| IT WON'T BE LONG
(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1980: "'It Wont Be Long' is mine. It was my
attempt at writing another single. It never quite made it. That
was the one where the guy in the 'London Times' wrote about the
'Aeolian cadences of the chords' which started the whole
intellectual bit about the Beatles."
PAUL circa-1994: "We'd spot the double meaning... In 'It
won't BE LONG till I BELONG to you' it was that same trip."
ALL I'VE GOT TO DO(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1980: "That's me trying to do Smokey Robinson
again."
ALL MY LOVING(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1972: "This was one of his first biggies."
JOHN 1980: "'All My Loving' is Paul, I regret to say.
Because it's a damn fine piece of work. But I play a pretty mean
guitar in back."
PAUL 1984: "Yeah, I wrote that one. It was the first song
I ever wrote where I had the words before the music. I wrote the
words on a bus on tour, then we got the tune when I arrived
there. The first time I've ever worked upside down."
PAUL 1988: "I think that was the first song where I wrote
the words without the tune. I wrote the words on the tour bus
during our tour with Roy Orbison. We did alot of writing then."
PAUL circa-1994: "It was a good show song. It worked well
live."
DON'T BOTHER ME(Harrison)
GEORGE 1980: "The first song that I wrote... as an
exercise to see if I could write a song. I wrote it in a hotel
in Bounemouth, England, where we were playing a summer season in
1963. I was sick in bed... maybe that's why it turned out to be
'Don't Bother Me.' I don't think it's a particularly good
song... It mightn't even be a song at all, but at least it
showed me that all I needed to do was keep on writing, and then
maybe eventually I would write something good."
PAUL 1988: "I think John and I were really concentrating
on-- 'We'll do the 'real' records,' but because the other guys
had alot of fans we wrote for them too. George eventually came
out with his own, 'Don't Bother Me,' but until then he hadn't
written one."
LITTLE CHILD(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1972: "Both of us wrote it. This was a knock-off
between Paul and me."
JOHN 1980: "'Little Child' was another effort of Paul and
I to write a song for somebody else. It was probably Ringo."
PAUL circa-1994: "Certain songs were inspirational and
you just followed that. 'Little Child' was a work job."
PLEASE MR. POSTMAN(Dobbin/Garrett/Garman/Brianbert)
PAUL 1984: "Influenced by the Marvelettes, who did the
original version. We got it from our fans, who would write
'Please Mr. Postman' on the back of the envelopes. 'Posty, posty,
don't be slow, be like the Beatles and go, man, go!' That sort
of stuff."
HOLD ME TIGHT(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1980: "That was Paul's. Maybe I stuck some bits
in there... I really don't remember. It was a pretty poor song
and I was never really interested in it either way."
PAUL 1988: "I can't remember much about that one. Certain
songs were just 'work' songs... you haven't got much of a memory
of them. That's one of them. You just knew you had a song that
would work, a good melody. 'Hold Me Tight' never really had that
much of an effect on me. It was a bit Shirelles."
PAUL circa-1994: "'Hold Me Tight' was a failed attempt at
a single which then became acceptable album filler."
I WANNA BE YOUR MAN(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1972: "Both of us wrote it, but mainly
Paul. I helped him finish it."
JOHN 1980: "'I Wanna Be Your Man' was a kind of lick Paul
had-- 'I wanna be your lover, baby. I wanna be your man.' I
think we finished it off for the Stones. We were taken down to
meet them at the club where they were playing in Richmond by
Brian and some other guy. They wanted a song and we went to see
what kind of stuff they did. Mick and Keith heard we had an
unfinished song-- Paul just had this bit and we needed another
verse or something. We sort of played it roughly to them and
they said, 'Yeah, OK, that's our style.' But it was only really
a lick, so Paul and I went off in the corner of the room and
finished the song off while they were all still sitting there
talking. We came back, and that's how Mick and Keith got
inspired to write... because, 'Jesus, look at that. They just
went in the corner and wrote it and came back!' You know, right
in front of their eyes we did it. So we gave it to them. It was
a throw-away. The only two versions of the song were Ringo and
the Rolling Stones. It shows how much importance we put on them.
We weren't going to give them anything great, right? I believe
it was the Stones' first record."
PAUL 1984: "I wrote it for Ringo to do on one of the
early albums. But we ended up giving it to the Stones. We met
Mick and Keith in a taxi one day in Charing Cross Road and Mick
said, 'Have you got any songs?' So we said, 'Well, we just
happen to have one with us!' I think George had been
instrumental in getting them their first record contract. We
suggested them to Decca, 'cuz Decca had blown it by refusing us,
so they had tried to save face by asking George, 'Know any other
groups?' He said, 'Well, there is this group called the Stones.'
So that's how they got their first contract. Anyway, John and I
gave them maybe not their first record, but I think the first
they got on the charts with. They don't tell anybody about it
these days; they prefer to be more ethnic. But you and I know
the real truth."
NOT A SECOND TIME(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1980: "That's me trying to do something. I don't
remember." (laughs)
PAUL 1984: "Influenced by Smokey Robinson and the
Miracles."
I WANT TO HOLD YOUR HAND(Lennon/McCartney)
PAUL 1964: "Let's see, we were told we had to get down
to it. So we found this house when we were walking along one
day. We knew we had to really get this song going, so we got
down in the basement of this disused house and there was an old
piano. It wasn't really disused, it was rooms to let. We found
this old piano and started banging away. There was a little old
organ too. So we were having this informal jam and we started
banging away. Suddenly a little bit came to us, the catch line.
So we started working on it from there. We got our pens and
paper out and just wrote down the lyrics. Eventually, we had
some sort of a song, so we played it for our recording manager
and he seemed to like it. We recorded it the next day."
JOHN 1980: "We wrote alot of stuff together, one on one,
eyeball to eyeball. Like in 'I Want To Hold Your Hand,' I
remember when we got the chord that made the song. We were in
Jane Asher's house, downstairs in the cellar playing on the
piano at the same time. And we had, 'Oh you-u-u/ got that
something...' And Paul hits this chord, and I turn to him and
say, 'That's it!' I said, 'Do that again!' In those days, we
really used to absolutely write like that-- both playing into
each other's noses."
PAUL circa-1994: "'Eyeball to eyeball' is a very good
description of it. That's exactly how it was. 'I Want To Hold
Your Hand' was very co-written."
THIS BOY(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1980: "Just my attempt at writing one of those
three-part harmony Smokey Robinson songs. Nothing in the
lyrics... just a sound and a harmony. There was a period when I
thought I didn't write melodies... that Paul wrote those and I
just wrote straight, shouting rock 'n roll. But of course, when
I think of some of my own songs-- 'In My Life,' or some of the
early stuff-- 'This Boy,' I was writing melody with the best of
them."
PAUL 1988: "Fabulous. And we just loved singing that
three-part too. We'd learned that from: (sings) 'To know know
know her is to love love love her...' We learned that in my
dad's house in Liverpool."
I CALL YOUR NAME(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1980: "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."
PAUL circa-1994: "We worked on it together, but it was
John's idea. When I look back at some of these lyrics, I think,
'Wait a minute. What did he mean? 'I call your name but you're
not there.' Is it his mother? His father? I must admit I didn't
really see that as we wrote it because we were just a couple of
young guys writing. You didn't look behind it at the time, it
was only later you started analyzing things."
MATCHBOX(Perkins)
RINGO 1964: "I'm featured on it. Actually it was
written by Carl Perkins about six years ago. Carl came to the
session. I felt very embarrassed. I did it just two days before
I went in the hospital (with tonsilitis) so please forgive my
throat."
ON SONGWRITING (DURING THE 'WITH THE BEATLES' PERIOD)
PAUL 1963: "If an idea does pop in your mind, then you
do sit down and say, 'Let's do it.' If there are no ideas and
say we've been told we've got a recording date in about two days
time, then you got to sit down and sort of slug it out. You
normally get just a little idea which doesn't seem bad and you
go on and it builds up from there. It varies every time."
ON RECORDING (DURING THE 'WITH THE BEATLES' PERIOD)
PAUL 1963: "Lots of people have asked us what we
enjoyed best... concerts, television, or recording. We like
doing stage shows because it's great to hear an audience
enjoying themselves. But the thing we like best is going into
the recording studio to make new records. What we like to hear
most is one of our songs taking shape in a recording studio, and
then listening to the tapes afterwards to hear how it all worked
out."
JOHN 1964 "We always record them exactly as we can play
them. Even if we do put things on top, the basic thing on a
record we do live. We play and sing at the same time on the
record, so if we can't do it there, we don't do it."
GEORGE 1977: "It was enjoyable. We'd get into doing
harmonies and this and that, because in the early days we were
only working on four-track tapes. So what we'd do would be work
out most of the basic track on one track, get all the balance
and everything set, all the instruments. Then we'd do all the
vocals, or overdub. If there was guitar, lines would come in on
the second verse and piano in the middle eight with shakers and
tambourines. We'd line up and get all the sounds right and do it
in a take, and then do all the vocal harmonies over."
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