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With the first CD releases of their albums in 1987 and 1988, the Beatles' core catalogue was harmonised worldwide to encompass their 12 original UK studio albums, the 1967 US Magical Mystery Tour album and the newly assembled Past Masters: Volumes One and Two compilation albums consisting of all the studio recordings released during 1962 to ...
The collection also includes the inserts contained in the individual albums, such as the cardboard cutout sheet in Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and the photos and poster in The Beatles. [6] A company specialising in audiophile vinyl pressings, Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab, released a similar box set in 1982 called The Beatles: The Collection.
The Beatles' Second Album "She Loves You" "I'll Get You" UK & US single (US on Swan) 1 — 3 — — — — — 1 — 7 — 7 — 1 — 1 — — — 1 — BPI: Silver [13]; The Beatles' Second Album
2: Twist and Shout: 12 July 1963 3: The Beatles No. 1: 1 November 1963 4: All My Loving: 7 February 1964 5: Long Tall Sally: 19 June 1964 6: A Hard Day's Night: Extracts from the Album: 6 November 1964 7: A Hard Day's Night: Extracts from the Film: 4 November 1964 8: Beatles for Sale: 6 April 1965 9: Beatles for Sale No. 2: 4 June 1965 10: The ...
According to EMI, the series was a re-promotion rather than a reissue campaign, since all the Beatles' singles had remained in print and were widely available. [5] The project resulted from the success of the 1973 double-album sets 1962–1966 and 1967–1970, [6] which the former Beatles had endorsed, and which contained all of their British single A-sides and double A-side tracks. [7]
The Beatles: The Collection was a vinyl boxed set of every Beatles album remastered at half speed from the original stereo master recordings, except for Magical Mystery Tour which was mastered from Capitol Records' submasters with the last three tracks in rechanneled stereo. [1]
Also included in the acquisition are the typed notes of Brian Epstein, the Beatles’ manager, from 1962 on how the band should present themselves, including what they should wear, when in public.
The Beatles - "Love Me Do" (EMI) one-sided acetate, the only unedited version with count-in - estimated at $50,000–$100,000. [17] Omega sold David Bowie's first demo tape (with The Konrads) for £39,360 in 2018 (Record Collector 485). A Michael Jackson "What More Can I Give" studio reference CD sold on eBay for $50,000 in 2015 [18]