And I Love Her

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"And I Love Her"
"And I Love Her" cover
Single by The Beatles
from the album A Hard Day's Night (UK)
Something New (U.S.
B-side(s) "If I Fell"
Released 20 July 1964 (US)
Format 7"
Recorded Abbey Road 1964
Genre Rock and roll
Length 2:31
Label Parlophone (UK)
Capitol (US) 5235
Writer(s) Lennon-McCartney
Producer(s) George Martin
Chart positions
The Beatles singles chronology
"I'll Cry Instead"
(US-1964)
"And I Love Her"
(US-1964)
"Matchbox"
(US-1964)
Music sample
A Hard Day's Night track listing
Side one
  1. "A Hard Day's Night"
  2. "I Should Have Known Better"
  3. "If I Fell"
  4. "I'm Happy Just to Dance with You"
  5. "And I Love Her"
  6. "Tell Me Why"
  7. "Can't Buy Me Love"
Side two
  1. "Any Time at All"
  2. "I'll Cry Instead"
  3. "Things We Said Today"
  4. "When I Get Home"
  5. "You Can't Do That"
  6. "I'll Be Back"

"And I Love Her" is a song by The Beatles and is the fifth track on their third album, A Hard Day's Night. It was released 20 July 1964 with "If I Fell" as a single by Capitol Records in the United States, reaching #12 in Billboard (see 1964 in music).

Contents

This song was one of the first pop songs with a title that starts in mid-sentence.[citation needed] Paul McCartney was pleased with himself that he came up with this clever idea.

It is also notable for its complex structure. This song has no obvious key signature, but rather a pedal point signature that switches back and forth between the key of E and its relative minor C#m. It also changes keys altogether just before the solo, to F. It ends, oddly, on the parallel major of the key of F's relative minor, D.

The song was written mainly by McCartney, though John Lennon claimed in an interview with Playboy that his major contribution was the "middle eight" section ("A love like ours/Could never die/As long as I/Have you near me").

Beatles publisher Dick James lends support to this claim, saying that the middle eight was added during recording at the suggestion of producer George Martin. According to James, Lennon called for a break and "within half an hour [Lennon and McCartney] wrote...a very constructive middle to a very commercial song."[1]

McCartney, on the other hand, maintains that "the middle eight is mine.... I wrote this on my own."[2]

Different edits of this song have been released throughout the world; these differ in the number of times the closing guitar riff is repeated.

  • Esther Phillips reversed the gender of the song in 1965; her "And I Love Him" reached #54 that year on the Billboard charts.

  1. ^ Keith Badman, The Beatles: Off the Record, p. 90; cited in Bob Spitz, The Beatles, p. 488.
  2. ^ Barry Miles, Paul McCartney, p. 123; cited in Bob Spitz, The Beatles, pp. 488-489.
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