| "Don't Pass Me By" | ||||
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| Song by The Beatles
from the album The Beatles |
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| Released | 22 November 1968 | |||
| Recorded | 5 June 1968 | |||
| Genre | Country rock | |||
| Length | 3:50 (Stereo version) 3:45 (Mono version) 4:11 (complete fast version) 4:20 (complete version) |
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| Label | Apple Records | |||
| Writer | Richard Starkey | |||
| Producer | George Martin | |||
| The Beatles track listing | ||||
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"Don't Pass Me By" is a song by the Beatles from the double album The Beatles (also known as the White Album). It was Ringo Starr's first solo composition,[1] and he sang lead vocals.
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Its earliest mention seems to be in a BBC chatter session introducing "And I Love Her" on the Top Gear program in 1964. In the conversation, Starr is asked if he wrote a song and Paul McCartney proceeded to mock it soon after, singing the first line "Don't pass me by, don't make me cry, don't make me blue." The song employs a three-chord blues structure.
The song was recorded in three separate sessions in 1968: 5 and 6 June, 5 and 12 July. Despite references to the song in 1964 as "Don't Pass Me By",[2] it was called "Ringo's Tune (Untitled)" on the 5 June session tape label and "This Is Some Friendly" on the 6 June label. By 12 July, the title was restored.[1]
During a lead vocal track recorded on 6 June, Starr audibly counted out 8 beats,[1] and it can be heard in the released song starting at 2:30 of the 1987 CD version. The monaural mix is faster than the stereo mix, and features a different arrangement of violin in the fade-out.
George Martin arranged an orchestral interlude as an introduction, but this was rejected.[2] It would eventually be used as an incidental cue for the Beatles' animated film Yellow Submarine. In 1996, the introduction was released as the track "A Beginning" on The Beatles Anthology 3 CD.[2][3]
The line "I'm sorry that I doubted you, I was so unfair, You were in a car crash and you lost your hair" is cited by proponents of the Paul is dead urban legend as a clue to McCartney's fate; the line "you lost your hair" is claimed to be a reference to "When I'm Sixty-Four", which McCartney wrote. However, the expression "to lose one's hair" was a fairly common English idiom (see, for instance, Elizabeth Bowen's novel "The Death of the Heart," 1938); it simply means "to become anxious or upset."
The song has been covered by alt-country band The Gourds and by the Southern rock band, The Georgia Satellites on their 1988 album, Open All Night and by The Punkles on their 2004 album, Pistol. The Rutles's songs "Livin' In Hope" and (to a lesser extent) "Easy Listening" are based on this song.
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