A one-on-one fight between friends is always hard to watch, but add another person to one side, and it turns even more vindictiveโsomething perfectly encapsulated by the Paul McCartney diss track John Lennon recruited George Harrison to play on. To be fair to Lennon and Harrison, McCartney had technically thrown the first musical punch.
Nevertheless, watching the former Beatles (sans Ringo) blow off steam was a somewhat saddening development in their artistic legacies.
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The Paul McCartney Diss Track John Lennon and George Harrison Recorded
John Lennon put โHow Do You Sleepโ on his 1971 record, Imagine, one year after the first unofficial breakup rumors and messages began popping up around the Beatles. The song features George Harrison on slide guitar and seems to directly refer to their former bandmate, Paul McCartney, which Lennon would later say was a direct response to McCartneyโs track โToo Many People,โ released the same year.
โToo Many People,โ from the 1971 album Ram, doesnโt name anyone specifically. However, itโs hard not to pick up on the subtext in McCartneyโs lyrics post-Beatles breakup. Too many people going underground, too many reaching for a piece of cake, he begins. That was your first mistake, you took your lucky break and broke it in two. Now what can be done for you? You broke it in two.
โI heard Paulโs message in Ram,โ Lennon told Crawdaddy (via BeatlesBible). โToo many people going where? Missed our lucky what? What was our first mistake? Canโt be wrong? Huh! I mean, Yoko Ono, me, and other friends canโt all be hearing things. So, to have some fun, I must thank Allen Klein publicly for the line โjust another day.โ A real poet! Some people donโt see the funny side of it. Too bad. What am I supposed to do, make you laugh? Itโs what you might call an โangry letterโ sung. Get it?โ
The Beatle Tried To Retract His Meaning, But Itโs Hard to Deny
In the early 1970s, the lyrical jabs between the former dynamic duo, Paul McCartney and John Lennon, seemed all but undeniable. George Harrisonโs part in Lennonโs โHow Do You Sleepโ felt like salt in the wound, especially when Lennonโwho had previously been rather critical of Harrisonโs musicianship and writing skillsโsaid things like, โThatโs the best heโs ever f***ing played in his life! Heโd go on forever if youโd let himโ (via Far Out Magazine). Indeed, itโs hard not to pick up on some subtle passive aggression, implying Harrison shone when speaking out against Macca.
In a clip from the Imagine film, released eight years after Lennonโs death, the ex-Beatle tried to reframe the subject matter of his scathing 1971 track. โItโs not about Paul; itโs about me. Iโm really attacking myself. But I regret the association. Well, whatโs to regret? He lived through it. The only thing that matters is how he and I feel about these things and not what the writer or commentator thinks about it. Him and me are okay.โ
While the ex-bandmates certainly might have been able to find common ground in their hard feelings, there are pretty irrefutable references to McCartney in Lennonโs โHow Do You Sleep.โ So, Sgt. Pepper took you by surprise. You better see right through that motherโs eye. Those freaks was right when they said you was deadโthe one mistake you made was in your head, Lennon began, not only responding to McCartneyโs lyrics but referencing the โPaul is deadโ conspiracy theory.
Lennon even added a jab about a Beatles tune, saying, The only thing you done was yesterday, and since youโre gone, youโre just another day. Ouch.
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