Love Me Do
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"Love Me Do" is an early Lennon-McCartney song, mainly written by Paul McCartney in 1961-2.
The first single released by The Beatles on October 5, 1962 was "Love Me Do" backed by "P.S. I Love You". When the single was originally released in the UK it peaked at number seventeen in the singles chart; in 1982 it was re-issued and this time reached number four. In the US the single was a number-one hit in 1964.
The Beatles' "Love Me Do" begins with bluesy harmonica played by John Lennon, then features Lennon and McCartney on joint lead vocals (Harrison sang harmony), although McCartney handles the low solo vocals on the song's title phrase when all of the instruments go silent. Lennon had previously sung these sections, but this late change in vocals was made when the harmonica part was added – as Lennon had to play the harmonica once the instrumentation started up again on the "do" of "love me do".
This song was recorded by The Beatles at different times with three different drummers:
- The Beatles first recorded it on June 6, 1962 with Pete Best on drums, as part of their EMI audition at Abbey Road Studios in London (released on Anthology 1).
- By September 4, Best had been replaced with Ringo Starr (producer George Martin did not approve of Best's drumming), and on that day The Beatles with Starr recorded a version again at Abbey Road Studios (released on the initial issue of the single - red Parlophone label - and on Past Masters, Volume One).
- One week later, on September 11, The Beatles returned to the same studio to discover that Martin was dissatisfied with Starr's drumming, and they made a recording of "Love Me Do" with session drummer Andy White on drums while Starr played tambourine (released on the second and most common issue of the single - black Parlophone label - and on the album Please Please Me) .
"Love Me Do", featuring Starr drumming, was also recorded eight times at the BBC; and played on the BBC radio programmes Here We Go, Talent Spot, Saturday Club, Side By Side, Pop Go The Beatles, and Easy Beat between October 1962 and October 1963. The version of "Love Me Do" recorded on July 10, 1963 at the BBC, and broadcast on the July 23, 1963 Pop Go The Beatles programme can be heard on The Beatles album Live at the BBC. The Beatles also performed the song live on the February 20, 1963 Parade Of The Pops BBC radio broadcast.
In 1972, Lennon commented: "Paul wrote the main structure of this when he was sixteen, or even earlier. I think I had something to do with the middle."
In 1982, McCartney remarked: "In Hamburg we clicked... At the Cavern we clicked... but if you want to know when we 'knew' we'd arrived, it was getting in the charts with 'Love Me Do'. That was the one. It gave us somewhere to go."
Similarly Starr in 1976 enthused: "The first record, 'Love Me Do', for me that was more important than anything else. That first piece of plastic. You can't believe how great that was. It was so wonderful. We were on a record!"
Instrumentation (album version)
- Paul McCartney on Hofner "violin" bass, lead vocal
- John Lennon on harmonica, Rickenbacker Capri 325 guitar, lead vocal
- George Harrison on acoustic guitar, harmony vocal
- Andy White on drums
- Ringo Starr on tambourine
Cover versions
"Love Me Do" has been covered by:- Bobby Vee on his 1964 album 30 Big Hits from the 60s
- Dick Hyman on his 1964 album Keyboard Kaleidoscope
- Sandie Shaw on her 1969 album Reviewing the Situation
- Ringo Starr on his 1998 album Vertical Man
- Flaco Jiménez on his 2000 album Sleepytown
- Madooo on his 2002 album This Day Is Forever
External links
- [Instrumentation and Lyrics for "Love Me Do"]
- [Song-by-Song Listing for "Love Me Do"]
- [Alan W. Pollack's Notes on "Love Me Do"]
- [Listing for "Love Me Do" at Steve's Beatles Page]
- [Listing for "Love Me Do" at The Complete Guide to The Beatles' Instruments]
- ["Love Me Do" Song Review at allmusic]
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