Joshua Lee Turner, the once teen guitar prodigy turned fully-fledged singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, recently released a video where he performed today’s Beatles track Till There Was You alongside Alice Faye. Turner featured here recently with his stunning version of Bob Dylan’s fleshed-out Wagon Wheel. When I heard their short excerpt Till There Was You at 2:31 in the video, I knew I had to find the Beatles’ version.
I was swept away by the song. It really demonstrates the Beatles’ versatility – appealing to all sections of an audience with this Broadway ballad. For example, during their appearance at the Royal Variety Performance on November 4, 1963, they followed Till There Was You with Twist and Shout – talk about extremes!
I don’t think I’ve heard Paul McCartney’s voice sound so endearing and affecting as it does on this one. The old-time sweet melody just melts my heart, and I knew I had to write about it here at the first opportunity. It’s such a gorgeous song, filled with grace and longing, and it captures the tranquil spirit of the great 1950s show tunes.
Till There Was You reminds me a lot, in both feel and melody, of the adorable Irving Berlin song What’ll I Do, which Frank Sinatra popularised and Bob Dylan later covered. It remains one of my favourite latter-day songs from the Maestro and will feature here shortly.
Wikipedia:
Till There Was You was written by Meredith Willson, and popularised by his 1957 stage production The Music Man and its 1962 movie musical adaptation. The song became the first Top 40 hit for Anita Bryant in 1959, prior to being recorded and further popularised by The Beatles in 1963.
Till There Was You released on their second album With the Beatles (1963). It was the only song from a Broadway show released by the band.
In the The Beatles’ version, Paul McCartney is accompanied by George Harrison and John Lennon on dueling acoustic, classical guitars played in a Spanish style over a bolero bongo beat played by Ringo Starr.
The widow of Meredith Willson, the composer of The Music Man, has stated that her husband’s estate eventually received more income from the royalties of the Beatles recordings of “Till There Was You” than it originally received from the actual play.
The song was part of their pre-recording repertoire in 1962, and they performed it at the Star Club in Hamburg.
[Verse 1]
There were bells on a hill
But I never heard them ringing
No, I never heard them at all
Till there was you
[Verse 2]
There were birds in the sky
But I never saw them winging
No, I never saw them at all
Till there was you
[Bridge]
Then there was music and wonderful roses
They tell me in sweet, fragrant meadows
Of dawn and dew
[Verse 3]
There was love all around
But I never heard it singing
No, I never heard it at all
Till there was you
[Bridge]
Then there was music and wonderful roses
They tell me in sweet, fragrant meadows
Of dawn and dew
[Verse 3]
There was love all around
But I never heard it singing
No, I never heard it at all
Till there was you
[Outro]
Till there was you
References:
1. Till There Was You – Wikipedia




























