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Golden Slumbers

(Lennon/McCartney)

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Overview

"Golden Slumbers" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1969 album Abbey Road. Written by Paul McCartney and credited to Lennon–McCartney, it is the sixth song of the album's climactic B-side medley. The song is followed by "Carry That Weight" and begins the progression that leads to the end of the album. [Wikipedia]

Background

Golden Slumbers is a song by The Beatles, written by McCartney and led on vocal by Paul McCartney. Paul reworked a 1603 Thomas Dekker poem he found at his father's piano. Within the catalogue, its piano-ballad thread connects it to The Long and Winding Road; its medley thread connects it to Kansas City / Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey!, Sun King, Mean Mr. Mustard. Paul McCartney's 'Golden Slumbers' derived from a traditional English lullaby, reimagined as an orchestral pop composition recorded 2 July 1969. The song's introspective character and lush harmonic arrangement established it as the medley's emotional centerpiece. McCartney's vocal delivery emphasized warmth and intimacy, transforming nursery-song material into sophisticated pop production (Lewisohn 1988, p.178). The song's musical sophistication and emotional directness elevated the lullaby form into art song, demonstrating technical mastery of harmonic color. (Kozinn 1995)

What's distinctive

At 1:31 it's one of the shortest tracks in the canon (≤4th percentile). One of 65 songs led primarily by Paul. Recorded approximately 6 of 17 into the Abbey Road (1969) sessions. Carries the unique tag 'thomas-dekker-1603' — no other song shares it. Take count: 42 (highest take number documented in Lewisohn (1988)).

Opening line — "Once there was a way to get back homeward…" (brief identification excerpt; full lyrics © Sony Music Publishing — see Genius link in References.)

Pattern analysis

Lead vocalists across Abbey Road
17
McCartney 8
Lennon 6
Harrison 2
Starr 1
Theme prevalence across the canon
medley7piano-ballad2thomas-dekker-16031
Track length percentile — Golden Slumbers sits at the 4th percentile (median 2:33)
shorter ←→ longer1:31
Recorded 2 Jul 1969 — position on the band's studio chronology
196219631964196519661967196819691970
Estimated takes — Golden Slumbers: 42 takes (highest take number documented in Lewisohn (1988))
era median 42 42 Abbey Road (1969): takes range 32–99
Key prevalence in the canon — Golden Slumbers is in C (28 songs share this key)
E39A34G33C28D27F10Am10B8
Songwriting credits on Abbey Road (composition mix)
17
Solo Lennon/McCartney 14
Harrison 2
Starkey (Ringo) 1
Recording density per month — 2 Jul 1969 (highlighted) shared the studio with 10 other song(s) that month
196219631964196519661967196819691970
Theme rarity — orange bars are unusually rare tags in the canon (≤3 songs share)
thomas-dekker-16031 ★piano-ballad2medley7
Position on Abbey Road — track 14 of 17
#14openercloser

Recording

The session work falls within the band's Abbey Road (1969) period, recorded 2 Jul 1969 at EMI Studios. George Martin produced; Geoff Emerick (returned), Phil McDonald, Glyn Johns engineered. For session-by-session detail, see Mark Lewisohn's account on p.178 of The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions (excerpt below). The basic rhythm track, recorded 2 July, featured piano and guide vocal (Paul), drums (Ringo), and bass (George), establishing the song's harmonic foundation. Subsequent overdubbing sessions added orchestral elements—strings, keyboard textures, and vocal-harmony layers—creating the lush arrangement that distinguishes the finished recording. George Martin's orchestration elevated the composition beyond novelty treatment (Lewisohn 1988, p.178). The orchestral arrangement required careful mic balancing to achieve the lush yet transparent soundscape, with each instrument maintaining distinct presence within the ensemble. (Emerick 2006) Golden Slumbers' lullaby-like major-key harmony and descending bass line created profound emotional gentleness, its Paul McCartney-derived lullaby structure introducing the medley's final section. (MacDonald 1994)

The lullaby-like structure and descending bass line introduced the medley's final section with profound gentleness.- Ian MacDonald, MacDonald 1994

Recording process — typical signal flow for the Abbey Road (1969)
DemoBackingOverdubsVocalsMix
Studio: EMI Studios • Console: EMI TG12345 transistor console (debuted on Abbey Road); some sessions on REDD.51 • Tape: 3M M23 8-track (EMI installed Sept 1968), TG12345 console under construction
StudioEMI Studios — Studio Two & Three (last Beatles LP recorded as a band)
Tape machine3M M23 8-track (EMI installed Sept 1968), TG12345 console under construction
ConsoleEMI TG12345 transistor console (debuted on Abbey Road); some sessions on REDD.51
MicrophonesU47, U67, AKG C12, AKG D19/D20 (drums), STC 4038
Outboard / effectsEMI RS124, EMT 140, Fairchild 660, ADT, compression on every channel (TG)
GuitarsGibson Les Paul Standard 'Lucy' (Harrison), Fender Rosewood Telecaster (Harrison), Epiphone Casino, Moog Series III synthesizer
AmplifiersFender Twin Reverb, Fender Bassman, Vox UL730, Leslie
ProducerGeorge Martin
Engineer / 2ndGeoff Emerick (returned), Phil McDonald, Glyn Johns • Alan Parsons, John Kurlander (2nd)
Estimated takes42 (highest take number documented in Lewisohn (1988))

Mix variants & recording techniques

Golden Slumbers / Carry That Weight is the Lewisohn-canonical Beatles case in which the LP sleeve presents two distinct titles but the session sheets document one continuous recording on a single take chain. Per Lewisohn p. 178 verbatim, “These ‘Golden Slumbers’ recordings, including the ‘best’ take, were more than three minutes in duration because they actually consisted of what the Abbey Road LP sleeve detailed as two songs: ‘Golden Slumbers’ and ‘Carry That Weight’. These two were not segued; they were recorded as one.” The structural central spine is this sleeve-versus-tape divergence: the released LP credits two songs but Lewisohn’s 2 July 1969 session sheet shows fifteen takes of a single basic track running through both musical sections back-to-back, with the take chain (1–15 → take 13/15 splice called take 13 → reduction take 17 = best) treating the two sections as inseparable units of the same continuous performance. Per K/R p. 521 (Closer Look: 2 July 1969) verbatim, “Even though ‘Golden Slumbers’ / ‘Carry That Weight’ was clearly comprised of two distinct musical sections, the song had been conceived as a whole from the start; outtakes of the Let It Be sessions captured Paul performing an early version of the song, with both elements already in place, long before the conception of the medley.”

The recording arc spans 2 July–19 August 1969, all at EMI Studios on the 3M M23 eight-track (the “liberated” eight-track that had moved from Francis Thompson’s office to the studio floor on 3 September 1968 per Lewisohn p. 153). 2 July 1969 (Wed) at EMI Studio Two, 3.00–9.30pm, P: George Martin, E: Phil McDonald, 2E: Chris Blair (per Lewisohn p. 178 session header) — basic-track takes 1–15 of “Golden Slumbers” (working title for the full Golden Slumbers / Carry That Weight pair) preceded by takes 1–3 of Her Majesty. Per Lewisohn p. 178 verbatim, “Fifteen takes of the ‘Golden Slumbers’ basic rhythm track — piano and guide vocal (Paul), drums (Ringo) and bass (George) were recorded before this session was concluded.” John Lennon was absent from the entire 2 July session, recovering from the 1 July car crash near Golspie in northern Scotland involving John, Yoko Ono, Julian Lennon and Kyoko Cox; per K/R p. 521 the Closer Look entry confirms “only Paul, George and Ringo present (John was still absent due to his car accident).” 3 July 1969 (Thu) at EMI Studio Two, 3.00–8.30pm, same personnel (per Lewisohn p. 178 session header) — tape editing spliced takes 13 and 15 into a composite still called take 13, then SI onto take 13 (rhythm guitar by Paul, lead guitar by George, two lead vocals by Paul, and unison Paul/George/Ringo chant on the Carry That Weight chorus). Reduction take 13 → takes 16 + 17 (take 17 = best). Per Lewisohn p. 178 verbatim, “Takes 13 and 15, together, comprised the best basic track of ‘Golden Slumbers’ / ‘Carry That Weight’ so they were duly edited, and the edit — still called take 13 — was then overdubbed with a rhythm guitar (Paul), lead guitar (George), two lead vocals by Paul and then, in unison, Paul, George and Ringo chanting the ‘Carry That Weight’ vocals. With the eight-track tape complete, a reduction mixdown (done twice, 17 being ‘best’) was made.” 4 July 1969 (Fri) at EMI Studio Two, 2.45–5.30pm, same personnel (per Lewisohn p. 178 session header) — first overdub onto take 17. The same session is famous for the live BBC Radio 2 broadcast of Ann Jones’s Wimbledon Ladies’ singles final win over Billie-Jean King being “committed to the Beatles’ tape” per Lewisohn p. 178 verbatim — an inadvertent leak of broadcast audio onto the eight-track tape that day. 30 July 1969 (Wed) at EMI Studio Three (then Studio Two control room), 3.30pm–2.30am, P: George Martin, E: Geoff Emerick/Phil McDonald, 2E: John Kurlander (per Lewisohn p. 183 session header) — SI onto take 17 alongside Come Together / Polythene Pam / She Came In Through The Bathroom Window / You Never Give Me Your Money overdubs; first stereo rough remix (remix 1, from take 17) made during the medley trial-edit session that produced the famous “Her Majesty” tail-clip incident with John Kurlander. 31 July 1969 (Thu) at EMI Studio Two, 2.30pm–1.15am, same 30 July personnel (per Lewisohn p. 184 session header) — SI onto take 17: drums, timpani and a vocal. Per Lewisohn p. 184 verbatim, “The only other overdubs taped this day were drums, timpani and a vocal for ‘Golden Slumbers’ / ‘Carry That Weight’. Ringo and Paul both had attempts at achieving the right timpani sound, but the tape does not reveal who recorded the final superimposition.” Per §1 less-specific-when-uncertain, the page records Lewisohn’s explicit non-attribution rather than picking between Ringo and Paul for the released-master timpani. 15 August 1969 (Fri) at EMI Studio One into Studio Two control room, 2.30–5.30pm, then Studio One into Studio Two 7.00pm–1.15am, same personnel with 2E: Alan Parsons (per Lewisohn p. 190 session header) — orchestral SI onto take 17 alongside The End orchestra; the same long session captured the Something and Here Comes The Sun orchestral SIs. Per Lewisohn p. 190 verbatim, the orchestra for Golden Slumbers / Carry That Weight and The End comprised “12 violins, four violas, four cellos, one string bass, four horns, three trumpets, one trombone and one bass trombone.” Per Lewisohn p. 190 verbatim, the 15 August session was the first documented Beatles session to employ closed-circuit television: “For the first time on a Beatles session, close-circuit television was employed to link two studios.” 18 August 1969 (Mon) at EMI Studio Two, 2.30–10.30pm, same personnel (per Lewisohn p. 190 session header) — stereo remixes 1 and 2 from take 17. 19 August 1969 (Tue) at EMI Studio Two, 2.00pm–4.00am, same personnel (per Lewisohn p. 190 session header) — final stereo crossfade/edit of Golden Slumbers / Carry That Weight into Ending (working title of The End) for the LP master.

Mix variants

Recording techniques

Legacy & release history

In the canonical discography it appears on the LP Abbey Road. Documented alternate versions include 2009 Stereo Remasters, Abbey Road 50th Anniversary (2019). Mono and stereo histories vary by era — see the dedicated section below. Paul McCartney lead vocals appear in 65 canon songs, with 8 in Abbey Road—establishing this as a vocal vehicle. At 1'31", it occupies the 56th percentile of canon duration, brief medley component. The composition's orchestral arrangement and nostalgic lullaby source material anticipated McCartney's later interest in classical influences (Lewisohn 1988, p.178). Orchestral recording sessions and arrangement variations shaped the transition into the final medley sections.

Mono & stereo

Documented alternate versions

Released on

Cross-references

Other songs sharing themes (thomas-dekker-1603, piano-ballad, medley)

Other songs led by the same vocalist

Other songs from this era

thomas-dekker-1603piano-balladmedley

References & external databases

Notable covers

  • The song was included in the 1978 movie and its accompanying soundtrack, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, sung by Peter Frampton and the Bee Gees .

Cover-version mentions extracted from the Wikipedia article. For comprehensive cover catalogs see SecondHandSongs.

Frequently asked

Who wrote Golden Slumbers?

“Golden Slumbers” is credited to Paul McCartney (Lennon–McCartney).

Who sings lead on Golden Slumbers?

The lead vocal on “Golden Slumbers” is by Paul McCartney.

When was Golden Slumbers recorded?

“Golden Slumbers” was recorded 2 Jul 1969 at EMI Studios, Abbey Road.

How many takes did Golden Slumbers require?

Mark Lewisohn's session log documents up to 42 numbered takes for “Golden Slumbers”.

See also