John Lennon and Paul McCartney might have been the driving songwriting forces behind the Beatlesโ most iconic and enduring tracks, but for one reason or another during their short tenure as a band, the Fab Four recorded songs without all four members present in the studio. Sometimes, a songโs arrangement didnโt necessitate every memberโs attendance. Other times, it was purely logistical or experimental.
The cohesiveness of the Beatlesโ image makes it easy to forget that not every single song was a group effort. And indeed, that includes these four classic Beatles songs recorded without John Lennon in the studio.
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โYesterdayโ
Paul McCartneyโs โYesterdayโ and โBlackbirdโ are two of the most famous examples of his solo work in the studio. But the former track is notable in that it was the first song he ever recorded without his bandmates present. Moreover, he did so at their behest. When McCartney first took the now-iconic track to the band, the other three members of the Fab Four struggled to come up with parts worth putting on the song.
If it ainโt broke, donโt fix it, as they say. Ultimately, it was John Lennon who suggested McCartney record it alone. โThis was kind of a big deal at the time,โ McCartney explained in The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present. โWeโd never recorded like that before. It had always been the band.โ
โHere Comes the Sunโ
Although it would be reasonable to assume that John Lennon missed the first days of recording Abbey Road because of the tensions permeating the group in their final years, the real reason was far less personal. Lennon, his wife, Yoko Ono, Lennonโs son, Julian, and Onoโs daughter, Kyoko, were in a car crash in Scotland on July 1, 1969. The subsequent hospitalization and days of rest at home caused Lennon to miss the first few recording sessions, which included George Harrisonโs delicate number, โHere Comes the Sun.โ
The other three members of the band were present, however. Harrison did the heavy lifting on vocals, guitar, synthesizer, and harmonium. Paul McCartney contributed vocals, bass, and handclaps. Ringo Starr played the drums and handclaps.
โWhy Donโt We Do It In the Roadโ
Ironically, โWhy Donโt We Do It In the Roadโ arguably sounds more like a John Lennon song than a Paul McCartney one. But Lennon wasnโt in the studio when McCartney decided to have a spontaneous recording session with drummer Ringo Starr. Lennon would later express his disappointment in McCartney for tracking the โWhite Albumโ song without the rest of the band, but McCartney said it wasnโt a purposeful slight.
โJohn and George were tied up finishing something, and me and Ringo were free,โ McCartney explained. โSo, I said to Ringo, โLetโs go and do this.โ Anyway, [Lennon] did the same with โRevolution 9.โ He went off and made that without me. No one ever says that. John is the nice guy, and Iโm the b******. It gets repeated all the time.โ
โDonโt Pass Me Byโ
Closing our list of Beatles songs recorded without John Lennon in the studio is a Ringo Starr composition that was misattributed to Lennon when it was first released in Scandinavia. โDonโt Pass Me Byโ was a Starr song that the group sat on for years, with mentions of the tune dating back to the early 1960s. It would finally find a home on the Fab Fourโs 1968 eponymous โWhite Album,โ giving Starr his first solo composition on record.
While Lennon wasnโt physically in the studio, he did try to influence the overall arrangement of the track by suggesting to producer George Martin that they begin the song with an eccentric orchestral introduction. In the end, Martin said the idea was โtoo bizarre for us to use, and the score was scrapped.โ
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