"I Know I'm Not Wrong" carried the working title of "Lindsey Song #1" and was among the first songs recorded for the
Tusk album. It was derived from an unused song titled "Needles and Pins", which later split into two unique songs: "
Not That Funny" and "I Know I'm Not Wrong", both of which share certain lyrics during the bridge and chorus. Sessions began on June 26, 1978, with the song's original tracking consisting of
Mick Fleetwood on drums,
John McVie playing a "limber groove" on the bass guitar, and
Christine McVie adding color on keyboards. Over time, Buckingham erased these tracks and replaced them with fuzz guitar, pillows, bongos, and
toy pianos. When recording the rhythm tracks for "I Know I'm Not Wrong", Buckingham sought to avoid the sonic quality of drums found on 1970s records. The song went through several different iterations before Buckingham settled on the final recording that appeared on the album. One early version of the song was an instrumental that possessed a "music-box" quality, another was built around an electric
twelve-string guitar figure with
polyrhythmic drums, while other versions featured wood blocks, toy pianos, heavily
reverberated vocals, and "tumbling" drum fills. Buckingham also invited
Stevie Nicks to sing backing vocals on the song, but her additions were scrapped. By April 1979, Buckingham had settled on two
Fender Stratocasters for muted strums, two
Ovation acoustic guitars for
fingerpicking,
bends, and strumming, along with some sped up electric guitars that sounded "like a mix between an
autoharp or a high-pitched
ukulele" according to engineer Hernan Rojas. Some fuzz electric guitars were added to beef up the lower frequencies of Buckingham's
Gretsch bass guitar. Buckingham also
overdubbed a harmonica part, which was recorded with a
Beyer M360 ribbon microphone and
doubled. To capture the room ambiance, the harmonica part was projected through the studio using a pair of headphones and a mini portable amplifier, both of which were recorded with a
Neumann 87 microphone and
compressed using Studio D's
Neve mixing console. ==Legacy==