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The single topped charts in Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands and Norway. In the United States, "Day Tripper" peaked at number five on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and "We Can Work It Out" held the top position. "Day Tripper" is a rock song based around an electric guitar riff and drawing on the influence of American soul music. The Beatles ...
We Can Work It Out" spent three non-consecutive weeks at number 1, while "Day Tripper" peaked at number 5. [57] The song was the band's eleventh US number one, accomplished in just under two years since their debut on the Hot 100. [58] [59] It was their sixth consecutive number 1 single on the American charts, [60] [61] a record at the time.
Daytripper or day-tripper may refer to: Day-tripper or daytripper, a person undertaking a day trip, a recreational activity "Day Tripper", a song by the Beatles; Daytripper (comics), a Marvel Comics character, Amanda Sefton, created in 1976 and part of the X-Men stories; Daytripper, a series from DC Comics' imprint Vertigo, created in 2010
It was released on 3 December 1965 in the United Kingdom on EMI's Parlophone label, accompanied by the non-album double A-side single "We Can Work It Out" / "Day Tripper". The original North American release, issued by Capitol Records, contains ten of the fourteen songs and two tracks withheld from the band's Help! (1965) album.
On the lyrics, the writing was mostly commenced by Coverdale, except "Day Tripper" (written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney) while Moody and Marsden contributed to some of the writing towards the tracks. All of the band's lineup wrote "Don't Mess With Me", which labeled the band as the credits themselves.
Found All the Parts is an EP released by Cheap Trick in 1980. It was released on a 10-inch disc as part of Epic Records' short-lived Nu-Disk series. The EP also contained a bonus promotional 7" single of "Everything Works If You Let It".
The Writers Guild of America (WGA) has unveiled its nominees for the 2025 WGA Awards, highlighting a mix of familiar Oscar frontrunners, unexpected entries, and the creative reshuffling prompted ...
He wrote it that day, and tried to teach it to the singer he was helping in Los Angeles, but he was unable to learn it. [5] Russell then wanted to record it himself, but his then-producer turned it down, claiming that songs about the movies were not hit material. [5] A full two years passed before anyone recorded "Act Naturally". [6] "No matter ...