The Beatles’ “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da”

The Beatles publicly announced their breakup in April 1970, but it’s a wonder that did not happen before since the band had long been roiling with acrimony. They squabbled in front of cameras during the recording and filming of Let It Be, and John Lennon had bluntly told Paul McCartney eight months earlier (when Abbey Road was poster of Beatles and Ob-la-di, Ob-la-dareleased), “I want a divorce.” George Harrison and Ringo Starr, ever the junior partners, were informed soon thereafter.

The antagonism goes back at least to the summer of 1968. That’s when “the boys,” as manager Brian Epstein used to call them, were recording the White Album at EMI Studios in London. A specific track, “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da,” was giving them fits. Written by McCartney, it is listed as a Lennon–McCartney song. They often collaborated, but quite a few of their numbers were composed mostly or entirely by one or the other; if it was good, each wanted credit and if it was a loser the other got blamed. Lennon and McCartney, whose lives have been studied in minute detail, sometimes behaved like immature ego-trippers.

First, a little background about “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da.” The title and chorus came from a London-based Nigerian conga player named Jimmy Scott-Emuakpor, who later accused McCartney of plagiarism. The storyline involves two characters named Desmond and Molly, Jimmy Scott...and something about him buying her a golden ring, them having a pair of children and how life goes on. Pardon the interruption, but I have never given much thought to the lyrics of pop songs. As if this whimsical ditty about Desmond and Molly has deep social significance! The White Album, I remind you, allegedly contained hidden messages that only Charles Manson could decipher—some absurd ideas about racial war, which he and his followers sought to precipitate by the Tate-LaBianca murders of August 8-9, 1969.

At any rate, John, Paul, George and Ringo were in the studio, getting on each other’s nerves. Even producer George Martin, usually a very even-tempered man, had a John Lennon and Yoko Ono, 1969little shouting match with McCartney. Long-time recording engineer Geoff Emerick took it even further, quitting his job. I have always liked McCartney, but he was the source of the problems here. He told Harrison how to play guitar, took over the drums from Starr and most of all insisted on rehearsing the song ad nauseum. It required 42 hours of studio time to get it right, in McCartney’s view: lots of changes, overdubs and complete remakes. Lennon, Harrison and Starr knew about the disagreement with Scott-Emuakpor and took his side, also suggesting that the Beatles’ prima donna bassist was guilty of cultural appropriation. The song, as you may know, was done in Jamaican ska/rock steady style.

Those last two years of the band’s existence, Lennon and McCartney were just plain sick of each other. Yoko Ono’s intrusive presence and Lennon’s addiction to heroin from mid-1968 to late 1969 only Paul McCartney on drumsexacerbated matters. Lennon, spaced out on smack, opined that “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da” was lousy. He called it “more of Paul’s granny music s—.”

Although not released as a single in the UK or the USA, it was in West Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, France, New Zealand, Austria, Switzerland, Israel, Australia and Japan, backed by Harrison’s “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” Sales were actually quite good. The song has been covered by artists such as Jimmy Cliff, Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass, and Peter Nero. Some contemporary critics (Jann Wenner of Rolling Stone and Alan Smith of NME, for example) gave it fairly high marks. Many, however, did not. Blender magazine did a poll in 2004 of the 50 worst rock & roll songs ever, and “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da” was listed at 48. Tom Rowley of the Daily Telegraph in 2012 ranked it near the bottom of the Beatles’ oeuvre. Only Lennon’s cacophonous 8-minute “Revolution 9,” he thought, was more devoid of musical value.

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9 Comments

  • Kenneth Hausmann Posted January 1, 2020 3:29 am

    They were big before I started listening to pop. I never really was a huge fan, but they did have some good music. Happy New Year to everyone!

    • Richard Posted January 3, 2020 2:00 pm

      Oh, I remember the first time I heard them sing on the radio. I was a schoolboy in Dallas.

  • Robert Gibbons Posted January 8, 2020 7:01 am

    Richard- Thank you for another well-researched article about a Beatles topic of which I was previously uninformed. I never thought of Paul as displaying any type of egotistical behavior. I always assumed that John Lennon and his crass sarcasm poisoned the well. And of course his allegiance to Yoko sabotaged any chance for Beatles harmony. “Obla-di obla-da” has never been one of my Beatles favorites, and I never recognized the reggae/ska riffs. Thanks again. Bob

    • Richard Posted January 8, 2020 5:04 pm

      Bob–Lennon and McCartney could both be “difficult.” Thanks for reading and offering a comment.

  • Heidi Gibbons Posted January 8, 2020 12:19 pm

    I love this song! Paul sang it and led the audience in its refrain in October 2018 here in Austin, TX, at the Austin City Limited Music Festival. It’s light, sweet and never heard anyone complain. “Life goes on.” And this was my 7th and 8th times to see Paul McCartney.

    • Richard Posted January 8, 2020 5:07 pm

      Heidi, as indicated in the final paragraph, some like it and some do not. It has some kind of tune, some harmony, etc. But Revolution 9 is so dreadful, it should never have been released. When my pet schnauzer farts, she sounds better than this song.

  • Moussa Posted June 8, 2020 4:42 pm

    I’ve learn English with their songs!!! Takes me back to my primary school days in Jakarta Indonesia when this is played over the tanoy in the main assembly hall

  • Izzy Rachman Posted June 8, 2020 4:43 pm

    Here iam using my friend wifi name as obladi ob blahda and reading this wonderful article with great detail and research. I need more something that entertain me like this, Richard!

  • Paul Ridenour Posted July 16, 2020 12:41 am

    I liked the song. I like every Beatles song except for Old Brown Shoe. I was age 4 when they were on the Ed Sullivan Show. I was age 10 when they broke up. I am a singer and drummer because of them. I learned harmony from them. I bought all of their LPs in 1970 and the White Album was the last album I bought in 1970. I never bought it because it didn’t list the songs. I didn’t know what was on it. Plus it was expensive as a double LP. When I heard the Beatles A to Z on a local Dallas radio show, I heard Dear Prudence for the first time and loved it. I bought the White Album and didn’t realize I knew most of the songs on the album from the radio. I have friends who hate the song along with Rocky Racoon. Sorry but I like them all. Over the years I have come to like Old Brown Shoe.

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