The song, a
country-style ballad, is titled from the character's name, which was originally "Rocky Sassoon", but McCartney changed it to "Rocky Raccoon" because he thought "it sounded more like a
cowboy". Former
13th Floor Elevators drummer
Danny Thomas claims the name "Rocky" was inspired by
Roky Erickson, the American rock band's then-vocalist and guitarist. According to Beatles historian Kenneth Womack, McCartney drew his inspiration for the song from
Robert W. Service's poem "
The Shooting of Dan McGrew". Canadian photographer and filmmaker Paul Saltzman, author of
The Beatles in Rishikesh and
The Beatles in India, has expressed the belief that Paul McCartney based the lyrics for "Rocky Raccoon" on Saltzman's description to him in Rishikesh of his girlfriend having recently left him for another man. The
Old West-style
honky-tonk piano was played by producer
George Martin. "Rocky Raccoon" is also the last Beatles song to feature
John Lennon's
harmonica playing. The lyrics describe a conflict over a
love triangle in the
Black Hills, in which Rocky's girlfriend "Lil" McGill (known to the public as Nancy) leaves him for a man named Dan, who punches Rocky in the eye. Rocky vows revenge and takes a room at the local saloon, finding a
Gideon Bible there. He bursts into the room Dan and Nancy are sharing and challenges Dan to a showdown, but Dan outdraws and shoots him. A drunken doctor attends to Rocky, who insists that the wound is only a minor one. Stumbling back to his room, Rocky sees the Bible and interprets it as a sign that he will recover. ==Legacy==