<P> Moreover, it became the signature phrase for the group at the time . The Daily Mirror's approving editorial of 5 November 1963, following the Beatles' acclaimed appearance at the Royal Variety Performance the night before, was entitled "Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!" The New York Times' lengthy article of 8 February 1964, describing the frenzy accompanying the group's arrival at John F. Kennedy International Airport and in New York City, made reference to "Yeah, yeah, yeah" in its first paragraph, continuation headline, and closing paragraph . An Associated Press story describing the positive critical reaction to the group's film A Hard Day's Night was headlined "' Yeah, Yeah, Yeah' For Beatles' Film" and labeled "She Loves You" as "the original' Yeah, Yeah, Yeah,' song". </P> <P> The phrase became synonymous not just with the Beatles but with the associated kind of popular music overall . A New York Times account describing the Animals' introductory concert in the city later that year repeated the phrase in description of the group . </P> <P> Clinton Heylin remarks that the chorus "no, no, no" in Bob Dylan's 1964 song "It Ain't Me, Babe" was taken as a parody of the Beatles' "yeah, yeah, yeah" in "She Loves You". The melody in both phrases uses a scale descending through a minor third . </P> <P> In 1975, authors Roy Carr and Tony Tyler wrote in The Beatles: An Illustrated Record that "If a future archivist were to select one single tune to characterise the Beatles' appeal and the stylistic devices for which they became world famous, he would be forced to choose' She Loves You' ." In 1979, author Greil Marcus included "She Loves You" in his Stranded: Rock and Roll for a Desert Island list of essential rock records . Even more fundamentally, Marcus posed the question of what one would tell a Martian who landed and asked the meaning of rock and roll? The first answer would be "She Loves You". </P>

I love you yeah yeah yeah the beatles