Beatles Songs

Beatles Songs

The following is a table of all songs recorded and/or written by the Beatles. Of the 304 songs listed here, 229 were written by at least one of the four members of the group, while the 75 other songs were written by others.

  • The columns Title, Year, and Album list each song title, the year in which the song was recorded, and the official UK studio album or post break-up album on which the song originally appeared.
  • The column Songwriter(s) lists the writer(s) of each song. Many songs credited to "Lennon–McCartney" were written by John Lennon or Paul McCartney alone, or with minor input from the other. Those credits are listed here as follows:
Lennon and McCartney: Songs written (as Lennon once put it) "eyeball to eyeball" (for example, "She Loves You" and "I Want to Hold Your Hand").
Lennon, with McCartney or McCartney, with Lennon: Songs with one main composer (the first name listed), but where the other made some noteworthy contribution; for example, cases where one wrote or rewrote some of the lyrics or melody, or where one wrote the verse and the other wrote the "middle eight" or bridge section, or gives the other an unfinished song to merge with an almost complete song (for example, "I've Got a Feeling", "A Day in the Life", or "We Can Work It Out").
Lennon or McCartney: Songs that one of the two wrote entirely on his own (for example, "Nowhere Man" or "All My Loving").
Contents
Top 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Read more about Beatles Songs:  Table, Notes and References

Famous quotes containing the words beatles and/or songs:

    We were all on this ship in the sixties, our generation, a ship going to discover the New World. And the Beatles were in the crow’s nest of that ship.
    John Lennon (1940–1980)

    And songs climb out of the flames of the near campfires,
    Pale, pastel things exquisite in their frailness
    With a note or two to indicate it isn’t lost,
    On them at least. The songs decorate our notion of the world
    And mark its limits, like a frieze of soap-bubbles.
    John Ashbery (b. 1927)