Опубликовано: 22 нояб. 2013 г.
This
is a response to the videos posted with interviews of the individual
Beatles who still liked to play music with one another but not so much
as Beatles any longer. In January 1975 (actually December 1974 in Disney
World), the band officially dissolved, all four members signed. This is
also to acknowledge 45 years since The Beatles - White Album was
released. This is a theoretical in that each songwriter used the others
to be a backup band with a rare backup vocal. Gone were the three and
four way harmonies like in With a Little Help From My Friends or What
Goes On.. The White Album was just a really good album they all helped
each other do. Not much co-writing at all. In this version we put Elton
John as guest musician in place of Eric Clapton with John's Whatever
Gets You Through The Night. We see Bluebird instead of Blackbird.
Blackbird is the better of the two admittedly. It was recently learned
that Eric Clapton helped on on My Sweet Lord playing acoustic with
George under Phil Spector production. Tremendous sound, I hope they one
day really mix down a record like this officially. Maybe Paul and Ringo
could oversee it as a last cool thing before we pull the curtain. Miss
the old Beatles, sorry it was so crazy, love the four lads from
Liverpool. This collection is the most "Beatle-like" or best material to
present from the four guys, Paul only on one Ringo song, nobody on
Paul's. Obviously they were pretty ticked at the time. But music was
made by Paul that shows he has bass lines that are most Beatle-like.
Imagine that. And this is set up to be a four CD set though it is
continuous for over 2 hours. Enjoy, don't watch just listen to what
magic they still had. John said so anyway, do a collection of their
post-Beatle songs and you'd get a 2nd White Album basically. This has
the sad version of All Things Must Pass because you can tell no one was
really giving it its due except George who wrote it. It's a reminder,
but ends on a happy note with a co-mingled John Lennon-Ringo Starr
version of Only You last song. Original Ringo version that was on the
radio is on Side 1. This is not intended to infringe any copyright and
all rights reserved by respective parties, EMI and UMG.
is a response to the videos posted with interviews of the individual
Beatles who still liked to play music with one another but not so much
as Beatles any longer. In January 1975 (actually December 1974 in Disney
World), the band officially dissolved, all four members signed. This is
also to acknowledge 45 years since The Beatles - White Album was
released. This is a theoretical in that each songwriter used the others
to be a backup band with a rare backup vocal. Gone were the three and
four way harmonies like in With a Little Help From My Friends or What
Goes On.. The White Album was just a really good album they all helped
each other do. Not much co-writing at all. In this version we put Elton
John as guest musician in place of Eric Clapton with John's Whatever
Gets You Through The Night. We see Bluebird instead of Blackbird.
Blackbird is the better of the two admittedly. It was recently learned
that Eric Clapton helped on on My Sweet Lord playing acoustic with
George under Phil Spector production. Tremendous sound, I hope they one
day really mix down a record like this officially. Maybe Paul and Ringo
could oversee it as a last cool thing before we pull the curtain. Miss
the old Beatles, sorry it was so crazy, love the four lads from
Liverpool. This collection is the most "Beatle-like" or best material to
present from the four guys, Paul only on one Ringo song, nobody on
Paul's. Obviously they were pretty ticked at the time. But music was
made by Paul that shows he has bass lines that are most Beatle-like.
Imagine that. And this is set up to be a four CD set though it is
continuous for over 2 hours. Enjoy, don't watch just listen to what
magic they still had. John said so anyway, do a collection of their
post-Beatle songs and you'd get a 2nd White Album basically. This has
the sad version of All Things Must Pass because you can tell no one was
really giving it its due except George who wrote it. It's a reminder,
but ends on a happy note with a co-mingled John Lennon-Ringo Starr
version of Only You last song. Original Ringo version that was on the
radio is on Side 1. This is not intended to infringe any copyright and
all rights reserved by respective parties, EMI and UMG.
The Beatles II -- The Black Album (Dec. 1974)
Side 1
1. My Sweet Lord (Harrison-Starr with guest Eric Clapton)
2. Uncle Albert (McCartney)
3. I'm The Greatest (Starr-Lennon)
4. Give Me Love (Harrison)
5. Instant Karma (Lennon-Harrison)
6. Another Day (McCartney)
7. Only You (Starr-Lennon cover tune)
8. Maybe I'm Amazed (McCartney)
Side 2
9. Imagine (Lennon)
10. Band On The Run (McCartney)
11. Whatever Gets You Through the Night (Lennon with guest Elton John)
12. Sunshine Life (Starr-Harrison)
13. Bluebird (McCartney)
14. Number 9 Dream (Lennon)
15. What Is Life (Harrison-Starr)
16. Junior's Farm (McCartney)
Side 3
17. It Don't Come Easy (Starr-Harrison)
18. Come and Get It (McCartney Version)
19. Love Is Real (Lennon)
20. Six O'Clock (Starr-McCartney)
21. Oh My Love (Lennon-Harrison)
22. Jealous Guy (Lennon)
23. Photograph (Starr-Harrison)
24. Let Me Roll It (McCartney)
25. Back Off Boogalow (Starr)
Side 4
26. Live and Let Die (McCartney)
27. Mind Games (Lennon)
28. My Love (McCartney)
29. Crackerbox Palace (Harrison)
30. Too Many People (McCartney)
31. All Things Must Pass (Harrison-Lennon-Starr-McCartney)
32. You're Sixteen (Starr cover)
33. Wah Wah (Harrison-Starr)
34. Only You (blended version of Lennon and Starr)
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