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The Strangers with Mike Shannon

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The Strangers with Mike Shannon (that is precisely how they were billed, not the other way around) had the honor, or misfortune, of covering the most obscure Lennon-McCartney song that was "given away" to another artist in the 1960s, and not recorded by the Beatles. This song was their May 1964 single "One and One Is Two," one of the few songs "given away" by the Beatles in the 1960s that did not chart in either the UK or the US. Of all the songs that fell into this category (with the possible exception of Carlos Mendes' Paul McCartney-penned "Penina"), "One and One Is Two" was the most forgettable. A rather standard and plodding Merseybeat number without the melodic imagination that characterized even the weakest and most primitive songs the Beatles did on their first recordings, it attracted little notice at a time when Lennon-McCartney were the most in-demand composers in popular music. Surprisingly little is known about the Strangers and Mike Shannon. Kristofer Engelhardt's Beatles Undercover, which usually covers recordings that the Beatles contributed to as songwriters or performers in frighteningly intense detail, could only note that the group were probably from South Africa. The song itself, however, had a rather more complex history than simply popping up on the Strangers 45 and disappearing. The composition was apparently intended for use by Billy J. Kramer, who had already covered several Lennon-McCartney tunes for hits. It was written while the Beatles were playing an extended engagement in Paris at the beginning of 1964, and a demo of McCartney singing the song and accompanying himself on piano has been bootlegged. It has been reported that John Lennon said that if Kramer recorded the song, he (Kramer) would be finished. In his extensive interview for...

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