Monday, July 31, 2006

Mike's Essential Beatlegs

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As some of you know, I'm a freak for The Beatles, especially for "Beatlegs," unreleased or otherwise unofficial recordings. These are studio tapes--composing tapes, alternate mixes, or unreleased songs--concert recordings, or demos. I discovered Beatlegs around 1981, and have gotten a huge amount of enjoyment out of listening to them in the 25 years since. Not only do they provide one with a break from the official material (which, if you're anything like me, you've heard to death), nothing is more encouraging to a fellow creative person than hearing The Beatles--The Beatles!--screwing up and singing weak, half-finished songs.

I'm far from the only fan interested in this stuff (witness the site Bootleg Zone) but I've never seen any attempt to assemble a list of the creme de la creme. It is the nature of Beatlegs for there to be a large percentage of dross to diamonds, and I have spent more than my fair share of time and money on crappy stuff I only listened to once. (Especially in the bad old pre-internet days, when everything was on vinyl and cost a boatload of cash. You can't imagine how pissed I'd get after spending $45 on something awful. Of course, the fact that I was making $5.50 an hour working at the local drug store had a lot to do with it.)

In an effort to share my hobby, I thought I'd post the Beatlegs that I have found most enjoyable (or most illuminating). Discussion is encouraged; the links go to the CD's page on Bootleg Zone, if it exists. Obviously I can't burn you copies, so don't ask, but everything I'm going to list is available on the web, newsgroups, eBay, et cetera. And trust me: the hunt is half the fun!

Wildcat
Madman 13-14
Two discs' worth of The Beatles jamming in 1960, before they were The Beatles. Not great listening, but certainly worth having for historical interest.

The Early Years, 1962, Decca Tapes Revised, Right Speed
Yellow Dog 101
The best version of the group's unsuccessful audition for Decca.

The Complete BBC Sessions (ten discs)
Great Dane 9326
Most fans would be satisfied with the official Beatles at the BBC release. This gives you everything--including interesting stuff not on the official set, including Lennon (not Ringo) doing "Honey Don't." I've seen collections that boast improved sources for some recordings, but this is what I've got, and it's quite nice.

The Complete Ed Sullivan Shows
Yellow Dog 062
More a historical document than something that's always in my player, but given that The Ed Sullivan Show played such a huge role in the legend of The Beatles, it's nice to have.

Turn Me On Dead Man/The John Barrett Tapes
Vigotone 178/9
In 1983, so the story goes, an EMI engineer battling cancer was allowed to make the first-ever catalogue of all Beatle-related recordings in the EMI vaults. This two-disc set is the best of what he uncovered. The highlight of the first disc is an awesome unreleased version of "What You're Doing." The second disc has a bunch of excellent White-era stuff, including "Step Inside Love/Los Paranoias/The Way You Look Tonight."

The Beatles Christmas Album
MO 6369
From 1963 to 1969, The Beatles recorded an annual Christmas message to be sent out to their fans. These discs are extremely fun (and some are even musically interesting). Anyway, it's a tradition in the Gerber/Powers household to play this every Christmas morning while drinking big bowls of Soy Nog.

Live at the Hollywood Bowl
STAO 2222
The Beatles' great lost live album! In 1964, Capitol Records recorded several Beatles concerts at Los Angeles' Hollywood Bowl, in hopes of producing a live album for the Christmas season. Unfortunately after hearing the tapes, The Beatles and George Martin nixed the project over concerns about the sound quality. I dunno--sounds great to me. (This version was reputedly mixed by the legendary Dr. Ebbetts, so that may be the reason.)

Shea!/Candlestick Park
Spank 108
Taken from a television film, the (semi-live) recording of The Beatles' epochal '65 concert at Shea is surprisingly good. Historically important, and a good listen, too. You can't say the same about the recording of their last concert, which comes courtesy of press agent Tony Barrow's tape recorder. But it's nice to have, regardless. (By the way, some people would add Budokan from the same tour, but there's only so much "God we're so tired of this and they're not even LISTENING" live Beatles I can stand.)

The Alternate Revolver
Walrus 021
Demos, mono mixes, and interesting fragments related to The Beatles' greatest album.

It's Not Too Bad
Pegboy 1008
The evolution of one of The Beatles' most fascinating songs: "Strawberry Fields Forever." This disc contains every meaningful step along the way, from the earliest demos, to edit pieces, and then finally the tracks that eventually coalesced into the finished song. Another one you won't listen to constantly, but it's really worth having.

Sgt. Peppers monomix
PMC 29567
A must for any true Beatles fan. The monophonic mix of Sgt. Pepper's--the only mix supervised by The Beatles themselves--is significantly different than the official (stereo) version. The guitars are more present, "She's Leaving Home" is at the right speed, there are more and different sound effects...And there are even ten bonus tracks. Truly one of my desert-island discs.

From Kinfauns to Chaos (Disc 1)
Vigotone 183
This disc collects the best available versions of the White Album demos recorded in May 1968 at George's house in Esher. Some really lovely stuff here, including early versions of John's "Jealous Guy" and two unreleased Harrison songs, "Circles" and "Sour Milk Sea." Sometimes I like this better than the actual album, which is full of bad vibes; Paul with a backing group, John with a backing group, et cetera.

The Beatles ("White Album")
Mono PMC 7067-8
Not as revelatory as Sgt. Pepper's, there are still enough differences between the mono and stereo mixes of the White Album to make the mono version worth getting. (No link because I got mine off eBay and it is not listed at Bootleg Zone.)

As Nature Intended
Vigotone 122
The Glyn Johns' mix of Let It Be, plus the entire rooftop concert. The best of a bad lot, in my humble opinion.

Artifacts I/5 Get Back to Abbey Road
BIG 1022
The sessions that later became the movie Let It Be are incredibly repellent to me; it's awful to listen to the band breaking up. Still, this disc collects the gems from the hours and hours of tape. You get all the highlights--"Commonwealth," "Fancy Me Chances," and a ripping version of Get Back done in German, among others. This disc also has a few nice tracks from the Abbey Road sessions that followed. Only one quibble: where's "No Pakistanis"?

3 comments For This Post I'd Love to Hear Yours!

John Kish says:

Mike,
I appreciate all you have shared with your fellow Beatle freaks. I myself don't really have any friends that go nuts over the Beatles the same as I do. I'm always looking for new beatlegs on the internet.I've spent the last 2-3 months putting together close to 80 fairly good home recording and studio demos of decent quality belonging to John Lennon.
Please feel free to email me, if for nothing else than to rap about the Beatles, especially John & George, God rest their souls.I miss them both very much; I wish they had been around longer than they were. That's up to our higher power whether you believe in God, or Budda or whatever.I'm sometimes agnostic, but I still believe a power greater than ourselves exists and
I'm absolutely sure John & George are in a much better space right now than we are. Anyway Mike, please email me if you get the chance.It would be nice to rap with another Beatles freak. Peace
John Kish
jak4357@optonline.net
Blog:beatlesthenandnow.blogspot.com


little_green_men2312 says:

This is terrific! Thanks for posting this!:)


Anonymous
says:

I have a Beatles record by Idle Minds Productions "Live from Hollywood Bowl" from Mushroom Records. It is a psychedelic red color with Eve holding an apple. Recorded July 24, 1964.

Do you know anything about it?

alan@printboise.com


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