BANDLE
Hints & Answer Guide
Monday, March 9, 2026
Play Official Bandle
Daily Bandle · March 9, 2026
Today’s Hints & Answer
Listen to each instrument layer — use the hints below to guess before tapping Reveal Answer.
Instrument Layers
Revealed one at a time in-game
1
of 6
Piano
A slow, deliberate piano intro in the key of C major — warm, unhurried chords with a gospel-like solemnity. The opening riff alone is one of the most recognised piano phrases in rock history
Medium
2
of 6
Bass Guitar
A steady, melodic bass line moving through the changes with quiet confidence — holding the song’s emotional weight without drawing attention away from the melody above
Hard
3
of 6
Drums
Simple, restrained drumming entering after the opening verse — a loose, almost hymn-like feel with brushed snare and steady kick. The drummer keeps a slow, soulful 4/4 groove throughout
Medium
4
of 6
Hammond Organ
Rich, swelling Hammond organ chords adding warmth and church-like depth beneath the vocals — evoking a gospel congregation feel that defines the song’s spiritual atmosphere
Easy
5
of 6
Lead Guitar
A soaring, bluesy lead guitar solo in the final third — clean, singing notes with a subtle Fender bite. One of rock’s most beloved guitar solos: emotional, spacious and perfectly restrained
Easy
6
of 6
Lead Vocals
A soulful, warm baritone singing the opening phrase “When I find myself in times of trouble…” — unmistakably one of the most famous voices in music history, delivering a message of comfort and acceptance
Final
Song Hints
01
Released on March 6, 1970 — this was the last single the band released while officially still together, just weeks before a very public split.
Release
02
The song shares its title with the band’s final studio album, also released in 1970. It was originally intended as a return-to-roots project recorded live.
Album
03
Genre: Rock / Gospel-influenced ballad. The song is built in the key of C major at a gentle 76 BPM — slow, stately, and hymn-like in feel.
Genre
04
The songwriter was inspired by a dream about his late mother, who appeared to him during a difficult period in the band’s history with words of reassurance and wisdom.
Inspiration
05
The song was written by a member of the most commercially successful band in history — a quartet from Liverpool, England, who defined the 1960s.
Artist
06
The two-word title is a phrase of acceptance and surrender — a call to stop fighting and allow things to unfold as they will. It reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Title
Song Profile
Artist: The Beatles
Written by: Paul McCartney
Album: Let It Be (1970)
Released: March 6, 1970
Label: Apple Records
Tempo: 76 BPM · C major
Written by: Paul McCartney
Album: Let It Be (1970)
Released: March 6, 1970
Label: Apple Records
Tempo: 76 BPM · C major
Chart Performance
Billboard Hot 100: #1 (2 weeks)
UK Singles Chart: #2
Grammy: Best Original Song Score (1971)
Rolling Stone: #20 Greatest Songs of All Time
YouTube: 600M+ views
UK Singles Chart: #2
Grammy: Best Original Song Score (1971)
Rolling Stone: #20 Greatest Songs of All Time
YouTube: 600M+ views
The Answer
The Beatles
Let It Be
Let It Be · Apple Records · 1970
Written by Paul McCartney and inspired by a dream about his late mother Mary, this gospel-tinged ballad became one of The Beatles’ most enduring songs. Released on March 6, 1970 — just weeks before the band officially disbanded — it reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and remains a timeless anthem of comfort and acceptance.
Grammy Award 1971
Won Best Original Song Score at the 13th Grammy Awards — one of the final accolades the band received during the original era.
Billboard Hot 100 #1
Topped the US Billboard Hot 100 for two weeks. The band’s last US #1 single — a fitting farewell from the world’s biggest rock group.
Rolling Stone Top 20
Ranked #20 on Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Songs of All Time — one of only a handful of songs to transcend its era and become a universal standard.