Maggie Mae

Highly Appreciated

MAGGIE MAE
 
 
“Maggie May”  (or “Maggie Mae”) is a traditional Liverpool folk song about a prostitute who robbed a “homeward bounder”:  a sailor coming home from a round trip.  In 1970, a truncated version of the song performed by the Beatles was included on their album Let It Be.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
As to the tracks on Kum Back that did not show up on Let it Be, besides “Teddy Boy”, a performance for just under a minute of a blues song by Jimmy McCracklin called “The Walk” (also known as “Can He Walk”) also does not appear on Let it Be.  The biggest surprise though is that one of the strongest songs made by the Beatles in their twilight years, “Don’t Let Me Down” – previously released in April 1969 as the b-side of the Get Back single – was also not included on Let it Be, though it was among the songs in the 2003 reissue, Let it Be . . . Naked.  With the inclusion of Don’t Let Me Down, two short tracks, “Dig It” and “Maggie Mae” (not the same song as the Rod Stewart classic, “Maggie May) were left off Let it Be . . . Naked.  Together, these two songs run just 1:30; honestly, you’d think there would be enough room on the CD for them, too (neither appears on Kum Back either, though Don’t Let Me Down does). 
 
(September 2017)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021