Prime members enjoy Free Two-Day Shipping, Free Same-Day or One-Day Delivery to select areas, Prime Video, Prime Music, Prime Reading, and more. Frankly, in many instances, I still prefer the Capitol versions as found on the Capitol Albums (volumes 1 and 2) box sets. Want to know how to tell? All tracks have been digitally remastered and are presented in both Stereo and Mono. All of the records are presented in both mono and stereo, which should be an exciting prospect for fans accustomed to hearing only mono versions of most of the early Beatles songs-- though beware, apparently the first pressing of the box contains incorrect mono mixes of Beatles VI and Rubber Soul. It's not that I hate the Beatles. You’ve Got To Hide Your Love Away (stereo), 2. The American Rubber Soul is also different than its British cousin, removing four songs from the U.K. version ("Drive My Car," "Nowhere Man," "What Goes On," "If I Needed Someone") and replacing them with two tunes from the U.K. Help! Like Capitol Albums, Vol. You can really understand why The Beatles had such a huge and immediate impact. Guitar Recorded Versions After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages that interest you. Want to know how to tell? And now, as the environments they created have become the content of our pop culture historical fiction, they seem just a bit removed from reality. Complete your The Beatles collection. Of course, the American version of Help! However, in 2006, after Paul has finally had his way with Let It Be, we've been given three helpings of Anthology leftovers, half the band is dead, Bob Spitz's recent thousand-page Beatles biography moves the band a step closer to trumping Jesus' wordcount, and it appears we're starting to run out of bands obviously ripping them off, I'm a little tired of them. Where several of the 1964 LPs on the first set were bathed in echo and were in fake stereo, the four 1965 records -- with the exception of The Early Beatles, which has such an extreme hard pan on its fake stereo that it is a bit difficult to listen to on headphones -- were not dressed up in as much post-production studio trickery and the stereo sounds natural, so the mixes aren't as disorienting as they were on, say, Second Album. Length: 12.0" I know this a 'sacrilege' to the audiophile. So, in between such classics as "Ticket to Ride" and the title track, you get James Bond riffs, Hitchcock strings, and a sitar-laden take on "A Hard Day's Night". Audio CD, Box set, Limited Edition, April 11 2006. Great addition to any Beatles Collection!!! As I write this, the powers that be are said to be working on making their entire remastered catalog available via download, so perhaps the smart money is on the Beatles hanging around a while. Easy way is to put on track 21 off Rubber Soul. Special packaging includes original album cover artwork and a 60-page collector’s booklet with rare photos. Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 10, 2014. To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Covers like "Anna (Go to Him)" and "A Taste of Honey" are more than serviceable, though the real attraction is John Lennon's famed larynx shredding take on "Twist And Shout". It's an odd mix of raucous covers ("Kansas City", "Dizzy Miss Lizzie", "Bad Boy") and more low-key stuff forecasting their move into more sophisticated territory ("Tell Me What You See", the excellent "Every Little Thing"). 43 more songs from the sensational Capitol collections, including: Another Hard Day's Night • Baby, It's You • Dizzy Miss Lizzie • Do You Want to Know a Secret? Volume 1 came out in 2004. is designed as a soundtrack to the film of the same name, containing selections from the movie's Ken Thorne-written score interspersed between the Beatles songs. Also comes with a nice little booklet. • Eight Days a Week • Girl • Help! And since the Brits' Please Please Me and Beatles for Sale are available only in mono, that means a lot of tracks are making their stereo CD debut here, including "Please Please Me," "Twist and Shout," "Kansas City/Hey Hey Hey Hey," "What You're Doing," and "Every Little Thing."