Day Tripper

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For the transport ticket, see Day Tripper (ticket).
"Day Tripper"
"Day Tripper" cover
Single by The Beatles
A-side(s) "We Can Work It Out"
Released 1965-12-03 (UK)
1965-12-06 (U.S.)
Format 7"
Recorded Abbey Road: 1965-10-16
Genre Rock/Pop
Length 2:46
Label Parlophone (UK)
Capitol (U.S.)
Writer(s) Lennon/McCartney
Producer(s) George Martin
Chart positions
The Beatles singles chronology
"Help!"
(UK-1965)
---------
"Yesterday"
(US-1965)
"Day Tripper" / "We Can Work It Out"
(1965)
"Paperback Writer"
(UK-1966)
---------
"Nowhere Man"
(US-1966)

"Day Tripper" is a song written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney and released by The Beatles as a "double A-side" single with "We Can Work It Out".

Contents

[edit] Composition

Under the pressure of needing a new single for the Christmas market,[1] Lennon wrote most of the lyrics and the famous guitar break, while McCartney helped with the verses. "Day-tripper" was a typical play on words by John: "Day trippers are people who go on a day trip, right? Usually on a ferryboat or something. But [the song] was kind of ... you're just a weekend hippie. Get it?"[2] In the same interview he said, "That's mine. Including the lick, the guitar break and the whole bit.[2] In his 1970 interview with Rolling Stone, however, he used "Day Tripper" as one example of their collaboration, where one partner had the main idea but the other took up the cause and completed it.[3] For his part, McCartney claimed it was very much a collaboration based on Lennon's original idea.[4]

The lyric may be partly about McCartney's reluctance to experiment with LSD.[citation needed] (Lennon and Harrison had been using LSD since the spring of 1965, when a London dentist slipped it into their coffee after an evening meal.[5] In August, Lennon confessed that he "just ate it all the time.") On the face of it, however, the song is about a girl who leads the singer on. The line recorded as "she's a big teaser" was originally written as "she's a prick teaser."[4] In this sense, it may equally be about the aloof heroine from "Norwegian Wood." In Many Years From Now, McCartney admitted that "Day Tripper" was about drugs.[4]

According to Ian MacDonald, the song "starts as a twelve-bar blues in E, which makes a feint at turning into a twelve-bar in the relative minor (i.e. the chorus) before doubling back to the expected B—another joke from a group which had clearly decided that wit was to be their new gimmick."[6] Indeed, in 1966 McCartney said in Melody Maker that "Day Tripper" and "Drive My Car" (recorded three days prior) were "funny songs, songs with jokes in." Lennon may have arrived at the song's signature riff in an attempt to better The Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction."[citation needed] McCartney provides the lead vocal and Lennon the harmony, in contrast to the Beatles' usual practice of a song's principle composer singing lead.

[edit] Recording

The song was recorded on 16 October 1965 at Abbey Road Studios. The Beatles recorded the basic rhythm track for "If I Needed Someone" after completing "Day Tripper".[1]

The released master contains one of the most noticeable mistakes of any Beatles song, a drop out at 1:58 (1:50 in the version on Past Masters, Volume Two) in which the lead guitar part momentarily disappears;[7] this may have been due to cover tape damage or some other recording mishap. This recording mishap was fixed for the compilation album 1.

[edit] Cover versions

Year Band Record Notes
1966 Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66 Herb Alpert presents
Sergio Mendes & Brazil '66
album
1966 Nancy Sinatra Boots album
1967 Jimi Hendrix Radio One Sessions album of recordings from 5 days with BBC's Radio One, released in 1988.
1974 Electric Light Orchestra Long Beach live album and single in Germany and the Netherlands
1975 Anne Murray Highly Prized Possession album, and a minor hit single, reaching #59 on the Billboard charts
1979 James Taylor Flag album
1980 Cheap Trick Found All The Parts live 10" EP
1980 Sham 69 The Game
1980 Yellow Magic Orchestra Public Pressure live album
1987 Bad Brains The Youth Are Getting Restless ive album
1991 Daniel Ash Coming Down album
1996 Ocean Colour Scene single with members of Oasis
1999 Type O Negative World Coming Down album
2001 Ian Hunter Missing In Action live album

[edit] Cultural references

  • In 1984, Devo reused the famous guitar riff in "The 4th Dimension" on their Shout!.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Mark Lewisohn (1988). The Beatles Recording Sessions. New York: Harmony Books, 64. ISBN 0-517-57066-1. 
  2. ^ a b David Sheff (interviewer) (2000). All We Are Saying: The Last Major Interview with John Lennon and Yoko Ono. New York: St. Martin's Press, 177. ISBN 0-312-25464-4. 
  3. ^ Jann S. Wenner (interviewer) (2000). Lennon Remembers (Full interview from Lennon's 1970 interview in Rolling Stone magazine). London: Verso. ISBN 1-85984-600-9. 
  4. ^ a b c Barry Miles (1997). Paul McCartney: Many Years From Now. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 209-210. ISBN 0-8050-5249-6. 
  5. ^ The Beatles (2000). The Beatles Anthology. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 177. ISBN 0-8118-2684-8. 
  6. ^ Ian MacDonald (1994). Revolution in the Head: the Beatles' Records and the Sixties. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 134. ISBN 0-8050-2780-7. 
  7. ^ What Goes On - Day Tripper. Retrieved on 2007-02-27.