Menlove Ave album artwork – John LennonWritten by: Hamlin
Recorded: October-December 1973
Producers: John Lennon, Phil Spector

Released: 3 November 1986 (UK), 27 October 1986 (US)

John Lennon: vocals
Jesse Ed Davis, Steve Cropper, Jose Feliciano, Art Munson, William Perry, Louis Shelton, Dale Anderson, Larry Carlton, David Cohen: guitar
Phil Spector: guitar, piano
Mac Rebennack, Leon Russell, Michael Omartian: keyboards
Nino Tempo: saxophone, keyboards
Bob Glaub, Thomas Hensley, Ray Neapolitan: bass guitar
William Perkins, Robert Hardaway: woodwind
Anthony Terran: trumpet
Jeff Barry, Andy Thomas, Michael Wofford, Michael Lang, Barry Mann, Michael Melvoin: piano
Bobby Keys, Jim Horn, Plas Johnson, Ronald Langinger, Donald Menza, Gene Cipriano: saxophone
Joseph Kelson: horn
Julian Matlock: clarinet
Conte Candoli, Chuck Findley: trumpet
Jim Keltner, Hal Blaine, Frank Capp, Jim Gordon: drums
Gary Coleman, Alan Estes, Steve Forman, Terry Gibbs: percussion

Available on:
Menlove Ave

Although recorded during the 1973 sessions for John Lennon's Rock 'N' Roll album, Angel Baby remained unreleased until the 1986 posthumous collection Menlove Ave.

It was written by Rosie Hamlin, and first released as a 1960 single by Rosie & The Originals. At the time Hamlin was 15 years old, and the doo-wop recording was made on a two-track machine in an aircraft hanger.

The single was released by Highland Records, and peaked at number five on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1960. It spent a total of 12 weeks on the charts.

Angel Baby fared less well in the United Kingdom, failing to chart after being issued by London Records. It evidently made a strong impression on Lennon, however: he selected it for the Rock 'N' Roll sessions, complete with Phil Spector's Wall of Sound production and a soaring brass arrangement.

Lennon turned Hamlin's naive teen ballad into a love song for rock 'n' roll itself, singing lines such as "I love you, I do/No one can love you like I do" with unbridled passion for the music that had proved so enduring since his teenage years. His spoken introduction, too, made clear his adoration for the song.

This here is one of my all-time favourite songs. Send my love to Rosie, wherever she may be.
John Lennon
Angel Baby

In October 1974, at the start of the Rock 'N' Roll sessions, Lennon appeared on KSAN-FM radio in San Francisco, in an interview with presenter Tom Donahue. Ostensibly a promotional opportunity for Walls And Bridges, Lennon selected several golden oldies to be played, including Rosie & The Originals' Angel Baby.

The reason why Angel Baby was left from Rock 'N' Roll is unknown, but it was pulled at a late stage. It did, however, appear on the unofficial album Roots: John Lennon Sings The Great Rock & Roll Hits, issued by Morris Levy in January 1975.

Lennon had agreed to record a selection of classic songs, including three from Levy's publishing catalogue, in order to avoid a plagiarism lawsuit over the resemblence of The Beatles' Come Together to Chuck Berry's You Can't Catch Me. An estimated 3,000 copies of Roots were pressed, but EMI and Capitol quickly blocked the release after it had been on sale for three days.

When Menlove Ave was issued in 1986 it featured an edited version of Angel Baby, which lengthened the song by more than half a minute. The section from 0'52" to 1'26" was repeated later in the song.

Angel Baby appeared on the four-CD box set Lennon in 1990, where it was faded out slightly earlier than on Menlove Ave.