10 Most Underrated Beatles Songs
1. And Your Bird Can Sing - Revolver
Throughout most of this list, we've paid a lot of lip service to Sir Paul McCartney. It's no big surprise either, with him being one of the masters of melody compared to the raw rock and roll that came from John Lennon most of the time. When it came time to cut tracks for the Revolver album, Lennon actually made a track that managed to beat his songwriting partner at his own game.
Years later, Lennon admitted that And Your Bird Can Sing was a song that was meant to copy the happy go lucky formula that McCartney's songs had, and it pays off in spades. In just over two minutes, Lennon wrote an absolutely perfect pop song, with a lyric about his love needing more than just material things when the world starts to bring her down. Though the entire song is carried by John's vocal, having the last verse be sung entirely in harmony by all three band members makes the song come alive again.
And for any of the guitar enthusiasts, this is one of the most energetic riffs of this era of the band, being a mix of the psychedelic distorted rock and a nod to the chiming sounds of bands like the Byrds. Even though this is the same album that has songs like Eleanor Rigby and For No One on it, the Beatles could still rock out with the best of them when they wanted to.