Let It Be

Let It Be

The Beatles

From the album

Come Together: Beatles in the '90s (1996)

Written by

Lennon-McCartney (Primarily Paul McCartney)

Key:C Major
Duration:4:01

Listen to the Song

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Summary

Released as the final single before their dissolution, 'Let It Be' is a gospel-inspired masterpiece that transformed Paul McCartney's personal grief into a universal anthem of resilience. Its blend of spiritual lyricism and building orchestral rock solidifies its status as one of the most culturally significant recordings in music history.

Piano BalladGospel RockClassic RockInspirationalAnthem

Musical Analysis

"Let It Be" is a masterclass in gospel-infused pop, centered around a classic I-V-vi-IV progression in C major. While these "four chords" have since become a modern pop staple, McCartney uses them here with the reverence of a church hymn. The song’s emotional…

Structure:Intro-Verse-Chorus-Verse-Chorus-Bridge-Chorus-Outro

Chords

verse:Am - F - C - G
chorus:C - G - Am - F
bridge:F - G - Am

History

Paul McCartney conceived "Let It Be" during a turbulent period for The Beatles, around the time of 'The White Album' sessions in 1968. He credited the inspiration to a dream he had about his mother, Mary Patricia McCartney.

“The song was the last single released by The Beatles before their breakup.”

📝 Lyrics

comforting · spiritual · hopeful

Theme

Acceptance and inner peace during times of adversity

Surface

The narrator receives a visit from a maternal figure named Mary who offers words of comfort and advice during a difficult period.

Deeper meaning

The song serves as a secular hymn about the power of surrender. It reflects Paul McCartney’s subconscious attempt to process the grief of losing his mother and the mounting tensions leading to the inevitable dissolution of the Beatles. It advocates for stoicism—accepting things that cannot be changed.

Symbols

Mother MaryThe lightCloudy night

Full Musical Analysis

"Let It Be" is a masterclass in gospel-infused pop, centered around a classic I-V-vi-IV progression in C major. While these "four chords" have since become a modern pop staple, McCartney uses them here with the reverence of a church hymn. The song’s emotional core is grounded in the Plagal cadence (IV-I), famously known as the "Amen cadence," which resolves the title hook with a sense of spiritual finality. By starting the verse on the tonic (C) and shifting to the relative minor (Am) to open the chorus, the harmony creates a subtle but effective transition from reflective storytelling to a more powerful, collective emotional release. The most harmonically distinctive moment occurs during the instrumental breaks and the signature outro "walk-down." Here, the progression descends rapidly through F, C/E, Dm7, and C before introducing a Bb major chord (the flat-seventh, or bVII). This modal borrowing from the Mixolydian scale adds a momentary rock-and-roll grit to the ballad, providing a soulful contrast to the otherwise diatonic purity of the piano part. This blend of church-inspired resolutions and secular bluesy inflections is a primary reason the song feels both intimate and universal.

Paul McCartney conceived "Let It Be" during a turbulent period for The Beatles, around the time of 'The White Album' sessions in 1968. He credited the inspiration to a dream he had about his mother, Mary Patricia McCartney.

Released as the final single before their dissolution, 'Let It Be' is a gospel-inspired masterpiece that transformed Paul McCartney's personal grief into a universal anthem of resilience. Its blend of spiritual lyricism and building orchestral rock solidifies its status as one of the most culturally significant recordings in music history.

Song DNA

Genre

Rock

Era

70s

Mood

Uplifting

Tempo

Ballad

Key

Major

Texture

Full Band

Sound

Piano-led

Feel

Straight

Explore More

Listen & Learn

Statistics

9.2M

Plays

1.2M

Listeners

100%

Popularity

4:01

Duration

4/4

Time

Credits

Written by

Lennon-McCartney (Primarily Paul McCartney)

Produced by

George Martin (single version)Phil Spector (album version)

From the album Let It Be