1962-66 (Red Album) by The Beatles (Record, 2008)

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About this product

Product Identifiers

Record LabelEmtl, EMD Int'l
UPC0077779703609
eBay Product ID (ePID)14070894307

Product Key Features

Release Year2008
FormatRecord
GenreRock
ArtistThe Beatles
Release Title1962-66 (Red Album)

Dimensions

Item Height0.21 in
Item Length12.51 in
Item Width12.12 in

Additional Product Features

Number of Tracks26
TracksLove Me Do, Please Please Me, From Me to You, She Loves You, I Want to Hold Your Hand, All My Loving, Can't Buy Me Love, Hard Day's Night, And I Love Her, Eight Days a Week, I Feel Fine, Ticket to Ride, Yesterday, Help, You've Got to Hide Your Love Away, We Can Work It Out, Day Tripper, Drive My Car, Norwegian Wood, Nowhere Man, Michelle, In My Life, Girl, Paperback Writer, Eleanor Rigby, Yellow Submarine
Number of Discs2
Sub-GenreBritish
Notes2 LP set. This superb compilation, often called "the red album," brings together the majority of The Beatles' hits from the early to mid '60s. Consequently, it plays like an overview of the some of the most popular and indelible rock songs of all time. From the "yeah, yeah, yeah"'s of "She Loves You" through the amped-up giddiness of "I Want to Hold Your Hand," the minor-key melodicism of "And I Love Her," and on to the chiming power pop of "Eight Days a Week" and the tweaky feedback of "I Feel Fine," these are the songs that turned the entire Western world on it's ear. The second half of the set-in addition to it's phenomenal songs- is interesting in that it charts The Beatles' move from straightforward pop toward the new chapter of rock the band would help script in the late '60s. After the expansive chords and slinky melodies of "Ticket to Ride," the band becomes alternately darkly introspective ("Yesterday") and looser and more groove-obsessed ("Drive My Car"), while trying on allegorical Dylan-inspired narratives ("Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)"), and happy-go-luck psychedelia ("Yellow Submarine"). These songs are part of our living, breathing cultural identity, and-as this collection reminds us-for good reason. EMI. 2005.

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