Written by:Â Lennon-McCartney
Recorded: 21, 22, 23, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30 January 1969
Producer:Â George Martin
Engineer:Â Glyn Johns
Released: 8 May 1970 (UK), 18 May 1970 (US)
Available on:
Let It Be
Anthology 3
Let It Be⊠Naked
Personnel
John Lennon: vocals, rhythm guitar
Paul McCartney: vocals, bass
George Harrison: vocals, lead guitar
Ringo Starr: drums
Billy Preston: electric piano
About The Song
John Lennonâs only significant new contribution to the Let It Be album (his âAcross The Universeâ had been recorded nearly a year previously), âDig A Ponyâ was the first song to be recorded during the Apple Studios sessions in late January 1969.
The version which appeared on Let It Be, however, was from the groupâs famous rooftop performance on 30 January.
âDig A Ponyâ contained mostly nonsense lyrics, which Lennon dismissed in 1980 as âanother piece of garbageâ. However, some tantalising references can be found, including to The Beatlesâ one-time name Johnny and the Moondogs (âI pick a moondogâ) and Mick Jagger (I roll a stoney/Well you can imitate everyone you knowâ).
However, like so many of Lennonâs songs of the period, the dominant influence is Yoko Ono. âDig A Ponyâ was originally titled âAll I Want Is Youâ, words which appear in the chorus and which constitute the songâs only direct, meaningful sentiment.
I was just having fun with words. It was literally a nonsense song. You just take words and you stick them together, and you see if they have any meaning. Some of them do and some of them donât.
In the studio
John Lennon played versions of âDig A Ponyâ several times at Twickenham Film Studios in January 1969, during a series of rehearsals which were filmed for the Let It Be movie. He ran through the song on 2, 7, and 13 January 1969.
By the time sessions started at The Beatlesâ own Apple Studios later in the month, they were familiar with the song and enjoyed playing it.
They began work on the song properly on 21 January, performing it numerous times to work out their individual parts and the songâs arrangement. One of the following dayâs many attempts was later released on Anthology 3.
23 January was mainly devoted to other songs, but at one point John Lennon started playing âDig A Ponyâ, with Ringo Starr joining in on drums. 25 and 26 January also saw the song briefly returned to, although The Beatlesâ attentions were largely elsewhere.
On 28 January they recorded numerous takes of âDig A Ponyâ, and on 29 January, following a run-through, Lennon and McCartney both indicated that they finally had an arrangement they were happy with.
The Let It Be album and film contained a version of the song recorded during the groupâs rooftop performance at Apple on 30 January. The recording began with a false start; in the film Starr can be seen putting his cigarette down and crying out âHold it!â
On the rooftop a production runner on the film, Kevin Harrington, knelt and held a clipboard in front of Lennon with the lyrics on it. The performance ended with Lennon saying âThank you, brothers. My hands are getting too cold to play a chord now.â
The 22 January version on Anthology 3 preserves the âAll I want isâŠâ opening and closing lines. These lines were a part of âDig A Ponyâ throughout the various recording sessions. On 23 March 1970, however, Phil Spector edited them out while mixing the song for Let It Be.