The Beatles — UK Canon
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What You're Doing

Song by The Beatles • McCartney

Beatlemania (1962–1964) — Mod sharpness — sharp suits, sharper hooks.

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Background

What You're Doing is a song by The Beatles, written by McCartney and led on vocal by Paul McCartney. Studio experiment with backwards-feeling drum intro; remade twice. Within the catalogue, its jangle thread connects it to And Your Bird Can Sing.

What's distinctive

One of 65 UK songs led primarily by Paul. Recorded approximately 57 of 67 into the Beatlemania (1962–1964) sessions. Carries the unique tag 'studio-experiment' — no other UK song shares it.

Opening line — "Look what you're doing…" (brief identification excerpt; full lyrics © Sony Music Publishing — see Genius link in References.)

P Paul McCartney — lead vocalJ Lennon — rhythm guitarP McCartney — bassG Harrison — lead guitarR Starr — drums

Recording

The session work falls within the band's Beatlemania (1962–1964) period, recorded 29 Sep 1964 at EMI Studios, Abbey Road. George Martin produced; Norman Smith engineered. The track was committed to Twin-track BTR-2 (1962); Studer J37 four-track from late-1963 via the REDD.37 / REDD.51 valve consoles, with the era's standard signal chain — EMI RS124 compressor (Altec 436B mod), EMT 140 plate reverb, STEED tape echo. Likely instrumental setup followed the era's working kit: Rickenbacker 325 (Lennon), Gretsch Country Gent / Tennessean (Harrison), Höfner 500/1 violin bass (McCartney), Ludwig Oyster Black Pearl kit (Starr), amplified through Vox AC30 (TB & non-Top-Boost variants). For session-by-session detail, see Mark Lewisohn's account on p.49 of The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions (excerpt below).

Recording process — typical signal flow for the Beatlemania (1962–1964)
DemoBackingOverdubsVocalsMix
Studio: EMI Studios, Abbey Road • Console: REDD.37 / REDD.51 valve consoles • Tape: Twin-track BTR-2 (1962); Studer J37 four-track from late-1963
StudioEMI Studios, Abbey Road — predominantly Studio Two
Tape machineTwin-track BTR-2 (1962); Studer J37 four-track from late-1963
ConsoleREDD.37 / REDD.51 valve consoles
MicrophonesNeumann U47, U48; AKG D19 (drums); STC 4038 (overheads)
Outboard / effectsEMI RS124 compressor (Altec 436B mod), EMT 140 plate reverb, STEED tape echo
GuitarsRickenbacker 325 (Lennon), Gretsch Country Gent / Tennessean (Harrison), Höfner 500/1 violin bass (McCartney), Ludwig Oyster Black Pearl kit (Starr)
AmplifiersVox AC30 (TB & non-Top-Boost variants)
ProducerGeorge Martin
Engineer / 2ndNorman Smith • Richard Langham, Geoff Emerick (2nd)
Recording: `I Don't Want To Spoil The Party' (takes 8-19); `What You're Doing' (takes— Mark Lewisohn, The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions, p.49

Pattern analysis

Lead vocalists across Beatles for Sale
14
Lennon 9
McCartney 3
Harrison 1
Starr 1
Theme prevalence across the canon
jangle2studio-experiment1remade1
Track length percentile — What You're Doing sits at the 48th percentile (median 2:33)
shorter ←→ longer2:30
Recorded 29 Sep 1964 — position on the band's studio chronology
196219631964196519661967196819691970

Legacy & release history

In the UK canonical discography it appears on the LP Beatles for Sale. 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 (studio-experiment, remade, jangle)

Other songs led by the same vocalist

Other songs from this era

studio-experimentremadejangle

References & external databases

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