Beatles "I Saw Her Standing There"
About "I Saw Her Standing There"
"I Saw Her Standing There" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles written by Paul McCartney and John Lennon. It is the opening track on the band's 1963 debut UK album Please Please Me and their debut US album Introducing... The Beatles.
In December 1963, Capitol Records released the song in the United States as the B-side on the label's first single by the Beatles, "I Want to Hold Your Hand". While the A-side topped the US Billboard chart for seven weeks starting 1 February 1964, "I Saw Her Standing There" entered the Billboard Hot 100 on 8 February 1964, remaining there for 11 weeks, peaking at No. 14. The song placed on the Cashbox chart for only one week at No. 100 on the same week of its Billboard debut. In 2004, "I Saw Her Standing There" was ranked No. 139 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
Top songs by Beatles
Let It Be
Hey Jude
I Want To Hold Your Hand
Come Together
A Day In The Life
Yesterday
A Hard Day's Night
All You Need Is Love
Michelle
Ob—la—di, Ob—la—da
And I Love Her
While My Guitar Gently Weeps
Besame Mucho
Across The Universe
In My Life
Blackbird
Help!
Roll Over Beethoven
All My Loving
Get Back
Love Me Do
Here Comes The Sun
Yellow Submarine
I Saw Her Standing There
Girl
Back In The U.s.s.r.
Can't Buy Me Love
Norwegian Wood (this Bird Has Flown)
Day Tripper
Eleanor Rigby
Hello, Goodbye
Carol
"I Saw Her Standing There" video by Beatles is property and copyright of its owners and it's embedded from Youtube.
Information about the song "I Saw Her Standing There" is automatically taken from Wikipedia. It may happen that this information does not match with "I Saw Her Standing There".
SONGSTUBE is against piracy and promotes safe and legal music downloading. Music on this site is for the sole use of educational reference and is the property of respective authors, artists and labels. If you like Beatles songs on this site, please buy them on Itunes, Amazon and other online stores. All other uses are in violation of international copyright laws. This use for educational reference, falls under the "fair use" sections of U.S. copyright law.