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Released in 1967

Good Morning Good Morning

Written by Lennon - McCartney

Last updated on January 21, 2024

Good Morning – John’s. That was our first major use of sound effects, I think. We had horses and chickens and dogs and all sorts running through it.

Paul McCartney – Interview with Playboy, 1984

From Wikipedia:

“Good Morning Good Morning” is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was written by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney. Inspiration for the song came to Lennon from a television commercial for Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. Another reference to contemporary television was the lyric “It’s time for tea and Meet the Wife“, referring to the BBC sitcom.

Lennon himself was critical of the track. “It’s a throwaway, a piece of garbage, I always thought,” he once said. “I always had the TV on very low in the background when I was writing, and it came over, and then I wrote the song.”

Recording

The basic track was recorded on 8 February 1967, with overdubs on 16 February (bass guitar and lead vocals), 13 March (brass section), 28 March (backing vocals and guitar solo), and 29 March (animal noises). The guitar solo was played by Paul McCartney on a Fender Esquire. At Lennon’s request, George Martin brought in Sounds Incorporated to provide the song’s prominent brass backing.

Lennon asked engineer Geoff Emerick to arrange the animal noises heard at beginning (and end) of the song so that each animal heard was one capable of devouring (or frightening) the animal preceding it. The final sound effect of a chicken clucking was so placed that it transforms into the guitar on the following track, “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)“. According to Emerick, these animal noises were inspired by the coda of “Caroline, No” that ended the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds album. They begin with the crow of a rooster, while the other animal sounds heard at the end of the song include birds, a cat, a dog, a cow, a horse, a sheep, a group of bloodhounds accompanying fox hunters on horseback with horns blasting, and a chicken.

The rapid 16th note bass drum fills were done on two bass drums, according to Beatles historian Mark Lewisohn. The length of the mono version of “Good Morning Good Morning” is 2:35, whereas the stereo version (due to a lengthier fade out of animal sounds) runs to 2:41. The 2017 stereo mix follows the editing style of the mono version, and as a result, it is also 2:35.

For the Beatles’ 2006 remix album, Love, the horse sounds were mixed into “Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!“. […]


This is largely John’s song. John was feeling trapped in suburbia and was going through some problems with Cynthia. It was about his boring life at the time, there’s a reference in the lyrics to ‘nothing to do’ and ‘meet the wife’; there was an afternoon TV soap called Meet the Wife that John watched, he was that bored, but I think he was also starting to get alarm bells and so ‘Good morning, good morning’.

Paul McCartney – From “Paul McCartney: Many Years from Now” by Barry Miles, 1997

‘Good Morning, Good Morning’ was fairly straight rock ‘n’ roll except for some strange beats on it and Sounds Incorporated (the group) playing their saxes and all that … I often sit at the piano, working at songs, with the telly on low in the background. If I’m a bit low and not getting much done, then the words on the telly come through. That’s when I heard the words, ‘Good Morning, Good Morning.’ It was a corn flakes advertisement. I was never proud of it. I just knocked it off to do a song.

John Lennon, 1967

From The Usenet Guide to Beatles Recording Variations:

[a] mono 19 Apr 1967. edited.
UK: Parlophone PMC 7026 Sgt Pepper 1967.
US: Capitol MAS 2653 Sgt Pepper 1967.

[b] stereo 6 Apr 1967. edited.
UK: Parlophone PCS 7026 Sgt Pepper 1967.
US: Capitol SMAS 2653 Sgt Pepper 1967.
CD: EMI CDP 7 46442 2 Sgt Pepper 1987.

[c] stereo 1995.
CD: Apple CDP 8 34448 2 Anthology 2 1996.

An Apr 6 mono mix was replaced by an Apr 19 mix [a] containing an improved blend of the hen cluck at the end into the first note of the next song, Sgt Pepper (reprise). Lewisohn does not say when or if the Apr 6 stereo mix was redone, and perhaps it was not. Checking the ending shows that the sound effects match in mono [a] and stereo [b] until the foxhunt, where the mono fades earlier, so that the hunt lasts about 6 seconds longer in stereo and continues past the somewhat later fadeout of the music. This may be the end of the main tape. Because of the early fade in mono [a], “Good morning good morning good” is heard only 9 times as against 10 times in stereo [b]. Both mixes then crossfade to the chicken squawk on what appears to be a separate tape, since unlike the other sound effects it does not overlap any music. The squawk is slightly longer in stereo, and blends better into the Sgt Pepper (reprise)– the retry on the mono mix may have been to make it more like the stereo?

The lead guitar is mixed down after the break in mono [a] but on [b] it continues loud over “People running round…”. After “tea and ‘Meet the Wife'” the guitar phrase is treated to a little extra ADT in mono.

The Anthology mix [c] is deliberately different and appears to show the state as of Feb 16, after the vocal and bass overdub, but without the horns and the sound effecs at the end.


Lyrics

Good morning, good morning

Good morning, good morning

Good morning, a


Nothing to do

To save his life

Call his wife in


Nothing to say

But what a day

How's your boy been?


Nothing to do

It's up to you

I've got nothing to say

But it's O.K.


Good morning, good morning

Good morning, a


Going to work

Don't want to go

Feeling lowdown


Heading for home

You start to roam

Then you're in town


Everybody knows

There's nothing doing

Everything is closed

It's like a ruin


Everyone you see

Is half asleep

And you're on your own

You're in the street


After a while

You start to smile

Now you feel cool


Then you decide

To take a walk

By the old school


Nothing has changed

It's still the same

I've got nothing to say

But it's O.K.


Good morning, good morning

Good morning, a


People running 'round

It's five o'clock

Everywhere in town

It's getting dark


Everyone you see

Is full of life

It's time for tea

And meet the wife


Somebody needs

To know the time

Glad that I'm here


Watching the skirts

You start to flirt

No you're in gear


Go to a show

You hope she goes

I've got nothing to say

But it's O.K.


Good morning, good morning

good


Good morning, good morning

good


Good morning, good morning

good

Variations

Officially appears on

See all official recordings containing “Good Morning Good Morning

Bootlegs

See all bootlegs containing “Good Morning Good Morning

Live performances

Paul McCartney has never played this song in concert.

Paul McCartney writing

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