| This is the most covered pop song of all
time. For years, it was also the song with the
most radio plays, but in 1999 BMI music
publishing reported that "You've Lost That Lovin'
Feeling" had passed it. |
| McCartney is the only Beatle to play on
this. It was the first time a Beatle recorded
without the others. |
| A string quartet was brought in to play on
this. It was the first time strings were used in
a famous pop song. It was also one of the first
pop songs to use elements of Classical Music. |
| This was the first Beatles song that could
not be reproduced live without additional
musicians. When they played it live, including
their famous Shea Stadium concert, it was just
McCartney with a guitar. |
| While touring in Paris, McCartney claims he
tumbled out of bed and the tune was in his head.
He thought he had heard it somewhere before. |
| The working title was "scrambled eggs" until
Paul could figure out lyrics. |
| This was the first Beatles song to capture a
mass adult market. Most of their fans were young
people until then. It also became one of their "Muzak"
classics, as companies recorded instrumental
versions as soothing background noise for
shopping centers and elevators. Another Beatles
song that lived on in this form is "Here Comes
The Sun." |
| The Beatles performed this on their third
live Ed Sullivan Show appearance and on
their last tour. For the live appearances,
McCartney would play with a prerecorded backing
track of strings. |
| This was one of 5 Beatles songs McCartney
performed on his "Wings Over America" tour in
1976. |
| McCartney had to ask Michael Jackson to use
this in his movie Give My Regards to
Broadstreet. Jackson outbid McCartney for
the publishing rights to The Beatles catalogue. |
| At any given time, some version of this is
probably being broadcast somewhere. |
| McCartney wrote some of the lyrics during a
5 hour car trip from Lisbon to Albufeira (in
Algarve, south of Portugal), on the 27th of May,
1965, when he was on vacation with Jane Asher.
The villa where Paul and Jane stayed was owned
by Shadows' guitarist Bruce Welch. Bruce said
that when he was packing to leave, Paul asked
him if he had a guitar because (Paul) was
working on the lyrics since the airport. Said
Bruce: "He borrowed my guitar and started
playing the song we all now know as
'Yesterday'." (thanks, Rato - Lisbon, Portugal) |
| This caused a rift between McCartney and
Yoko Ono. When The Beatles Anthology
album was released, McCartney asked that the
writing credit on this read "McCartney/Lennon,"
since he wrote it. Yoko refused, and it was
listed as "Lennon/McCartney," which is how they
usually credited songs written by either Beatle.
In 2003, McCartney switched the writing credit
for the first time when he listed 19 Beatles
songs on his Back In The US album as
"Paul McCartney and John Lennon." Paul claims he
and John made an informal agreement in 1962
regarding the credits, but he had every right to
switch it if he chose. Yoko disagrees. |
| McCartney has consistently talked about how
easy this song was for him to compose. In
describing it, he has said "I did the tune
easily and then the words took about two
weeks...." (thanks, Shannon - Kathleen, GA) |
| Some of the artists who have recorded this
include Boyz II Men, Ray Charles, En Vogue,
Marianne Faithful, Marvin Gaye, Tom Jones, Nana
Mouskouri, Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, The
Supremes, Andy Williams, and Tammy Wynette. A
female Soul trio called The Toys did a cover for
their 1966 album Sing "A Lover's Concerto.
(thanks, Jerro - New Alexandria, PA) |
| This was featured in the 1997 movie Bean,
when the title character (played by Rowan
Atkinson) sings it with David Langley (played by
Peter MacNicol) as they trot home one night.
(thanks, Tiffany - Dover, FL) |