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Prodcut Description: [More Information ...] No Description AvailableNo Track Information AvailableMedia Type: CDArtist: BEATLESTitle: BEATLES 1Street Release Date: 11/14/2000 Similar Products : [More Information ...] Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band N |  Abbey Road The Beatles' last days as a band were as productive as any major pop phenomenon that was about to split. After recording the ragged-but-right Let It Be, the group held on for this ambitious effort, an album that was to become their best-selling. Though all four contribute to the ... |  Elv1s 30 #1 Hits N |  Love It begins with a twittering of birdsong lifted from "Across the Universe." And once the triple-tracked a capella harmonies of "Because" enter, followed by snatches from "A Hard Day's Night" and "The End," leading into a fired-up "Get Back," it becomes obvious that this is far mor... |  Rubber Soul No Description AvailableNo Track Information AvailableMedia Type: CDArtist: BEATLESTitle: RUBBER SOUL (BRITISH)Street Release Date: 08/09/1988 |  The Beatles (The White Album) Better known as the "White Album," this was meant to be the record that brought them back to earth after three years of studio experimentation. Instead, it took them all over the place, continuing to burst the envelope of pop music. Lennon and McCartney were still at the height o... |  Sounds Of Summer - The Very Best Of The Beach Boys N | ![Revolver [UK]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/510D51P8YKL._SL75_.jpg) Revolver [UK] Revolver wouldn't remain the Beatles' most ambitious LP for long, but many fans--including this one--remember it as their best. An object lesson in fitting great songwriting into experimental production and genre play, this is also a record whose influence extends far beyond mere... |  Magical Mystery Tour The album feels even more like a collection of singles (instead of an actual movie soundtrack) than Help! or A Hard Day's Night, but maybe that's because every song sounds like it could have been a hit single--with the natural exception of the goofy/weird instrumental "Flying." E... |  1967-1970 (The Blue Album) Even as the Beatles began heading toward an inevitable breakup, their prolific ways continued; this two-disc look back only skims the surface of their later achievements. Excerpts from Sgt. Pepper, Magical Mystery Tour, the white album, Abbey Road, and Let It Be compete for space... |
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band Abbey Road Elv1s 30 #1 Hits Love Rubber Soul The Beatles (The White Album) Sounds Of Summer - The Very Best Of The Beach Boys Revolver [UK] Magical Mystery Tour 1967-1970 (The Blue Album)
Reviews:
Super Buy This is a great collection of songs from the Beatles, it does not have all of them, but has a great variety. It is a collection of songs from the beginning to the end of their run. The price is right also. For those fans of the Beatles this is a cant miss. Very Pleased This is a great CD with all the beginning Beatles tunes you could want. Brings back tons of memories of those times - highly recommended! The beatle' s have stood the test of time This review is written by Mr. Bradberry's students:
The beatles' number one hits was a great album that they have put out. I think it was a great compilation of there hits. They put it together and had it sold in stores and they had there fan base grow 10 fold. But some of there songs that are on the album should not be on there and they also could have made it into a two disc set. The songs may be scatterd into many of there Cd's but they all came together in one great compilation and as you all can tell i give a five out of five.
If fans truly love the beatles they should buy this cd, and be prepared for a revival of beatlemania. unlike today's boy band the beatles actually wrote their music.
This cd gives the new generation a chance to experience the beatles.
the bands now a days have less origionalty then the beatles becasue some bands read from a script.
For My Girlfriend. There has long been a myth in popular culture that you are either an Elvis person or a Beatles person. Well, barring the fact that this notion ignores a number of incredible artists who have not much in common with either entity, it seems to be more or less true, at least in our particular case. I am an Elvis man at heart; always have been. To me, he was the absolute pinnacle. His records opened up a whole musical world to me: everything from rockabilly, to bluegrass, to straight country, to balls-out rock & roll, to opera, to pop crooning, to blues, to soul, to dixieland jazz, to gospel, to folk music, to romantic ballads, and beyond.
Well, the way I feel about Elvis, my girlfriend feels about the Beatles. To her, they are the bedrock, the very foundation, of everything that has come about in popular music over the last 40 years or so. Sometimes, we have our playful arguments over who's better, but deep down, I must admit she has a very valid point. So for her, I am going to humble myself in public (or semi-public, anyway) and say she is....right. Mostly.
Oh, that hurt.
Anyway, I willingly give credit where credit is due, and the Beatles deserve a heck of a lot of credit. For their innovations in recording techniques alone, they deserve all the praise in the world. As for their songwriting chops, I can't say anything that hasn't already been said by Beatlemaniacs the world over. It's top-notch (at least after 1965 or so) and they have an undeniable musicality to them that usually manages to sway even the most jaded of listeners, myself included. John Lennon & Paul McCartney are justifiably legendary lyricists (although, from an outsider's point of view, I think they're held in a bit too high esteem in comparison to the rest of the band; my girlfriend's favorite Beatle is Ringo for whatever reason, and insofar as I have a favorite, it's George). What's really great about the Beatles' songwriting is that their songs are quite flexible, and can be covered in any number of ways by a range of artists from, yes, Elvis (did great things with "Get Back" in his stage shows, but the less said about his cover of "Hey Jude", the better) and Johnny Cash (with his elegiac take on "In My Life") to Aretha Franklin and Ray Charles (with soulful re-interpretations of "Eleanor Rigby"). Even Frank Sinatra got in on the act with his rendition of "Something", which, just to prove how in touch he was, he claimed was his "favorite Lennon-McCartney song" (d'oh!).
The Beatles, while certainly taking a cue from Elvis, Bob Dylan, Carl Perkins, Little Richard and others, forged their own path and laid the groundwork for nearly a half-century's worth of music to come. Listen to any crappy indie band around today, and you'll hear a bunch of people straining to channel the spirit of the...Beatles. (God, I almost said "Fab Four", but I won't go that far.) But those indie bands mistake blandness for sensitivity, journal entries for insightful lyricism, half-plucked acoustic guitar chords for atmosphere. They don't have the heart that the Beatles had, and despite what you may think of their music, you can't deny that the Beatles had heart, even toward the bitter end.
Another thing--which may not matter much to some, but it means something to me--the Beatles have going for them is that, like Elvis (who often proclaimed that Fats Domino was the true "King of Rock & Roll", who said at the start that his greatest aspiration was to be as good a bluesman as Arthur Gunter), the Beatles always acknowledged their debt to the music that came before them. Even if other people often ignore that fact, having the sense to say it yourself is the sign of a class act in my book.
As for this album in particular, the "1" compilation? Well, it's the first (and so far, only) Beatles album I've ever bought (although I hope to change that soon with the news that the remastered original albums will be released in some form this year or early next year). I don't pretend to know enough about the Beatles' back catalog to tell the differences between sound on each release (the whole stereo vs. mono thing went right over my head), but this CD sounds pretty good to me. It's the songs that matter anyway, right? All the fancy-pants remastering in the world wouldn't matter if the songs were crap. The song selection on here is okay if your favorite Beatles period runs up to about 1965 or so; there seems to be a preponderance of the early stuff. I much prefer the later songs like "While My Guitar Gently Weeps", "One After 909", "Helter Skelter" and some other things. This track listing doesn't even have as much variety as what you might hear on any given day on a radio station. For someone who's just testing the waters, I guess it'll do.
So to sum up, while I won't be running for the president of my local Beatles fan club any time soon, I can honestly say that they are one of the best bands in history (not "THE" best; Queen and the Clash get my split vote on that one, which is another living room argument waiting to happen. But then, without the Beatles, there wouldn't have been a Queen or Clash. Where does it end?!), and they honestly deserve our praise and gratitude for both the great music they made and the great music they inspired. The end.
P.S. Honey, Elvis is still better. Covering All The Main Beatles songs The Beatles 1 is a one CD collection spanning The Beatles entire carerr on 27 tracks, all the songs on here were singles and all went too number one at one time. A pretty good collection good for anyone starting out on the beatles but i dont think it covers all the good beatles songs. For instance there is no songs from Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club band it is missing a lot of songs but still its pretty good |
Keyword: Music,
Description: The Beatles 1

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