Rock 'N' Roll album artwork – John LennonWritten by: Berry
Recorded: October-December 1973
Producers: John Lennon, Phil Spector

Released: 21 February 1975 (UK), 17 February 1975 (US)

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

Available on:
Rock 'N' Roll

John Lennon recorded a version of Chuck Berry's 1958 song for his Rock 'N' Roll album. He had also sung it with The Beatles in 1963.

Berry released the song in January 1958, and it reached number two on the US singles chart. It also topped the R&B Best Sellers chart. In the UK it peaked at number 11, and quickly became a staple of many aspiring rock 'n' roll musicians' repertoires.

The Quarrymen, and later The Beatles, often performed Sweet Little Sixteen live between 1957 and 1962. A live version recorded in December 1962 was included on the unofficial 1977 release Live! at the Star-Club in Hamburg, Germany; 1962.

The Beatles recorded it for the sixth episode of the BBC radio show Pop Go The Beatles on 10 Juy 1963. First broadcast on 23 July that year, it was eventually released on 1994 collection Live At The BBC. They also recorded a version for the fifth episode on 2 July 1963, but it was never used.

John Lennon's solo version was produced by Phil Spector, and was recorded between 17 October and 14 December 1973. Spector cut the tempo of the song and gave it the full Wall of Sound treatment, and Lennon turned in one of his most passionate vocal performances.