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An Associated Press story describing the positive critical reaction to the group's film A Hard Day's Night was headlined "'Yeah, Yeah, Yeah' For Beatles' Film" and labelled "She Loves You" as "the original 'Yeah, Yeah, Yeah,' song". [51] The phrase became synonymous not just with the Beatles but with the associated kind of popular music overall ...
Swan Records, a small Philadelphia-based record label mainly known for novelty records, obtained the US rights to "She Loves You" in September 1963. [35] After the Beatles recorded "Sie liebt dich", Swan argued they likewise held the rights to that song. [36] Swan released "Sie liebt dich" b/w "I'll Get You" in the US on 21 May 1964. [37]
Song Year-End position 1964 "I Want to Hold Your Hand" 1 "She Loves You" 2 "A Hard Day's Night" 13 "Love Me Do" 14 "Please Please Me" 16 "Twist and Shout" 40 "Can't Buy Me Love" 52 "Do You Want to Know a Secret" 55 "I Saw Her Standing There" 95 1965 "Help!" 7 "Ticket to Ride" 31 "Eight Days a Week" 55 1966 "We Can Work It Out" 49 "Paperback ...
Swan Records had enjoyed chart success with several U.S. artists but came into the spotlight after EMI, a prestigious British music company headquartered in London, leased the Beatles' recording of "She Loves You" backed with "I'll Get You" and, as catalogue number Swan 4152, it became an American number 1 hit on March 21, 1964.
Among critics, it is considered the band's purest rock and roll album and praised for its soulful takes on both contemporary black music hits and original material. In 2004 The Beatles' Second Album was issued for the first time on compact disc as part of The Capitol Albums, Volume 1 boxed set. It was issued in a miniature cardboard replica of ...
"I'll Get You" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, [2] and released by the Beatles as the B-side of their 1963 single "She Loves You". [3] The song was initially titled "Get You in the End".
4. "Love of the Loved" by Cilla Black. 1963 "Love of the Loved" is a song credited to John Lennon and Paul McCartney and was recorded as part of their unsuccessful audition sessions for Decca Records.
Twist and Shout is the Beatles' second album released in Canada, in mono by Capitol Records (catalogue number T-6054) on 3 February 1964. [2] It consists of songs mostly drawn from Please Please Me, their first LP released in the United Kingdom.