I'll Cry Instead
Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English
Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other "I'll Cry Instead" is a song written by John Lennon (credited to Lennon–McCartney), and recorded by the English rock band the Beatles for their third studio album, A Hard Day's Night (1964), a part-studio and part-soundtrack album to their film of the same name (1964). In the United States, the song originally appeared in the US version of A Hard Day's Night before it was released as a single backed with "I'm Happy Just to Dance with You" along with the US album Something New.
Background and composition
Both John Lennon and Paul McCartney identified "I'll Cry Instead" as having been written entirely by Lennon.[1] Lennon wrote the song for inclusion in the Beatles' 1964 film, A Hard Day's Night,Template:Sfn intended for use in the film's "break out" and open field sequence.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, director Richard Lester disliked the song and replaced it in the film with "Can't Buy Me Love",Template:Sfn so the band opted to wait on its recording.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn
Lyrics
Lennon later reflected that the lyrics of "I'll Cry Instead" represent his then newfound feelings of frustration with success and the sense that he had lost his freedom.Template:Sfn Lennon's wife, Cynthia Lennon, similarly described the lyrics as a cry for help, explaining that "[i]t reflects the frustration he felt at that time", being "the idol of millionsTemplate:Nbsp... [while] the freedom and fun of the early days had gone."Template:Sfn McCartney later suggested the song referred to difficulties in Lennon's marriage with Cynthia.Template:Sfn
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"I'll Cry Instead", unlikely as it may seem, wasTemplate:Nbsp... an unheralded slice of Lennon autobiography. The sheer admission of weakness was news in itself, but Lennon later saw the middle eight of the song – with its terror of being seen as weak, and desire to hide from the public gaze – as an honest personal statement.Template:Sfn
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In contrast to the Beatles' earlier teenage love songs, the lyrics of "I'll Cry Instead" are comparatively darker.Template:Sfn The song's singer explains that, while he is now crying over a lost love, he plans to seek vengeance and break the hearts of girls "around the world", thereby punishing anyone who had ever rejected him.Template:Sfn Author and musician John Kruth describes the song as one of Lennon's "stalker songs", alongside his other 1964 compositions "You Can't Do That" and "No Reply", dealing in themes of separation and uncontrollable jealousy.Template:Sfn The singer makes reference to a chip on his shoulder, something author Steve Turner suggests signals Lennon's entrance into a period of self-examination that lasted through the 1969–1970 break-up of the Beatles and his first solo albums.Template:Sfn
Music
"I'll Cry Instead" is in 4/4 (common time) and is in the key of G major, except the bridge, which modulates to D major. The song uses the three blues chords I, IV and V. Structurally, it employs two bridges while avoiding instrumental solos and double verses between bridges.[2]
Among musicologists and authors, several describe "I'll Cry Instead" as country, including Ian MacDonald, Jean-Michael Guesdon & Philippe Margotin, Alan W. Pollack, Tim Riley and William Ruhlmann.[2][3][4] Jonathan Gould calls it "rockabilly-styled",Template:Sfn and Stephen Thomas Erlewine describes it as "tough folk rock".[5] Country music was popular in the Beatles' hometown of Liverpool throughout the 1950s and Lennon listened to the genre regularly before he experienced rock and roll.Template:Sfn Doggett writes the song is the first among several by the Beatles from 1964 and 1965 that were overtly country and rockabilly influenced,Template:Sfn as does critic Richie Unterberger, who compares the song to the Beatles' next studio album, Beatles for Sale, and McCartney's 1965 composition "I've Just Seen a Face".[6] Doggett further comments that, even if it lacks the "pace or bite of Carl Perkins or Elvis Presley at their peak", the influence is heard in the lead guitar work of George Harrison, as well as Lennon's rhythm guitar playing and chord progressions.Template:Sfn
Production
Recording
The Beatles recorded "I'll Cry Instead" on 1 June 1964, during an afternoon session in which they also recorded covers of "Matchbox" and "Slow Down". Recording took place in EMI's Studio Two, with George Martin producing the session, assisted by balance engineer Norman Smith.Template:Sfn Rather than recording the song straight through,Template:Sfn the Beatles split it into two parts designated "Section A" and "Section B",Template:Sfn something author John C. Winn suggests would allow for greater versatility in editing the track into the film.Template:Sfn
Six takes of "Section A" were recorded followed by two takes of "Section B",Template:Sfn with the latter takes marked seven and eight.Template:Sfn Both sections consist of four tracks, with electric guitar, bass and drums on the first track; Lennon's vocal on the second; his acoustic guitar on the third; and overdubs onto the fourth,Template:Sfn including a tambourine from Ringo Starr and a second vocal from Lennon to double-track his original.[7]Template:Refn On the third line of each verse ("show you what your lovin' man can do"), McCartney adds a bass break which Riley suggests anticipates those heard on the Beatles' 1966 songs "Rain" and "I'm Only Sleeping".Template:Sfn
Mixing
On 4 June 1964, Martin and Smith mixed several songs, including "I'll Cry Instead".Template:Sfn They mixed each section for mono, then edited takes six and eight together; take six consists of the first two verses, the bridge and the third verse, while take eight begins at 1:09, containing the fourth verse, a repeating bridge and a fifth verse. The completed mono mix lasts 2:04.Template:Sfn On 9 June, Martin and Smith copied this mix,Template:Sfn sending it to the US record labels United Artists and Capitol.Template:Sfn
On 22 June 1964, Martin and Smith finished production on the rest of the A Hard Day's Night LP, including mixing "I'll Cry Instead" for stereo.Template:Sfn Like the mono version, they edited together takes six and eight,Template:Sfn but joined the takes at a different place.Template:Sfn After an edit at 1:08, the song cuts to the second bridge, omitting the fourth verse and resulting in a length of 1:43, 21 seconds shorter than the US mono mix. To make the mono and stereo version match, they roughly trimmed the mono version, bringing it down to 1:44, though this fix was only made to the UK mono releases, the longer mono version having already been sent for printing in the US.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn
Release
EMI's Parlophone label released the A Hard Day's Night LP in the UK on 10 July 1964.Template:Sfn "I'll Cry Instead" appears on the album's second side, sequenced alongside the other tracks that do not appear in the film.Template:Sfn Despite the song's absence from the film, United Artists kept the song on the North American version of A Hard Day's Night,[8] released in the US on 26 June 1964.[9] Capitol retained the rights to the same songs, so long as they were not marketed as a film soundtrack,Template:Sfn and began issuing songs from the United Artists soundtrack as singles in the US.Template:Sfn The label released "I'll Cry Instead" as a single in the US on 20 July 1964, backed with "I'm Happy Just to Dance with You".[10] The song reached Template:Numero on the Cash Box Top 100[11] and Template:Numero on the Billboard Hot 100 record charts,[12]Template:Sfn additionally achieving Template:Numero in Canada.[13] Capitol collected the released singles on the North American LP Something New,Template:Sfn also released on 20 July 1964, sequencing "I'll Cry Instead" as the album's opening track.[14]Template:Refn
When Universal Pictures and Walter Shenson re-released A Hard Day's Night in cinemas in 1982, "I'll Cry Instead" was included in an opening sequence as a tribute to Lennon, consisting of a "Swingin'" early to mid-1960s-style collage of photos of the Beatles in 1964.Template:Sfn
Personnel
According to Ian MacDonald:Template:Sfn
- John LennonTemplate:Spaced ndash double-tracked vocal, acoustic rhythm guitar
- Paul McCartneyTemplate:Spaced ndash bass
- George HarrisonTemplate:Spaced ndash lead guitar
- Ringo StarrTemplate:Spaced ndash drums, tambourineTemplate:Refn
Chart performance
Template:SinglechartTemplate:Singlechart| Chart (1964) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Canada (CHUM)[15] | 20 |
| US Cash Box Top 100[11] | 22 |
| US Record World 100 Top PopsTemplate:Sfn | 28 |
Notes
References
Citations
Sources
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External links
Template:A Hard Day's Night Template:Navbox musical artist
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- 1964 songs
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