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Anthology 1 | 
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| Artist: The Beatles Label: Emd Int'l Category: Music
List Price: $56.98 Buy New: $39.98 You Save: $17.00 (30%)
New (13) Used (2) from $19.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 98 reviews Sales Rank: 123156
Format: Import Media: LP Record Discs: 3 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 724383444519 EAN: 0724383444519 ASIN: B00004WPDA
Publication Date: 1996 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: sealed brand new fast shipping
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| Tracks:
Disc 1
| • | Free as a Bird | | • | We Were Four Guys...That's All [Interview] - John Lennon, Jann Wenner | | • | That'll Be the Day | | • | In Spite of All the Danger | | • | Sometimes I'd Borrow...Those Still Exist [Interview] - Mark Lewisohn, Paul McCartney | | • | Hallelujah, I Love Her So | | • | You'll Be Mine | | • | Cayenne | | • | First of All...It Didn't Do a Thing Here [Interview] - Paul McCartney, | | • | My Bonnie | | • | Ain't She Sweet | | • | Cry for a Shadow | | • | Brian Was a Beautiful Guy...He Presented Well [Interview] - John Lennon, David Wigg | | • | I Secured Them...A Beatle Drink Even Then [Reading] - Brian Epstein | | • | Searchin' | | • | Three Cool Cats | | • | Sheik of Araby | | • | Like Dreamers Do | | • | Hello Little Girl | | • | Well, the Recording Test...By My Artists [Reading] - Brian Epstein | | • | Besame Mucho | | • | Love Me Do | | • | How Do You Do It? | | • | Please Please Me | | • | One After 909 [False Starts] | | • | One After 909 [Complete] | | • | Lend Me Your Comb | | • | I'll Get You | | • | We Were Performers...In Britain [Interview] - John Lennon, Jann Wenner | | • | I Saw Her Standing There | | • | From Me to You | | • | Money (That's What I Want) | | • | You Really Got a Hold on Me | | • | Roll over Beethoven |
Disc 2
| • | She Loves You [Take] | | • | Till There Was You | | • | Twist and Shout | | • | This Boy | | • | I Want to Hold Your Hand [Version] | | • | Boys, What I Was Thinking... | | • | Moonlight Bay | | • | Can't Buy Me Love | | • | All My Loving [Version] | | • | You Can't Do That | | • | And I Love Her [Version] | | • | Hard Day's Night [Version] | | • | I Wanna Be Your Man | | • | Long Tall Sally | | • | Boys | | • | Shout | | • | I'll Be Back [Take 2][Demo Version] | | • | I'll Be Back [Take 3] | | • | You Know What to Do | | • | No Reply [Demo Version] | | • | Mr. Moonlight | | • | Leave My Kitten Alone | | • | No Reply [Take] | | • | Eight Days a Week [False Starts] | | • | Eight Days a Week [Complete] | | • | Kansas City/Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey! |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com This is the first release in a three-part series that essentially amounted to the three surviving Beatles officially sanctioning the release of tracks that had been bootlegged for years. Thus, you get some of their earliest recordings as teens; the tracks they cut in Hamburg, Germany; their Decca audition tapes (which were rejected); and, finally, alternate takes and works in progress of songs that are now part of the world's consciousness. Oh, yeah, you also get "Free As a Bird," the John Lennon track the other Beatles "finished" in 1995; it's out of context in the company of some of the group's early classics. Beatlemaniacs, of course, love exploring this stuff, but the three Anthologies are hardly a place for beginners to start their explorations. --Bill Holdship
Album Description 3 LP set. No other band has had quite the same impact as the four lads from Liverpool. Over the course of eight years and more than a dozen albums, the Beatles changed popular music and culture forever, spearheading the 1960s British Invasion and shaping rock & roll along the way. Along with their amazing musical output and unprecedented worldwide celebrity, John, Paul, George, and Ringo were responsible for many pop music revolutions, major and minor--writing their own material, pushing the limits of the studio, making films of their music, printing song lyrics on albums--that today are taken for granted. Although the Beatles disbanded in 1970, their artistic legacy is permanently ingrained in the entire world's musical vocabulary. EMI. 2005.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 93 more reviews...
Anthology March 17, 2008 Well, I give 5 stars ONLY and ONLY for Free as a Bird, which stands along with Dear Prudence, Come Together and other great masterpieces... it is just amazing how they managed to create such a great song having just an old tape with Lennon singing!... Also Leave My Kitten Alone deserves some attention... surprising it wasn't on Please Please Me or With THe Beatles... the problem is that without these two songs the Anthology isn't worth a penny, for it is a compilation of early performances, some of them even featuring Pete Best, so if you feel like spending 30$ on some history, go ahead, for those who expect something new and of good quality, better find Free as a bird single and you wouldn't be dissapointed...
FABULOUS September 30, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Takes us back to the early years,with their early hits,and their versions during rehearsals,recording sessions to the master recordings
Anthology 1 July 26, 2007 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
It's not the best thing. there's a lot of fuzzy songs and short speeches it wasn't that good... a lot of short songs
This is previously unreleased material, not masters... 5 star for historic value alone June 14, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
First off, this CD gets 5 stars for historic value alone. No, John, Paul, George and Ringo weren't at the height of their abilities then (Ringo wasn't even involved through much of this.) However, these are fairly good, very interesting recordings. I'm not a music theory expert, or anything but I don't see- or hear- what's so out of tune, tempo, and harmony, according to one of the negative reviews. Nothing seems off key, and to a Beatles fan, this stuff is fun, and some of their great wit is present here. No, there earliest, previously unreleased originals are not lyrically or musically great, but not terrible (and 'Youl'll be Mine' is a hoot if you can make out the words.) The recording qaulity is very poor on some of the VERY earliest recordings but, but there old, and the musicanship (is that a word?) still seems pretty good. In fact 'Cry for a Shadow', an early instrumental, is great material. As for the Decca tapes, they're not great, although that could be because of Brian Epstein's selections, of which we hear five here. Still, 'Three Cool Cats' is great fun (with George's lead vocal),as is Searchin', and one would have though Paul's 'Like Dreamers Do' would have sold Decca the group, at least as songwriters. 'Hello Little Girl' and Sheak of Araby' were okay, too. We hear some of Stuart Sutcliff's bass (in very poor qaulity), and some of Pete Best's drums (Ringo was clearly WAY better.) The early sessions with George Martin are interestig, not bad ( the false starts section for 'One of 909' is really fun(ny).) The live cuts (I saw Her Standing There, Roll Over Beethoven, etc.) that end disc one are of course great. I listen to dsic 2 less but great material (an early cut of 'Can't buy Me Love', 'And I Love Her, Eight Days a Week, Hard Day's Night, et al.) abound. Watch also for the Ed Sullivan Show performance of 'All my Loving'. There is also material from the Royal Command performance- priceless.
Of course 'Free as a Bird' is here, and if you love the Beatles, you'll want to own it, although 'Real Love' (on Anthology 2), is a better song. The audio snippets help narrate you through, and are generally interesting and enlightening (same for the liner notes in the booklet), although most of them are of medicore audio qaulity. They don't annoy me, and although absent on later 'Anthologies', create a smooth guide from track to track here (with the notes of course.)
Finally, to the one star reviewer I refered to earlier: I looked up all the people you list as "great guitarists... great drummers"- they are all jazz musicians. Now, I have nothing against jazz, in fact it's a side interest of mine, but comparing the Beatles to jazz is apples to oranges, to use the cliched analogy, for lack of a better one. You can't compare jazz to pop/rock (especially early 60s pop/rock), and in fact, I can't imagine how someone with your tastes, wondered into/got interested in the Beatles, to begin with. In short, the styles, practiced skills, theories, and criteria for good musicians/songs are simply different in these two, very different genres. Sorry you don't like this stuff. I like this and jazz. Make peace with the fact that its apples and oranges, and its the Beatles and your tastes.
(SIDE NOTE: Don't even get me started on the reviewer who prefers the Stones; I'll address that in another review.)
So, sorry for all the ranting. Overall I give Anthology one, 5 stars for historic value alone (the music isn't bad either.) But don't buy if you're not a 'diehard fan' or are just starting a collection!
PRESENT AT THE CREATION April 14, 2007 THE BEATLES ANTHOLOGIES ARE A RECORD OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF A LEGENDARY BAND. IF YOU WANT TO KNOW HOW IT WAS DONE HAVE A LISTEN HERE. NOW IF WE COULD ONLY GET SOME EARLY MOZART...
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