Although eventually released as a Beatles song, "You Know My Name (Look Up the Number)" was nearly issued as the
A-side of a
Plastic Ono Band single. Lennon was determined to have this song and "
What's the New Mary Jane" (a Beatles outtake from
The Beatles sessions recorded by Lennon and
Yoko Ono with Harrison in August 1968) released. He arranged for Apple to issue both songs on a Plastic Ono Band single. On 26 November 1969, four months after contributor Brian Jones drowned in his swimming pool, Lennon edited "You Know My Name (Look Up the Number)", reducing the length from 6:08 to 4:19, a more suitable time for a single. The Plastic Ono Band single was given an Apple catalogue number (Apples 1002) and British release date (5 December 1969). In January 1970, Apple issued a press statement, describing the record as Lennon and Ono singing and backed by "many of the greatest show business names of today" which the press believed was a thinly disguised reference to the Beatles. The record was cancelled before it was issued. In March 1970, the song was released as the B-side to the Beatles' single, "Let It Be", but mistitled as "You Know My Name (Look Up My Number)" on the label of the record itself (the correct title appeared on the record sleeve, however). The original Plastic Ono Band single catalogue number is visible, though scratched out, in the runout groove of the original British pressings of the "Let It Be" single. "What's the New Mary Jane" was not officially issued by the Beatles until the release of
Anthology 3 in 1996. However, the song previously appeared on several
bootleg records. "You Know My Name (Look Up the Number)" was the last Beatles song from the group's official canon to be included on an album, issued on an LP for the first time on
Rarities (which had been included as a bonus disc in the British and American boxed set,
The Beatles Collection in 1978, and released separately as an album in the United Kingdom in 1979). The first American album to contain "You Know My Name (Look Up the Number)" was the US version of
Rarities, which was issued by
Capitol Records in 1980. The first CD version was issued in 1988 on the
Past Masters, Volume Two compilation. The record was available only in mono until 1996 when an extended stereo mix was finally issued with the release of
Anthology 2. However, while this mix restores portions of the song, it omits others that were issued on the original mono single, causing considerable differences between the mono and stereo versions of the track. For example, the ending of the stereo version has an early fade out, whereas the mono version does not fade. ==In popular culture==