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The Beatles - Day Tripper |
The Beatles - Day Tripper Lyrics and Youtube Music VideosAlbum:
Yesterday... And Today Released:
1965 Got a good reason
For taking the easy way out
Got a good reason
For taking the easy way out now
She was a
Day TripperOne way ticket, yeah
It took me so long to find out
And I found out
She's a big teaser
She took me half the way there
She's a big teaser
She took me half the way there, now
She was a day tripper
One way ticket, yeah
It took me so long to find out
And I found out
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Tried to please her
She only played one night stand
Tried to please her
She only played one night stand, now
She was a day tripper
Sunday driver, yeah
It took me so long to find out
And I found out
Day tripper, day tripper, yeah
Day tripper, day tripper, yeah
Day tripper, day tripper, yeah
Writer/s: MCCARTNEY, PAUL / LENNON, JOHN
Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Lyrics licensed and provided by
LyricFindDay Tripper Song Chart John Lennon's lyrics were his first overt reference to LSD in a Beatles song. The song can be seen as Lennon teasing Paul McCartney about not taking acid. In 2004, Paul McCartney did an interview with the Daily Mirror newspaper where he explained that drugs influenced many of The Beatles' songs. He singled this one out as being about acid (LSD), but also said that people often overestimate the influence of drugs on their music. The line "She's a big teaser" was written as "She's a prick teaser," but the group new that wouldn't fly. Lennon: "Day Trippers are people who go on a day trip, right? Usually on a ferryboat or something. But the song was kind of - you're just a weekend hippie. Get it?" A short promotional film of The Beatles lip-synching to this song was made for the TV special The Music Of Lennon and McCartney, which first aired December 17, 1965 in the UK. It was one of the first music videos. (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France, for above 2) Lennon wrote this after their record company demanded a new single. The Beatles were not that happy with the way this song turned out because they had been forced to come up with a new single. (thanks, Adrian - Wilmington, DE) Jimi Hendrix sometimes covered this at his concerts. This was released as a double-A-sided single with "We Can Work It Out." It went to the #1 position in the UK but only went to #5 in the US. In fact, "We Can Work It Out" got more airplay in the US. In America, the single was released on the same day as the Rubber Soul album, although neither song was on that album. The Beatles were popular enough to support the output. James Taylor did a cover version on his album Flag. (thanks, Jake - New Rochelle, NY) With a packed schedule and feverish demand for TV appearances, The Beatles made music videos for five on their songs, including this one, at a one-day shoot at Twickenham Film Studios in London on November 23, 1965. They did three different versions of "Day Tripper," lip-synching the song while having fun with the set pieces.
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