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Lennon–McCartney

Lennon–McCartney was the songwriting partnership between English musicians John Lennon (1940–1980) and Paul McCartney (born 1942) of the Beatles. It is widely considered one of the greatest, best known and most successful musical collaborations ever by records sold, with the Beatles selling over 600 million records worldwide as of 2004.[1] Between 5 October 1962 and 8 May 1970, the partnership published approximately 180 jointly credited songs, of which the vast majority were recorded by the Beatles, forming the bulk of their catalogue.

Paul McCartney and John Lennon in 1964

Unlike many songwriting partnerships that comprise a separate lyricist and composer, such as George and Ira Gershwin, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, or Elton John and Bernie Taupin, both Lennon and McCartney wrote lyrics and music. Sometimes, especially early on, they would collaborate extensively when writing songs, working "eyeball to eyeball" as Lennon phrased it.[2] During the latter half of their partnership, it became more common for either of them to write most of a song on their own with minimal input from the other, and sometimes none at all. By an agreement made before the Beatles became famous, Lennon and McCartney were credited equally with songs that either one of them wrote while their partnership lasted.

Lennon–McCartney compositions have been the subject of numerous cover versions. According to Guinness World Records, "Yesterday" has been recorded by more musicians than any other song.[3]

Meeting edit

Although McCartney had previously seen and noticed Lennon in the local area without knowing who he was,[4] the pair first met on 6 July 1957, at a local church fête, where 16-year-old Lennon was playing with his skiffle group the Quarrymen. The 15-year-old McCartney, brought along by a mutual friend, Ivan Vaughan, impressed Lennon with his ability on the guitar and his version of Eddie Cochran's "Twenty Flight Rock". Soon afterwards, Lennon asked McCartney if he would join the Quarrymen; McCartney accepted.[5][6] The duo's first musical idols were the Everly Brothers, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, and Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, and they learned many of their songs and imitated their sound.[7] Their first compositions were written at McCartney's home (20 Forthlin Road), at Lennon's aunt Mimi's house (251 Menlove Avenue), or at the Liverpool Institute.[8] They often invited friends—including George Harrison, Nigel Walley, Barbara Baker, and Lennon's art school colleagues—to listen to performances of their new songs.[9]

Writing chemistry edit

Lennon said the main intention of the Beatles' music was to communicate, and that, to this effect, he and McCartney had a shared purpose. Author David Rowley points out that at least half of all Lennon–McCartney lyrics have the words "you" and/or "your" in the first line.[10] In Lennon's 1980 Playboy interview, he said of the partnership:

[Paul] provided a lightness, an optimism, while I would always go for the sadness, the discords, the bluesy notes. 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.[11]

Historian Todd Compton has noted that there is some truth to Lennon's statement regarding McCartney's optimism. However, it does not tell the whole story, as some of McCartney's most characteristic songs are tragic, or express themes of isolation, such as "Yesterday", "She's Leaving Home", "Eleanor Rigby" or "For No One".[12]

Although Lennon and McCartney often wrote independently—and many Beatles songs are primarily the work of one or the other—it was rare that a song would be completed without some input from both writers. In many instances, one writer would sketch an idea or a song fragment and take it to the other to finish or improve; in some cases, two incomplete songs or song ideas that each had worked on individually would be combined into a complete song. Often one of the pair would add a middle eight or bridge section to the other's verse and chorus.[13] George Martin attributed the high quality of their songwriting to the friendly rivalry between the two.[14] This approach of the Lennon–McCartney songwriting team—with elements of competitiveness and mutual inspiration as well as straightforward collaboration and creative merging of musical ideas—is often cited[by whom?] as a key reason for the Beatles' innovation and popular success.[citation needed]

As time went on, the songs increasingly became the work of one writer or the other, often with the partner offering up only a few words or an alternative chord. "A Day in the Life" is a well-known example of a later Beatles song that includes substantial contributions by both Lennon and McCartney, where a separate song fragment by McCartney ("Woke up, fell out of bed, dragged a comb across my head ...") was used to flesh out the middle of Lennon's composition ("I read the news today, oh boy ..."). "Hey Jude" is another example of a later McCartney song that had input from Lennon: while auditioning the song for Lennon, when McCartney came to the lyric "the movement you need is on your shoulder", McCartney assured Lennon that he would change the line—which McCartney felt was nonsensical—as soon as he could come up with a better lyric. Lennon advised McCartney to leave that line alone, saying it was one of the strongest in the song.[15]

Though Lennon and McCartney's collaborative efforts decreased in later years, they continued to influence one another. As Lennon stated in 1969, "We write how we write now because of each other. Paul was there for five or ten years, and I wouldn't write like I write now if it weren't for Paul, and he wouldn't write like he does if it weren't for me."[16][17]

Credit variations and disputes edit

Joint credit edit

When McCartney and Lennon met as teenagers and began writing songs together, they agreed that all songs written by them (whether individually or jointly) should be credited to both of them.[18] The precise date of the agreement is unknown; however, Lennon spoke in 1980 of an informal agreement between him and McCartney made "when we were fifteen or sixteen".[19] Two songs written (primarily by Lennon) in 1957, "Hello Little Girl" and "One After 909", were credited to the partnership when published in the following decade.[20] The earliest Beatles recording credited to Lennon–McCartney to be officially released is "You'll Be Mine", recorded at home in 1960 and included on Anthology 1 35 years later.[21]

Some other compositions from the band's early years are not credited to the partnership. "In Spite of All the Danger", a 1958 composition that the band (then The Quarrymen) paid to record to disc, is attributed to McCartney and George Harrison. "Cayenne", recorded at the same time as "You'll Be Mine", is a solo McCartney composition. "Cry for a Shadow", an instrumental recorded during the Beatles' sessions with Tony Sheridan in June 1961 (one of the only full instrumentals the group recorded), was written by Harrison and Lennon.[22]

By 1962, the joint credit agreement was in effect. From the time of the Beatles' A&R Decca audition in January that year, until Lennon's announcement in September 1969 that he was leaving the band, virtually all songs by McCartney or Lennon were published with joint credit, although, on a few of their first releases, the order was reversed (see below). The only other exceptions were a handful of the McCartney compositions released by other musicians (viz. "Woman" by Peter and Gordon in 1966 (McCartney using Bernard Webb as a pseudonym), "Cat Call" by Chris Barber in 1967, and "Penina" by Carlos Mendes in 1969).[23][24] Lennon kept the joint credit for "Give Peace a Chance", his first single with the Plastic Ono Band.

After the partnership had ended, Lennon and McCartney each gave various accounts of their individual contribution to each jointly credited song, and sometimes claimed full authorship. Often their memories of collaboration differed, and often their own early and late interviews are in conflict.[25] In 1977, Lennon offered Hit Parader a list of Beatles songs with comments regarding his and McCartney's contributions to each song. In his response to the article at the time, McCartney disputed only one of Lennon's entries.[26]

Lennon described the song as co-written in 1965 interviews.[27] In late interviews, he claimed full authorship. McCartney's stated help was on the "countermelody", estimating the song as "70–30" to Lennon.[28][29][30] In 1984, McCartney said "John and I wrote it at his house in Weybridge for the film."[30]
In 1965, Lennon claimed that the song was "three-quarters mine and Paul changed it a bit. He said let's alter the tune."[31] However, in 1980, Lennon said that McCartney's contribution was limited to "the way Ringo played the drums".[32] In Many Years from Now, McCartney said "we sat down and wrote it together ... give him 60 percent of it."[33]
Lennon's entry for "In My Life" was the only one that McCartney disputed in his response to the Hit Parader article.[26] Lennon said that McCartney helped only with "the middle eight" of the song.[34] McCartney said that he wrote the entire melody, taking inspiration from Smokey Robinson songs.[35]
In the 1997 biography Many Years from Now, McCartney recalled writing the music to "Eleanor Rigby" on a piano at Jane Asher's family home in Wimpole Street,[36] and then playing it to Donovan, who supported that the song lacked any serious lyrics at that point.[37] In 1972, Lennon said that he wrote 70 percent of the lyrics,[38] but Pete Shotton, Lennon's childhood friend, remembered Lennon's contribution as being "absolutely nil".[39] In 1985, McCartney said that Lennon had contributed "about half a line" to the song, but elsewhere (including a 1966 interview) he describes finishing the song with more substantial collaboration with Lennon.[40] Harrison also contributed to this song. According to journalist Hunter Davies, the last verse was finished with all the Beatles giving suggestions in the studio.[41]
McCartney claimed to have helped on the lyric, estimating the song as "80–20" to Lennon.[42] In Hit Parader, Lennon did not acknowledge any contributions from McCartney.[26]
In Hit Parader, Lennon said he authored the song and took the words from a circus poster. He did not acknowledge McCartney as a contributor.[26] In 2013, McCartney recalled spending an afternoon with Lennon writing the song based on the poster: "I read, occasionally, people say, 'Oh, John wrote that one.' I say, 'Wait a minute, what was that afternoon I spent with him, then, looking at this poster?'"[43]

Lennon–McCartney vs McCartney–Lennon edit

In October 1962, the Beatles released their first single in the UK, "Love Me Do", credited to "Lennon–McCartney". However, on their next three releases the following year (the single "Please Please Me", the Please Please Me LP, and the single "From Me to You"), the credit was given as "McCartney–Lennon".[44] According to McCartney, the decision to consistently order the credit with Lennon first was made at an April 1963 band meeting.[18] With the "She Loves You" single, released in August 1963, the credit reverted to "Lennon–McCartney", and all subsequent official Beatles singles and albums list "Lennon–McCartney" (UK) or "John Lennon-Paul McCartney" (US) as the author of songs written by the two.

In 1976 McCartney's band Wings released their live album Wings over America with songwriting credits for five Beatles songs reversed to place McCartney's name first. Neither Lennon nor his wife Yoko Ono publicly objected to the flipped credits.[18] Many years after Lennon's death however, in the late 1990s, McCartney and Ono became involved in a dispute over the credit order.[45] McCartney's 2002 live album, Back in the U.S., also used the credit "Paul McCartney and John Lennon" for all of the Beatles songs.[46] When Ono objected to McCartney's request for the reversed credit to be used for the 1965 song "Yesterday", McCartney said that he and Lennon had agreed in the past that the credits could be reversed, if either of them wanted to, on any future releases.[47] In 2003, he relented, saying, "I'm happy with the way it is and always has been. Lennon and McCartney is still the rock 'n' roll trademark I'm proud to be a part of – in the order it has always been."[45] An in-depth analysis of the legal issues was the subject of a 66-page article in the Pepperdine Law Review in 2006.[48]

Lennon–McCartney and others edit

A number of songs written primarily by the duo and recorded by the Beatles were credited as follows:

  • "What Goes On" (1965): Lennon–McCartney–Starkey[49]
  • "12-Bar Original" (1965): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey
  • "Flying" (1967): Harrison–Lennon–McCartney–Starkey[50]
  • "Jessie's Dream" (1967): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey
  • "Los Paranoias" (1968): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey
  • "Dig It" (1969): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey[51]
  • "Maggie Mae" (1969): Arrangement by Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey
  • "Suzy Parker" (1969): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey
  • "Free as a Bird" (1995): Original composition by John Lennon; Beatles version credited to John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr
  • "Christmas Time (Is Here Again)" (1995 edit of 1967 fan club version): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey[52]
  • "Now and Then" (2023): Original composition by John Lennon; Beatles version credited to John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr

The German-language versions of "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and "She Loves You" were also credited to additional songwriters for assisting with the translation. "Komm, Gib Mir Deine Hand" was credited to Lennon–McCartney–Nicolas–Hellmer, and "Sie Liebt Dich" was credited to Lennon–McCartney–Nicolas–Montague.

Legacy edit

Cultural impact edit

Lennon–McCartney, as well as other British Invasion songwriters, inspired changes to the music industry because they were bands that wrote and performed their own music. This trend threatened the professional songwriters that dominated the American music industry. Ellie Greenwich, a Brill Building songwriter, said, "When the Beatles and the entire British Invasion came in, we were all ready to say, 'Look, it's been nice, there's no more room for us… It's now the self-contained group- makes, certain type of material. What do we do?"[53] In 1963, The Sunday Times called Lennon and McCartney the greatest composers since Ludwig van Beethoven.[54]

The Lennon–McCartney brand would prove to be a model for several other songwriting teams in the rock genre, including, according to Lennon, the Rolling Stones' Jagger–Richards partnership.[55] Subsequent Beatlesque songwriting teams attracted comparisons in the media to Lennon–McCartney. The new wave band Squeeze's partnership of Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook was dubbed the "new Lennon–McCartney" by music writers.[56][57][58] Difford and Tilbrook expressed ambivalence about the comparison: Tilbrook felt that they "got a bit pompous" as a result, while Difford noted that, although the tag was "very useful" to Squeeze for getting the attention of radio programmers, the label "might have been a burden" on Tilbrook "because he had to live up to the challenge of [the Beatles'] kind of songwriting, which he didn't need to do because he's such an incredible songwriter in his own right."[58] Record Mirror pondered in 1980 whether Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys, the founding duo of electronic band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, were emerging as "the Lennon and McCartney of the electronic world";[59] music journalists subsequently began to describe the pair as "the Lennon–McCartney of synth-pop".[60][61][62]

When McCartney teamed up with Elvis Costello in 1989, Costello's acerbic style earned him comparisons to Lennon in his role as McCartney's collaborator.[63][64][65] McCartney, despite conceding that Costello has "got a bit of Lennon in him", characterized the pairing as "a new thing".[63]

Beatles catalogue edit

The Lennon–McCartney songwriting partnership makes up the majority of the Beatles' catalogue. The first two UK studio albums included 12 cover tunes and 15 Lennon–McCartney songs,[66][67] with one track ("Don't Bother Me") credited to George Harrison.[67] Their third UK album, A Hard Day's Night (1964), is the only Beatles album made up entirely of Lennon–McCartney compositions.[68] The next album released, Beatles for Sale (1964), included six covers and eight Lennon–McCartney originals.[69] The subsequent release, Help! (1965), had two covers and two Harrison compositions along with ten Lennon–McCartney tracks; it was the last Beatles album to feature a non-original composition until Let It Be, which included an arrangement of the traditional Liverpool folk song "Maggie Mae". Among the songs in this post-Help! output, Harrison contributed between one and four songs per album, and Starr wrote two songs in total and received a joint credit with Lennon and McCartney for a third ("What Goes On"). In addition, "Flying" and "Dig It" were credited to all four Beatles. The rest of the catalogue came from Lennon and McCartney.

Lennon and McCartney gave songs to Starr to sing, and to Harrison before he started writing his own material. As for the songs they kept for themselves, each partner mostly sang his own composition, often with the other providing harmonies, or they shared lead vocal. If each contributed a fragment to make a whole song, he might sing his portion, as in the case of "I've Got a Feeling" and "A Day in the Life". "Every Little Thing" is a rare example of a Lennon–McCartney song in which one member of the partnership was primary composer (McCartney) but the other sang lead vocal (Lennon).[70][71] McCartney sings in unison with Lennon on the verses, but Lennon's vocal is more prominent. McCartney sings the high harmony on the chorus.

In January 2017, McCartney filed a suit in United States district court against Sony/ATV Music Publishing seeking to reclaim ownership of his share of the Lennon–McCartney song catalogue beginning in 2018. Under US copyright law, for works published before 1978 the author can reclaim copyrights assigned to a publisher after 56 years.[72][73] McCartney and Sony agreed to a confidential settlement in June 2017.[74]

Non-Beatles songs edit

Several songs credited to Lennon–McCartney were originally released by bands other than the Beatles, especially those managed by Brian Epstein. Recording a Lennon–McCartney song helped launch new performing-artists' careers. Many of the recordings below were included on the 1979 compilation album The Songs Lennon and McCartney Gave Away.[75] Beatles versions of some of these were recorded; some were not released until after their split, on compilations such as Live at the BBC (1994) and The Beatles Anthology (1995–96).

In April 2024, the surviving Beatles son's James McCartney and Sean Ono Lennon worked together on the song "Primrose Hill" for McCartney's upcoming album.[76]

Year Artist Song Peak chart
position
Notes
1963 The Rolling Stones "I Wanna Be Your Man" UK #12 Beatles version released later in 1963 on With the Beatles
1963 Billy J. Kramer with the Dakotas "I'll Be on My Way" (B-side) Beatles version released on Live at the BBC
1963 Billy J. Kramer with The Dakotas "Bad to Me" UK #1 Beatles demo was released on iTunes download The Beatles Bootleg Recordings 1963
1963 Billy J. Kramer with The Dakotas "I Call Your Name" (B-side) Beatles version released on The Beatles' Second Album (US) and the Long Tall Sally EP (UK) in 1964
1963 Billy J. Kramer with The Dakotas "I'll Keep You Satisfied" UK #4
1964 Billy J. Kramer with The Dakotas "From a Window" UK #10
1963 Tommy Quickly "Tip of My Tongue"
1963 The Fourmost "Hello Little Girl" UK #9 Beatles version released on Anthology 1
1963 The Fourmost "I'm in Love" UK #17 Beatles demo released on iTunes download The Beatles Bootleg Recordings 1963
1963 Cilla Black "Love of the Loved" UK #35 Beatles version released on bootlegs of the Decca audition
1964 Cilla Black "It's for You" UK #7
1964 The Strangers with Mike Shannon "One and One Is Two" The song was rejected by Billy J. Kramer. The Strangers with Mike Shannon were South African.[77]
1964 Peter & Gordon "A World Without Love" UK #1
US #1
Demo released in bootlegs
1964 Peter & Gordon "Nobody I Know" UK #10
1964 Peter & Gordon "I Don't Want to See You Again" US #16
1964 The Applejacks "Like Dreamers Do" UK #20 Beatles version released on Anthology 1
1965 P.J. Proby "That Means a Lot" UK #30 Beatles version released on Anthology 2
1968 John Foster & Son Ltd Black Dyke Mills Band "Thingumybob" The eponymous theme to a Yorkshire Television sitcom. Developed from an early version known as "Etcetera", demoed by Paul McCartney during a session for "Mother Nature's Son" on 20 August 1968.[78]
1968 Cilla Black "Step Inside Love" UK #8 Beatles improvisation released on Anthology 3
1969 Mary Hopkin "Goodbye" UK #2 Original demo released in The Abbey Road 50th anniversary deluxe edition.[79]
1969 Plastic Ono Band "Give Peace a Chance" UK #2 Although composed alone by Lennon, McCartney was credited as co-composer on the single appearance and on Lennon's compilation albums Shaved Fish and The John Lennon Collection. The credit was revised in the 1990s to cite only Lennon.

Four songs and a soundtrack album were released during this period but credited solely to Paul McCartney:

Year Artist Recording Peak chart
position
Notes
1966 Peter & Gordon "Woman" UK #28; US #14 McCartney is credited as "Bernard Webb".
1966 The George Martin Orchestra The Family Way soundtrack McCartney composed the melodies while Martin scored and directed the music for the film and album.
1967 The Chris Barber Band "Catcall" Originally known as "Catswalk", performed from 1958 to 1962 and revisited during the Get Back sessions in January 1969.[80]
1969 Jotta Herre [pt] "Penina" [pt] Originally released by Jotta Herre and later covered by Carlos Mendes.[81]
1969 Badfinger "Come and Get It" UK #4 The original demo was included on Anthology 3 and 50th Anniversary of Abbey Road in 2019.

Unreleased songs edit

The following compositions are believed to have been written by Lennon and McCartney, but never officially released by the Beatles or any other artist except as noted below. Many have appeared on Beatles bootlegs, an exception being "Carnival of Light".[82] The list of unreleased songs includes some of the earliest Lennon–McCartney joint works dating back to the Quarrymen, the group that evolved into the Beatles.[83] Several of these songs were revisited during the Get Back sessions of early 1969.[84]

Title Year Notes
"Keep Looking That Way" 1957 Played by the Quarrymen.[85]
"Looking Glass" 1957 Instrumental. Mentioned in 1969 film outtakes; unknown if performed during Get Back sessions.[86]
"That's My Woman" 1957 Played by the Quarrymen.[85][87]
"Years Roll Along" 1957 Played by the Quarrymen.[85][88]
"I'll Wait Till Tomorrow" 1960 Country-influenced duet briefly sung by Lennon and McCartney during the Get Back sessions on 3 January 1969.
"I've Been Thinking That You Love Me" 1960 Briefly performed during the Get Back sessions on 3 January 1969.[89][90]
"Some Days" 1960 Speculative titles based on taped works-in-progress.[88][91] "You'll Be Mine", also recorded at the time, was released on Anthology 1.
"You Must Write Everyday" 1960
"Well Darling" 1960
"Come on People" 1960
"I Don't Know" 1960
"Pinwheel Twist" 1962 Performed live in 1962.[92]
"Carnival of Light" 1967 Recorded on 5 January 1967; nearly 14-minute-long experimental collage.[82][93]
"Shirley's Wild Accordion" 1967 Recorded on 12 October 1967; instrumental intended for Magical Mystery Tour film.[94]
"Etcetera" 1968 Recorded by McCartney on 20 August 1968, with "Mother Nature's Son" and "Wild Honey Pie".[95]
"Watching Rainbows" 1969 Sung by Lennon; performed during the Get Back sessions on 14 January 1969.[96][97]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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  11. ^ Sheff 2000, p. 136. "In My Life" was the main song on which Lennon and McCartney disagreed, see below..
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Bibliography edit

  • Compton, Todd (2017). Who Wrote the Beatle Songs? A History of Lennon-McCartney. San Jose: Pahreah Press. ISBN 978-0-9988997-0-1.
  • Everett, Walter (2001). The Beatles As Musicians: The Quarry Men through Rubber Soul. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-514105-4.
  • Goodman, Joan (1984). "Playboy Interview With Paul and Linda McCartney". Beatles Interview Database. from the original on 1 September 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2009.
  • Lewisohn, Mark (1988). The Beatles Recording Sessions. New York: Harmony Books. ISBN 0-517-57066-1.
  • MacDonald, Ian (2005). Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties (Second Revised ed.). London: Pimlico (Rand). ISBN 1-84413-828-3.
  • MacDonald, Ian (2007). Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties. Chicago: Chicago Review Press. ISBN 978-1-55652-733-3.
  • Miles, Barry (1997). Paul McCartney: Many Years From Now. New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0-8050-5249-6.
  • Rowley, David (2008). Help! 50 Songwriting, Recording and Career Tips used by the Beatles. Matador. ISBN 978-1-906221-37-9.
  • Shea, Stuart; Rodriguez, Robert (2002). Fab Four FAQ: Everything Left to Know About the Beatles ... and More!. New York: Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 978-1-4234-2138-2.
  • Sheff, David (2000). All We Are Saying: The Last Major Interview with John Lennon and Yoko Ono. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-25464-4.
  • Spitz, Bob (2005). The Beatles: The Biography. Boston: Little, Brown. ISBN 0-316-80352-9.
  • Sulpy, Doug; Schweighardt, Ray (1999). Get Back: The Unauthorized Chronicle of the Beatles' 'Let It Be' Disaster. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 978-0-312-19981-4.
  • Unterberger, Richie (2006). Unreleased Beatles Music and Film. San Francisco: Backbeat Books. ISBN 978-0-87930-892-6.
  • Wiener, Allen J. (1994). The Beatles: The Ultimate Recording Guide. Holbrook, Mass.: Adams Media. ISBN 978-1-55850-414-1.
  • Winn, John C. (9 December 2008). Way Beyond Compare: The Beatles' Recorded Legacy, 1957–1965. Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-0-307-45157-6.

External links edit

  • "Two of Us: Inside the Lennon/McCartney Connection", by Joshua Wolf Shenk, Slate.com
  • The Lennon-McCartney Songwriting Partnership
  • An Introduction to Compton's Who Wrote the Beatle Songs? A History of Lennon-McCartney, with a list of his ascriptions of all the songs written by the Beatles
  • Songs the Beatles Gave Away compiled by Joseph Brennan; includes Lennon–McCartney songs and others
  • A list of the songs John Lennon and Paul McCartney gave to other artists during the Beatle years originally posted on Usenet rec.music.beatles 9 November 1994.
  • Unreleased Beatles compositions showcased in Liverpool and Seattle, and on CD titled Off the Beatle Track (23 June 2009): http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/06/prweb2550404.htm

lennon, mccartney, songwriting, partnership, between, english, musicians, john, lennon, 1940, 1980, paul, mccartney, born, 1942, beatles, widely, considered, greatest, best, known, most, successful, musical, collaborations, ever, records, sold, with, beatles, . Lennon McCartney was the songwriting partnership between English musicians John Lennon 1940 1980 and Paul McCartney born 1942 of the Beatles It is widely considered one of the greatest best known and most successful musical collaborations ever by records sold with the Beatles selling over 600 million records worldwide as of 2004 update 1 Between 5 October 1962 and 8 May 1970 the partnership published approximately 180 jointly credited songs of which the vast majority were recorded by the Beatles forming the bulk of their catalogue Paul McCartney and John Lennon in 1964 Unlike many songwriting partnerships that comprise a separate lyricist and composer such as George and Ira Gershwin Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II or Elton John and Bernie Taupin both Lennon and McCartney wrote lyrics and music Sometimes especially early on they would collaborate extensively when writing songs working eyeball to eyeball as Lennon phrased it 2 During the latter half of their partnership it became more common for either of them to write most of a song on their own with minimal input from the other and sometimes none at all By an agreement made before the Beatles became famous Lennon and McCartney were credited equally with songs that either one of them wrote while their partnership lasted Lennon McCartney compositions have been the subject of numerous cover versions According to Guinness World Records Yesterday has been recorded by more musicians than any other song 3 Contents 1 Meeting 2 Writing chemistry 3 Credit variations and disputes 3 1 Joint credit 3 2 Lennon McCartney vs McCartney Lennon 3 3 Lennon McCartney and others 4 Legacy 4 1 Cultural impact 4 2 Beatles catalogue 5 Non Beatles songs 6 Unreleased songs 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 9 External linksMeeting editAlthough McCartney had previously seen and noticed Lennon in the local area without knowing who he was 4 the pair first met on 6 July 1957 at a local church fete where 16 year old Lennon was playing with his skiffle group the Quarrymen The 15 year old McCartney brought along by a mutual friend Ivan Vaughan impressed Lennon with his ability on the guitar and his version of Eddie Cochran s Twenty Flight Rock Soon afterwards Lennon asked McCartney if he would join the Quarrymen McCartney accepted 5 6 The duo s first musical idols were the Everly Brothers Little Richard Chuck Berry Elvis Presley Buddy Holly and Smokey Robinson and the Miracles and they learned many of their songs and imitated their sound 7 Their first compositions were written at McCartney s home 20 Forthlin Road at Lennon s aunt Mimi s house 251 Menlove Avenue or at the Liverpool Institute 8 They often invited friends including George Harrison Nigel Walley Barbara Baker and Lennon s art school colleagues to listen to performances of their new songs 9 Writing chemistry editLennon said the main intention of the Beatles music was to communicate and that to this effect he and McCartney had a shared purpose Author David Rowley points out that at least half of all Lennon McCartney lyrics have the words you and or your in the first line 10 In Lennon s 1980 Playboy interview he said of the partnership Paul provided a lightness an optimism while I would always go for the sadness the discords the bluesy notes 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 11 Historian Todd Compton has noted that there is some truth to Lennon s statement regarding McCartney s optimism However it does not tell the whole story as some of McCartney s most characteristic songs are tragic or express themes of isolation such as Yesterday She s Leaving Home Eleanor Rigby or For No One 12 Although Lennon and McCartney often wrote independently and many Beatles songs are primarily the work of one or the other it was rare that a song would be completed without some input from both writers In many instances one writer would sketch an idea or a song fragment and take it to the other to finish or improve in some cases two incomplete songs or song ideas that each had worked on individually would be combined into a complete song Often one of the pair would add a middle eight or bridge section to the other s verse and chorus 13 George Martin attributed the high quality of their songwriting to the friendly rivalry between the two 14 This approach of the Lennon McCartney songwriting team with elements of competitiveness and mutual inspiration as well as straightforward collaboration and creative merging of musical ideas is often cited by whom as a key reason for the Beatles innovation and popular success citation needed As time went on the songs increasingly became the work of one writer or the other often with the partner offering up only a few words or an alternative chord A Day in the Life is a well known example of a later Beatles song that includes substantial contributions by both Lennon and McCartney where a separate song fragment by McCartney Woke up fell out of bed dragged a comb across my head was used to flesh out the middle of Lennon s composition I read the news today oh boy Hey Jude is another example of a later McCartney song that had input from Lennon while auditioning the song for Lennon when McCartney came to the lyric the movement you need is on your shoulder McCartney assured Lennon that he would change the line which McCartney felt was nonsensical as soon as he could come up with a better lyric Lennon advised McCartney to leave that line alone saying it was one of the strongest in the song 15 Though Lennon and McCartney s collaborative efforts decreased in later years they continued to influence one another As Lennon stated in 1969 We write how we write now because of each other Paul was there for five or ten years and I wouldn t write like I write now if it weren t for Paul and he wouldn t write like he does if it weren t for me 16 17 Credit variations and disputes editJoint credit edit When McCartney and Lennon met as teenagers and began writing songs together they agreed that all songs written by them whether individually or jointly should be credited to both of them 18 The precise date of the agreement is unknown however Lennon spoke in 1980 of an informal agreement between him and McCartney made when we were fifteen or sixteen 19 Two songs written primarily by Lennon in 1957 Hello Little Girl and One After 909 were credited to the partnership when published in the following decade 20 The earliest Beatles recording credited to Lennon McCartney to be officially released is You ll Be Mine recorded at home in 1960 and included on Anthology 1 35 years later 21 Some other compositions from the band s early years are not credited to the partnership In Spite of All the Danger a 1958 composition that the band then The Quarrymen paid to record to disc is attributed to McCartney and George Harrison Cayenne recorded at the same time as You ll Be Mine is a solo McCartney composition Cry for a Shadow an instrumental recorded during the Beatles sessions with Tony Sheridan in June 1961 one of the only full instrumentals the group recorded was written by Harrison and Lennon 22 By 1962 the joint credit agreement was in effect From the time of the Beatles A amp R Decca audition in January that year until Lennon s announcement in September 1969 that he was leaving the band virtually all songs by McCartney or Lennon were published with joint credit although on a few of their first releases the order was reversed see below The only other exceptions were a handful of the McCartney compositions released by other musicians viz Woman by Peter and Gordon in 1966 McCartney using Bernard Webb as a pseudonym Cat Call by Chris Barber in 1967 and Penina by Carlos Mendes in 1969 23 24 Lennon kept the joint credit for Give Peace a Chance his first single with the Plastic Ono Band After the partnership had ended Lennon and McCartney each gave various accounts of their individual contribution to each jointly credited song and sometimes claimed full authorship Often their memories of collaboration differed and often their own early and late interviews are in conflict 25 In 1977 Lennon offered Hit Parader a list of Beatles songs with comments regarding his and McCartney s contributions to each song In his response to the article at the time McCartney disputed only one of Lennon s entries 26 Help 1965 Lennon described the song as co written in 1965 interviews 27 In late interviews he claimed full authorship McCartney s stated help was on the countermelody estimating the song as 70 30 to Lennon 28 29 30 In 1984 McCartney said John and I wrote it at his house in Weybridge for the film 30 Ticket to Ride 1965 In 1965 Lennon claimed that the song was three quarters mine and Paul changed it a bit He said let s alter the tune 31 However in 1980 Lennon said that McCartney s contribution was limited to the way Ringo played the drums 32 In Many Years from Now McCartney said we sat down and wrote it together give him 60 percent of it 33 In My Life 1965 Lennon s entry for In My Life was the only one that McCartney disputed in his response to the Hit Parader article 26 Lennon said that McCartney helped only with the middle eight of the song 34 McCartney said that he wrote the entire melody taking inspiration from Smokey Robinson songs 35 Eleanor Rigby 1966 In the 1997 biography Many Years from Now McCartney recalled writing the music to Eleanor Rigby on a piano at Jane Asher s family home in Wimpole Street 36 and then playing it to Donovan who supported that the song lacked any serious lyrics at that point 37 In 1972 Lennon said that he wrote 70 percent of the lyrics 38 but Pete Shotton Lennon s childhood friend remembered Lennon s contribution as being absolutely nil 39 In 1985 McCartney said that Lennon had contributed about half a line to the song but elsewhere including a 1966 interview he describes finishing the song with more substantial collaboration with Lennon 40 Harrison also contributed to this song According to journalist Hunter Davies the last verse was finished with all the Beatles giving suggestions in the studio 41 And Your Bird Can Sing 1966 McCartney claimed to have helped on the lyric estimating the song as 80 20 to Lennon 42 In Hit Parader Lennon did not acknowledge any contributions from McCartney 26 Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite 1967 In Hit Parader Lennon said he authored the song and took the words from a circus poster He did not acknowledge McCartney as a contributor 26 In 2013 McCartney recalled spending an afternoon with Lennon writing the song based on the poster I read occasionally people say Oh John wrote that one I say Wait a minute what was that afternoon I spent with him then looking at this poster 43 Lennon McCartney vs McCartney Lennon edit In October 1962 the Beatles released their first single in the UK Love Me Do credited to Lennon McCartney However on their next three releases the following year the single Please Please Me the Please Please Me LP and the single From Me to You the credit was given as McCartney Lennon 44 According to McCartney the decision to consistently order the credit with Lennon first was made at an April 1963 band meeting 18 With the She Loves You single released in August 1963 the credit reverted to Lennon McCartney and all subsequent official Beatles singles and albums list Lennon McCartney UK or John Lennon Paul McCartney US as the author of songs written by the two In 1976 McCartney s band Wings released their live album Wings over America with songwriting credits for five Beatles songs reversed to place McCartney s name first Neither Lennon nor his wife Yoko Ono publicly objected to the flipped credits 18 Many years after Lennon s death however in the late 1990s McCartney and Ono became involved in a dispute over the credit order 45 McCartney s 2002 live album Back in the U S also used the credit Paul McCartney and John Lennon for all of the Beatles songs 46 When Ono objected to McCartney s request for the reversed credit to be used for the 1965 song Yesterday McCartney said that he and Lennon had agreed in the past that the credits could be reversed if either of them wanted to on any future releases 47 In 2003 he relented saying I m happy with the way it is and always has been Lennon and McCartney is still the rock n roll trademark I m proud to be a part of in the order it has always been 45 An in depth analysis of the legal issues was the subject of a 66 page article in the Pepperdine Law Review in 2006 48 Lennon McCartney and others edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message A number of songs written primarily by the duo and recorded by the Beatles were credited as follows What Goes On 1965 Lennon McCartney Starkey 49 12 Bar Original 1965 Lennon McCartney Harrison Starkey Flying 1967 Harrison Lennon McCartney Starkey 50 Jessie s Dream 1967 Lennon McCartney Harrison Starkey Los Paranoias 1968 Lennon McCartney Harrison Starkey Dig It 1969 Lennon McCartney Harrison Starkey 51 Maggie Mae 1969 Arrangement by Lennon McCartney Harrison Starkey Suzy Parker 1969 Lennon McCartney Harrison Starkey Free as a Bird 1995 Original composition by John Lennon Beatles version credited to John Lennon Paul McCartney George Harrison and Ringo Starr Christmas Time Is Here Again 1995 edit of 1967 fan club version Lennon McCartney Harrison Starkey 52 Now and Then 2023 Original composition by John Lennon Beatles version credited to John Lennon Paul McCartney George Harrison and Ringo Starr The German language versions of I Want to Hold Your Hand and She Loves You were also credited to additional songwriters for assisting with the translation Komm Gib Mir Deine Hand was credited to Lennon McCartney Nicolas Hellmer and Sie Liebt Dich was credited to Lennon McCartney Nicolas Montague Legacy editCultural impact edit See also Cultural impact of the Beatles Lennon McCartney as well as other British Invasion songwriters inspired changes to the music industry because they were bands that wrote and performed their own music This trend threatened the professional songwriters that dominated the American music industry Ellie Greenwich a Brill Building songwriter said When the Beatles and the entire British Invasion came in we were all ready to say Look it s been nice there s no more room for us It s now the self contained group makes certain type of material What do we do 53 In 1963 The Sunday Times called Lennon and McCartney the greatest composers since Ludwig van Beethoven 54 The Lennon McCartney brand would prove to be a model for several other songwriting teams in the rock genre including according to Lennon the Rolling Stones Jagger Richards partnership 55 Subsequent Beatlesque songwriting teams attracted comparisons in the media to Lennon McCartney The new wave band Squeeze s partnership of Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook was dubbed the new Lennon McCartney by music writers 56 57 58 Difford and Tilbrook expressed ambivalence about the comparison Tilbrook felt that they got a bit pompous as a result while Difford noted that although the tag was very useful to Squeeze for getting the attention of radio programmers the label might have been a burden on Tilbrook because he had to live up to the challenge of the Beatles kind of songwriting which he didn t need to do because he s such an incredible songwriter in his own right 58 Record Mirror pondered in 1980 whether Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys the founding duo of electronic band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark were emerging as the Lennon and McCartney of the electronic world 59 music journalists subsequently began to describe the pair as the Lennon McCartney of synth pop 60 61 62 When McCartney teamed up with Elvis Costello in 1989 Costello s acerbic style earned him comparisons to Lennon in his role as McCartney s collaborator 63 64 65 McCartney despite conceding that Costello has got a bit of Lennon in him characterized the pairing as a new thing 63 Beatles catalogue edit The Lennon McCartney songwriting partnership makes up the majority of the Beatles catalogue The first two UK studio albums included 12 cover tunes and 15 Lennon McCartney songs 66 67 with one track Don t Bother Me credited to George Harrison 67 Their third UK album A Hard Day s Night 1964 is the only Beatles album made up entirely of Lennon McCartney compositions 68 The next album released Beatles for Sale 1964 included six covers and eight Lennon McCartney originals 69 The subsequent release Help 1965 had two covers and two Harrison compositions along with ten Lennon McCartney tracks it was the last Beatles album to feature a non original composition until Let It Be which included an arrangement of the traditional Liverpool folk song Maggie Mae Among the songs in this post Help output Harrison contributed between one and four songs per album and Starr wrote two songs in total and received a joint credit with Lennon and McCartney for a third What Goes On In addition Flying and Dig It were credited to all four Beatles The rest of the catalogue came from Lennon and McCartney Lennon and McCartney gave songs to Starr to sing and to Harrison before he started writing his own material As for the songs they kept for themselves each partner mostly sang his own composition often with the other providing harmonies or they shared lead vocal If each contributed a fragment to make a whole song he might sing his portion as in the case of I ve Got a Feeling and A Day in the Life Every Little Thing is a rare example of a Lennon McCartney song in which one member of the partnership was primary composer McCartney but the other sang lead vocal Lennon 70 71 McCartney sings in unison with Lennon on the verses but Lennon s vocal is more prominent McCartney sings the high harmony on the chorus In January 2017 McCartney filed a suit in United States district court against Sony ATV Music Publishing seeking to reclaim ownership of his share of the Lennon McCartney song catalogue beginning in 2018 Under US copyright law for works published before 1978 the author can reclaim copyrights assigned to a publisher after 56 years 72 73 McCartney and Sony agreed to a confidential settlement in June 2017 74 Non Beatles songs editSeveral songs credited to Lennon McCartney were originally released by bands other than the Beatles especially those managed by Brian Epstein Recording a Lennon McCartney song helped launch new performing artists careers Many of the recordings below were included on the 1979 compilation album The Songs Lennon and McCartney Gave Away 75 Beatles versions of some of these were recorded some were not released until after their split on compilations such as Live at the BBC 1994 and The Beatles Anthology 1995 96 In April 2024 the surviving Beatles son s James McCartney and Sean Ono Lennon worked together on the song Primrose Hill for McCartney s upcoming album 76 Year Artist Song Peak chartposition Notes 1963 The Rolling Stones I Wanna Be Your Man UK 12 Beatles version released later in 1963 on With the Beatles 1963 Billy J Kramer with the Dakotas I ll Be on My Way B side Beatles version released on Live at the BBC 1963 Billy J Kramer with The Dakotas Bad to Me UK 1 Beatles demo was released on iTunes download The Beatles Bootleg Recordings 1963 1963 Billy J Kramer with The Dakotas I Call Your Name B side Beatles version released on The Beatles Second Album US and the Long Tall Sally EP UK in 1964 1963 Billy J Kramer with The Dakotas I ll Keep You Satisfied UK 4 1964 Billy J Kramer with The Dakotas From a Window UK 10 1963 Tommy Quickly Tip of My Tongue 1963 The Fourmost Hello Little Girl UK 9 Beatles version released on Anthology 1 1963 The Fourmost I m in Love UK 17 Beatles demo released on iTunes download The Beatles Bootleg Recordings 1963 1963 Cilla Black Love of the Loved UK 35 Beatles version released on bootlegs of the Decca audition 1964 Cilla Black It s for You UK 7 1964 The Strangers with Mike Shannon One and One Is Two The song was rejected by Billy J Kramer The Strangers with Mike Shannon were South African 77 1964 Peter amp Gordon A World Without Love UK 1 US 1 Demo released in bootlegs 1964 Peter amp Gordon Nobody I Know UK 10 1964 Peter amp Gordon I Don t Want to See You Again US 16 1964 The Applejacks Like Dreamers Do UK 20 Beatles version released on Anthology 1 1965 P J Proby That Means a Lot UK 30 Beatles version released on Anthology 2 1968 John Foster amp Son Ltd Black Dyke Mills Band Thingumybob The eponymous theme to a Yorkshire Television sitcom Developed from an early version known as Etcetera demoed by Paul McCartney during a session for Mother Nature s Son on 20 August 1968 78 1968 Cilla Black Step Inside Love UK 8 Beatles improvisation released on Anthology 3 1969 Mary Hopkin Goodbye UK 2 Original demo released in The Abbey Road 50th anniversary deluxe edition 79 1969 Plastic Ono Band Give Peace a Chance UK 2 Although composed alone by Lennon McCartney was credited as co composer on the single appearance and on Lennon s compilation albums Shaved Fish and The John Lennon Collection The credit was revised in the 1990s to cite only Lennon Four songs and a soundtrack album were released during this period but credited solely to Paul McCartney Year Artist Recording Peak chartposition Notes 1966 Peter amp Gordon Woman UK 28 US 14 McCartney is credited as Bernard Webb 1966 The George Martin Orchestra The Family Way soundtrack McCartney composed the melodies while Martin scored and directed the music for the film and album 1967 The Chris Barber Band Catcall Originally known as Catswalk performed from 1958 to 1962 and revisited during the Get Back sessions in January 1969 80 1969 Jotta Herre pt Penina pt Originally released by Jotta Herre and later covered by Carlos Mendes 81 1969 Badfinger Come and Get It UK 4 The original demo was included on Anthology 3 and 50th Anniversary of Abbey Road in 2019 Unreleased songs editThe following compositions are believed to have been written by Lennon and McCartney but never officially released by the Beatles or any other artist except as noted below Many have appeared on Beatles bootlegs an exception being Carnival of Light 82 The list of unreleased songs includes some of the earliest Lennon McCartney joint works dating back to the Quarrymen the group that evolved into the Beatles 83 Several of these songs were revisited during the Get Back sessions of early 1969 84 Title Year Notes Keep Looking That Way 1957 Played by the Quarrymen 85 Looking Glass 1957 Instrumental Mentioned in 1969 film outtakes unknown if performed during Get Back sessions 86 That s My Woman 1957 Played by the Quarrymen 85 87 Years Roll Along 1957 Played by the Quarrymen 85 88 I ll Wait Till Tomorrow 1960 Country influenced duet briefly sung by Lennon and McCartney during the Get Back sessions on 3 January 1969 I ve Been Thinking That You Love Me 1960 Briefly performed during the Get Back sessions on 3 January 1969 89 90 Some Days 1960 Speculative titles based on taped works in progress 88 91 You ll Be Mine also recorded at the time was released on Anthology 1 You Must Write Everyday 1960 Well Darling 1960 Come on People 1960 I Don t Know 1960 Pinwheel Twist 1962 Performed live in 1962 92 Carnival of Light 1967 Recorded on 5 January 1967 nearly 14 minute long experimental collage 82 93 Shirley s Wild Accordion 1967 Recorded on 12 October 1967 instrumental intended for Magical Mystery Tour film 94 Etcetera 1968 Recorded by McCartney on 20 August 1968 with Mother Nature s Son and Wild Honey Pie 95 Watching Rainbows 1969 Sung by Lennon performed during the Get Back sessions on 14 January 1969 96 97 See also editOutline of the Beatles The Beatles timeline List of songs recorded by the Beatles List of songwriter collaborations The Beatles bootleg recordings Jagger RichardsReferences editCitations edit Beatles remastered box set video game out CNNMoney com 9 September 2009 Archived from the original on 15 September 2018 Retrieved 1 December 2011 Sheff 2000 p 137 Most Recorded Song Guinness World Records Archived from the original on 10 September 2006 Retrieved 12 May 2009 Paul McCartney Sean Lennon 4 October 2020 Paul McCartney full interview with Sean Ono Lennon BBC Radio 2 Event occurs at 1 45 to 3 00 Archived from the original on 19 June 2022 Retrieved 19 June 2022 Burlingame Jeff John Lennon Imagine Berkeley Heights Enslow Publishers 2011 Print Conord Bruce W John Lennon New York Chelsea House Publishers 1994 Print Spitz 2005 pp 131 32 Miles 1997 p 34 Spitz 2005 p 135 Rowley 2008 p 3 Sheff 2000 p 136 In My Life was 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