| | Beatles Capitol Albums Vol. 1 CD Beatles Discography of CDs
(46 Customer Reviews)
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Our Price: $56.89 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1 day
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Includes both stereo and mono versions of the USA-only albums MEET THE BEATLES (1964), THE BEATLES' SECOND ALBUM (1964), SOMETHING NEW (1964), and BEATLES '65 (1964), and a 60 page booklet including rare photos and select quotes from John, Paul, George and Ringo. The Beatles: John Lennon (guitar); Paul McCartney (bass guitar); Ringo Starr, George Harrison. Personnel: George Harrison (vocals, guitar); John Lennon (vocals, harmonica); Ringo Starr (vocals, drums); Paul McCartney (vocals). Audio Remasterer: Ted Jensen. Liner Note Authors: Mark Lewisohn; Mark Lewisohn. Recording information: England. All tracks have been digitally mastered using 24-bit technology. Authors: John Lennon; Paul McCartney; George Harrison; Ringo Starr; Brian Epstein . Photographers: Joe Covello; Black Star. When the Beatles' albums were reissued on CD in 1987, the group seized the opportunity to standardize their catalog internationally, choosing to release the British version of their LPs on CD in every territory throughout the world. From their standpoint, it made sense creatively, since these were the albums they intended to make, and it also made sense from a consumer standpoint, since these British LPs were longer than their foreign counterparts, particularly the American LPs released between 1964 and 1965. While the reasoning behind the move was sound, it was controversial in America, since the vast majority of their audience there not only grew up on the U.S. versions, they may not have even been aware that there were great differences in how the music was issued in both the U.S. and U.K. up until Sgt. Pepper in 1967. To make matters even more complicated, the first four albums -- 1963's Please Please Me through 1964's Beatles for Sale -- were released in mono on CD, which was like pouring salt into the wounds for American fans: not only could they not get the versions they grew up with, they didn't even sound the same. The Beatles were hardly the only British rock & roll band to have its LPs released in different incarnations in the U.S. During the height of the British Invasion in the mid-'60s, it was standard practice for U.S. record labels to shuffle songs between records, either to help promote singles or squeeze out as much product as they could out of a limited number of songs, and since LPs were released in both mono and stereo mixes, there several different variations of the basic album on the marketplace. This was done without the artist's consent, and the Beatles protested the issue with the notorious "butcher" cover of the U.S. album Yesterday...and Today, where the Fab Four dressed up in butchers coats surrounded by decapitated baby dolls and raw meat -- not a subtle criticism, but not an inaccurate one, either. After Sgt. Pepper ushered in the album rock era, this practice faded away. Years later, in the thick of the CD reissue boom, there was heavy nostalgia among record collectors for these American and British and stereo and mono variants, which led to '90s reissues of classic '60s rock albums containing both the stereo and mono mixes, or individual reissues of the U.S. and U.K. versions of particular albums. The Rolling Stones, Kinks, Animals, and many other peers of the Beatles were given reissues of these variants, but not the Beatles themselves, even though these were among the most requested reissues and were among the most interesting of these variations. Interesting is a word that cuts both ways -- they were interesting because they were popular, the records that brought Beatlemania to America, but interesting because they were wrong-headed, sometimes in their sequencing but often in their mixes. Under the supervision of Capitol executive Dave Dexter -- who initially rejected the Beatles for Capitol -- the original mixes were given ludicrous layers of echo on the stereo versions that changed the feel of the albums. To those legions of American fans, it didn't matter that these American versEntertainment Weekly (p.185) - 4 stars out of 5 - "The early Beatles were all about success and girls; they were crazy about rock versatility done with solid style and charming heat. This set presents them the way they first fascinated America: new, punk and polite." Uncut (p.87) - 4 stars out of 5 - "[T]he combination of Merseypool punning and codified smut was lethal. The amphetamine gulp and the exuberant energy unleashed the emotions a generation." Capitol Albums Vol. 1 Music Average Rating: (3.8 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Good Job! These cute little CD'S that copy the original album covers are the greatest add to my Beatle Collection. The music in both stereo and mono sounds great. The Beatle's music will live forever. Submitted by trish.port (Phila., PA USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
At Last! Thank you, Capitol Records! For American fans of The Beatles, this is it. The sound, the mixes, the play order; everything is just exactly like I remember it. I have the UK albums as well and perhaps they are better in some ways, but these are the ones that I played over and over as a kid, to the point where every riff, every note, every beat of Ringo's drums are burnt into my brain. Thank you again, Capitol .... and please bring on Volume 2 .... please hurry! Submitted by Joe (Broomes Island, MD)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Beatlemania Lives Don't worry about the controversy concerning US vs. British releases. Most of us Beatlemaniacs have the "official" British releases and now we have the albums the way we remember them from our youth. And having both the stereo and mono on each disc was a great idea. Get this set and remember your youth. Submitted by pascha_a (Tennessee)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Narcissistic boomer adores this collection As someone who was a 12-year-old girl in 1964, I don't give a hoot what the Beatles wanted these albums to sound like. I want to steep in recollections of the slumber party when we played Meet the Beatles ALL NIGHT LONG, over and over, and experience the Beatles' early work as the magic cookie that evokes fragrant recollections of my lost youth. This set does that, all right. But it evokes much more. That 12-year-old kid had no idea how much Carl Perkins and Buck Owens and Little Richard was folded into the Beatles' mix, but I hear it now. You can also hear strong influences on Steve Earle and some of his alt-country brethren. The recordings sound (minus pops and hiss) just the way they did in 1964, which later releases didn't: the versions you heard in the 80s were mixed differently, and in some case, entire solos that I knew by heart were just... missing. These recordings are heavy on the reverb -- a low-tech wall of sound -- but everything's there, and the energy and inventiveness of that young band shine through. Yeah, they were were derivative, but show me a musician who isn't. And what exactly is wrong with deriving your music from the masters? Some of the ballads haven't aged well (in fact they're downright unlistenable), but on balance, this release is long overdue and extremely satisfying. Submitted by adarrow (Mendon, VT, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
The Circle is Now Complete It's hard to believe that 40 years ago I started collecting these same songs on LPs and I wore them out. Then 16 years ago I was standing in line at midnight at the neighborhood record store waiting for the first cd releases, but I was disappointed that they weren't the albums I remembered as a pre-teen. Well - disappointment over!! I have spent the last few days listening to this still-great music played in the original order that is still imprinted in my memory banks - and with the added joy of hearing the stereo I grew up with restored also. Highly recommended. I am having lots of fun. Submitted by hvcooper (Yardley, PA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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