I Saw Her Standing There

"I Saw Her Standing There" is a song by The Beatles, written primarily by Paul McCartney, but credited to McCartney/Lennon. It is the opening track on the album, Please Please Me. The song was also the B-side to "I Want to Hold Your Hand."

About
I Saw Her Standing There was the second song recorded during the 585 minute session which produced the album, Please Please Me. With the working title "Seventeen," the song was recorded in nine takes with two takes of hand claps added in later. Although 9 takes were made, it was the first which was ultimately used (with added handclapps making it take 12). However, the "One-two-three-four" count-in was from take nine and edited onto the beginning. The full take nine was released on the "Free as a Bird" CD single.

This is one of the many early songs John and Paul wrote together in the McCartney living room after skipping school. Originally, the first lyric was "She was just seventeen / never been a beauty queen," but John rejected that line adding instead "you know what I mean." The original lyrics were written inside Paul's Liverpool Institute exercise book.

An early rehearsal tape from the Cavern Club shows that this song was originally played at a slower tempo with a bluesy feel and featured John's harmonica.

Paul said the bass line to this song was lifted from Chuck Berry's "I'm Talkin' 'Bout You."

In America, "I Saw Her Standing There" was chosen as the B-side to their breakout single "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and reached #14 on the charts

The only time John took lead vocals on "I Saw Her Standing There" was when he joined Elton John on stage in November 1974 where it followed "Whatever Gets You Thru the Night" and "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds." As John said, this was a number "by an old estranged fiancé of mine named Paul."

Paul has included this song on his last 3 major tours. He also recorded a new version of "I Saw Her Standing There" for his Russian album, CHOBA B CCCP, but it remains an outtake.