The List

The Top 20 Beatles Songs, #4: “Hey Jude”

The-Beatles-Hey-Jude---UK-Exp-398886

โ€œHey Judeโ€

Album: (Single) (1968)

Composer: Lennon/McCartney

โ€œHey Judeโ€ is the only song on our countdown that was never released on a non-compilation studio album. Apparently, it was good enough on its own. Topping all the charts and โ€œbest ofโ€ lists, it is easily one of the most-loved songs of the 20th century. With a deliberately positive message and a rollicking, diverse arrangement, its seven minutes pass quickly and never get old. Every component of this song —  from Paulโ€™s serenading to Ringoโ€™s steady but flourishing beat to the half jammed/half orchestrated crescendo- makes you want to sing along all the way through the end of its irresistibly repetitive four-minute coda.

Conceived by Paul as a pick-me-up for Johnโ€™s son, Julian, during the beginning of Johnโ€™s relationship with Yoko, the songโ€™s beginnings say a lot about both Paulโ€™s occasionally overbearing presence and Johnโ€™s growing distance from the band. In 2002, Julian told Mojo that he and Paul โ€œused to hang out a bit – more than dad and I did.โ€ Seeing as how Paul personally visited Julian during this tough time and wrote the song on his way, it is clear that he felt strongly about the boy, and his lyrical work has a particularly genuine quality. As the song has aged, its effect has only grown stronger. As Paul said of some of its lines, โ€œtime lends a credence to things.โ€

Musically, โ€œHey Judeโ€ has a particularly disparate beginning and end. Starting off as a harmless piano ballad, it soon becomes a rock tune, and finishes with a glorious clamor of โ€œnah nah nahs,” horns, and strings. This final bit pushed the song well beyond the time constraints of a typical Beatles song, let alone commercial radio. Its amazing energy, rousing vibe, and universal appeal make “Hey Jude” one for the ages.

paul-mccartney-julian-lennon072