Single version On 11 April 1969,
Apple Records released "Get Back" as a single in the UK, paired with "Don't Let Me Down" on the B-side. The single began its 17-week stay in the charts on 23 April at No. 1, a position it held for six weeks. It was the first Beatles single to enter the official UK singles chart at the top. In the US, "Get Back" began its first of 12 weeks on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart the week ending 10 May. Two weeks after the song's chart debut, it hit No. 1, where it stayed for five weeks. "Get Back" became the band's 17th No. 1 song on
Billboard, matching
Elvis Presley's previous record of 17 number ones. In both the UK and US, the single was released by Apple, although EMI retained the rights to the song as part of their contract. It was the only Beatles single to include an accompanying artist's name, crediting "Get Back/Don't Let Me Down" to "The Beatles with Billy Preston". Neither Apple nor
Capitol Records created a picture sleeve for the single—it was modestly packaged in a black sleeve with a cursive-style font simply stating "The Beatles on Apple". Apple launched a print ad campaign for the song concurrent with its release showing a photo of the band with the slogan
The Beatles as Nature Intended, indicating that the sound of "Get Back" harked to the group's earlier days. The single version of the song contains a chamber reverb effect throughout and a coda after a false ending, with the lyrics "Get back Loretta / Your mommy's waiting for you / Wearing her high-heel shoes / And her low-neck sweater / Get back home, Loretta." This does not appear on the album version; the single version's first LP appearance would come three years later on the
1967–1970 compilation. This version also appeared in the albums
20 Greatest Hits,
Past Masters and
1. It was also included in the original line-up of the proposed
Get Back album, which was scheduled to be released in the fall of 1969. The single was also released in the experimental
PocketDisc format by Americom in conjunction with Apple and Capitol in the late 1960s.
Let It Be version (1970) When Phil Spector came to remix "Get Back", he wanted to make it seem different from the version released as the single, though both versions were essentially the same take. The unreleased
Get Back albums included elements of studio chatter to add to the live feel of the recordings. In this spirit, Spector included part of the studio chatter recorded immediately before a take recorded on 27 January, slightly crossfaded it onto the beginning of the master take (also recorded on 27 January), and omitted the coda recorded on 28 January, instead adding McCartney and Lennon's remarks after the close of the rooftop performance. This created the impression that the single and album versions are different takes. The single's reverb effect was also omitted from this remix.
Naked version (2003) In 2003, "Get Back" was re-released on the
Let It Be... Naked album, remixed by independent producers with the sanction of surviving Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, with John Lennon's and George Harrison's widows. The "Naked" version of "Get Back" is a remix of the take recorded on 27 January 1969 used for both the single and album versions, without the coda recorded the following day or the framing dialogue from the studio and rooftop concert added to the album version. The single's reverb effect was also omitted from this remix, and the song fades immediately before the final "whoo". Apple also prepared a specially-created music video of the
Let It Be ... Naked release of the song to promote that album in 2003. This video is edited together using stock footage of the band, along with Billy Preston, George Martin and others.
Love version (2006) In 2006, a newly mixed version of "Get Back" produced by
George Martin and his son
Giles was included on the album
Love. This version incorporates elements of "
A Hard Day's Night" (the intro
chord), "
A Day in the Life" (the improvised orchestral
crescendo), "
The End" (Ringo Starr's drum solo, Paul McCartney's second guitar solo, and John Lennon's last guitar solo), and "
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)" (Take 1's drum count-off intro). However, this piece has several edits, including an extended intro, and the second verse is removed completely.
The Beatles: Get Back versions Universal Music released take 8 from the recording sessions to promote the 50th-anniversary edition of
Let It Be and the
2021 Get Back documentary miniseries. This version has McCartney ad-libbing a different spoken word section over the bridge, beginning with "It's five o'clock ... your mother's got your tea on." As the band performed the song three times during their impromptu rooftop concert on 30 January 1969, all three of those versions also appear in the final episode of the mini-series, as the concert is shown in its entirety. Take 3 of the rooftop concert was released on
Anthology 3 in 1996, while the first two were released in January 2022. ==McCartney live performances==