The “Backward” Masterpiece: Why George Harrison Called This Lennon’s Best 🎸 What happens when you take a Beethoven classic and play it entirely in reverse? For John Lennon, it resulted in his final, hauntingly beautiful contribution to Abbey Road. While the rest of the band was drifting apart, this “difficult” harmony became the track George Harrison admired most for its sheer simplicity and soul. Discover the strange origin story of “Because”—a song born from a single piano moment with Yoko Ono that redefined the Beatles’ final sessions.

George Harrison

JOHN LENNON’S LAST GREAT GIFT TO ABBEY ROAD — AND THE QUIET, EERIE REASON GEORGE HARRISON SAID THIS SONG MEANT MORE THAN ANY OTHER

The John Lennon Lyric George Harrison Used in 'Here Comes the Sun'

• George Harrison later admitted that one understated John Lennon track was ‘possibly my favourite’ on Abbey Road, despite never being released as a single
• Because marked the final fully formed new composition Lennon brought into the Beatles’ last album sessions, as tensions quietly mounted behind the scenes
• Inspired by a reversed Beethoven chord sequence and built on a fragile nine-voice harmony, the song left the band with nowhere to hide
• Fans now debate whether it captured Lennon’s final moment of calm — or the last time the Beatles truly sang as one

John Lennon and George Harrison during the Abbey Road session to record Paperback Writer and Rain, April 1966. : r/beatles

When Abbey Road was released in September 1969, it arrived to the public as a flawless, confident farewell — an album polished to perfection, radiating control, maturity and musical assurance at a time when few suspected just how close the band already was to collapse.

Yet beneath its glossy surface, the Beatles were quietly unravelling, navigating creative rivalry, personal fractures and the unspoken knowledge that this might be the final time they would work together as a functioning unit.

And at the emotional centre of that fragile balance sat Because — a song so still, so exposed and so eerily restrained that, in hindsight, it feels less like a track and more like a pause in time.

‘POSSIBLY MY FAVOURITE ON THE ALBUM’

This tape rewrites everything we knew about the Beatles' | The Beatles | The Guardian

During interviews promoting the album, George Harrison was asked which songs resonated with him most deeply.

He spoke warmly of Paul McCartney’s She Came In Through the Bathroom Window, admiring its confidence and playful swagger, and he praised the emotional weight of Golden Slumbers.

But when the subject turned to John Lennon’s Because, Harrison stopped — and chose his words carefully.

“That’s possibly my favourite one on the album,” he said, acknowledging the song’s deceptive simplicity while noting that its harmony was unusually demanding to perform.

Coming from a band rarely generous with praise toward one another — particularly during such a tense period — the remark carried a significance that listeners would only fully understand years later.

JOHN LENNON’S FINAL FULL STATEMENT

The Final Song The Beatles Recorded for 'Abbey Road,' Written by John Lennon, Became One of George Harrison's Favorites - American Songwriter

Because occupies a unique and quietly haunting place in Beatles history.

While it was not the final recording made for Abbey Road, it was the last fully realised new song Lennon personally brought into the sessions, arriving not as a fragment or experiment, but as a complete artistic statement.

Its origin was unusually precise.

In early 1969, Yoko Ono was playing Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata on the piano when Lennon asked her to reverse the chord sequence — an inversion that sparked the skeletal framework of what would become Because.

Stripped of narrative, characters or psychedelic imagery, the song emerged as something austere and reflective, driven by philosophical simplicity rather than lyrical flourish.

“The lyrics speak for themselves,” Lennon explained at the time.
“No bullsh–t. No imagery. No obscure references.”

NOTHING TO HIDE BEHIND

John Lennon's death 'didn't change my life' - George Harrison | Music | Entertainment | Express.co.uk

Musically, Because left the Beatles completely exposed.

John, Paul and George recorded a three-part harmony and then meticulously layered it three times over, creating a fragile nine-voice choir with no instruments beneath it.

There were no guitars to mask imperfection.
No drums to steady the tempo.
No production tricks to soften mistakes.

Every breath, every pitch shift and every blend demanded absolute trust and control.

“We had to really learn it,” Harrison later admitted — a telling phrase for a band whose unity was already beginning to slip elsewhere.

A SONG THAT HOLDS EVERYTHING IN PLACE

Sequenced between Here Comes the Sun and You Never Give Me Your MoneyBecause does not push the album forward or resolve its tensions.

Instead, it suspends them — holding the listener in a moment of fragile equilibrium, like a breath drawn just before something irreversible occurs.

Some fans now hear the track as John Lennon’s final moment of inner calm before the chaos of the Beatles’ breakup fully took hold.

Others hear it as the last time the band truly sang together as equals, bound by discipline rather than rivalry.

Across forums, retrospectives and social media discussions, Because continues to provoke debate — described alternately as a lullaby, a requiem, or a farewell disguised as serenity.

THE POWER OF RESTRAINT

This is why John Lennon hated The Beatles album 'Abbey Road' | McCartney Times

George Harrison never praised Because for its ambition, cleverness or showmanship.

What he valued was its restraint.

And perhaps that is why the song endures — not as a grand finale, but as a quiet centre.

A reminder of what the Beatles could still achieve when ego briefly stepped aside.

A final moment where balance, trust and harmony returned — if only for a few minutes.

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