Album
Hear The Beatles Tell All
1964 · Non-Music
5 collectors on Gatefold own this

Hear The Beatles Tell All is a Spoken Word album by The Beatles, originally released in 1964. On Gatefold: 18 pressings tracked, owned by 5 collectors.
About
In The Beatles’ long and winding history, their self-titled 1968 album is considered by many to be the beginning of the end. Not musically, of course—raw and sprawling, “The White Album” contains some of their richest and most enduring songs—but insofar as the LP showed they were starting to work and develop distinct styles apart from one another. But to hear Giles Martin, son of the late longtime Beatles producer George Martin, tell it, the truth may be more complicated. His evidence: This new 107-track collection he has overseen, featuring a fresh mix of the original album, freewheeling studio outtake, and the 27 holy-grail acoustic “Esher demos” largely recorded at George Harrison’s house following the band’s consciousness-expanding off-site in India. To Martin, these loose, candid recordings show a band playing off one another’s chemistry in the studio, working together with humor and camaraderie to spare. “You can’t make a record like ‘The White Album’ if you’re arguing,” he say. Martin tells Apple Music which tracks best prove his theory, and how this set offers insight for completists and casual fans alike. <b>Julia</b> “There’s a version where John plays for my dad and he’s trying to work out whether to fingerpick it or strum it, and you hear them having a conversation. No one even knew this existed, because it was on the back end of a tape with no name on it. When Paul came in, this was the first thing he wanted to listen to, because he was there with John when they were recording it. And it’s like, ‘Wait a second—I thought you all went to different studio...’” <b>Cry Baby Cry</b> “We have the acoustic version which John sings for the Esher demo, and then there’s a version on the outtakes which is almost like Pink Floyd. The final mix we did actually sounds more like the demo in some way. They really valued each other as musicians and contributors to everything they did, and that’s what you hear in ‘The White Album’—the way the other members of the band added to the record to create the final version.” <b>Happiness Is a Warm Gun</b> “There’s conversations you hear after a number of takes where John says to George, ‘It’s getting better, but it’s not getting any easier, or it’s not getting any more fun.’ And George goe, ‘But it’s getting better <i>and</i> it’s getting more fun.’” <b>Blackbird</b> .
via Apple Music
The Clerk says
The Clerk knows this whole record — the pressing quirks, the credits, the take.
Tracklist
Side A
- AJim Steck Interviews John Lennon
Side B
- BDave Hull Interviews John, Paul, George, Ringo
Sound DNA
- Spoken Word
- Comedy
- clean
- sarcastic
- witty
Credits
The people behind it.
Performers
- Hal BlainePERCUSSION
5 collectors on Gatefold own this · 18 pressings tracked on Gatefold
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