Both songs were recorded on March 5th, 1963, before the group's recently-recorded first album Please Please Me was even released. Manager Brian Epstein and producer George Martin wanted as much product as possible ready to go, in order to strike while the young band was still hot.
After completing work on the A-side, the boys turned their attention to Thank You Girl, recording six live-in-the-studio takes before arriving at the keeper. The ending still was not right, however, so seven edit pieces were attempted before the song was considered complete - for the time being.
Martin decided in the coming days that something more was needed, and he realized that a harmonica part would do the trick. It's surprising that that had not occurred to any of them on March 5th, since a harmonica overdub had been performed on From Me to You only hours earlier on that day. It was arranged for John to report alone to Abbey Road Studios on March 13th for this purpose. This was not a problem, as he had a bad cold and was actually not appearing with the group for a few nights on their current national tour.
In his book The Beatles: Recording Sessions, Mark Lewisohn relates a story about John needing to borrow a harmonica for the song From Me to You on March 5th. Geoff Emerick was not present at that session, but he did serve as second engineer for Thank You Girl on March 13th and has the exact same incident occurring on the latter date, including the part about John returning the harmonica to disc cutter Malcolm Davies and saying that "it tasted like a sack of potatoes."
In any event, fifteen takes of John playing the harmonica were recorded. Then, Martin and engineers Norman Smith and Emerick created both the mono and stereo mixes of the song. Only three instances of the harmonica were used in the mono mix, yet three additional harmonica bits were used in the stereo version.
Fans in the UK only heard the mono mix of the song when it was released both as a B-side and on the EP The Beatles' Hits. In the US, VeeJay Records had the mono mix for the song's use as the B-side of two different singles - From Me to You and Do You Want to Know a Secret. But, when Capitol wanted to release the song on The Beatles' Second Album, the label was given the previously-unheard stereo mix. Thus, most American fans only knew Thank You Girl with all of the harmonica bits. It was a bit of a surprise in 1988 to hear the relatively stark mono mix on the Past Masters collection.
The group added the song to their stage act for the few months that their third single dominated the British charts. They also performed it on their first BBC television appearance, as well as on three BBC Radio broadcasts. The last of these can be heard on the Live at the BBC collection, from the program Easy Beat. It is a spirited performance, though it is mostly notable for giving us a chance to hear the song with no harmonica, which is how they always played it live.
Thank You Girl was long gone from the band's setlist by the time they first came to America.
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