“My least favorite Beatles song.” Elvis Presley inspired it. John Lennon hated it. Behind the song he wanted to keep off the Beatles’ first psychedelic record 

Beatles Paul McCartney and John Lennon, London, 1967.
Paul McCartney and John Lennon, in London, 1967. (Image credit: JRC /The Hollywood Archive)

The Beatles drew inspiration from all over the musical map — Motown, acoustic folk, rockabilly and beyond. But one of the darker lines ever sung by the band can be traced directly to a 1950s rock and roll record by Elvis Presley.

The lyric appears in Presley’s 1955 Sun Records single “Baby, Let’s Play House,” written by Arthur Gunter. Early in the song, Presley delivers a line that’s as blunt as it is unsettling: “I’d rather see you dead, little girl, than to be with another man.”

The phrase stuck with John Lennon. Nearly a decade later, he used it as the starting point for a Beatles song — one that would eventually appear on the band’s landmark 1965 album, Rubber Soul.

That song was “Run for Your Life.”

The Beatles pose in 1965. (from left) Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison and John Lennon

The Beatles pose in 1965. (from left) McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison and Lennon. (Image credit: Getty Images)

Lennon borrowed Presley’s line almost verbatim for the song’s opening lyric. From there he built the rest of the track around the same jealous premise, warning the song’s subject that if he ever caught her with another man, “that’s the end.”

Years later, Lennon would admit the song wasn’t something he thought much about at the time.

“I never liked ‘Run for Your Life’ because it was a song I just knocked off,” he told Rolling Stone in 1970. “It was inspired from Elvis.”

Run For Your Life (Remastered 2009) - YouTube Run For Your Life (Remastered 2009) - YouTube
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The track ultimately became the closer on Rubber Soul, the group’s sixth studio album and one often regarded as the point where the Beatles fully embraced the idea of the LP as an artistic statement rather than simply a collection of songs.

It was also the first record on which they presaged the dawn of psychedelic rock by using the studio to change the sound of their instruments. The sessions saw the Beatles experimenting with new textures and instrumentation. George Harrison famously introduced the sitar to the band’s sound on “Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown),” while Paul McCartney used a fuzz bass tone on Harrison’s “Think for Yourself.”

George Harrison (left) and John Lennon of English rock band the Beatles during a press conference, circa 1965.

George Harrison and Lennon at a press conference circa 1965. (Image credit: Don Paulsen/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

“Run for Your Life,” however, had simpler origins than other tracks on the album. Lennon later described it as a quick composition built around the Presley line that had caught his ear years earlier.

“I wrote it around that,” he said. “But I didn’t think it was that important.”

It was sort of a throwaway song of mine that I never thought much of. But it was always a favorite of George’s.”

— John Lennon

In hindsight, the song also reflected something about Lennon’s state of mind at the time. As McCartney later noted in his memoir Many Years From Now, Lennon’s lyrics often revealed a possessiveness that contrasted with McCartney’s own outlook on relationships.

“John was always on the run, running for his life,” McCartney wrote. “He was married; whereas none of my songs would have ‘catch you with another man.’ … I wasn’t as worried about that as John was. A bit of a macho song.”

Even if Lennon dismissed the track as a throwaway, there was little chance of it being replaced. With the holiday season approaching, the Beatles were racing to finish Rubber Soul in time to be released for Christmas 1965.

Production line at E.M.I. factory in Hayes Middlesex where the new Beatles LP Rubber Soul is being manufactured, 24th November 1965.

A woman checks pressings of Rubber Soul for quality control at the E.M.I. factory in Hayes Middlesex, November 24, 1965. (Image credit: Daily Herald/Mirrorpix/Mirrorpix via Getty Images)

The album’s final recording session — which began at 4 p.m. on November 11 and stretched into the early hours of the next morning — saw the band record McCartney’s “You Won’t See Me” and Lennon’s “Girl,” while also adding overdubs to “Wait.” With the deadline looming, there simply wasn’t time to create another song. “Run for Your Life” remained in place as the album’s closing number.

And while Lennon later called it his “least favorite Beatles song” and said he “always hated” it, at least one of his bandmates felt differently.

“It was sort of a throwaway song of mine that I never thought much of,” Lennon later said. “But it was always a favorite of George’s.”

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Elizabeth Swann is a devoted follower of prog-folk and has reported on the scene from far-flung places around the globe for Prog, Wired and Popular Mechanics She treasures her collection of rare live Bert Jansch and John Renbourn reel-to-reel recordings and souvenir teaspoons collected from her travels through the Appalachians. When she’s not leaning over her Stella 12-string acoustic, she’s probably bent over her workbench with a soldering iron, modding gear.