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Please Please Me
PleasePleaseMeSingle
Please Please Me cover
The Beatles
Genre Rock and Roll, Beat
Written by Lennon/McCartney
Released 11 January 1963 (single)
Album Please Please Me
Recorded 26 November 1962
Length 2:00
Label Parlophone
Producer George Martin
Please Please Me guide
Previous
Ask Me Why
Next
Love Me Do
' guide

"Please Please Me" is a song and the second single released by English rock group the Beatles in the United Kingdom, and the first to be issued in the United States. It was also the title track of their first LP, which was recorded to capitalise on the success of the single. It was originally a John Lennon composition, although its ultimate form was significantly influenced by George Martin. John Lennon: "Please Please Me is my song completely. It was my attempt at writing a Roy Orbison song, would you believe it? I wrote it in the bedroom in my house at Menlove Avenue, which was my auntie's place". (David Sheff. John Lennon: All We Are Saying).

The single was released in the UK on January 11, 1963 and reached No. 1 on the New Musical Express (the most recognized chart at the time) on February 22, as well as Melody Maker where it was Number 1 for two weeks. However, it only reached No.2 on the Record Retailer chart, which was subsequently evolved in the UK Singles chart and because of this it was not included on the multi-million selling Beatles compilation, 1.

The single, as initially released with "Ask My Why" on the B-side, failed to make much impact in the US, but when re-released there on January 3, 1964 (this time with "From Me To You" on the B-side), it reached number three on the Hot 100.

Composition[]

The Beatles had accomplished a modest success with "Love Me Do", but outside of Liverpool and Hamburg they were still practically unknown. Part of the problem was that the group was committed to begin what was to be their final Hamburg session just as "Love Me Do" entered the British charts and so was unable to actively promote it on their home soil. Nonetheless, their producer, George Martin, felt it was a promising start and decided to go ahead with a second single. "Please Please Me" has a diverse history. George Martin has stated that the original version of this song was "rather dreary", was too slow and consequently had little prospect of being the big hit the band was looking for. Martin said, "I was still thinking that we should release their [earlier] recording on "How Do You Do It?"", a previously taped Mitch Murray composition that Martin insisted the Beatles record which he had seriously considered as an alternative debut single instead of "Love Me Do". The group replied that they were only interested in recording their own material. McCartney said: "It was symptomatic of our group that we turned down "How Do You Do It?". Ringo Starr commented: "I remember us all being ready to stand up for the principle of, 'We have written these songs and we want to do them'". George Martin was ultimately sympathetic to their appeals, but said later: "[I] would still have issued "How Do You Do It?" had not persuaded me to listen to another version of "Please Please Me".

Lennon first conceived "Please Please Me" as a bluesy, slow tempo song. Lennon recalled: "I remember that day I wrote it, I heard Roy Orbison doing "Only the Lonely", or something. And I was also always intrigued by the words to a Bing Crosby song that went, 'Please lend a little ear to my pleas'. The double use of the word 'please'. So it was a combination of Roy Orbison and Bing Crosby". Originally it was vocally sparse, did not contain and harmonies or responses, nor did it have the scaled harmonica intro.

Recording[]

George Martin claimed he first heard it at the "Love Me Do" re-make session on September 11. "On my first visit in September we just ran through some tracks for George Martin. We even did Please Please Me. I remember that, because while we were recording it I was playing the bass drum with a maraca in one hand and a tambourine in the other." (Ringo Starr, from Anthology). "We'd had a top 30 entry with 'Love Me Do' and we really thought we were on top of the world. Then came 'Please Please Me' - and wham! We tried to make it as simple as possible. Some of the stuff we've written in the past has been a bit way-out, but we aimed this one straight at the hit parade... we almost abandoned it as the b-side of 'Love Me Do'. We changed our minds only because we were so tired the night we did 'Love Me Do'. We'd been going over it a few times and when we came to the question of the flip-side, we intended using 'Please Please Me'. Our recording manager, George Martin, thought our arrangement was fussy, so we tried to make it simpler. We were getting very tired, though, and we just couldn't seem to get it right. We are conscientious about our work and we don't like to rush things" (John Lennon, from Anthology) In opinion of George Martin, "At that stage 'Please Please Me' was a very dreary song. It was like a Roy Orbison number, very slow, bluesy vocals. It was obvious to me that it badly needed pepping up. I told them to bring it in the next time and we'd get another go at it" He asked the Beatles to consider making major changes to it, including increasing it tempo. By the time it was brought back into the studio on November 26, 1962, its arrangement had been radically altered, and it took 18 takes to record what George Martin immediately predicted would be their first major hit. "We sang it and George Martin said, 'Can we change the tempo?' We said, 'What's that?' He said, 'Make it a bit faster. Let me try it.' And he did. We thought, 'Oh that's all right, yes.' Actually, we were a bit embarrassed that he had found a better tempo than we had." (Paul McCartney, from Anthology). In fact, if the session notes and date attribution in the 1995 compilation "The Beatles Anthology 1" are correct, a faster-tempo version sans harmonica was recorded at Abbey Road Studios on September 11. That track (No. 24 on "Anthology 1") was believed to have been wiped until its rediscovery in 1994 during the "Anthology" production, and Anthology notes seem to indicate that it features session drummer Andy White instead of Ringo Starr. (The point is not addressed in the Mark Lewisohn-researched "Anthology" notes, although author Lewisohn's 1988 "The Beatles Recording Sessions" quotes session engineer Ron Richards as saying, "Ringo didn't play drums at all that evening.") The unexpected rediscovery of the 11 September up-tempo recording raises the questions of when the Orbison-inspired slow version was played for Martin and whether a tape of that version might also still exist in the Abbey Road vaults, inasmuch as Lewisohn's 1988 quote from Martin ("We didn't keep outtakes then [1962])" was later contradicted.

Despite incorrectly claiming that he played on the hit single version, Andy White was not at the studio for that final recording on November 26 and was only hired for the September 11 session. As recorded on November 26, Lennon's harmonica playing features prominently and, similar to other early Beatles' composition such as "Love Me Do" and "From Me To You", opens the song. McCartney and Lennon initally shared the lead vocals with McCartney holding a high note while Lennon drops down through the scale, a ploy they learned from the Everly Brothers UK hit song "Cathy's Clown" (April 1960). McCartney said: "I did the trick of remaining on the high note while the melody cascaded down of it". Ringo Starr asserts himself, exorcising any lingering doubts from the "Love Me Do" sessions regarding his ability. Where "Love Me Do" had been arguably parochial, relying to a large extent on their existing home fans for support. "Please Please Me" would be groundbreaking, especially as the Beatles were now back in the UK and able to appear on influential national television shows such as Thank Your Lucky Stars.

  • If one were to accept Record Retailer's chart positions for "Please Please Me" and "How Do You Do It?", then George Martin's instincts for a number one hit were absolutely correct, the former reaching number two and the latter number one for Gerry & The Pacemakers.
  • There are three different mixes of the song, two in mono and one in stereo. The mono mix that appears on the single is not the same as Please Please Me album mix, as extra echo was added to the LP version. A new mix was created for the stereo of the album, and on February 25, 1963 Martin made one created from original takes 16, 17 and 18. This stereo version has Lennon fluffing the final verse, causing him to sing 'come on' with a slight chuckle in his voice. Also different in the stereo is Harrison's lead guitar line before the final verse; rather than duplicating the overdubbed harmonica exactly as he had earlier in the song, Harrison drops down a fourth for a third note, rather than continuing down by stepwise motion.
  • It was credited to "McCartney-Lennon", as were all other Lennon-McCartney originals on the Please Please Me album. The songwriting credit was changed to the more familiar "Lennon-McCartney" sequence for their second album, With the Beatles.

Publishing[]

According to Ray Coleman's biography, Brian Epstein - The Man Who Made the Beatles, Epstein had been dissatisfied with EMI's promotional efforts for "Love Me Do" (published by EMI's subsidiary Ardmore & Beechwood) and asked George Martin if he could suggest a publisher who would push the single more effectively. Martin suggested three candidates, one of which was Dick James. Epstein made an appointment to meet him for 11 a.m. the following day, as well was an appointment with another EMI subsidiary at 10 a.m. Arriving on time for the first meeting, Epstein was informed that the executive he was due to meet had not arrived yet. Still waiting at 10:25, he decided that he was not prepared to do business with an organization that could not keep a scheduled appointment, and left. Arriving at James's office 20 minutes early, he apologized to the receptionist and said he was happy to wait until the appointed time. The receptionist nevertheless phoned James, who promptly came out of his office, welcomed Epstein and quickly got down to business. Epstein played the single and James remarked that it was a number one record. Epstein replied that if James could achieve that then he would be prepared to offer him a long-term publishing deal. James then phoned Philip Jones, producer of ITV television show Thank Your Lucky Stars, played the song down the telephone to him and gained The Beatles a slot on the next edition of the program. The two then shook hands on a deal that would make them, and the Beatles, extremely wealthy.

UK release[]

The new single was released in the UK on January 11, 1963, during one of the worst winters in British history and on January 12 most of the population were snowed-in at home watching the Beatles perform the song on the Saturday night TV show, Thank You Lucky Stars. The national exposure of the song, as well as the unusual appearance and hair style of the group, brought the band a lot of attention and they were booked by promoter Arthur Howes for a series of national tours. The first tour was as a support band to Helen Shapiro in February, then Tommy Roe and Chris Montez in March, Roy Orbison in May and, during breaks in the touring schedule, the Beatles performed the song on a number of BBC national radio programs. All of the factors, along with extensive press coverage, propelled the single to the top of the most of the British charts and the Beatles, much to their embarrassment, were moved to the top of the bill on the Tommy Roe and Roy Orbison tours.

Original US release[]

Capitol Records, EMI's United States label, was offered the right to release "Please Please Me" in the US, but turned it down. Instead, it was placed with Transglobal, an EMI affiliate that worked to place foreign masters with US record labels. It was told to find an American outlet for the record as quickly as possible, in order to appease Martin and Beatles manager Brian Epstein. "Please Please Me" was then offered to Atlantic, which also rejected it. Finally, Vee-Jay, which had released the top-five hit "I Remember You" by Frank Ifield in 1962 (another record that Capitol had turned down), was offered the right to issue "Please Please Me" in the States, and chose to do so. The exact date of the US issue was lost for decades, but research published in 2004 showed that the single, "Please Please Me/Ask Me Why", was released by Vee-Jay on February 7, 1963. Coincidentally, this was exactly one year before the Beatles' plane landed in New York on their first visit as a band to America.

Dick Biondi, a disc jockey on WLS in Chicago and a friend of Vee-Jay executive Ewart Abner, played the song on the radio, perhaps as early was February 8, 1963, thus becoming the first DJ to play a Beatles record in the United States. Art Roberts, legendary DJ and music director at the time, tells how the record came to be played first at the station:

"Let me tell you the story of 'Please Please Me'. The record was released on the Vee-Jay label. It was a local Chicago recording company. The owner, Ewart Abner, brought a copy of the record to WLS. I was the music director at the time and listened to his story about a group, and looked at pictures in teen magazines he brought back from England. I figured, what is this group would get as popular in the United States as they were in England and Europe. So I added the record to the list."

"Please Please Me" peaked at number 35 on March 15 after four weeks on its "Silver Dollar Survey" However, the song did not chart any of the major national American surveys until 1964.

The first pressings of the Vee-Jay single, which was assigned the catalog number 498, featured a typographical error: The band's name was spelled "The Beattles" with two "t"s. WLS used this spelling on its Silver Dollar Surveys in 1963. Later copies of the single corrected this. Also, the composers on the Vee-Jay edition were credited on both sides as "J. Lennon-P. McCartney", unlike on the UK Parlophone edition (which listed the names in the reverse order). However, with the exception of Chicago, the record was a flop as it sold approximately 7,310 copies. Today, copies of Vee-Jay 498 - whether with the incorrect or correct spelling of the Beatles on the label - are valuable collector's items.

Second US release[]

In the wake of the rush-release of "I Want to Hold Your Hand" in the United States, Vee-Jay reissued "Please Please Me" on or about January 3, 1964, after the footage of the Beatles had appeared on a television program hosted by Jack Paar. Playing it safe, the label chose to put "From Me To You" on the B-side, as Del Shannon's version had been a minor hit in 1963. The new single was issued with the catalog number 581.

This time "Please Please Me" was a massive hit, eventually peaking at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for the week ending March 14, 1964, trailing only "I Want To Hold Your Hand" and "She Loves You". It was only of the songs that compromised the top five on the Billboard Hot 100 of April 4, when the Beatles held the top five spots.

Because Vee-Jay wanted to get as many copies of the record pressed as quickly as possible, it did not insist on uniformity from one pressing plant to another. As a result, a dizzying number of label variations exist. Some of these added a comma to the song title, rendering it as "Please, Please Me". Additionally, some copies of the record were issued with a picture sleeve. Early promotional copies had a special sleeve proclaiming "Please Please Me" as "The Record Thar Started Beatlemania". The text on the sleeve noted that the Beatles had just appeared on Paar's program and were scheduled to appear on The Ed Sullivan Show in February. This sleeve is considered to be extremely rare.

At least 1.1 million copies of the reissue were sold. If Vee-Jay had been a member of the RIAA, the single would have been certified gold.

Critical reception[]

Rolling Stone ranked the song at number 184 on its list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, placing it 15th among Beatles songs on that list.

"Please Please Me" was chosen for The Beatles' first national UK television appearances on Thank You Lucky Stars on January 19, 1963.

Personnel[]

Engineered by Norman Smith

Versions[]

The song has been covered by a number of artists, including the Nazmi, Alvin and the Chipmunks, the Merseyboys, the Mustang, the Crickets, David Cassidy, and Blondie.

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