
Let It Be is a Rock album by The Beatles, originally released in 1970. On Gatefold: 766 pressings tracked, owned by 171 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Rock
- Classic Rock
- warm
- wistful
- poetic
About
The dissolution of The Beatles was a famously unpleasant situation: By 1968, Lennon and McCartney were sometimes working simultaneously in separate studios; only about half of the White Album’s songs featured the full band. Conceived by McCartney as an effort to reclaim the band’s marital groove, <i>Let It Be</i> presented The Beatles not as an elaborate studio art project but as four guys making music together in a room. For as divisive as Phil Spector’s 11th-hour contributions were (George Martin joked that he should be given a credit for production, while Spector should get one for overproduction), they were also overstated: Only a handful of tracks here—most notably Lennon’s “Across the Universe” and McCartney’s “The Long and Winding Road”—were all that heavily orchestrated. While some were chopped up and reassembled to get a better shape, the rest of the album (“Get Back,” George Harrison’s breezy “For You Blue,” the surrealistic blues of Lennon’s “Dig a Pony,” recorded live on the rooftop of the band’s Apple Corps offices) hewed more or less to what McCartney had envisioned: The Beatles rediscovering the poise and spontaneity of a great live band. (“Let It Be” was a relatively big production even before Spector came on board.) Still, it’s a bittersweet, sometimes uncomfortable listen, and only further muddled by the eternal debate of whether or not it was actually the band’s last album, having been more or less finished before <i>Abbey Road</i> was started but not released until the band had broken up about a year later. (“And now we’d like to do ‘Hark, the Angels Come!’” Lennon squeaks in falsetto before “Let It Be”—a jab at what he felt was Paul’s sodden pseudo-religiosity.) Still, listen and you can still hear the heart, humor, and camaraderie that made them so unusual to begin with: McCartney’s “Two of Us,” the throwback “One After 909,” the eternal “Get Back.” In September 1969, Lennon quit. <i>Abbey Road</i> came out about a week later. McCartney effectively quit the following April, and put out his first solo record, <i>McCartney</i>, about a week later. In a self-interview that doubled as album promotion and carefully worded statement of personal independence, McCartney said that his only immediate plans were to grow up.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
- 1Two of Us3:35
- 2Dig a Pony3:55
- 3Across the Universe3:48
- 4I Me Mine2:25
- 5Dig It0:50
- 6Let It Be4:03
- 7Maggie Mae0:40
- 8I've Got a Feeling3:37
- 9One After 9092:53
- 10The Long and Winding Road3:38
- 11For You Blue2:32
- 12Get Back3:07
- 13Let It Be (Documentary)4:42
Credits
Performers
- Billy PrestonKEYBOARDS ORGAN ELECTRIC PIANO
- The BeatlesVOCALS
- Paul McCartneyBASS VOCALS LEAD VOCALS
- Ringo StarrDRUMS VOCALS PERCUSSION
- George HarrisonGUITAR VOCALS LEAD GUITAR
- John LennonGUITAR VOCALS LEAD VOCALS
- Linda McCartneyBACKING VOCALS
171 collectors on Gatefold own this · 766 pressings tracked on Gatefold
