Recording , outside EMI Studios in February 1967 The Beatles taped the basic track for "Only a Northern Song" at EMI Studios (now
Abbey Road Studios) on 13 February 1967, during the sessions for ''Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band''. As was typical with his new compositions, Harrison had yet to give the song a title, so it was referred to as "Not Known". The line-up on the track was Harrison on organ, Lennon on tambourine, McCartney on bass and Starr on drums. The band recorded nine takes of the song before selecting take 3 for further work. The following day, the studio engineers carried out three
reduction mixes of this performance onto fresh
4-track tapes. On what was now called take 12 (the third of the reduction mixes), Harrison filled the two available tracks with his lead vocals. The song was disliked by the Beatles' producer,
George Martin, The band were similarly unenthusiastic As his sole writing contribution to
Sgt. Pepper, Harrison instead offered the
Indian-styled "
Within You Without You", which, in Martin's recollection, was welcomed with "a bit of a relief all round". "Only a Northern Song" then became the first track the group supplied for the soundtrack to the
Yellow Submarine animated film, in line with their contractual obligation to
United Artists to provide four new songs. Described by Beatles historian
Mark Lewisohn as a "myth", a story later circulated that Harrison had rush-written the composition for United Artists in early 1968, after
Al Brodax, the film's producer, approached the band for a final song.
Overdubbing The group returned to take 3 of "Only a Northern Song" on 20 April, a day when members of the
Yellow Submarine production team visited them in the studio. The band started working on the song less than 45 minutes after completing the final
mixing on
Sgt. Pepper, demonstrating what Lewisohn terms a "tremendous appetite" to continue recording. Retaining the organ and drum tracks, they
overdubbed a new bass guitar part and, on a separate track, trumpet,
glockenspiel and vocalised sounds. A second 4-track tape recorder was used, so allowing the various instrumental parts and studio effects to be spread across eight available channels. According to Pollack, these additions constitute a "noise track", which further heightens the theme of discordance, and is used to fill the song's instrumental sections, becoming especially prominent during the outro. With its inclusion of random sounds and spoken voices, Inglis cites the
sound collage effect as a precedent for Lennon's 1968
avant-garde track "
Revolution 9" and an early example of
electronic music.
Mixing On 21 April, the Beatles completed a
mono mix of the song for its inclusion in
Yellow Submarine. Due to the difficulty in getting the two 4-track machines to play at exactly the same time, attempts at creating a
stereo equivalent were abandoned. In October 1968, while preparing the
Yellow Submarine soundtrack album for release, EMI's engineers created a
duophonic (or mock-stereo) mix of "Only a Northern Song" from the mono mix. The monaural version of the album, which was originally available only in the UK, similarly used a suboptimal version of the recording. In this case, as with the three other new songs presented to United Artists, the engineers combined the two channels from the duophonic mix, rather than use the true mono mix from April 1967. ==Appearance in
Yellow Submarine film==