The List

4 of the Coolest Bridges From Beatles Songs

The Beatles knew their way around a song. Water is wet, after all. Paul McCartney and John Lennon penned most of the Fab Fourโ€™s music, and their compositions rarely missed the mark. And while their choruses were always catchy or memorable, some of The Beatlesโ€™ song bridges were also pretty incredible. Letโ€™s look at just a few examples of the Fab Fourโ€™s finest bridges, shall we?

โ€œSomethingโ€

Letโ€™s be real. The entirety of โ€œSomethingโ€ is stunning. However, that bridge is likely the most famous bridge in the whole of The Beatlesโ€™ discography. If itโ€™s not, itโ€™s certainly the best either way. George Harrison really showed the world how talented and underrated a songwriter he was, and โ€œSomethingโ€ is devastatingly romantic. After the main sections, the driving, powerful bridge made up of drums and piano is absolutely entrancing. It keeps the listenerโ€™s interest, and the whole thing just feels spiritual.

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โ€œA Hard Dayโ€™s Nightโ€

This tune is a pretty solid example of how The Beatles would occasionally muddle the traditional arrangement of a song composed of verses, bridges, and choruses. However, John Lennon himself referred to Paul McCartneyโ€™s vocal section in โ€œA Hard Dayโ€™s Nightโ€ as a bridge, so weโ€™ll run with that. The whole of the song is beautifully composed, but McCartneyโ€™s maintenance of the song with his bridge is pretty amazing.

โ€œThis Boyโ€

How about a deep cut? This track from Meet The Beatles! deserves more love, in my opinion. Itโ€™s a very Motown-adjacent tune, and Lennon himself said he was trying to emulate Smokey Robinson with โ€œThis Boyโ€. I think he was successful. The harmonization in the verses of this song is gorgeous, and Lennonโ€™s solo bridge is a pleading, breaking, reverent section that ties the whole thing together.

โ€œNo Replyโ€

This Beatles For Sale track from 1964 boasts one of the most underrated bridges in the bandโ€™s discography. The song is a bit low-energy, but โ€œNo Replyโ€ is still a great opener for an album. The band was exhausted but still managed to put something beautiful together. And once that bridge section hits, it becomes clear that โ€œNo Replyโ€ is not a lazy song. Lennon basically screams through the bridge, desperate for the object of his love to appreciate him.

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