song failed to make any dent on the charts, and neither did the other three singles he released on Specialty in 1959.  The label then did decide to drop Williams from their roster, but it was more because of his conviction of dealing narcotics in 1960.  "Bad Boy" did get released on 78 and 45 RPM on the London label in Britain where John Lennon took notice of it and, being a fan of The Coasters as well as Larry Williams, added it to The Beatles repertoire in early 1960.

From Capitol Headquarters’ hot pursuit, John chose two relatively unknown tracks, "Dizzy Miss Lizzy" and "Bad Boy," per the rush, rush demand from the American record label in Hollywood, California. 

Click here for William’s original record:                                              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQRbeunfbDE

Track 17 – Yes It Is: A one-sided love song based on the singer’s confession, “I could be happy with you by my side, ‘If’ I could forget her, but it's my pride. His heart can never love another as much as he loved her.

The first Beatles song of 1965 to touch a nerve was the B-side to their first British single "Ticket To Ride."  This moving ballad was entitled "Yes It Is" which, although not directly stated, implies the death of a former love while desiring to move on with his life.  Such was the impact of the song that George Harrison was quoted at the time saying "I prefer this one.  It should have been the major side."  Cynthia Lennon, John's wife at the time, also stated, "This is my favorite Beatles track so far." One of my favorites too, in that ‘This Boy’ holds title as my all-time favorite song, ‘according to John, ‘Yes It Is’ was a remake of ‘This Boy.’ There are obvious similarities, of course, such as the waltz-like time signature, the intricate three-part harmonies in the verses and solo vocal with harmonized background vocals during the bridge, and the standard four-chord doo-wop sequence in the verses.  The differences between the two songs are equally obvious, such as the mature substance of the lyrics, the more adventurous chord changes and the unusual number of measures per section, the latter element being predictably Lennon.

Although some in The Beatles' camp loved the song, John continually dismissed it.  He would scoff at the lyric "for red is the color that will make me blue," explaining this as an example of the song's "double-Dutch words."    

Track 18 – I’M Down: A one-sided love song based on the singer’s love interest could care less if she lies, finds humor in his hurt feelings, and tells him to keep his hands to himself.

When The Beatles triumphantly returned to tour the US in August of 1965, the similarly sounding “I’m Down” replaced “Long Tall Sally” as their closing song and remained to be the case throughout the rest of their touring career into late August of 1966.  With only a few exceptions, such as their final show at Candlestick Park in San Francisco on August 29th, 1966, “I’m Down” was proudly displayed by the group as the final word at their concert performances.

“That’s Paul…with a little help from me, I think,” stated John Lennon in 1980.  Paul corroborates this by saying, “I’m not sure if John had any input on it, in fact, I don’t think he did.  But not wishing to be churlish, with most of these I’ll always credit him with 10 percent just in case he fixed a word or offered a suggestion.  But at least 90 percent of that would be mine.”

Paul wrote the song at 57 Wimpole St. in London where he lived with his current girlfriend Jane Asher and her family.  Since The Beatles were back in their home territory from April through June of 1965, having completed their remote filming for the movie “Help!” by that time, the song emerged during these months.

To say that it was an easy song to write is nonsense.  In fact, they were trying to write a song like this for quite a long time.  “We spent a lot of time trying to write a real corker – something like ‘Long Tall Sally,’” Paul was quoted as saying in October of 1964.  He continues, “It’s very difficult. ‘I Saw Her Standing There’ was the nearest we got to it.  We’re still trying to compose a Little Richard sort of song.  I’d liken it to abstract painting.  People think of ‘Long Tall Sally’ and say it sounds so easy to write.  But it’s the most difficult thing we’ve attempted.  Writing a three-chord song that’s clever is not easy.”

I’m Down Live in Germany, 66: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFs5ybuBPcE

I’m Down Live in Atlanta, 65:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f27RoArwar0

And the song the Beatles played last on their final concert in San Francisco’s Candlestick Park was––Long Tall Sally.

Once again, just like my composition lyrics linked to the love songs I’ve written, unrequited love dominates the majority pieces.

Next week takes us through another amazing run of hit singles that soared up the pop charts where I’ll unveil the tracks about love, found listed on the Past Masters Volume 2 CD of which completes and brings to a close this fifteen-album series.      

Friday, March 10, 2017

Tis Better To Have Loved and Lost Than To Never Loved At All. Alfred Lord Tennyson – Part 13


All right, time to move ahead to the next album in search of unrequited love songs vs. mutual love, positioned within the gifted melodic phrasing stanzas written by my favorite most influential heroes, John, Paul, and George. Next up, the rigorous, sometimes contentious, Let It Be motion picture soundtrack.

13th LP – Let It Be (Mutual Love Songs / 3 vs. One-Sided / 1)

Track 1 – Two Of Us. The opening song on The Beatles' final album,  written by Paul McCartney, tells about his fondness for getting lost deliberately in the country with his future wife, Linda. That alone signifies mutual love.

Lennon and McCartney shared the same microphone to sing the song, as captured in the Let It Be film. Indeed, the middle sections contain likely references to their relationship, with both acutely aware that their time as members of The Beatles was drawing to a close––You and I have memories

Longer than the road that stretches out ahead.

Two Of Us is also thought to contain a reference to The Beatles' business troubles with Apple, in the line "You and me chasing paper, getting nowhere." The song displays the relief felt by McCartney at being able to leave these troubles behind and enjoy uncomplicated moments with Linda. “As a kid, I loved getting lost. I would say to my father - let's get lost. But you could never seem to be able to get really lost. All signs would eventually lead back to New York or wherever we were staying! Then, when I moved to England to be with Paul, we would put Martha in the back of the car and drive out of London. As soon as we were on the open road I'd say, 'Let's get lost' and we'd keep driving without looking at any signs. Hence the line in the song, 'Two of us going nowhere.' Paul wrote Two Of Us on one of those days out. It's about us. We just pulled off in the woods somewhere and parked the car. I went off walking while Paul sat in the car and started writing. He also mentions the postcards because we used to send a lot of postcards to each other.”
Linda McCartney
A Hard Day's Write, Steve Turner

Track 2 – Dig A Pony. Love enters the tune by John expressing, “All I want is you, everything has got to be the way you want it to.” I tilt this song toward one-sided since we never hear the woman’s input. Dig A Pony contained mostly nonsense lyrics, which Lennon dismissed in 1980 as "another piece of garbage." However, some tantalizing references can be found, including to The Beatles' one-time name Johnny and the Moondogs ("I pick a moondog") and Mick Jagger (I roll a stoney/Well you can imitate everyone you know"). However, like so many of Lennon's songs of the period, the dominant influence is Yoko Ono. Dig A Pony was originally titled All I Want Is You, words which appear in the chorus and which constitute the song's only direct, meaningful sentiment. “I was just having fun with words. It was literally a nonsense song. You just take words, and you stick them together, and you see if they have any meaning. Some of them do, and some of them don't.”
John Lennon, 1972

Track 3 – Across The Universe was John Lennon's first composition to be recorded by The Beatles since I Am The Walrus five months earlier. The words were written before the music and came to Lennon in the early hours one morning at his home in Kenwood. “I was lying next to my first wife in bed,” says John, “you know, and I was irritated. She must have been going on and on about something, and she'd gone to sleep, and I'd kept hearing these words over and over, flowing like an endless stream. I went downstairs, and it turned into sort of a cosmic song rather than an irritated song; rather than a 'Why are you always mouthing off at me?' or whatever, right? ... “But the words stand, luckily, by themselves. They were purely inspirational and were given to me as boom! I don't own it, you know; it came through like that. I don't know where it came from, what meter it's in, and I've sat down and looked at it and said, 'Can I write another one with this meter?' It's so interesting: 'Words are flying [sic] out like [sings] endless rain into a paper cup, they slither while they pass, they slip away across the universe.' Such an extraordinary meter and I can never repeat it! It's not a matter of craftsmanship; it wrote itself. It drove me out of bed. I didn't want to write it, I was just slightly irritable, and I went downstairs, and I couldn't get to sleep until I put it on paper, and then I went to sleep. It's like being possessed; like a psychic or a medium. The thing has to go down. It won't let you sleep, so you have to get up, make it into something, and then you're allowed to sleep. That's always in the middle of the bloody night when you're half-awake or tired, and your critical facilities are switched off.”
John Lennon, 1980
All We Are Saying, David Sheff

Track 4 – I Me Mine. The last song to be recorded by The Beatles, I Me Mine was written by George Harrison about revelations regarding the ego discovered through LSD use. George explains his definition here, “Having LSD was like someone catapulting me out into space. The LSD experience was the biggest experience that I'd had up until that time” ...  “Suddenly I looked around, and everything I could see was relative to my ego, like 'that's my piece of paper' and 'that's my flannel' or 'give it to me' or 'I am.' It drove me crackers; I hated everything about my ego, it was a flash of everything false and impermanent, which I disliked. But later, I learned from it, to realize that there is somebody else in here apart from old blabbermouth. Who am 'I' became the order of the day. Anyway, that's what came out of it, I Me Mine. The truth within us has to be realized. When you realize that, everything else that you see and do and touch and smell isn't real, then you may know what reality is, and can answer the question 'Who am I?”
George Harrison
I Me Mine (book), 1980

Track 5 – Dig It. A gobbled die gooked jam session led by John sometimes running as long as twelve plus minutes of playful fun rather than lyrical substance toward a cause.

Track 6 – Let It Be. Paul gives us an eye-opener on how this tune developed, and I quote, “One night during this tense time I had a dream I saw my mum, who'd been dead ten years or so. And it was so great to see her because that's a wonderful thing about dreams: you actually are reunited with that person for a second; there they are, and you appear to both be physically together again. It was so wonderful for me, and she was very reassuring. In the dream, she said, 'It'll be all right.' I'm not sure if she used the words 'Let it be' but that was the gist of her advice, it was, 'Don't worry too much, it will turn out OK.' It was such a sweet dream I woke up thinking, Oh, it was really great to visit with her again. I felt very blessed to have that dream. So that got me writing the song Let It Be. I literally started off 'Mother Mary', which was her name, 'When I find myself in times of trouble,' which I certainly found myself in. The song was based on that dream.”
Paul McCartney
Many Years From Now, Barry Miles

It was perhaps inevitable - even fortuitous for the group - that Let It Be took on religious overtones, with many listeners interpreting it as referring to the Virgin Mary. Again, Paul comments so, “Mother Mary makes it a quasi-religious thing, so you can take it that way. I don't mind. I'm quite happy if people want to use it to shore up their faith. I have no problem with that. I think it's a great thing to have faith of any sort, particularly in the world we live in.”
Paul McCartney
Many Years From Now, Barry Miles

Track 7 – Maggie Mae is a traditional Liverpool folk song about a prostitute who robbed a sailor, Maggie May (as it is more commonly known) dates back from the early 19th century. This musical piece credited all four famous musicians as the arrangers.

Track 8 – I've Got A Feeling combined two half-finished songs that seemed as if they held little hope until joined as one tune. McCartney wrote the section that gave the song its title; Presumably about the optimistic facts Linda had triumphed into the woman Paul had always sought to find. Therefore, I categorize this ditty as a mutual love song.

Lennon's contribution was originally called “Everybody Had A Hard Year,’ and followed along the lines of his current bad luck (Divorce from Cynthia, separated from son Julian, Yoko miscarriage, etc., etc.) John’s contributed section had previously debuted during the White Album sessions.

Remarkably, this tune was the pair's first full and equal collaboration since 1967's Baby You're A Rich Man. The brilliant songwriting team worked on the melody and lyrics together at Cavendish Avenue, London, Paul’s resident just a couple blocks away from Abbey Road.

Track 9 – One after 909, a one-sided love song by John and Paul, based on the lyric portrayal when the singer reminisces, “I begged her not to go, and I begged her on my bended knees.” And, “Don’t be cold as ice.”

One of The Beatles' earliest songs, and originally recorded in March 1963. Paul remembers: “It's the first... one of the first songs we'd ever done. John wrote it when he was about 15.”

The group first recorded One After 909 on the same day as From Me To You in 1963. However, two bootleg versions by The Quarrymen exist, dating from 1960, one of which Apple featured in the Anthology TV series. Two other fascinating live recordings of the song exist, both from a 1962 rehearsal at the Cavern Club.

Click here for the 1962 rehearsal: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FAxqGcCiSzE

Paul McCartney later explained how One After 909 was an attempt to write an American railroad song in the style of their musical heroes. “It has great memories for me of John and I trying to write a bluesy freight-train song. There were a lot of those songs at the time, like Midnight Special, Freight Train, Rock Island Line, so this was the One After 909; she didn't get the 909, she got the one after it! It was a tribute to British Rail, actually. No, at the time we weren't thinking British, it was much more the Super Chief from Omaha.”
Paul McCartney
Many Years From Now, Barry Miles

Track 10 – The Long And Winding Road started out as a simple McCartney ballad, written in Scotland in 1968 at a time in which the cracks in The Beatles' relationships became ever deeper. A demo was recorded during the White Album sessions but taken no further. Paul recalls, “I was a bit flipped out and tripped out at that time. It's a sad song because it's all about the unattainable; the door you never quite reach. This is the road that you never get to the end of.”
Paul McCartney
Many Years From Now, Barry Miles

The song was written with Ray Charles in mind, although McCartney acknowledged that the similarities are well hidden. Again, Paul shares more, “It doesn't sound like him at all, because it's me singing and I don't sound anything like Ray, but sometimes you get a person in your mind, just for an attitude, just for a place to be, so that your mind is somewhere rather than nowhere, and you place it by thinking, Oh, I love that Ray Charles, and think, Well, what might he do then? So, that was in my mind and would have probably had some bearing on the chord structure of it, which is slightly jazzy. I think I could attribute that to having Ray in my mind when I wrote that one.
Paul McCartney
Many Years From Now, Barry Miles

Track 11 – For You Blue was written by George Harrison dedicated this song to his wife Pattie, a straightforward blues song recorded during the Let It Be sessions. “It's a simple 12-bar song following all the normal 12-bar principles, except that it's happy-go-lucky!”
George Harrison

Because the word love or lovely appears ten times throughout the stanzas, I’m labeling track 11 as a mutual love song.

Track 12 –  Get Back. Here ushered in the Beatles' 19th British single, known as, Get Back, and it was the first release by the group from their 1969 'back-to-basics' phase.

Background Fun Facts: Geez, what you're about to read sounds like present day America–– The song began as a satirical and critical look at attitudes towards immigrants in Britain. McCartney intended to parody the negative attitudes that were prevalent among politicians and the press.

Race issues evidently played on McCartney's mind during the Get Back sessions. He led The Beatles through Commonwealth, an unreleased improvised satire loosely based on British politician Enoch Powell's notorious 'Rivers of blood' speech.

The most infamous of the unreleased Get Back versions is known as No Pakistanis and contained the line "Don't dig no Pakistanis taking all the people's jobs." While mostly unfinished, the song did include a mumbled rhyming couplet which paired the words 'Puerto Rican' with 'Mohican.' However, Paul shares some further insight, “When we were doing Let It Be, there were a couple of verses to Get Back which were actually not racist at all - they were anti-racist. There were a lot of stories in the newspapers then about Pakistanis crowding out flats - you know, living 16 to a room or whatever. So, in one of the verses of Get Back, which we were making up on the set of Let It Be, one of the outtakes has something about 'too many Pakistanis living in a council flat' - that's the line. Which to me was actually talking out against overcrowding for Pakistanis... If there was any group that was not racist, it was the Beatles. I mean, all our favorite people were always black. We were kind of the first people to open international eyes, in a way, to Motown.
Paul McCartney
Rolling Stone, 1986

Last but not least, concerning track 12, John believed Jo Jo was a code name for Yoko, (Get back to where you once belong, Yoko), although, it’s clear Paul has stuck to his story that Jo Jo is just a fictional character.

In closing out the Let it Be LP, unrequited love songs scores a single slot and mutual love songs win by a count of three.

Next week takes us through the amazing run of hit singles that soared up the pop charts where I’ll unveil the tracks about love, found listed on one of my favorite releases, the Past Masters Volume 1 CD.