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Which songs did The Beatles play at their famous “rooftop” concert?

Story Center by Story Center
May 12, 2026
Reading Time: 15 mins read
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Which songs did The Beatles play at their famous "rooftop" concert?

11 May 2026, 12:21

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The Beatles performing live on the roof of 3, Savlle Row, 30 January 1969.

Picture:
Dom Slike / Alamy Stock Photo



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No 3 Savile Row in London is to become the world’s first official Beatles “fan experience” in 2027. But why did this Georgian terraced house in Mayfair become a key part of the band’s legend?

Situated in Mayfair, just off London’s bustling Regent Street, Savile Row was once the home to the City’s tailoring business. That is, until The Beatles moved into Number 3 in the summer of 1968, establishing their Apple Corps business in the Georgian house, and adding their very own recording studio in the basement.

It’s been announced that No 3 is to become the very first official Beatles “fan experience” – or museum if you’d rather. Due to open in 2027, the venue will offer seven floors of unseen material from Apple’s archives, exhibitions, a special fan store and a recreation of the original studio where the band recorded in early 1969.

The location is also where The Beatles performed their final ever “concert” – an impromptu lunchtime session on 30th January 1969 which was intended to form the climax to their “Get Back” project, which was to be released over a year later as Let It Be.

The building at Saville Row was the location of much joy and much drama as the Fab Four negotiated the difficult task of running their own business – which at various stages encompassed recording, mastering, A&R and a record label, alongside short-lived excursions into the world of film, electronics, publishing and even a clothes shop.

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Now No 3 is back in the hands of The Beatles. As Ringo Starr says, “It’s like coming home.”

“It was such a trip to get back to 3 Savile Row recently and have a look around,” says Paul McCartney. “There are so many special memories within the walls, not to mention the rooftop. The team have put together some really impressive plans and I’m excited for people to see it when it’s ready.”

More on The Beatles at 3 Savile Row here.

3 Savile Row in Mayfair - where the
3 Savile Row in Mayfair – where the “rooftop” concert took place in January 1969.

Picture:
Alamy


Why did The Beatles play a concert on the rooftop of 3 Saville Row?

On 30th January 1969, The Beatles played their last ever gig. It wasn’t a paid show and a lot of people that witnessed the event weren’t even aware at the time that they were listening to The Beatles. They couldn’t see the four famous faces – John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr – and the songs they were hearing were unfamiliar and played very loudly and from a distance.

The Beatles, hard at work on their
The Beatles, hard at work on their “Get Back” project in January 1969. The band invested a great deal of money in a studio located in the basement of 3 Savile Row. Note the “apple green” coloured carpet.

Picture:
Ethan Russell/Apple Corps/Press


This was no ordinary concert – this was the moment that The Beatles took to the roof of their Apple offices in central London to perform their last public appearance as a group. The band would officially split just over a year later and the four men would never play together again.

It’s such an iconic moment in the Fab Four’s story – the band stop the traffic with rock ’n’ roll – that it’s been copied, parodied and referenced countless times in the last 50 years. The event forms the climax to Peter Jackson‘s documentary Get Back, which is available to watch on Disney+.

But why did the rooftop concert happen and which songs did The Beatles play?

The Beatles stop touring

The Beatles officially stopped touring in 1966. The quartet had worked constantly since Beatlemania broke in the summer of 1963 – they’d travelled the world, released seven albums, had 11 UK No 1 hit singles and made two feature films. They were exhausted. Controversial tours of the Philippines and the US in 1966 had seen the band come into actual physical danger and their sub-30 minute sets were full of old material and couldn’t be heard over the screaming fans anyway.

So, on 29 August 1966, The Beatles performed what they considered to be their last ever live show at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park. Even though the show wasn’t announced as their final date, it was the end of the era. With no further activity on the horizon, people though The Beatles had split up.

What the public didn’t know was that The Beatles had chosen to concentrate on their recording career. Their next album was to be an adventurous sonic adventure called Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, released in the summer of 1967. This LP was a huge success, selling millions and critical acclaim that was unusual for a pop album.

The Beatles played their final
The Beatles played their final “proper” concert at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park on 29th August 1966.

Picture:
Bill Waterson / Alamy Stock Photo


The “Get Back” sessions

The Beatles worked on their Magical Mystery Tour film project for the rest of 1967 and spent most of 1968 recording the sprawling double “White Album”. During the making of this record, relations between the four became fractious (with Ringo walking off the sessions for two weeks), but the band enjoyed some of the ensemble playing on tracks like Yer Blues and Happiness Is A Warm Gun.

Because of this, towards the end of the album sessions in October 1968, The Beatles announced their return to live performance. They were to play three live shows at The Roundhouse in December. The gigs would be filmed for television and fans could win tickets via the official fan club. But these shows were postponed.

The Beatles – Don’t Let Me Down

Originally, the gigs were to showcase the “White Album”, but the plan changed. The Beatles would rehearse a live show of new material, which would then be performed at a live, televised broadcast. You’d see The Beatles at work, “getting their act together”, then playing live to adoring fans who had waited the best part of three years to see their heroes again.

So it was that on 2 January 1969, the four Beatles went to Twickenham film studios in Middlesex to rehearse songs and build up a new set over two weeks. What could possibly go wrong?

The wheels fell off this idea quite quickly. Nobody could come to a decision on where the live show would take place or what the format would be. Would they play the show on an ocean liner to a group of invited fans? Would it take place in an African ampitheatre? Or would it take place in an art gallery in England? Or maybe just good old Twickenham studios?

Not only that, but the “White Album” had exhausted the group’s pool of material – while McCartney had a few songs on the boil, Lennon only had a couple of fragments. John dabbling with heroin didn’t help matters and the presence of his new partner Yoko Ono also caused further tension. George Harrison, meanwhile, had a stack of new songs, but had trouble getting his partners to listen.

The Beatles reconvene in the more comfortable setting of Apple's own recording studios - in the basement of their office at Saville Row
The Beatles reconvene in the more comfortable setting of Apple’s own recording studios – in the basement of their office at Saville Row.

Picture:
Alamy


After only one week of rehearsal, George had had enough – he walked out of the group and only agreed to return if the live show idea was scrapped and the documentary was changed to be about the making of a new album. The sessions moved to Apple’s basement studio at their offices in Saville Row, London, but to continue the idea of The Beatles playing “live”, it was decided that the recordings would be done in simple takes, with no overdubs. To help with this, George enlisted keyboard player Billy Preston to accompany the band and help them “get back” to basics. This was also the title of a new McCartney song, developed during the sessions.

The rooftop show

While the live show was dead in the water, the director of the documentary, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, was determined to have some kind of “climax” to the film. After much discussion, The Beatles came to the only decision that everyone could agree on. There was some consideration of them performing on top of Primrose Hill in North London, but ultimately, the band would move the least amount of distance they could manage. They’d play a live show on the roof of their office.

So it was that at lunchtime on Thursday, 30 January, The Beatles climbed their way onto the cold and windy rooftop of Number 3, Saville Row, accompanied by Billy Preston on organ.

The Beatles' Final Live Performance
The Beatles’ Final Live Performance.

Picture:
Trinity Mirror / Mirrorpix / Alamy Stock Photo


The Beatles played on the roof for just under 45 minutes, which engineer/producer Glyn Johns recorded the audio in the basement and Lindsay-Hogg’s cameramen caught the action. This is what The Beatles played:

The Beatles – Apple rooftop gig 30 January 1969 setlist:

  • Get Back (short rehearsal take, featured in the Get Back documentary)
  • Get Back (take one)
  • Get Back (take two)
  • Don’t Let Me Down (take one)
  • I’ve Got A Feeling (take one, later released on the Let It Be album)
  • One After 909 (later released on the Let It Be album)
  • Dig A Pony (later released on the Let It Be album)
  • God Save The Queen (a short jam while the engineers changed tapes)
  • I’ve Got a Feeling (take two)
  • Don’t Let Me Down (take two)
  • Get Back (take three, later included on Anthology 3)

The rooftop performance of “Get Back” from the forthcoming docuseries “TheBeatles: Get Back”

As the band tore through the final rendition of Get Back, complaints from local businesses about the noise – and, listening to some of the outtakes, it was LOUD – had prompted a couple of officers from the local Saville Row police station to arrive at Apple and remonstrate with staff. In 2021, one of the cops, 19-year-old PC Ray Dagg, told the Mirror that he was bluffing somewhat on the day – the musicians were on private property, meaning it would have been difficult to arrest them.

The cameras roll as The Beatles' rooftop performance gets underway. 30th January 1969.
The cameras roll as The Beatles’ rooftop performance gets underway. 30th January 1969.

Picture:
Album/Alamy Stock Photo


He said: “At 19, I was pretty gung-ho and I think I probably might have and taken the flak afterwards for wrongful arrest.”

During the song the policemen make it up onto the roof. John and George’s amps are turned off by a nervous Mal Evans who’s afraid of the legal consequences, but the two Beatles quickly switch the amps back on to finish the number in a brutal-if-ragged style. As McCartney eyes the approaching policemen, he ad-libs: “You’ve been playing on the roofs again.. you know your momma doesn’t like it… she’s gonna have you arrested!”

The Beatles' final public performance together on 30th January 1969.
The Beatles’ final public performance together on 30th January 1969.

Picture:
Hoberman Publishing / Alamy Stock Photo


To The Beatles’ – and the film-makers- disappointment, nobody got arrested and the show finished. As the dying notes of Get Back faded away, Ringo’s wife Maureen – a Beatles fan from the early days – cheered in triumph at her heroes’ short-lived return to live music, causing Macca to return to the mike to say “Thanks Mo.” All that was left to say was John Lennon’s famous last words: “I’d just like to say thank you on behalf of the group and ourselves and I hope we’ve passed the audition.”

The Be-Sharps – Baby On Board

The legacy of The Beatles’ rooftop gig

The rooftop show made the news that day, but it wasn’t until the release of the feature film documentary, now titled Let It Be, that the event passed into legend. It wasn’t the ending to the film that The Beatles had expected, but it left the movie with a memorable climax.

Echo & The Bunnymen
Echo & The Bunnymen “do a Beatles” at the old HMV store in Oxford Street to mark 20 years of the Fab Four’s Sgt Pepper album in 1987.

Picture:
dpa picture alliance / Alamy Stock Photo


The rooftop show quickly became one of the most iconic images in the story of The Beatles. Monty Python star Eric Idle parodied the scene in his spoof documentary The Rutles (where one of the crew is unceremoniously booted off the roof and into the street below), while Homer Simpson’s barbershop quartet The Be-Sharps too to the roof of Moe’s Tavern for one last show (prompting a Simpsonised version of George Harrison to drive by and comment: “It’s been done.”)

U2 – Where The Streets Have No Name (Official Music Video)

U2 aped the rooftop show for the video to their 1987 single Where The Streets Have No Name and Manchester band James performed a show on top of the city’s Piccadilly Hotel on the anniversary of the Beatles’ gig in 1991.

Countless other groups have copied the event (including the Bootleg Beatles tribute band in 1999), and even Paul McCartney got in on his own act in July 2009, when he performed a show on top of the marquee of the Ed Sullivan theatre in New York. It’s been done, Macca!

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.radiox.co.uk ’

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