The Night Before (song)

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "about". Template:Good article 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". "The Night Before" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1965 film Help! and soundtrack album of the same name. It was written primarily by Paul McCartney and credited to the Lennon–McCartney partnership. Described as a pop rock or rock and roll song, its lyrics reflect on the singer's last night with his lover before being abandoned.

Recorded in February 1965, "The Night Before" was the first Beatles song to feature electric piano, played by John Lennon. Its film sequence was shot the following May, showing the band miming to the track on Salisbury Plain. The Beatles only played the song live once, during their final BBC Radio performance. In contemporary interviews, McCartney said that it was one of his favorite songs from the Help! film and one of the Beatles' best recordings up to that point. Critics have given it mixed reviews, with some praising it while others dismiss it as insignificant. Many fans consider it one of the Beatles' best early songs. George Martin, Herbie Mann, Josie Cotton, and Restless Heart are among the artists who have covered it.

Background and recording

Neither Paul McCartney nor John Lennon had strong memories about writing "The Night Before".Template:Sfn Although the song is credited to the Lennon–McCartney songwriting partnership,Template:Sfn both identified it as being written primarily by McCartney.[1] McCartney recalled writing it at the apartment of his then girlfriend Jane Asher and her family,Template:Sfn at 57 Wimpole Street in central London.Template:Sfn

The Beatles recorded "The Night Before" on 17 February 1965 during the third session for the soundtrack of their second feature film, Help!, in which they also recorded George Harrison's song "You Like Me Too Much".Template:Sfn Recording in EMI's Studio Two, George Martin produced the session, assisted by engineers Norman Smith and Ken Scott.Template:Sfn The band achieved a satisfactory basic track in two takes,Template:Sfn featuring McCartney singing and playing bass, Ringo Starr on drums,Template:Sfn Harrison playing rhythm guitar on his Gretsch Tennessean,[2] and Lennon playing a Hohner Pianet electric piano, the first time the instrument was used on a Beatles recording.Template:Sfn

The band overdubbed several parts onto take two.[3] McCartney double-tracked his vocal,Template:Sfn Lennon and Harrison added backing vocals,[4] Starr added maracas to the bridge,[5]Template:Refn and McCartney and Harrison – the former of whom using his new Epiphone CasinoTemplate:SfnTemplate:Refn – played a dual guitar solo, doubling each other in octaves.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn McCartney was pleased with the final recording, telling Melody Maker, "that sound was one of the best [we] had got on record, instrumentally."[6]

On 18 February 1965, Martin, Smith, and Scott mixed the song for mono in the control room of Studio Two.Template:Sfn Smith and engineer Malcolm Davies remixed it for stereo on 23 February.Template:Sfn On 18 April in EMI's Room 65, another stereo remix was made by Martin, Smith, and Phil McDonald for the film company United Artists, but it was never used.Template:Sfn

Composition

"The Night Before" has been described as a pop rockTemplate:Sfn[7] or rock and roll songTemplate:Sfn that also draws from blues[8] and R&B.[9]Template:Refn It is mainly in the key of D major, with a brief modulation to G major in the bridge, and is in common time.[8] According to music scholar Terence J. O'Grady, the "most notable" element of the song's composition is the I–♭VII–IV–V chord progression used in the verses, as the Beatles had never used it before despite it being very popular among their contemporaries.Template:Sfn The melody in the verses is shared between the lead and backing vocal parts,[8] a technique musicologist Alan W. Pollack likens to a hocket[8] and biographer Jonathan Gould says prefigures the "increasingly complex and conversational" vocal arrangements in the Beatles' later songs.Template:Sfn O'Grady writes that the verse's "blueslike intensity" is contrasted by the more complex melody in the bridge,Template:Sfn which peaks with a high A note[8] on the line, "It makes me wanna cry".Template:Sfn

Lyrically, Gould writes that "The Night Before" relates to "the age-old pop theme of an overnight change of heart",Template:Sfn with the singer reflecting on the previous night before his lover left him.Template:Sfn Music journalist Steve Turner suggests that this may have been inspired by McCartney's tumultuous relationship with Asher.Template:Sfn Pollack writes that the song is comparable to "Yesterday" – written by McCartney around the same time – in that both protagonists wish to reverse their relationships by one day; however, while "Yesterday" expresses "grim resignation, ["The Night Before"] openly begs for another chance."[8] Writer Kevin Courrier compares the song with a contemporaneous song by Lennon, "Yes It Is", noting that "where Lennon wishes to rid himself of memories of lossScript error: No such module "String".... McCartney wants to hold on to the happy thoughts of the night before, even if it means he's being abandoned."Template:Sfn

Film sequence

File:Beatles "The Night Before" Help! film sequence.jpg
The Beatles performing the song in Help! Lennon is playing the same Hohner Pianet used on the track.Template:Sfn

"The Night Before" was one of seven songs selected by director Richard Lester for use in Help![10] The song's film sequence was shot over 3–5 May 1965 and consists of the band miming to the track on Salisbury Plain.[11] The scene depicts an outdoor recording session,Template:Sfn with a makeshift control booth and recording equipment set up in an open field.Template:Sfn The film's premise involves Starr being targeted for assassination by a cult.Template:Sfn In line with this, the Beatles perform the song under protection of the British 3rd Royal Tank Regiment,Template:Sfn surrounded by soldiers and Centurion tanks.[12] "She's a Woman" is also used in the scene, as the character Ahme is shown attempting to trick the cultists by playing it on an underground tape recorder surrounded by dynamite. The two songs alternate with respect to the film's action. As "The Night Before" finishes, the dynamite explodes and the band runs for cover.Template:Sfn

Release and reception

Help! premiered in the United Kingdom on 29 July 1965,Template:Sfn and EMI's Parlophone label released the soundtrack LP on 6 August.[13] "The Night Before" appeared on side one along with the seven other tracks from the film, sequenced between "Help!" and "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away".Template:Sfn On 13 August, Capitol released the North American version of the album, with the song sequenced between "Help!" and "From Me To You Fantasy" from Ken Thorne's score.Template:Sfn In a contemporary interview, McCartney said that "The Night Before" was one of his favorite songs from the film and that the band struggled deciding whether it or "Ticket to Ride" should have been the lead single.[14]

Critically, Beatles biographer Hunter Davies evaluates "The Night Before" as a "middling" song that "critics have had little to say about, not seeing much to praise, or much to attack".Template:Sfn In his book Revolution in the Head, Ian MacDonald criticizes the song's musical and lyrical content as "only fair mainstream pop of its period."Template:Sfn Mark Hertsgaard dismisses it as a "throwaway"Template:Sfn while Patrick Humphries and Peter Doggett deem Lennon's use of electric piano to be the only novel element of the song.Template:Sfn Conversely, Richie Unterberger of AllMusic considers "The Night Before" to be a "first-rate romantic pop-rock song"[7] and Kevin Courrier praises it as one of McCartney's underappreciated compositions.Template:Sfn Rolling Stone ranked it at number 49 in a list of the 100 greatest Beatles songs, the editors writing: "For any other band, a pop gem as magnificent as 'The Night Before' would have turned into a career-making hit single, if not the foundation of a legend. But for the Beatles, it was just another great album track".[15] The song has also been reappraised by fans as one of the Beatles' best early songs, with a 2014 readers' poll conducted by the magazine ranking it their ninth best song from before Rubber Soul.[16]

Other versions

British law in the 1960s compelled BBC Radio to play material recorded especially for the medium.Template:Sfn In keeping with this practice, the Beatles recorded their only live rendition of "The Night Before" for the BBC Light Programme The Beatles (Invite You to Take a Ticket to Ride) on 26 May 1965.Template:Sfn As well as being the band's last performance for a music programme,Template:Sfn it was their only BBC session to feature electric piano, used on "The Night Before" along with "Dizzy Miss Lizzy". Of the songs performed during this session, EMI only included "Dizzy Miss Lizzy" and "Ticket to Ride" on the 1994 album Live at the BBC, although the entire broadcast has appeared on bootlegs.Template:Sfn

George Martin recorded an instrumental version of the song for his 1965 easy listening album, George Martin and His Orchestra Play Help![17] American jazz flautist Herbie Mann covered "The Night Before" and "Yesterday" for his 1966 album Today![18] New wave singer Josie Cotton recorded a cover of "The Night Before" in 1986 – featuring vocals from Stray Cats guitarist Brian Setzer[19] – for her album Everything Is Oh Yeah, which went unreleased until 2019.[20] Country band Restless Heart covered the song for their 2004 reunion album Still Restless, with music critic Al Campbell opining that it "sounds more like mid-'70s America than the Fab Four."[21]

McCartney first performed "The Night Before" in concert during his On the Run tour, beginning on 15 July 2011 at Yankee Stadium.[16][22] Thomas Connor of the Chicago Sun-Times described it as one of "several unexpected cuts" from the tour,[23] while Bernard Perusse of the Montreal Gazette wrote that its inclusion appealed to "real Beatle geeks" and drew "delighted gasps" from the audience.[24]

Personnel

According to Ian MacDonaldTemplate:Sfn unless stated otherwise:

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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External links

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