The first recorded use of guitar feedback can be found on The Beatles‘ I Feel Fine, according to John Lennon.
The guitarist claimed he and George Harrison‘s work on the track would be an innovative moment not just for the band but for music history, as it is allegedly the first recorded example of guitar feedback. Lennon would claim this in interviews after The Beatles broke up, where he would speak highly of the song. Lennon once described his work with Harrison on the A-side track as featuring a “typical Beatles bit”, and it seems to have worked. The song would top the charts in the UK and the US on release. Lennon would suggest I Feel Fine featured the first “feedback”, and doubled down on it in later interviews, going as far as to say The Beatles were ahead of Jimi Hendrix and The Who.
He said in 1972: “This was the first time feedback was used on a record. It’s right at the beginning.” Lennon would claim again in 1980 in an interview with Playboy, issuing a challenge for anyone to find a conscious use of guitar feedback. He said: “That’s me completely. Including the guitar lick with the first feedback anywhere.
“I defy anybody to find a record… unless it is some old blues record from 1922… that uses feedback that way. So I claim it for the Beatles. Before Hendrix, before The Who, before anybody. The first feedback on record.”
Before these claims surfaced, Lennon would suggest I Feel Fine is more a “typical Beatles bit” than anything else. He said: “George and I play the same bit on the guitar together– that’s the bit that’ll set your feet a-tapping, as the reviews say. The middle-eight is the most tuneful part, to me, because it’s a typical Beatles bit.”
Source: Ewan Gleadow/cultfollowing.co.uk