He went on to say that the following lines were about fans who hung around outside his home day and night, and whose actions he found off-putting: "See the people standing there / Who disagree, and never win / And wonder why they don't get in my door.
[12] The recording opens with a harpsichord playing a descending chromatic line (resembling "Michelle") in a staccato-like pattern in 44 time.
Ringo Starr's hi-hat in the final measure of this introduction introduces a swing beat that stays for the remainder of the song.
The word "fixing" here is sung to a piano F major chord but on "hole" to a C augmented chord (which includes a G♯/A♭ note that is a III (3rd) note in the thus predicted F minor scale) pivoting towards the Fm pentatonic minor scale on the more negative mood of "rain gets in".
[13] The Fm key melody in the verse is tinged both by blues flat 7th, and Dorian mode raised 6th notes.
In the second half of the verse, McCartney's bass begins a syncopated three-note pattern that leaves the downbeat empty, meanwhile his vocal is dropping to F an octave below (on "stops my mind"), climbing back to C ("from wandering") then sailing free of the song's established octave to a high falsetto A flat on "where it will go".
[14] George Harrison enters in the seventh and eighth measure with a syncopated distorted Stratocaster with gain, treble and bass all turned up high, providing a distinctive countermelody, double-tracked phrase descending from McCartney's high A♭ vocal note through what author Jonathan Gould terms a "series of biting inversions on the tonic chord".