Beatles' 5 Boldest Rip-Offs
Accused of exploiting other artists' songs in the Beatles, John Lennon defended himself by saying, "It wasn't a rip-off; it was a love-in." Paul McCartney's take: "We pinch as much from other people as they pinch from us."
"In the early years, I'd often carry around someone else's song in my head," Lennon said. "And only when I'd put it down on tape — because I can't write music — would I consciously change it to my own melody, because I knew that otherwise somebody would sue me." Perhaps the best example of the Beatles transforming a piece of music is in "Because": It was drawn from Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata, but Lennon reversed the chord progression and then mutated it into something else.
While the Beatles drew inspiration from artists both famous and obscure, they almost always made whatever they were borrowing into something new, because they were a creative group of lads and because they were careful to cover their tracks. That's almost always. Here's five examples where their pinches got more blatant.
1. "Revolution": Pee Wee Crayton, "Do Unto Others"
By: Gavin Edwards
Source: Rolling Stone