

The realization of the possibilities of using minor tonality that began on the bridge of "From Me to You" a year earlier was starting to pay dividends for the band on songs like "Things We Said Today" and "I'll Be Back," as well as on the chorus of the Harrison spotlight "I'm Happy Just to Dance With You." But nowhere was this growth more successful than on Lennon's "If I Fell" and McCartney's first truly brilliant melody, "And I Love Her. Lennon's "You Can't Do That" featured a bridge that uprooted the song from its Wilson Pickett moorings, while McCartney's "Can't Buy Me Love" featured a deviation from the norm in the 11th bar of the verse, and used minor chords – usually employed to denote sadness – in the exuberant chorus (a trick carried over from "She Loves You"). It was first released on 26 June 1964 in the United States by United. Used by permission.But from the dramatic opening chord of the title track to the somewhat abrupt end of "I'll Be Back," A Hard Day's Night found the Beatles trying out some new musical ideas and, more often than not, succeeding.Įven those moments where they relied on 12-bar blues bore the fruits of these experiments. A Hard Days Night is the third studio album by the English rock band The Beatles. Credited to Lennon-McCartney, it was written by John Lennon in either Paris or New York and recorded in eight takes on 27 February 1964. In North America, it was released on both the American version of A Hard Day's Night and the album Something New. "Tell Me Why" is a song by the Beatles from their album A Hard Day's Night. Song by the Beatles from the album A Hard Day's Night Listen free to The Beatles A Hard Days Night (A Hard Days Night, I Should Have Known Better and more). 'Cause I really can't stand it, I'm so in love with you.

If it's something that I've said or done,
