"It Won't Be Wrong" was composed in 1964 by the Byrds lead guitarist
Jim McGuinn and his friend Harvey Gerst, who was an acquaintance from McGuinn's days as a folk singer at
The Troubadour folk club in West Hollywood, California. The song originally appeared with the alternate title of "Don't Be Long" on the
B-side of a single that the Byrds had released on
Elektra Records in October 1964, under the pseudonym the Beefeaters. By the time the song was re-recorded in September 1965, during the
recording sessions for the Byrds' second
Columbia Records' album, its title had been changed to "It Won't Be Wrong". Musically, however, the
guitar riff following each verse foreshadows the
raga experimentation of the band's later songs "
Eight Miles High" and "
Why", both of which would be recorded within three months of "It Won't Be Wrong". The Byrds' biographer,
Johnny Rogan, has described the difference between the earlier Beefeaters' recording of the song and The Byrds' Columbia version as remarkable. Rogan went on to state that the "lackluster Beefeaters' version was replaced by the driving beat of a Byrds rock classic, complete with strident guitars and improved harmonies, that transformed the sentiments of the song from an ineffectual statement to a passionate plea." ==Release==