My Favorite Beatles Tune

A PowerPop contribution

Recently, Max who writes the excellent PowerPop blog, invited me to develop a post for a fun series he titled Beatles Week. His direction to contributors was “to either write about their favorite Beatles song…or write something about them.” Max and I share very similar opinions about music, including the longtime conviction The Beatles are the best band of all time, and sometimes I still believe we’re distant relatives – well, regardless, I feel like Max is my brother. Following is my contribution, which first appeared on PowerPop blog on March 15.

The Beatles are my all-time favorite band, so rejecting an invitation to write about my most beloved song or something else about the four lads from Liverpool simply wasn’t a possibility. I chose the first option. Thanks for the generous offer, Max!

So, what’s my favorite Beatles tune? That’s easy – all of them, except perhaps for number 9, number 9, number 9…Well, that doesn’t reduce the choices by much. Seriously, with so many great Beatles songs, it’s hard to pick just one! My first Beatles album was a compilation, Beatles 20 Golden Hits, released by Odeon in 1979. Below is an image of the tracklist.

While each of the above songs is great and would deserve a dedicated post, the album doesn’t include the tune I decided to highlight. If you follow my blog or know my music taste otherwise, by now, you may be thinking I’m going to pick another song The Beatles recorded after they stopped touring.

Perhaps gems like A Day In the Life, Strawberry Fields Forever or I Am the Walrus come to mind. In fact, I previously said if I could pick only one, it would be A Day In The Life. The truth is with so many great tunes to choose from, it also depends on my mood and the day of the week.

That said, one song I’ve really come to love only within the past five years was recorded by The Beatles while they still were a touring band: If I Needed Someone, one of George Harrison’s earlier tunes that made it on a Beatles album: Rubber Soul, except for North America where it was included on Yesterday and Today, the record that became infamous because of its initial cover showing The Beatles in butcher outfits with mutilated baby dolls.

According to his 1980 autobiography I, Me, Mine, as cited by Wikipedia, Harrison apparently didn’t feel If I Needed Someone was anything special. He compared it to “a million other songs” that are based on a guitarist’s finger movements around the D major chord.

True, it’s a fairly simple song. And yet I totally love it!

Music doesn’t have to be complicated to be great. In this case, a major reason why I dig this tune as much as I do is Harrison’s use of a Rickenbacker 360/12, a 12-string electric guitar that sounds like magic to my ears. Of course, when you hear Rickenbacker, one of the first artists who come to mind is Rickenbacker maestro Roger McGuinn who adopted the Rickenbacker 360/12 to create the Byrds’ signature jingle-jangle guitar sound.

There is an interesting background story. The inspiration for McGuinn to use the Rickenbacker 360/12 came after he had seen Harrison play that guitar in the Beatles film A Hard Day’s Night. Harrison’s If I Needed Someone, in turn, was influenced by the guitar sound McGuinn had perfectionated, especially on the Byrds’ rendition of Pete Seeger’s The Bells of Rhymney. The rhythm was based on the drum part in She Don’t Care About Time, a tune by Gene Clark, the Byrds’ main early songwriter.

“George Harrison wrote that song after hearing the Byrds’ recording of “Bells of Rhymney”, McGuinn told Christianity Today magazine, as documented by Songfacts. “He gave a copy of his new recording to Derek Taylor, the Beatles’ former press officer, who flew to Los Angeles and brought it to my house. He said George wanted me to know that he had written the song based on the rising and falling notes of my electric Rickenbacker 12-string guitar introduction. It was a great honor to have in some small way influenced our heroes the Beatles.”

Apart from the signature guitar sound of the Byrds, If I Needed Someone also is viewed as reflecting Harrison’s then-developing interest in Indian classical music by the use of drone over the main musical phrase and its partly so-called Mixolydian harmony. I’m basing this on Wikipedia and frankly don’t fully understand it.

Harrison wrote the song for English model Pattie Boyd whom he married in January 1966. There has been some discussion over the ambivalent tone of the lyrics. Does a guy who sings, “If I needed someone to love you’re the one that I’d be thinking of” really sound like he’s madly in love with the girl and wants to marry her? Or how about “Carve your number on my wall and maybe you will get a call from me” – “maybe” neither sounds very committed nor romantic, at least not in my book!

If I Needed Someone has been covered by various other artists. First out of the gate were The Hollies who released the tune as a single on December 3, 1965, the same day Rubber Soul appeared in the UK. Their rendition, which Harrison evidently didn’t like, peaked at no. 20 on the UK Official Singles Chart. Various other versions were recorded in 1966 by American bands Stained Glass, The Kingsmen and The Cryan’ Shames, as well as South African jazz trumpet player Hugh Masekela. Among additional covers that appeared later is a brilliant rendition by Mr. Rickenbacker maestro himself from 2004.

The BeatlesIf I Needed Someone

The ByrdsThe Bells Of Rhymney

The ByrdsShe Don’t Care About Time

Roger McGuinnIf I Needed Someone

If Needed Someone

If I needed someone to love
You’re the one that I’d be thinking of
If I needed someone

If I had some more time to spend
Then I guess I’d be with you, my friend
If I needed someone

Had you come some other day
Then it might not have been like this
But you see now I’m too much in love

Carve your number on my wall
And maybe you will get a call from me
If I needed someone
Ah, ah, ah, ah

If I had some more time to spend
Then I guess I’d be with you, my friend
If I needed someone

Had you come some other day
Then it might not have been like this
But you see now I’m too much in love

Carve your number on my wall
And maybe you will get a call from me
If I needed someone
Ah, ah

Sources: Wikipedia; Songfacts; YouTube

33 thoughts on “My Favorite Beatles Tune”

  1. Wow, really? As a fellow Beatlemaniac, this one doesn’t even reach my top 50. If I had to pick a “lesser but still good” Harrison song I’d go with “Don’t Bother Me” or “I Need You.” I agree with Harrison’s own assessment that it’s “nothing special.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I also agree with Harrison’s assessment that it’s a simple tune that doesn’t introduce anything revolutionary. I still have come to love it. A key factor is that Rickenbacker sound I really dig.

      That said, perhaps it would have been more appropriate to title the post “One of My Favorite Beatles Tunes”. As noted, there’re so many other great songs I could have picked instead.

      Speaking of George, “Here Comes the Sun”, “Something” and “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” each would have been worthy candidates. I also love “The Inner Light”.

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      1. Agreed. Thats why I referred to those other tunes as “lesser” but still good. Those other songs are in a league of their own. As to “Inner Light'” if that had been on Sgt Pepper instead of “Within You Without You” it’d be an even better album.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. You’re aware that “Strawberry” and “Penny Lane” were both candidates for the album. George Martin’s biggest regret was not having them on there. But at a collective 7 minutes between those songs, they would have had to pull something off. And he didn’t say what that might be.

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      3. Indeed, I was aware of it. And, yes, I guess adding these two tunes would have necessitated removing a song or two.

        I think I could have lived without “Within Without You” and perhaps “She’s Leaving Home”.

        It’s actually quite remarkable how many great Beatles singles never made it on any of their regular studio albums!

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  2. Thanks for sharing the Roger McGuinn version! I saw him live back in the 90s, and it was a great concert. I don’t recall if he played “If I Needed Someone” at that show, but I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that he did!

    Liked by 1 person

      1. I agree… I love his version of “You Bowed Down” on Back From Rio. Elvis Costello also does a cool version of that one on All This Useless Beauty. Though Elvis Costello wrote it, Roger McGuinn’s version came first, so it’s an interesting case of an artist doing a “cover” version of a song he actually wrote!

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  3. A good column and while I don’t think it was near George’s best work, it is a good song and probably the first inclination he gave of being a songwriter and singer who could (soon) hold his own against Lennon & McCartney. I agree that both ‘Strawberry Fields’ and ‘Penny Lane’ would have helped ‘Sgt Pepper’, but I wouldn’t want to remove any of the songs that were on it…. but I woulda been happy if they’d eliminated that dead air and 20 seconds or so of gibberish right at the end after ‘A Day in the Life’. That might have made room for one of the two to be squeezed in!

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  4. Thank you for the contribution Christian… I love the song…I think this song marked a change in his songwriting…it’s one of the most important songs he ever wrote…I love the jangle also.

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      1. I’ve done several music drafts, TV drafts & movie drafts. MOST of those were handled by Hanspostcard (Ron). Max stepped in to help when Ron & Quinn got sidetracked.

        I was going to do a write-up on “I Feel Fine”, my fave Beatle song. I just wasn’t up to the task.

        Thanks for checking in on me.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I love “I Feel Fine”. It’s got an excellent guitar riff. I’ll tell what. Whenever you’re up to it, if you’d like to write it up, I’d be happy to post it as a contribution – no pressure, of course! 🙂

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      3. I certainly like it but, I’m not a Beatles guru…so…I’m not qualified to comment on ability or style. My experience with instruments is a three month stint playing a flute in 6th grade. I could read music at 10 years old but, not now.

        I will work on my write-up this weekend.

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      4. Hey, at the end of the day all that matters is that music speaks to you. Knowledge about technical skills or equipment may be exciting for geeks like me, but it pretty much is irrelevant!😀

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      5. These are great indicators – no PhD needed! In my case, I’ll admit I’ve also liked songs that have literally brought me to tears – obviously not because I hated them but because they moved me.

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  5. I occasionally write about The Beatles every now and then. Your article got me thinking…. Like you said every Beatles song is my favourite too. Today I’m smitten with their Liverpool songs which I wrote about. Interestingly Day Tripper also get a good work out on my stereo. Harrison has always been an outlier. Taxman is awesome, so is Something.

    Liked by 1 person

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