Contemporary reviews Time magazine declared "Something" to be the best track on
Abbey Road, while
John Mendelsohn wrote in
Rolling Stone: "George's vocal, containing less adenoids and more grainy Paul tunefulness than ever before, is one of many highlights on his 'Something,' some of the others being more excellent drum work, a dead catchy guitar line, perfectly subdued strings, and an unusually nice melody. Both his and Joe Cocker's version will suffice nicely until Ray Charles gets around to it." Writing in
Saturday Review magazine, Ellen Sander described "Something" as "certainly one of the most beautiful songs George Harrison has ever written" and added: "He feels his way through the song, instinctively cutting through its body and into the core, emoting so clearly and so gracefully that at the moment he peals 'I don't know, I don't know,' it is shown that even what is not known can be understood." According to Beatles biographer
Nicholas Schaffner, "Something" showed Harrison following McCartney's populist approach and some "long-haired music critics" were repelled by the song's use of lush
MOR-style orchestration. An outspoken critic of
Abbey Road,
The New York Timess
Nik Cohn derided it and "Here Comes the Sun" as "mediocrity incarnate". By contrast, Lon Goddard of
Record Mirror described the song as "another beautiful Harrison composition" in the style of "While My Guitar Gently Weeps", saying that "It leaps scales in its heavy orchestral arrangement, then drifts down to George's simple but effective guitar style." In his review of the single, Derek Johnson of the
NME lauded the track as "a real quality hunk of pop" with a "strident lead guitar which exudes a mean and moody quality". Johnson stated his regret that Harrison "isn't featured more regularly as a singer", and concluded of "Something": "It's a song that grows on you, and mark my words, it will – in a big way!" As guest singles reviewer for
Melody Maker,
Keef Hartley said it was "probably the best track" on
Abbey Road, adding: "What I was waiting for was that guitar solo because George Harrison is just about the only guitar player I know of who can plan a solo so it doesn't sound as though it is planned."
Commercial performance Although its commercial impact was lessened by the ongoing success of the parent album, "Something" / "Come Together" was certified
Gold by the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on 27 October. During the single's chart run on
Billboard in the US, "Something" peaked at number 3 until the magazine changed its practice of counting sales and airplay separately for each song; following this change on 29 November, the single topped the
Billboard Hot 100, for one week. "Come Together" / "Something" became the Beatles' eighteenth number 1 single in
Billboard, surpassing
Elvis Presley's record of seventeen. In the other US national charts,
Record World listed "Something" / "Come Together" at number 1 for two weeks and "Come Together" / "Something" for the remaining three weeks at number 1, while in
Cash Box magazine, which continued to rank each song separately, "Something" peaked at number 2 and "Come Together" spent three weeks at number 1. As the preferred side, "Something" was number 1 in Canada (for five weeks), Australia (five weeks), West Germany (two weeks), New Zealand and Singapore. The combined sides reached number 4 in Britain. There, the release was highly unusual, given the traditional preference for non-album singles. In addition, according to former
Mojo editor
Paul Du Noyer, "so enormous were sales of
Abbey Road that demand for the single was inevitably dampened." Along with "Here Comes the Sun", "Something" was included on the Beatles' 1973 compilation album
1967–1970, thereby giving Harrison two of the four tracks representing
Abbey Road. In 1976, Capitol sequenced it as the opening track of
The Best of George Harrison, a compilation that, against Harrison's wishes, combined his best-known compositions from the Beatles era with his hits as a solo artist. The song was subsequently included on the band's themed compilations
Love Songs and
The Beatles Ballads. On 17 February 1999, "Something" was certified double
Platinum by the RIAA. In its 2014 list titled "The Beatles' 50 Biggest Billboard Hits",
Billboard places the double A-side single in sixth place, immediately after "
Let It Be" and ahead of "
Hello, Goodbye". ==Retrospective assessments and legacy==