Discography Blogspot: Beatles
“Two of Us” (Paul & John acoustic, but they’re barely speaking) “Dig a Pony” “Across the Universe” (John’s cosmic poem – the Let It Be version has orchestral overdubs) “I Me Mine” (George, recorded after John quit) “Dig It” (12-minute jam edited to 50 seconds) “Let It Be” (Paul’s mother Mary in a dream) “Maggie Mae” (Liverpool folk song snippet) “I’ve Got a Feeling” (Paul/John mashup) “One After 909” (written 1958, finally recorded) “The Long and Winding Road” (Phil Spector’s strings, which Paul hated) “For You Blue” (George’s 12-bar) “Get Back” (as a single, better)
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beatles discography, beatles albums, beatles blogspot, fab four, lennon mccartney, revolver vs abbey road, rubber soul review, beatles vinyl collection. “Two of Us” (Paul & John acoustic, but
Paul originally dreamed the melody of “Yesterday.” He woke up, played it on piano, and asked friends, “What song is this? I must have heard it somewhere.” 6. Rubber Soul (1965) The game changer. The album where The Beatles stopped being a pop band and became artists. Influenced by Bob Dylan and The Byrds. Rubber Soul (1965) The game changer
Let’s start at the very beginning (a very good place to start). Before diving in, note: The Beatles’ US discography (thanks to Capitol Records) was a mess of different track listings, fake stereo, and omitted songs. For this Beatles discography Blogspot guide, we stick to the official UK canon —the 13 albums as recognized on streaming services and the 2009/2018 remasters. 1. Please Please Me (1963) Recorded: February 11, 1963 (in one 12-hour session!) Singles included: None on original UK — “Please Please Me” and “Love Me Do” were already hits.
The Beatles made 13 studio albums in less than a decade. And over 50 years later, we’re still here — on Blogspot, YouTube, Reddit, or in record shops — trying to figure out how four lads from Liverpool changed music forever.
Revolver > Sgt. Pepper . Don’t @ me. 8. Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) The one that broke the album concept. Not really a concept album (only first two and last two tracks reprise the theme), but a tour de force of studio trickery.