Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Let It Be is the twelfth and final studio album by the English rock band the Beatles. It was released on 8 May 1970, nearly a month after the official announcement of the group's public break-up , in tandem with the documentary of the same name .
"Let It Be" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles, released on 6 March 1970 as a single, and (in an alternative mix) as the title track of their album Let It Be. It was written and sung by Paul McCartney , and credited to the Lennon–McCartney partnership.
The rooftop performance was a part of a doc being filmed about the Beatles rehearsing and recording the album Let It Be.This was their final live performance before breaking up in April 1970.
Naked consists largely of newly mixed versions of the Let It Be tracks while omitting the excerpts of incidental studio chatter and most of Spector's embellishments. It also omits two tracks from the 1970 release – "Dig It" and "Maggie Mae" – replacing them with "Don't Let Me Down", which was the non-album B-side of the "Get Back" single. [2]
Ferry Aid was a British-American charity supergroup, brought together to record the song "Let It Be" in 1987.The single was released following the Zeebrugge Disaster; on 6 March 1987 the ferry MS Herald of Free Enterprise had capsized, killing 193 passengers and crew.
Director Michael Lindsay-Hogg (center, in blue suit) speaks to the Beatles before their set on the Apple rooftop on Jan. 30, 1969 — the climax of the original Let It Be film. The Beatles would ...
An official Beatles BBC album was being planned as early as 1982, [9] and it was reported that "EMI was preparing an album" of the BBC material by late 1991. [10] To supplement the archive he had partially rebuilt for The Beeb's Lost Beatles Tapes, BBC Radio producer Kevin Howlett sought out additional sources, such as tapes kept by people involved in the original sessions; others had ...
Let It Be is the third studio album by American rock band the Replacements.It was released on October 2, 1984, by Twin/Tone Records.A post-punk album with coming-of-age themes, Let It Be was recorded by the band after they had grown tired of playing loud and fast exclusively as on their 1983 Hootenanny album; the group decided to write songs that were, according to vocalist Paul Westerberg, "a ...