John Lennon wrote "Now and Then" in the late 1970s, and recorded a five-minute piano demo around 1977 on a
tape recorder at his home at
the Dakota in New York City. The lyrics are typical of the apologetic love songs that Lennon wrote in the latter half of his career. For the most part the verses were nearly complete, though there are still a few lines that Lennon did not flesh out on the demo tape performance. Writing for the
Los Angeles Times,
Stephen Thomas Erlewine called Lennon's song "a wispy, melancholy ballad".
Beatles' first version with Harrison In January 1994, the year Lennon was posthumously inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, his widow,
Yoko Ono, gave
Paul McCartney two
cassette tapes she had previously mentioned to
George Harrison. The tapes, which both had a note on them reading "For Paul", included home recordings of songs that Lennon had never completed and/or released commercially, two of them on one tape being the eventually completed and released "
Free as a Bird" and "
Real Love". The two other songs on the other tape were "
Grow Old with Me" and "Now and Then". "Grow Old with Me" had already been released in 1984 on the posthumous album
Milk and Honey, so the Beatles turned their attention to "Now and Then". In March 1995, the three surviving Beatles began to work on it by recording a rough backing track that was to be used as an
overdub. It included acoustic guitars played by McCartney and Harrison, a rough drum track by
Ringo Starr, an electric guitar by Harrison, and a bass and "a few synth [things]" played by McCartney." However, after several days of recording, all work on the song ceased and plans for a third reunion single were scrapped. The project was largely shelved because of Harrison's dislike of the song due to its low-quality recording. McCartney later stated that Harrison called Lennon's demo recording "fucking rubbish". Some such as Ben Lindbergh of
The Ringer later speculated that, given Harrison had said "Apart from the quality, which was worse than the other two ['Free as a Bird' and 'Real Love'], I didn't think ['Now and Then'] was much of a song", he might have been critical of the song itself and not merely the recording quality. When the Beatles released their version of the song in 2023, Harrison's widow
Olivia issued a press release stating: "George felt the technical issues with the demo were insurmountable and concluded that it was not possible to finish the track to a high enough standard. If he were here today,
Dhani and I know he would have wholeheartedly joined Paul and Ringo in completing the recording of 'Now and Then.'" that McCartney was hoping to complete the song as a "
Lennon–McCartney composition" by writing new verses, utilizing archival recordings of backing vocals and guitar work from Harrison (who had died in 2001), Prior to the 2023 release, the only available recording of the song was from Lennon's original demo. In February 2009, the same version of Lennon's recording was released on a
bootleg CD, taken from a different source, with none of the "buzz" which hampered the Beatles' recording of the song in 1995. McCartney said in October 2021 that he still hoped to finish the track.
MAL restoration and final version co-produced the final song.|211x211pxFor the 2021 documentary series
The Beatles: Get Back, director
Peter Jackson's production company
WingNut Films isolated instruments, vocals, and individual conversations utilising its audio restoration technology over a four-year period. The
neural network, called MAL (
machine-assisted learning) – named after the Beatles' former road manager
Mal Evans, and as a
pun to
HAL 9000 of ''
2001: A Space Odyssey Lennon's vocals were isolated from his solo piano demo, which finally allowed the song to be finished. McCartney recorded bass guitar, a slide guitar solo in the style of Harrison as a tribute to him, electric harpsichord, backing vocals, and piano in the style of Lennon's demo in his home studio in East Sussex while Starr later recorded a finalized drum track and backing vocals in his home studio in Los Angeles. Additionally, Harrison's guitar parts (both acoustic and electric) from the 1995 sessions were inserted into the song. The restoration was followed by the addition of a
string section written by McCartney,
Giles Martin (the son of Beatles' former producer and longtime collaborator
George Martin), and
Ben Foster, recorded at
Capitol Studios. The piece was given the
decoy name of "Give & Take" to avoid leaks from the musicians and recorded during late April 2022. Finally, McCartney and Martin added portions of original vocal recordings of "
Here, There and Everywhere", "
Eleanor Rigby" (both from
Revolver), and "
Because" (from the 1969 album
Abbey Road) into the new song, following the methods used for the 2006 remix album
Love. Ben Lindbergh of
The Ringer contrasted the original recording to the released version: "McCartney collaborates with his former muse not just by building on Lennon's work, but by undoing it. The Beatles release is almost a minute shorter than the Lennon demo, largely because the latter includes two pre-chorus bridges that the former removes (aside from a subtle, hard-to-hear allusion in McCartney's piano chords during the new solo)". Speaking about the removal of the pre-chorus bridge, McCartney said "It had a big middle section and I thought it rambled a bit. I thought to myself, Well, if I was working with John now ... I'd say, 'We've got to do something about that middle and maybe even remove it. I think it'll make the song stronger.' So we did. I think he would have been OK with that. Of course I'm never going to know but, y'know, I think mine's the best guess we can have." The finished track was produced by McCartney and Martin, while Lynne was credited for "additional production", and mixed by
Spike Stent. On 13 June 2023, McCartney told
BBC Radio 4's
Today programme that he had "just finished" work on extracting Lennon's voice from an old demo of the latter's in order to complete the song, using (in his words)
artificial intelligence. Dubbing the project "the final Beatles record", he did not name the song; however,
BBC News reported it was likely that the song is "Now and Then" and that it would be released later in 2023. On the use of AI for
sound source separation, McCartney clarified in June 2023 that "nothing has been
artificially or synthetically created. It's all real and we all play on it. We cleaned up some existing recordings – a process which has gone on for years." == Packaging ==