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McCartney in new app for android smartphones

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Still from the app. © Copyright Jaunt.Inc.
Paul McCartney's performance of "Live and Let Die" from the concert at Candlestick Park is a featured preview in a new app.
Here's the blurb: "Experience musical legend and visionary Sir Paul McCartney performing "Live and Let Die" in 360 degrees, with stereo 3D and immersive audio in Jaunt's first publicly released cinematic VR experience. Requires a recent 5" or 6" phone and a Google Cardboard virtual reality viewer."

We tried to get it to work with our Samsung Galaxy tab, but no luck. Soon to be available for Rift on Macs and Windows PCs, though.

McCartney's Facebook publicity said: "Paul has partnered with Jaunt to allow fans to watch 'Live and Let Die' in an immersive 360-degree virtual environment at his recent Candlestick Park concert. The app puts you right in the crowd, onstage, backstage, or even right by Paul’s side in the midst of the song's climactic pyro!"

Nice to see a Beatle featured in an app that isn't solely for IOS, though.

Links:
Google Play
Developer's site

Yoko bought Lennon's former home?

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Newcastle Road number 9

An article in Breitbart.com speculates that Yoko Ono may have been the anonymous bidder who last year bought 9 Newcastle Road in Liverpool, John Lennon's address from birth to age five. After that, he was taken away from his mother Julia and given to his aunt Mimi and uncle George, to be raised at 251 Menlove Avenue, also known as "Mendips". According to Breitbart.com, the identity of the buyer has been "common knowledge" around Liverpool since the auction. Another tell tale sign is that the same team that Yoko Ono hired to refurbish Mendips, is working on 9 Newcastle Road.

One thing that may have mattered in Yoko's decision to purchase the house, is that it fits into one of the Lennons' theories: That the number 9 has great significance in Lennon's life. Apart from the things he created himself, like #9 Dream, Revolution #9 and Yoko deciding to give birth to Sean on John's birthday, the number 9 has popped up by coincidence several times. John's first address was 9 Newcastle Road, so it fits. Even in death, number 9 haunted Lennon, as it may well have been just before midnight on December 8 in New York when he was killed, but it was already many hours into December 9th in Liverpool at the time.

After having bought and refurbished Mendips, Yoko gave the building to the National Trust, who have turned it into a tourist attraction with regular daily visits: see this link.

Perhaps we'll get another Liverpool Lennon attraction once the house has been refurbished? Next year John would have turned 75, had he lived, so we know something is planned to mark that.

Source: Breitbart.com

The Abbey Road pics got £180,000

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One of the Abbey Road photos, #4.  Photo: Iain Macmillan. Copyright: Apple Corps Ltd.
The not particularly rare photographs of the Beatles crossing Abbey Road, shot for the cover of the album of the same name have sold for a staggering £180,000. Experts, texperts predicted the photos would make £70,000 when they went under the hammer at Bloomsbury Auctions.

According to Sarah Wheeler, Head of Photography at Bloomsbury Auctions, the set was originally sold individually, but were collected and put together as a set by a private collector, the current seller.

Funny that, he could have just visited Snap Galleries in 2011 and bought a full set.

Source: Daily Mail

From the exhibition "Beatles and bystanders", here's a rundown of various people in the background of the six Abbey Road photos for the front cover, as described by Snap Galleries owner Guy White in an article in Sabotage Times. (We have substituted the name Paul Cole with the words "Mystery man"):

The session photographs in more detail:

Frame 5. The cover shot, has been discussed and analysed in depth over the years, even to advance theories of the death of Paul McCartney. But what of the five other front cover session photographs taken that day: the three right to left and two left to right passes that weren’t used? They have been reproduced sparingly in publications over the years, but the opportunity to view them together on a wall in a gallery setting has allowed us to go much deeper.

Frame 1. "Mystery man" is there, on the right, but so are two other people further back on the same side of the road. One is looking at the camera, the other is bending down, looking for something in a bag. On the left pavement, a man sits on the wall, his legs dangling, while closer to camera, two women and a young girl appear behind the Volkswagen Beetle.

Frame 2. There’s "Mystery man" again, but this time he is all alone on the right pavement. The two people on the right in frame 1 have gone. Meanwhile our friend sitting on the wall on the left has been joined by a man in a white shirt and a woman with a parasol.

Frame 3. "Mystery man" is there, but now he has moved further away from his position in frame 2. He shares the pavement this time with a lady in a red sweater, looking directly at the camera. Here’s where it gets interesting. You have to look very, very carefully on the left pavement to spot her, but there in the closest gateway, just behind the Beetle, is a young woman in a purple top. This is her first appearance, but she is present in three of the six frames – just one fewer appearance than "Mystery man".  Immediately behind the Beetle, a black delivery van has pulled in. It has gone before frame 4. Look carefully and you can see the left arm of the driver, standing behind the van.

Frame 4. There’s no sign of "Mystery man", but there is another man in a white shirt, striding with some purpose, walking towards the camera. Over on the left we get a clearer sight of the mysterious girl in the purple top, on the move this time, and two of the three decorators who appear on the actual cover, appear in this frame.

Frame 5. The actual cover. The one everyone knows. "Mystery man" is there on the right, of course. On the left pavement, further back, stand three decorators, subsequently identified as Alan Flanagan, Steve Millwood and Derek Seagrove. They were all captured for posterity on the cover photograph. Close viewing shows another man, as yet unidentified, standing behind a car, close to the group of three. There is no sign of the mysterious girl in the purple top.

Frame 6. "Mystery man" has had enough – he’s gone. The three decorators remain on the left, joined by a fourth person. The girl in the purple top is there on the left, clearly visible, back in the gateway she first occupied in frame 3. Other people appear, but are not engaged with the scene: a man dressed in black walks away from camera on the left pavement. On the right, by the police van, two people are looking away, while in the distance, on the left, passengers spill out of a number 159 bus. Who were these other people? Maybe we’ll never know, or maybe this can be the start of their 15 minutes. Anyone out there recognise their mum, or their aunty Beryl?

Guy White's descriptions of the bystanders in each of the Macmillan shots have been added to our main blog post about the Abbey Road photo session, "The road goes on forever".

The butcher cover

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The original "Yesterday And Today" cover. Photo: Robert Whitaker
On the 25th March 1966, a photo session which was to become a notorious part of The Beatles' history took place: the infamous 'butcher cover' pictures were taken.

The session took place at a top floor studio on the second floor of 1 The Vale, Chelsea, London. The space was rented by Oluf Nissen, but the photographer was Robert Whitaker. Before it took place, though, the group posed for a more conventional session at the studio for Nigel Dickson, working for The Beatles Book magazine. They wore light turtleneck sweaters and dark jackets, for what became their 1966 handout and standard promotional pictures. They also taped an interview for Radio Caroline DJ Tom Lodge, for a free flexi disc titled Sound Of The Stars which was given away by Disc And Music Echo, co-owned by Brian Epstein.

The "butcher" concept

Whitaker had the idea of creating a satirical commentary on The Beatles' fame, inspired by the German surrealist Hans Bellmer's images of dismembered doll and mannequin parts.

"I did a photograph of the Beatles covered in raw meat, dolls and false teeth. Putting meat, dolls and false teeth with The Beatles is essentially part of the same thing, the breakdown of what is regarded as normal. The actual conception for what I still call "Somnambulant Adventure" was Moses coming down from Mount Sinai with the Ten Commandments. He comes across people worshipping a golden calf. All over the world I'd watched people worshiping like idols, like gods, four Beatles. To me they were just stock standard normal people. But this emotion that fans poured on them made me wonder where Christianity was heading."Robert Whitaker

It was later claimed that the photographs were intended as a protest by The Beatles on their treatment by the press and public, and Capitol Records' insistence on reordering their album tracks for the American market, but Whitaker later denied this, saying it was entirely his idea.

Q: How did that photo, featuring the Beatles among slabs of meat and decapitated dolls, come about? Was it your idea or the Beatles'?

Robert Whitaker: It was mine. Absolutely. It was part of three pictures that should have gone into an icon. And it was a rough. If you could imagine, the background of that picture should have been all gold. Around the heads would have gone silver halos, jewelled. Then there are two other pictures that are in the book [The Unseen Beatles], but not in colour.

Q: How did you prepare for the shoot?

It was hard work. I had to go to the local butcher and get pork. I had to go to a doll factory and find the dolls. I had to go to an eye factory and find the eyes. False teeth. There's a lot in that photograph. I think John's almost-last written words were about that particular cover; that was pointed out to me by Martin Harrison, who wrote the text to my book. I didn't even know that, but I'm learning a lot.

Q: Why meat and dolls? There's been a lot of conjecture over the years about what that photo meant. The most popular theory is that it was a protest by the Beatles against Capitol Records for supposedly "butchering" their records in the States.

Rubbish, absolute nonsense. If the trilogy or triptych of the three photographs had ever come together, it would have made sense. There is another set of photos in the book which is the Beatles with a girl with her back toward you, hanging on to sausages. Those sausages were meant to be an umbilical cord. Does this start to open a few chapters?

Q: Were you aware when you shot it that Capitol Records was going to use it as a record cover?

No.

Q: Were you upset when they did and then when they pulled it and replaced it with another photo?

Well, I shot that photo too, of them sitting on a trunk, the one that they pasted over it. I fairly remember being bewildered by the whole thing. I had no reason to be bewildered by it, purely and simply, because it could certainly be construed as a fairly shocking collection of bits and pieces to stick on a group of people and represent that in this country.

Robert Whitaker Goldmine magazine, 15 November 1991

The triptych as intended by Whitaker was to be retouched to make The Beatles appear as religious icons. The decoration was intended to contrast with the earthiness of the meat and dummies, underlining the group's normality beneath their fame. The cover was an unfinished concept. It was just one of a series of photographs that would have made up a gate-fold cover. Behind the head of each Beatle would have been a golden halo and in the halo would have been placed a semi-precious stone. Then the background would have contained more gold, so it was rather like a Russian icon. It was just after John Lennon had said that the Beatles were more popular than Jesus Christ. In a material world that was an extremely true statement. Robert Whitaker


Robert (Bob) Whitaker's book from 1998, "The Unseen Beatles".

Outtakes from the session, included in Whitaker's book The Unseen Beatles, indicate the form the triptych was to take. The first photograph shows the group facing a woman standing with her back to the camera, with her hands raised in surprise or worship. The Beatles held a string of sausages, intended to symbolise an umbilical cord, to emphasise that the group were born like everybody else. The triptych's centre panel is the image now known as the 'butcher' photograph, and shows The Beatles dressed in butchers' white coats, surrounded by slabs of meat and doll parts. The final panel was an image of George Harrison standing behind a seated John Lennon, holding a hammer as if he was driving nails into Lennon's head. This was intended to underline that The Beatles were real and substantial, not idols to worship.

Not imaginary nails. Photo: Robert Whitaker

The butcher photograph was used in advertisements for Paperback Writer in the British music press before it appeared on the cover of the Capitol Records compilation Yesterday... And Today.

Advertisement in "Disc and music Echo".

Capitol pressed the cover in early June 1966, but upon its release that month it was swiftly recalled after an outcry from record retailers. Nervous after Lennon's comments about The Beatles being "more popular than Jesus", the label issued letters of apology and hastily issued the album with a replacement cover, also taken by Whitaker. Eventually it was decided that it would be cheaper to paste the new cover shot over the withdrawn butcher sleeves. Unpeeled copies are now highly sought-after by collectors; however, the most valuable are the original 'first state' versions, particularly the stereo pressings.

The "trunk cover" pasted over. Note the triangular black shape on the right, revealing Ringo's black sweater on the butcher picture underneath. Photo: Robert Whitaker.
The text and most of the images in this blog post taken from the official Robert Whitaker Photographer page on Facebook.

Links for further enlightenment and photos:
The Beatles Bible
Feelnumb
Rare Beatles


12 days of Christmas

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Universal Music's 12 days of Christmas campaign.
In a new article from the Daily Mirror about the revitalised vinyl records industry, we noticed the following sentence: "Music giant Universal Music is releasing a number of vinyl singles next month by acts such as The Who and The Beatles in its 12 Days Of Christmas campaign". So, Beatles singles, aye? However, upon further investigation, it turned out to be the afore mentioned "Long Tall Sally" release from Record Store Day's "Black Friday" in the USA, being readied in the UK for December 2. Technically, that's an EP and not a single, Daily Mirror.

Picture from our reader Josep M. Navarro, who bought the EP on "Black Friday" from Revolver Records in Barcelona, Spain today.


The two recent "Best Buy exclusive" Wings singles are also part of the campaign. Here's the release schedule:

  • Metallica, Lords of Summer 12” - December 1st
  • The Beatles, Long Tall Sally 7” - December 2nd
  • Tim Hardin, Tim Hardin 1 & 2 LPs - December 3rd
  • Wings, Let Em In/Beware My Love 7” - December 4th
  • Bon Jovi, Live 2 10” - December 5th
  • 5 Seconds of Summer , Picture disc LP - December 6th
  • St. Vincent, Pieta/Sparrow 10” - December 8th
  • Weezer, Back to the Shack 7” - December 9th
  • Shirley Collins/Davy Graham, Folk Roots, New Roots LP - December 10th
  • Wings, Letting Go 7” - December 11th
  • Imagine Dragons, Night Vision picture disc LP - December 12th
  • The Who, Be Lucky 7” - December 13th
For the record, all three Beatles and related records have been observed in record stores here in Norway today as part of Black Friday.

New Lennon art book

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John Lennon The Collected Artwork

A new book collects John Lennon's drawings. The book will be published in the UK on December 3, and in the USA on December 23. Here's the description:

Throughout the course of his career, John Lennon’s work as an artist expressed common societal themes from every epoch he witnessed. Until now, little of this work has been seen in one place. For the first time, John Lennon: The Collected Artwork offers a visually captivating history of Lennon’s art, including more than 200 images and featuring 25 never-before-published pieces from the archives of Yoko Ono.

Often surreal and extremely vibrant, Lennon’s drawings were widely considered some of the finest interpretive art of the era. His 1969 Bag One series, frequently censored due to its overt eroticism, is part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and his peace-themed sketches have been used in antiwar movements since the 1970s. Selections from these and many other series are featured in this matchless collection, a beautiful showpiece and a timeless record of Lennon’s emotional, political, and imaginative spirit.

Product details
Hardcover: 264 pages (UK) 204 pages (USA)
Publisher: Insight Editions, Div of Palace Publishing Group, LP
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1608870294
ISBN-13: 978-1608870295
Product Dimensions: 27.9 x 27.9 cm (UK) 11" x 11" (USA)

About the author:

SCOTT GUTTERMAN writes about music and art for Vogue, Artforum, The New Yorker, GQ, and other publications. He is the deputy director of the Neue Galerie New York. He lives in New York City.

New CD: The early works of George Martin

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George Martin compilation on independent label.
The small record company Not Now Music is releasing another out of EU copyright compilation, this one focusing on recordings made by the Beatles' producer, George Martin. Two Beatles tracks are included, and yes, it's the usual suspects. The double CD is due out December 8.

Disc: 1
1. Love Me Do - The Beatles
2. Don't You Rock Me Daddy-O - The Vipers
3. Won't You Come Home Bill Bailey - Freddy Randall & His Band
4. Robin Hood - Dick James
5. I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good (feat. Cleo Laine) - Johnny Dankworth & His Orchestra
6. Be My Girl - Jim Dale
7. Theme From "Limelight" - Ron Goodwin & His Orchestra
8. Portrait Of My Love - Matt Monro
9. Time Beat - Ray Cathode
10. Barwick Green (Archers Theme) - Sidney Torch & His Orchestra
11. You're Driving Me Crazy - The Temperance Seven
12. Saturday Jump - Humphrey Lyttelton & His Band
13. Earth Angel - The Southlanders
14. The Dr. Kildare Theme - Johnny Spence & His Orchestra
15. Murder She Said (Theme From Film) - Ron Goodwin & His Orchestra
16. Crazy Rhythm - Max Geldray With Wally Stott & His Orchestra

Disc: 2
1. P.S. I Love You - The Beatles
2. My Kind Of Girl - Matt Monro
3. Pickin' A Chicken - Eve Boswell
4. No Other Baby - The Vipers
5. Morse Code Melody - The Alberts
6. Arriverderci Darling - Edna Savage
7. The White Suit Samba - Jack Parnell & His Rhythm
8. Hi-Flutin' Boogie - John Scott
9. High Society - Graeme Bell & His Australian Jazz Band
10. Experiments With Mice - Johnny Dankworth & His Orchestra
11. Little Red Monkey - Joy Nichols, Jimmy Edwards & Dick Bentley
12. Hayfoot, Strawfoot - Kenny Baker Quartet
13. No One Will Ever Know - Matt Monro
14. Romanza - Roberto Inglez & His Orchestra
15. Skiffling Strings - Ron Goodwin & His Orchestra
16. Coronation Scot - Sidney Torch & Queen's Hall Light Orchestra

The price is as low as it gets for a 2CD release: £5.67. But then again, they didn't have to fork out for the copyrights.

What is life - the winner

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A winner of this competition has been chosen by Dhani and Olivia Harrison, above is the winning entry. Brandon Moore won the $5000 price, and The Apple Years boxed set. The video has been posted on George Harrison's official social media channels.

Spanish Beatles boxed set

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Spanish boxed sets
Josep M. Navarro has written to us about a Spanish Beatles boxed set which, like the current Italian one we wrote about recently, was being sold in newsstands, and featured a specially designed box. This boxed set made it's debut in Spain October 13, 2013, when the newspaper El Pais started selling the collection of The Beatles CDs along with the Sunday's newspaper.
The final official CD was for sale on January 12, 2014. The following week the collection was expanded with the sale of three more CDs, "On Air: Live at BBC vol.2", "Love" and "Live at BBC vol.1", in a similarly designed box.
Cardboard sheet for Rubber Soul

The presentation was very nice with a cardboard sheet accompanying the CDs. The second CD came with the box for storage. The price of single CDs was 9.90 euros and 12.90 euros for the double CDs.
Albums in order of release:
  1. Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
  2. Abbey Road (plus box for storage)
  3. The Beatles (White album) 2CD
  4. Let It Be
  5. Help!
  6. Rubber Soul
  7. Revolver
  8. Magical Mystery Tour
  9. A Hard Day's Night
  10. Please Please Me
  11. With The Beatles
  12. Beatles For Sale
  13. Past Masters 2CD
  14. Yellow Submarine
  15. On Air: Live at the BBC Vol 2 2CD (plus box for storage)
  16. Love 2CD
  17. Live at the BBC Vol 1 2CD
Back of the boxed sets
Here's the link to the promotion in El Pais.

Bootleg Recordings 1964 coming

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The Beatles bootleg recordings 1963
Universal Music Canada supposedly confirmed that a release is forthcoming. Like last year's Bootleg Recordings 1963, the new Beatles release is going to be a digital only, quiet release. We are hoping that a number of concert performances from 1964 will be included.

Elton and Lennon on YouTube

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Very happy to see that the concert footage we had a modest hand in helping to unearth back in 2011 has been given a proper pubic airing this Thanksgiving, courtesy of Elton John's official YouTube channel. See our original 2011 blog post here.

Why Ringo is hated in Liverpool

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In 2008, Liverpool celebrated being one of the cities named "Capital of Culture" and a big celebration was held, one which included Ringo Starr coming home to perform and do some bits for the city. Unfortunately, a few days after the celebrations Ringo was a guest at the Jonathan Ross Show, and his comments about Liverpool on that show offended Liverpudlians. You can watch his appearance on the show on the clip presented here:



Unlike Paul McCartney, Ringo no longer has any living relatives remaining in Liverpool, which means he no longer has any current connection to the city - and a reason to go there. Which is likely to have been on his mind when he said that he wouldn't want to live there any more. After that show, a lot of people in Liverpool turned their backs on the drummer, and even now, otherwise intelligent people are referring to Ringo as "the lucky guy who managed to join the Beatles just as fame struck". This is really a sorry state, and as someone who both loves Liverpool (I just came back from spending this week there), and who has more than just a tad of knowledge about the Beatles, I'm not happy with this situation. It was taken wrong, and now it's all this.

Still, Ringo returned to Liverpool in 2011, playing at the Empire Theatre, where the Beatles also held a few concerts in the sixties. Sadly, people who would have enjoyed the show didn't turn up, because they were still angry with Ringo. The local newspaper Liverpool Echo had a commentary titled "We are a city that forgives", unfortunately this was not the case.

Ringo has a lot of love for Liverpool, and his last three solo albums have all had a song about Liverpool on them.
There's no need for me to justify Ringo's place in the Beatles, a world of drummers have been thankful for what he taught them and have openly paid tribute to him many times over the years, he was easily the most popular Beatle in the USA, and John Lennon has testified that Ringo would have made it to stardom even without the Beatles. When the Beatles were over, Ringo's single "It Don't Come Easy" was a big hit, outselling his fellow former-Beatles' singles at the time: John Lennon's "Power to the People", Paul McCartney's "Another Day" and George Harrison's "Bangla Desh". In 2011, Rolling Stone readers named Ringo Starr the fifth-greatest drummer of all time. And no, John Lennon (who by the way is the hero the city of Liverpool most worships, over all the three other guys) never said anything about Ringo not being the greatest drummer in the Beatles. Lennon never had anything but praise for his drummer, and made use of him on his first solo albums.

Studio tracks for Bootleg Recordings 1964

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A fan made creation, not really the cover art of the actual awaited release
While waiting for the Beatles Bootleg recordings 1964 to pop up over at iTunes, here's a list of studio performances from 1964 already available to collectors and fans, courtesy of the bootleg industry, and likely to be included on the new release:
  • Komm Gib Mir Deine Hand - takes 1, 2, 7, 9, 10 and take unknown
  • Komm Gib Mir Deine Hand - original mono mix
  • Sie Liebt Dich - take unknown
  • Sie Liebt Dich - original mono mix
  • Can't Buy Me Love - takes 1-4
  • You Can't Do That - session chat and take 6
  • And I Love Her - take 2
  • I Should Have Known Better – harmonica fragment, take 2?, take 8 (slate) and take 11
  • And I Love Her - takes 11 (ending)/take 12 (slate), take 14 (slate - "take 50")
  • And I Love Her - studio chat fragments and take 21 (slate)
  • Tell Me Why - takes 2 (slate) and 4
  • If I Fell - take unknown (fragment)
  • I Call Your Name - take 1 (pre take chat)
  • A Hard Day’s Night - takes 1-9
  • I'll Be Back - takes 2, 3, 12-15
  • You Know What To Do - studio demo
  • No Reply - studio demo take 1
  • Baby's In Black - take 7 (chat/slate)
  • I'm A Loser - takes 1-8
  • Mr Moonlight - takes 1, 2 (partial) and 4
  • Leave My Kitten Alone - take 4 (end), take 5
  • Every Little Thing (session chat)
  • What You're Doing - take 11
  • No Reply - takes 1 and 2, and two unknown takes
  • Eight Days A Week - studio chat and takes 1, 2, 4 and 5
  • She's A Woman session chat
  • She's A Woman - takes 1-7
  • Eight Days A Week - take 6 + edit piece 15 (with guide vocal)
  • Eight Days A Week - take 6 + edit piece 15 with overdubs (unfaded intro)
  • Kansas City/Hey Hey Hey Hey - take 2
  • I Feel Fine - takes 1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and take 9 after overdubs.
  • Everybody's Trying To Be My Baby - session chat
  • Honey Don't - session chat
  • What You're Doing (remake) - take unknown

Of course, in addition to these, Apple will have to include any unreleased BBC radio performances from 1964 circulating, as well as any concert performances not already released. The tracks from "The Beatles at the Hollywood Bowl" LP will stay copyright protected because it was an official release in 1977. However, the complete August 23rd, 1964 Hollywood Bowl concert is circulating among collectors and the tracks not cherry-picked for the official album will have to be released now to protect the copyrights in the recording.
Last year's Bootleg Recordings 1963 failed to cover all bases, resulting in small time record labels releasing the missed opportunities, like with this album.
Two Beach Boys copyright protection collections for 1964 are already out, and a 9 volume set from Bob Dylan is expected shortly. If a new Beatles collection is to follow, soundboard tapes of the band’s concerts in Paris, Melbourne, Adelaide, Vancouver, Philadelphia and several other cities will have to be included. And since we know that unbootlegged performances from the Beatles 1964 concerts are in the hand of private collectors, we can expect to see small time labels further profiting on unreleased Beatles material in the year to come.

Last year's iTunes-only release.
While the Beach Boys collections are readily available to all as iTunes downloads, the Bob Dylan sets are usually limited edition physical releases, limited to 1000 copies. Of course, neither of these methods are of much damage to the bootleg industry, since in the Beach Boys' case, collectors who want physical discs are turning to bootleg versions, and in the case of Bob Dylan, the limited availability is made up for by counterfeiting and vinyl rips circulating among the fans.
The unavailability of the Beatles Bootleg Recordings 1963 as physical discs is also profiting the underground record industry who are selling their product via ebay and other channels.

Limited editon 4LP - 2CD underground physical release of last year's iTunes only collection.
Background: In 2012, the European Union extended copyrights on recordings from 50 to 70 years. However, the law came with a provision that copyrighted material had to be released within 50 years or else the songs would enter the public domain. Last year, the Beatles, without much publicity, put out a collection of songs on iTunes in order to retain their copyrights.

Lennon's Own Books

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In His Own Write 1964
The two John Lennon books that he wrote at the height of Beatlesmania, "In His Own Write" (1964) and "A Spaniard In The Works" (1965) have been reissued on December 8 by the publishing house Canongate in the UK.

"In His Own Write", Lennon’s critically acclaimed debut was one of the biggest selling books of the Sixties, selling over 600,000 copies in the UK alone. Combining nonsense verse, oddball stories and stunning line drawings, it reveals a side to Lennon’s creative output that has always been overshadowed by his music.



"A Spaniard In The Works", Lennon's second collection, is every bit as witty, whimsical and wonderful as his debut. Lennon's writing style owes much to his favourite author, Englishman Lewis Carroll, while his drawings are influenced by American James Thurber.

A Spaniard in the Works 1965

Jamie Byng, Publisher at Canongate, says: “Fifty years on, these two books by Lennon remain wonderfully fresh and memorable and distinctive and it is a great honour to be publishing new editions of them which do justice to the original drawings. Lennon was an exceptional artist and there is a growing appreciation of this which is borne out by the recent, record-breaking sale at Sotheby’s.”

Byng is referring to an extensive auction of original poetry and artwork from the two books, which took place at Sotheby’s, New York earlier this month and raised $2.9M, well over double the pre-sale estimates.

It was reported in an article that an initial printing in Great Britain sold 50,000 copies the first day, and Simon & Schuster had a first printing of 90,000 in the USA. The books were also translated to other languages in the sixties, here in Scandinavia they were available in Danish, Swedish and Finnish.

The regular price of these books is £12.99 each, but they are available now from Canongate's web site for just £5.20 each, which is a pre-Christmas sale price. The books are faithful facsimile copies of the originals with hard covers, on the back cover is the legend "50th Anniversary Edition" and they do have bar codes on the back as well.

The backs of the books, click to enlarge


Originally published by Jonathan Cape in hard covers in the UK, both books have had several reprints in hard covers as well as paperback, "In His Own Write" especially so, as recent as the year 2000. And here they are again!

A Spaniard in the Works English/Swedish 1997

Back in 1997, I purchased an English and Swedish edition of "A Spaniard in the Works" from the Swedish publishing house Bakhåll. Together with that edition was a CD containing tracks with never before released Lennon pieces and interviews.

1997 CD tracks:
  1. "My Life" (Lennon) 2:30
  2. "John Meets Yoko - Teacher/Pupil" (Lennon) 1:44
  3. "Dear John" (Lennon) 4:10
  4. "Cosmic Joke Number 9 / The Future Is Ours To See" (Lennon) 1:30
  5. "Lord, Take This Makeup Off Me" (Lennon) 2:18
  6. "Do It Yourself" (unknown) 1:13
  7. "Make Love Not War" (Lennon) 3:13
  8. "Groupies" (Lennon) 1:45
  9. "Here We Go Again" (Lennon/Spector) 2:57
  10. "What Does It Mean When You're Such A Pacifist That You Get Shot?" (Lennon) 0:57
  11. "His Spirit Is Still Around" (Yoko Ono) 0:46
The book with the CD. CD notes on this page (click to enlarge).
After John Lennon's death, Yoko Ono published a third volume in the trilogy, "Skywriting by Word of Mouth". Subtitled "and Other Writings Including the Ballad of John and Yoko", it was published posthumously in 1986 and included an afterword by his widow, Yoko Ono. Like his other works, it contains miscellaneous writings and cartoons.

Skywriting by Word of Mouth 1986

The book includes Lennon's autobiography (titled "The Ballad of John and Yoko"), in which he talks about the Beatles' break-up ("I started the band. I disbanded it.") and says that he has no hard feelings against his former bandmates: "Paul, George, and It's Only Ringo. I bear them no ill will." However, he also referred to them as "avant-garde revolutionary thinkers" a statement which could be interpreted as sarcastic in intent and declared "In retrospect, the Beatles were no more an important part of my life than any other (and less than some)."

Lennon mentioned the manuscript in a 1980 Playboy interview:"At one point ... I wrote about two hundred pages of mad stuff." The manuscript was stolen from the Lennons' apartment in 1982, and later recovered in 1986, when Ono had it published.

Petition: Bowie-McCartney

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Ziggy and Macca
A group of teenagers has started a campaign trying to get Paul McCartney and David Bowie to collaborate on a song. Despite their age, they deeply appreciate and admire these two artists (who share a common common link in John Lennon) and, basically, they want to bring them together before "it's too late", as they say.
To this end, they have established a Facebook group, a Twitter account and created a petition page. Meanwhile, we'll air the only collaboration between the two we have known of: Here's Paul McCartney introducing and backing Mick Jagger and David Bowie's impromptu performance of "Dancing in the Street" from the Prince's Trust concert in 1986.


"Hope" due out on vinyl - in the future

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In the future, "Hope for the Future" will be out on vinyl.
Contrary to previous reports, the recent iTunes release from Paul McCartney, "Hope For The Future" will be out on a physical disc in the er... future, it is being readied for release as a 12" vinyl single early next year, January 12th. (source: Spin-CDs)

Tracks:
1) ’Hope For The Future (Main)
2) ’Hope For The Future (Thrash)
3) ’Hope For The Future (Beatsession Mix)
4) ’Hope For The Future (Jaded Mix)
5) ’Hope For The Future (Mirwais Mix)

In the video for "Hope for the Future", Paul was filmed while standing on a circular platform, very reminiscent of  a clip for another time travel oriented saga.

Paul on a round platform
Paul etc on a round platform

Mal Evans' article about the Get Back album

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Reproduced in the Beatles' Anthology book, this was the original artwork for the Get Back album. Looks like it has been pasted over with a corrected cover from when the album's name was changed to "Let It Be", and then that paste-over has been removed again. According to John Kosh, John Lennon wrote the corrective measures on the artwork pictured here.
In July 1969, the Beatles'Get Back album was being readied for release in August, and Mal Evans wrote an article about the upcoming album for the official fan club magazine, "The Beatles Book Monthly". He describes the album thoroughly, and does a track by track detailed account about what's in the grooves. Here is the article, reproduced from #72 of Beatles Book Monthly.

THE BEATLES GET BACK

AUGUST LP SURPRISES


* 10-year-old song is included ! * Skiffling Beatles do "Maggie May" ! * No vocals from Ringo ! * "The Beatles with their socks off" - and they've re-recorded "Love Me Do" but it's not on the LP!

The Beatles' next LP album was finished at the end of May - with George the only Beatle remaining in Britain at the time, supervising the last of the re-mixing and re-balancing sessions to produce the final tapes from which the LP record will be made.

Release of the album is being held back until August so that it can coincide with the publication of a special book full of recording session pictures.

Apart from the LP and the book, there's the film which was made while the new numbers were being rehearsed at Twickenham and recorded in Apple's own new studio in the basement beneath 3, Savile Row, our London headquarters.
The fe!lows would like the film to go on television in August so that everything comes together at the same time. Before I go into the new LP in track-by-track detail let me set down some of the background information. The title of the album is The Beatles; Get Back. And indeed John, Paul, George and Ringo do get back with these recordings - all the way back to the simplicity of their earliest stuff.

Remember the fellows' first Parlophone album Please, Please Me, issued in May 1963? Well, the photograph for the new LP cover was taken in exactly the same place by the same photographer, Angus McBean. With the four fellows grouped over the staircase at the offices of EMI Records in London's Manchester Square, just as they had done six years earlier.
The Beatles; Get Back is by far the most informal set of records The Beatles have ever put out. Everything was rehearsed, as you know, down at Twickenham - both those sessions were really to get together the new songs and decide how each one would be treated. Once we moved from Twickenham to Apple all the recording we did was "live" with no "over-dubbing" of extra voices or instruments, no orchestras brought in boost the accompaniments, no special electronic happenings whatsoever. Just three guitars plus Ringo's drums - with piano and occasional organ contributions from Paul and from Billy Preston who was the only non-Beatle to work with us throughout the series of sessions.

The stereo version of the LP is particularly great - thanks to sound expert Glyn Johns who was the studio engineer for all the recordings.

Gradually since Please Please Me The Beatles have been going for greater and greater studio perfection, using every possible audio and electronic technique to add to and improve the finished productions. This time the policy has been entirely different. The Beatles; Get Back is The Beatles with their socks off, human Beatles kicking out their jams, getting rid of their inhibitions, facing their problems and working them out with their music. During and in between most of the tracks you will hear lots of studiofloor conversation, each of the fellows chatting, preparing for the next number, shouting comments up to the control room. On other albums all this type of ad-lib stuff has been cut from the tapes befare putting the tracks on disc.

This time everything is left for you to hear-just as it happened. You even hear a clapper board banging down and a yelled instruction from one of the filming crew people who were making the separate visual recording of everything which took place.

In all there are nine entirely new numbers on The Beatles; Get Back-plus both sides of the recent single, Get Back and Don't Let Me Down. At the very end of the second side they get back to Get Back again for a brief encore version of that number. And between a couple of other items are brief "link" tracks featuring Save The Last Dance For Me and Maggie May the only non-Beatle compositions the fellows have put out on record since they made Act Naturally and Dizzy Miss Lizzy for their Help! album in 1965.

The article is from The Beatles Book Monthly #72.

There is only one George Harrison composition – For You Blue - and it hasn't a trace of sitar or anything else Eastern about it.

Ringo stays with his drums all the way through this new programme and he doesn't have a solo vocal track of his own on this occasion.

Although this LP has only 11 main numbers on it, far more tracks have been recorded. The Beatles didn't want to repeat the "double disc" idea and make everyone buy a pair of LP records together. lnstead all the other tracks are held "in the can" so that they can be used later.

Amongst the stuff that "stays on file" so to speak is enough material for a special rock 'n' roll LP - including famous American rock hits like Shake Rattle And Roll and Blue Suede Shoes.

What's more we even did a re-make of Love Me Do, The Beatles first single from October 1962! But one of the recordings which you WILL find on the new album goes back even further than that. It's a number called One After 909 which John and Paul wrote as long ago as 1959 ! Oh yes, Ringo DID put down one vocal item, his own composition called Octopussy's Garden, but along with at least another 15 others by George, John and Paul, it's "in the can" for future release unless now that all the Beatles are back they decide to make last minute additions to the August LP.

On the LP the version you will hear of Get Back is the same one which went on the single but we did a special LP version of the single's other side, Don't Let Me Down. Everything you hear on The Beatles; Get Back was recorded at Apple and the starting dates for all recordings were during the last fortnight of January. The first one to get under way was Dig A Pony on January 20 and the last one we started work on was One After 909 (May 28).

As you may remember if you saw all the newspaper stories at the time or read what I had to say about it several Beatles Monthly issues ago, we recorded five numbers in the open air on the roof of the Apple HQ building. The five were One After 909, I've Got A Feeling, Don't Let Me Down, Get Back and Dig A Pony BUT only ONE roof-top version is included on the LP-and that's One After 909. We did fresh versions of the other items way down below in the basement.

O.K.-it's time to get back. Here's my run-down on all the LP recordings, the ones The Beatles have made just to please, please you :

SIDE ONE

I. ONE AFTER 909

One After 909 was written by John and Paul ten years ago when they were not Beatles at all but The Nurk Twins or something like that. Like I said a little earlier, this is the album's only Apple roof-top recording. It makes a punchy kick-off to the Get Back programme with Paul's raw voice ravin' all the way. It opens with a piano run and a guitar chord echoing out around the January sky - but that's just a false start. Then straight into the heavy rocking. Ringo on drums, John playing rhythm guitar, George on lead guitar, Paul playing bass guitar and good old Billy Preston adding his electric piano work. The vocal is shared by Paul and John. You won't catch all the words at first hearing---except, perhaps, the line about ''she said she was travelling on the one after 909" which tells you a missing bird and a train are involved in the story. Make up the rest for yourself. Sounds to me as if this fellow really knows how to mess things up. His bird isn't coming on the next train either. He's a right loser!

LINK TRACK: SAVE THE LAST DANCE

At the end of the first track there's a bit of applause and you'll hear Paul saying "Thanks Mo" to Ringo's Mo because she was clapping hardest! Then you'll hear a fragment of freaky vamping, just a nice bit of guitar stuff, and Paul saying ''Just a minute boys". Then John and Paul go into the familiar old Drifters' hit Save The Last Dance - not much of it because this wasn't meant to be on the new LP at all but we left this bit to maintain the fun atmosphere of the whole session. Then:
Paul: "Do your thing man."
John: "I can't keep off it."
John again: "Give me the courage to come screaming in".

2. DON'T LET ME DOWN

Nobody ever loved me like she does. You know that - and you know this track unless you've just never played the ''B"-side of the Get Back single. For this LP version of Don' t Let Me Down John sings with the guitar and drums line-up just as it was for One After 909 but Billy didn't play this time.
Paul sings too but it's mostly John. I love this slow, bluesy one with its banging beat and great wailing guitar from the fingers of G.H. At the end of the track you'll hear this:
John: "We'll do Dig A Pony straight into I've Got A Feeling."
And, friends, that's what they do.

3. DIG A PONY

Mostly John this one, with occasional Paul again. Billy's back on electric piano, Paul on bass and lots of metal coming from Ringo's department. A bit of blues this, nicely heavy, with emphasis on the tune rather than the words.
In gist the line is that you can do anything you want to do so long as you set your mind to it. Overcome everything if you really try to work it out. You can even dig a pony. Lots of ad lib comments flung around, a crash of the cymbal and we're straight on into ...

4. I'VE GOT A FEELING

Paul and John sharing the vocal. Paul coming in with that great screamy style of his. John replying to Paul's lines and, later, coming in to take over the lead singing for a verse. And you'll just about hear him mutter to himself "I cocked it up trying to get loud."
Story comes in the middle with the tag-line "All that I was looking for was somebody who looked like you."
Between I've Got A Feeling and the last track of the first side you'll hear Ringo thump his tomtoms and ask: "What does that sound like?"

5. GET BACK

Get back to where you once belonged-obviously the main theme not only of this terrific track but of the whole album, The Beatles' whole frame of mind for 1969. Paul does a great job of the vocal. Again it's George on rhythm, John on lead, Paul on bass, Ringo drumming and Billy doing his bit on the electric piano.

SIDE TWO

1. FOR YOU BLUE

George's composition, George as vocalist. You'll hear him say "O.K.''? and give a bit of a false start on his guitar. Then he gets into this beautiful love song about the girl you're always dreaming of, the one who haunts you, the one you never quite meet up with. The grass is always greener on the other side of the hill.
No bass here or on the next couple of tracks. Instead we had George playing acoustic guitar, John on steel guitar, Paul on piano-plus Ringo's drumming. Interesting middle with 12 bars guitar and 12 bars piano. Almost like a South Sea Beat Ballad with the "island" effect of John's Fender running through here. "You're a sweet and lovely girl, I love you". Nice words, neat tune. When you hear this one you'll agree that George's songwriting is better than ever these days. I'd say this is one of the most pleasing things he's ever done. Thank you George and now for ...

2. TEDDY BOY

George switches to electric guitar here, John plays acoustic and Paul sings a simple story about a mother comforting her boy. Mama's going to see you through. We all need someone to turn to-that's the message. We need people. No man is an island. Later on the whole session gets a bit like a square dance with genuine (genuine?) calls. And we didn't cut out the electronic squeal that came halfway through this recording. The result of feed-back from one of the amps. All through the making of the LP we used portable equipment fetched over from EMI because the stuff being built into the Apple Studio wasn't ready for action.

3. TWO OF US ON OUR WAY HOME

Two of us riding nowhere. You and I have memories longer than the road that stretches out ahead. We're on our way back home. We're getting back. John and Paul share the vocal on this pleasant mediumpaced lazy Sunday afternoon sort of number. The two of them with their voices in good harmony. Still not using a bass here but George reaching his fingers down low to the bass lines of his electric guitar. All fades away . . . "So we leave the little town of London, England...." (Paul).

LINK TRACK: MAGGIE MAY

This is a riot. All the fellows getting together for a brief reminder that we're all Mersey Beat Boys at heart. Yes, this is THE Maggie May, dirty Maggie May who'll never walk down Lime Street anymore. Sung with much Liverpool gusto.

4. DIG IT

Fast and very rhythmic. A great big free-for-all. John takes over the bass guitar playing for this and the next two tracks with Paul playing piano and George on acoustic again. Paul singing here with John shouting enthusiastic remarks like "I can hardly keep my hands still." Scatty vocal vamping above the piano and rhythm laid down as a solid base. "I want it, I want it"(George). "You're gonna get it all right, get it good" (John). The words are saying you can't really knock anything – BBC, Doris Day, anything because SOMEBODY digs it even if you don't.
John: 'That was Can You Dig It. Now we'd like to do Hark The Angels Come." Yes the voice you'll hear at this point belongs to J. Lennon and not G. Fields.
Then you'll hear a voice say 'Take 27" which is nothing to do with 27 different recording "'takes" - just the filming people readying themselves to roll their cameras on the day's 27th bit of shooting.
"Take 27"(clap) "Sync the second clap" (clap).

5. LET IT BE

This is the track I like best of the Get Back LP bunch. It's Paul using his soulful voice, sounding so very sincere, backing himself on piano. When all the broken-hearted people living in the world agree, there'll be an answer Let it be. Behind Paul we had John and George doing the harmoney. There's a lot of flowing piano above and around the vocal. George plays his Lesley guitar-which can sound like organ and does here. Light metallic beat from Ringo with his foot right down to close up the hi-hat.

6. THE LONG AND WINDING ROAD

Paul again here on another slow, sentimental piece with much piano surrounding his plaintive balladeering. About the girl who teft him standing there all alone and the many times he's cried. But "you'll never know the ways I've tried."Don't leave him there lead him down the long and winding road to your door.

GET BACK (REPRISE)

Back to the beginning to remind you what the album's all about. What else can I say in July about a recording which has sold a few million singles and was still at the top of the charts in Britain and America when we came out with The Ballad Of John And Yoko at the beginning of June?

So that's The Beatles; Get Back - the record, the book that's coming out with it and the film we've made to show people what LP making is really like. In fact that's the real intention of the album itself. All the off-the-record bits left ON the record for you to hear. None of the loose ends tied up. Just a friendly album that invites you to join in what happens in The Beatles' recording studio. Certainly something different. Quite unlike the carefully prepared, expertly edited LP productions the fellows have spent so many months on in the past. In just a few weeks from now you'll have the chance of hearing it all for yourselves. I hope you'll agree that The Beatles; Get Back is a very interesting addition to your collection and that you'll enjoy the come-and-join-us informality of the whole thing.

MAL EVANS

A bootleg reproduces or mimics the album cover after the name change to "Let It Be". Of course, after this the idea for the retro front cover was dropped and a totally new design, based on the "Get Back" book and "Let It Be" movie poster favoured.

A new live album from Paul McCartney

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Paul McCartney: Live at the Electric Proms, 2007
A new Paul McCartney album, “Live at the Electric Proms 2007” on the Charly label was introduced to iTunes (and other music download shops) in the U.S. and several other countries, but (probably for contractual reasons) not in the UK. It's a 17-track album, which sadly only lacks 7 more tracks to be a complete audio document of the evening. The concert was shown on TV in Great Britain in HD quality, and has been heavily DVD-bootlegged ever since. I had the pleasure of attending this concert, just a few days after having attended his Paris Olympia concert.

The track list:
  1. Magical Mystery Tour
  2. Flaming Pie
  3. Got to Get You into My Life
  4. Dance Tonight
  5. Only Mama Knows
  6. Blackbird
  7. Calico Skies
  8. Eleanor Rigby
  9. Band on the Run
  10. Back in the USSR
  11. Live and Let Die
  12. Baby Face
  13. Hey Jude
  14. Let It Be
  15. Lady Madonna
  16. I Saw Her Standing There
  17. Get Back
Total Length: 54:02
Missing songs performed at the concert but not available on this album:
  • C Moon
  • The Long And Winding Road
  • I'll Follow The Sun
  • That Was Me
  • Here Today
  • House Of Wax
  • I've Got A Feeling

iTunes (USA) link.

For this concert, Paul McCartney's backing band was helped by the inclusion of live strings, which really made a difference and breathed new life to songs like "Eleanor Rigby". Too bad Paul "Wix" Wickens still opted for stringing along on his keyboards.

Additional details about this release:
Original Release Date: December 3, 2014
Label: Charly
Copyright: © 2014 Charly Acquisitions Ltd

Presentation folder for the 1965 Intertel promos

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Sales presenter from 1965
Currently up for sale over at ebay is a presentation folder for the 1965 Intertel promos, the folder is said to have come from Brian Epstein's own collection.

It is a 4 page presentation folder, on gray and black textured medium card stock measuring 35 cm by 48 cm.

The presenter was made specifically for the program purchasers of the worlds major TV networks, announcing the completion, for the first time of 5 video clips of The Beatles newest hit songs ready for distribution.

Up until this time, late 1965, the Beatles would do the rounds of the various TV programs in person to mime to their latest singles, and were becoming increasingly reluctant to do so because of their hectic live and recording commitments. So they decided to self produce and videotape their own promotional promotional clips and distribute them for free to the various TV networks.

Ten clips were shot at Twickenham Studios, produced by Tony Bramwell on the 23rd and 24th of November 1965 and distributed immediately. The clips were:

- We can work it out, 3 versions
- Day Tripper, 3 versions
- Help, 1 version
- Ticket to ride, 1 version
- I Feel Fine, 2 versions

The clips appeared on programs such as BBC's Top of The Pops and ITV's Thank Your Lucky Stars in the UK in late 1965 and early 1966. In other countries, the clips also appeared on various pop music shows.

The text is as follows:
Brian Epstein Presents
The BEATLES
FIVE FABULOUS RECORDINGS
FOR TELEVISION
NOW AVAILABLE WORLD WIDE

WE CAN WORK IT OUT
DAY TRIPPER
HELP!
I FEEL FINE
TICKET TO RIDE

The opened folder shows a small black and white photo from each of the filmed songs, and the
text goes: Five fabulous recordings for television * A Subafilms Production
THE BEATLES performing their biggest hits!

The photo captions are:
1. WE CAN WORK IT OUT
Running time 2 minutes 13 seconds
2. DAY TRIPPER
Running time 2 minutes 50 seconds
3. HELP
Running time 2 minutes 16 seconds
4. I FEEL FINE
Running time 2 minutes 20 seconds
5. TICKET TO RIDE
Running time 3 minutes 0 seconds

Here is a superbly produced series of performances by The Beatles.
Specially filmed in London, these recordings feature five of the Group's
biggest world wide hits - including their most recent double-headed
chart topper "We Can Work It Out" and "Day Tripper"

The opened folder

The back of the folder has the address, phone number and cable address to be used for enquiries about the clips. In fine print at bottom of back cover are the words "Designed and Printed by Converta Limited."

The back of the folder
Tony Bramwell talks about these films in his Magical Mystery Tours book: "At Twickenham we shot up to three versions of each promo and simply sent copies of the best, free of charge, to every TV station The Beatles had ever been on. But it was too expensive, so we were told. When EMI called and complained that we had spent a total of seven hundred and fifty pounds, we fell about the office laughing. Their accounts office said it was far too much."

The BBC paid £1,750 for the right to broadcast several on Top Of The Pops, their flagship music show, on various occasions throughout December, and NEMS struck deals with numerous other broadcasters around the world.

The Beatles in St. Louis book

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The Beatles in St Louis, 1966.
Our friend Sara over at the Meet The Beatles For Real blog has started a funding campaign to help her achieve her goal of writing a book about The Beatles' visit to St. Louis in 1966, as well as subsequent visits to the city by members of The Beatles. Here's her plea:

Ever since I was in the 4th grade, I have dreamed of writing and publishing a book. After running the popular Beatles blog site for the past 5 years, Meet the Beatles for Real, I have decided that Ican make my dream come true and write a book about the Beatles. Living close to St. Louis, Missouri, and being a Beatles fan, I have always been fascinated by the stories of the fans who saw the Beatles that rainy night on August 21, 1966 at Busch Stadium.

I am in the process of writing a book about the Beatles in St. Louis. The book will include the stories of the Beatles 1966 concert and also stories of George Harrison's concert in 1974, Paul McCartney's concerts in 1993, 2002 and 2012 and Ringo's concerts in 1995, 1997. 2000, 2001 and 2014. Right now I am calling the book "Happiness is Seeing the Beatles."

I want this book to be the best book that I can and it needs a lot of photos to make the stories come to life. Of course including photos in a book costs a lot of money and that is why I am asking for some help.

Please help me with my dream of writing a Beatles book.

Peace and Love,
Sara S.

Visit this website to help Sara raise $2000 towards the project. Anyone who contributes at least $25 will receive a free copy of the book when it is published in the summer of 2016.
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