The Beatles — UK Canon
HomeSongs › Day Tripper

Day Tripper

Song by The Beatles • Lennon–McCartney

Rubber Soul (late 1965) — Burnished tone, sitar curls, fish-eye perspective.

On this page

Background

Day Tripper is a song by The Beatles, written by Lennon–McCartney and led on vocal by John Lennon & Paul McCartney. Double A-side with 'We Can Work It Out'; that opening guitar riff. Within the catalogue, its double-a-side thread connects it to We Can Work It Out.

What's distinctive

One of 101 UK songs led primarily by John. Recorded approximately 5 of 16 into the Rubber Soul Era (late 1965) sessions. Carries the unique tag 'famous-riff' — no other UK song shares it.

Opening line — "Got a good reason for taking the easy way out…" (brief identification excerpt; full lyrics © Sony Music Publishing — see Genius link in References.)

J John Lennon — lead vocalJ Lennon — rhythm guitarP McCartney — bassG Harrison — lead guitarR Starr — drums

Recording

The session work falls within the band's Rubber Soul Era (late 1965) period, recorded 16 Oct 1965 at EMI Studios, Abbey Road. George Martin produced; Norman Smith (his last LP) engineered. The track was committed to Studer J37 four-track via the REDD.51, with the era's standard signal chain — EMI RS124, EMT 140 plate, fuzzbox prototypes. Likely instrumental setup followed the era's working kit: Epiphone Casino, Rickenbacker 360-12, Gibson J-160E, sitar (Harrison — first Beatles sitar on 'Norwegian Wood'), amplified through Vox AC30, Vox AC50, Fender Showman. For session-by-session detail, see Mark Lewisohn's account on p.3 of The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions (excerpt below).

Recording process — typical signal flow for the Rubber Soul Era (late 1965)
DemoBackingOverdubsVocalsMix
Studio: EMI Studios, Abbey Road • Console: REDD.51 • Tape: Studer J37 four-track
StudioEMI Studios, Abbey Road — Studio Two
Tape machineStuder J37 four-track
ConsoleREDD.51
MicrophonesNeumann U47, U48; AKG C12; STC 4038 (drums)
Outboard / effectsEMI RS124, EMT 140 plate, fuzzbox prototypes
GuitarsEpiphone Casino, Rickenbacker 360-12, Gibson J-160E, sitar (Harrison — first Beatles sitar on 'Norwegian Wood')
AmplifiersVox AC30, Vox AC50, Fender Showman
ProducerGeorge Martin
Engineer / 2ndNorman Smith (his last LP) • Ken Scott (2nd)
Contents Preface 4 The Paul McCartney Interview 6 1962 Recording sessions for: `Love Me Do', `Please Please Me' 19631967 16 Recording sessions for: `Penny Lane', 92 Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, Yellow Submarine, `All You Need Is Love', Magical Mystery Tour, `Hello, Goodbye' Recording sessions for: Please…— Mark Lewisohn, The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions, p.3

Pattern analysis

Theme prevalence across the canon
double-a-side2famous-riff1drug-tease1half-hearted-acid1
Track length percentile — Day Tripper sits at the 68th percentile (median 2:33)
shorter ←→ longer2:48
Recorded 16 Oct 1965 — position on the band's studio chronology
196219631964196519661967196819691970

Legacy & release history

In the UK canonical discography it on the single Day Tripper / We Can Work It Out. Mono and stereo histories vary by era — see the dedicated section below.

Mono & stereo

Documented alternate versions

No documented alternate versions.

Released on

Cross-references

Other songs sharing themes (famous-riff, double-a-side, drug-tease, half-hearted-acid)

Other songs led by the same vocalist

Other songs from this era

famous-riffdouble-a-sidedrug-teasehalf-hearted-acid

References & external databases

— ad slot (replace with AdSense ins tag) —