The Anthemic Beatles Song John Lennon Said He Wrote “About Something I Hadn't Experienced”
Despite what the media said about it (for better or worse), the Beatles weren’t exactly the soothsayers or cultural gurus-slash-corrupters they were often painted to be—in fact, John Lennon was the first to admit that he didn’t truly understand what he was singing about in one of the Fab Four’s most iconic anthems that seemingly wrapped up the band’s ethos in five short words.
“All you need is love,” the Beatles repeated emphatically in their 1967 non-album single. The song became the foundation for the flower power, “peace and love” movement of the late 1960s. But it wasn’t until 1969 that Lennon realized he actually had no idea what he had been talking about. Yet. The Beatles released “All You Need Is Love” as the A-side to “Baby, You’re a Rich Man” in 1967. The song was part of a massive global television link and served as an affable contribution to the multi-satellite production. How could one argue with the song? All you need is love, love, love is all you need. Songwriting credit went to both John Lennon and Paul McCartney. But years later, Lennon would admit that, in hindsight, he realized he didn’t actually know what he was talking about in 1967.
“When I was singing about all you need is love, I was talking about something I hadn’t experienced,” Lennon said in a 1969 interview with Howard Smith. “I had experienced love for people in gusts and love for things and trees and things like that. But I hadn’t experienced what I was singing about. It’s like anything. You sing about it first or write about it first and find out what you were talking about after.”
Source: americansongwriter.com/Melanie Davis