The history of the "Love Me Do" single is one of
the more confusing sagas in the Beatles' history. After the group's June 6th,
1962 audition -- in which a runthrough of "Love Me Do" was taped --
producer George Martin, who was unhappy with then-drummer Pete Best's playing,
told the Beatles' manager Brian Epstein that he would be using a session
drummer for future work with the band. Despite that, when the Beatles -- with
new drummer Ringo Starr -- showed up to their first proper session on September
4th, a version of "Love Me Do" was recorded with Ringo behind the
drums.
Unsatisfied with Ringo's performance, for their September
11th session, Martin hired studio ace Andy White to drum on the two sides of
the single -- with Ringo being relegated to tambourine on "Love Me
Do" and maracas on "P.S. I Love You." Despite George Martin's
dissatisfaction with the first version of "Love Me Do," the original
Ringo recording from September 4th was accidentally released as the original
single version -- and was the version that shot the song up the British hit
parade. The mix-up wasn't noticed until the song had long peaked on the charts
and was replaced by the "Andy White" version for the Please Please Me
album in March 1963 and single's second UK pressing about a month later. The
actual master and mixdown tapes of the "Ringo" version of "Love
Me Do" have long been lost and the version that's now included in the
Beatles' catalogue was taped from a collector's pristine mint version of the
single.
Amazingly, the confusion over the two versions of "Love
Me Do" continues 50 years on, with EMI this week recalling all their
copies of the commemorative 50th anniversary reissue of the original "Red
Parlophone" single release because the powers that be mixed things up once
again by this time using Andy White's -- rather than Ringo's -- version on the
single's A-side.
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