Introduction

đ Why John Lennon âHatedâ Engelbert Humperdinck: The Story of Musical Spite and Paul McCartney
The feud between John Lennon and Engelbert Humperdinck was not personal, but rather a clash of culture and musical philosophy. Lennonâs âhatredâ for Humperdinck was actually resentment toward what Humperdinck represented in the landscape of 1960s British pop music, particularly in relation to The Beatles and Paul McCartney.
Two main reasons account for this rivalry: The first was a chart battle, and the second was Lennon using Humperdinck as a metaphor to criticize Paul McCartneyâs music.
1. The Beatlesâ Greatest Chart Blocker
In 1967, The Beatles were at the peak of musical experimentation with their legendary double A-side single: âStrawberry Fields Foreverâ / âPenny Lane.â Everyone expected the track to easily reach the No. 1 spot on the UK charts.
However, the person who unexpectedly blocked their path was Engelbert Humperdinck with his romantic ballad âRelease Me.â Humperdinckâs song outsold The Beatlesâ double single, holding the No. 1 spot and forcing The Beatles to settle for No. 2.

For John Lennon, who championed innovation and the avant-garde, the fact that a traditional, easy-listening ballad like âRelease Meâ defeated one of their most revolutionary works was a personal insult and a declaration that the public still favored the âsquare.â This was the genesis of Lennonâs public resentment.
2. The Symbol of Paul McCartneyâs âConformityâ
In 1970, in a famous interview after The Beatlesâ breakup (Lennon Remembers), John Lennon used Engelbert Humperdinck as a weapon to attack Paul McCartney.
Lennon described McCartneyâs musical style as too easy, too geared towards the mainstream, and too âconformist.â He sarcastically suggested that Paul McCartney represented âthe Engelbert Humperdinck sideâ of The Beatlesâimplying that Paulâs music was too safe, saccharine, and lacked the pioneering artistry that John pursued.
Lennon calling Paul âEngelbert Humperdinckâ was one of his most memorable insults, intended to clearly distinguish between his own avant-garde tendencies and what he considered Paulâs low-quality pop-ballad leanings.
Therefore, John Lennonâs âhatredâ for Engelbert Humperdinck was not directed at the man Arnold George Dorsey, but at the cultural image and musical conservatism that the name represented.