Joint credit When McCartney and Lennon met as teenagers and began writing songs together, they agreed that all songs written by them (whether individually or jointly) should be credited to both of them. The precise date of the agreement is unknown; however, Lennon spoke in 1980 of an informal agreement between him and McCartney made "when we were fifteen or sixteen". Two songs written (primarily by Lennon) in 1957, "
Hello Little Girl" and "
One After 909", were credited to the partnership when published in the following decade. The earliest Beatles recording credited to Lennon–McCartney to be officially released is "
You'll Be Mine", recorded at home in 1960 and included on
Anthology 1 35 years later. Some other songs from the band's early years are not credited to the partnership. "
In Spite of All the Danger", a 1958 song that the band (then
the Quarrymen) paid to record to disc, is attributed to McCartney and
George Harrison. "
Cayenne", recorded at the same time as "You'll Be Mine", is a solo McCartney song. "
Cry for a Shadow", an instrumental recorded during the Beatles' sessions with
Tony Sheridan in June 1961 (one of the only full instrumentals the group recorded), was written by Harrison and Lennon. By 1962, the joint credit agreement was in effect. From the time of the Beatles'
A&R Decca audition in January that year, until Lennon's announcement in September 1969 that he was leaving the band, virtually all songs by McCartney or Lennon were published with joint credit, although, on a few of their first releases, the order was reversed (see below). The only other exceptions were a handful of the McCartney songs released by other musicians (viz. "
Woman" by
Peter and Gordon in 1966 [McCartney using Bernard Webb as a pseudonym], "Cat Call" by
Chris Barber in 1967, and "Penina" by
Carlos Mendes in 1969). Lennon kept the joint credit for "
Give Peace a Chance", his first single with the
Plastic Ono Band. After the partnership had ended, Lennon and McCartney each gave various accounts of their individual contribution to each jointly credited song, and sometimes claimed full authorship. Often their memories of collaboration differed, and often their own early and late interviews are in conflict. In 1972, Lennon offered
Hit Parader a list of Beatles songs with comments regarding his and McCartney's contributions to each song. In his response to the article at the time, McCartney disputed only one of Lennon's entries. •
"Help!" (1965) : Lennon described the song as co-written in 1965 interviews. In late interviews, he claimed full authorship. McCartney's stated input was on the "
countermelody", estimating the song as "70–30" to Lennon. In 1984, McCartney said "John and I wrote it at his house in Weybridge for
the film." •
"Ticket to Ride" (1965) : In 1965, Lennon claimed that the song was "three-quarters mine and Paul changed it a bit. He said let's alter the tune." However, in 1980, Lennon said that McCartney's contribution was limited to "the way Ringo [Starr] played the drums". In
Many Years from Now, McCartney said "we sat down and wrote it together ... give him 60 percent of it." •
"In My Life" (1965) : Lennon's entry for "In My Life" was the only one that McCartney disputed in his response to the
Hit Parader article.
Lennon–McCartney vs McCartney–Lennon In October 1962, the Beatles released their first single in the UK, "
Love Me Do", credited to "Lennon–McCartney". However, on their next three releases the following year (the single "
Please Please Me", the
Please Please Me LP, and the single "
From Me to You"), the credit was given as "McCartney–Lennon". According to McCartney, the decision to consistently order the credit with Lennon first was made at an April 1963 band meeting. McCartney's 2002 live album,
Back in the U.S., also used the credit "Paul McCartney and John Lennon" for all of the Beatles songs. When Ono objected to McCartney's request for the reversed credit to be used for the 1965 song "
Yesterday", McCartney said that he and Lennon had agreed in the past that the credits could be reversed, if either of them wanted to, on any future releases. In 2003, he relented, saying, "I'm happy with the way it is and always has been. Lennon and McCartney is still the rock 'n' roll trademark I'm proud to be a part of – in the order it has always been." Subsequent Paul McCartney live albums
Good Evening New York City (2009) and
Amoeba Gig (2019) featured original credit to Lennon–McCartney songs. The new
Paul McCartney and Wings live-in-the-studio album
One Hand Clapping (2024) featured reverted credits to the Beatles songs.
Lennon–McCartney and others A number of songs written primarily by the duo and recorded by the Beatles were credited as follows: • "
What Goes On" (1965): Lennon–McCartney–
Starkey • "
12-Bar Original" (1965): Lennon–McCartney–
Harrison–Starkey • "
Flying" (1967): Harrison–Lennon–McCartney–Starkey • "Jessie's Dream" (1967): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey • "
Los Paranoias" (1968): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey • "
Dig It" (1969): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey • "
Maggie Mae" (1969): Arrangement by Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey • "
Suzy Parker" (1969): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey • "
Free as a Bird" (1995): Original composition by John Lennon; Beatles version credited to John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr • "
Christmas Time (Is Here Again)" (1995 edit of 1967 fan club version): Lennon–McCartney–Harrison–Starkey • "
Now and Then" (2023): Original composition by John Lennon; Beatles version credited to John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr The
German-language versions of "
I Want to Hold Your Hand" and "
She Loves You" were also credited to additional songwriters for assisting with the translation. "
Komm, gib mir deine Hand" was credited to Lennon–McCartney–
Nicolas–Hellmer, and "
Sie liebt dich" was credited to Lennon–McCartney–Nicolas–Montague. ==Effect on George Harrison==