Rubber Soul album artworkWritten by: Lennon-McCartney
Recorded: 10 November 1965
Producer: George Martin
Engineer: Norman Smith

Released: 3 December 1965 (UK), 6 December 1965 (US)

John Lennon: vocals, rhythm guitar
Paul McCartney: vocals, bass, piano
George Harrison: vocals, lead guitar
Ringo Starr: drums, maracas
George Martin: harmonium

Available on:
Rubber Soul
Love

Released in 1965 on Rubber Soul, The Word found The Beatles singing for the first time about love as a notional concept. It was a turning point in their writing, marking a transition between early songs such as She Loves You, and the psychedelic era's belief that All You Need Is Love.

It sort of dawned on me that love was the answer, when I was younger, on the Rubber Soul album. My first expression of it was a song called The Word. The word is 'love', in the good and the bad books that I have read, whatever, wherever, the word is 'love'. It seems like the underlying theme to the universe.
John Lennon
Anthology

The lyrics displayed an almost religious fervour, with Lennon and McCartney acting as evangelists for their new revelation about love.

In the beginning I misunderstood
But now I've got it, the word is good...

Now that I know what I feel must be right
I'm here to show everybody the light

The Word demonstrated The Beatles' increasing awareness of their power as spokesmen and figureheads. This was developed especially by Lennon, in 1966's Rain ('Can you hear me?'; 'I can show you') and his later political songs.

The song was a collaboration between Lennon and McCartney, and began as an attempt to write a song based around a single note.

We smoked a bit of pot, then we wrote out a multicoloured lyric sheet, the first time we'd ever done that. We normally didn't smoke when we were working. It got in the way of songwriting because it would just cloud your mind up – 'Oh, shit, what are we doing?' It's better to be straight. But we did this multicoloured thing.
Paul McCartney
Many Years From Now, Barry Miles

Lennon later allowed Yoko Ono to give the lyric sheet to John Cage as a birthday present. It was later reproduced in Cage's book Notations, a collection of scores from modern music.

Elements from The Word were combined with Drive My Car and What You're Doing, for a sequence on the 2006 album Love.

The Word was written together, but it's mainly mine. You read the words, it's all about – gettin' smart. It's the marijuana period. It's love, it's the love-and-peace thing. The word is 'love', right?
John Lennon
All We Are Saying, David Sheff

In the studio

The Word was recorded in a session beginning at 9pm on 10 November 1965, finishing at 4am the following morning.

It took just three takes to perfect the rhythm track. Onto this were overdubbed harmony vocals, piano by McCartney, a harmonium part performed by George Martin, and maracas played by Starr.