Beatles bootlegs



         


The Beatles are one of the most bootlegged bands in music history. Beatles bootleg records began showing up in the late 1960s, usually containing material that was illegally recorded, stolen or leaked from the band's record label EMI. In the 1990s, Beatles bootleg CDs and videos began to take their place.

One of the first Beatles bootlegs to be sold illegally was Kum Back, which was created from an early acetate put together by engineer Glyn Johns on March 10, 1969. The acetate included rough mixes and versions of songs that would eventually be released on Let It Be. A copy of the acetate had leaked out and by September, radio stations around the country were playing music from the as yet unreleased album. In the fall, the Kum Back bootleg began to show up in record stores. Before long, bootlegs of a second mix made by Johns on May 28 also began to hit the black market.

To this day, "Let It Be Sessions" (aka the "Get Back Sessions") material is still the primary source for Beatles bootlegs. Literally hundreds of hours of recordings exist, that feature the band rehearsing new material, as well as classic rock and roll covers.

Most of the better quality, heavily bootlegged songs were eventually released (usually in superior quality) on The Beatles Anthology CD series. These included "Besame Mucho" (with Pete Best on drums), "How Do You Do It?", "One After 909 (early version)", "Leave My Kitten Alone", "Can't Buy Me Love (Alternate)", "If You've Got Trouble", "That Means a Lot", "12-Bar Original", "I'm Looking Through You (take 1)", "Strawberry Fields Forever (demo sequence}", "A Day In The Life (alternate with rough McCartney vocal)", "Fool on the Hill (demo)", "Not Guilty", "What's The New Mary Jane?", "Come And Get It (demo)", and "Because (vocals only)". Many of these songs were also compiled in the 1980s by engineer Geoff Emerick for a planned album of previously unreleased material entitled Sessions. The project was scrapped, but has shown up countless times in bootleg form.

The following is a list of some of the most common bootlegged recordings by the Beatles.

A number of songs have been fraudulently passed off by bootleggers as unreleased Beatles songs, including a song called "Piece of Mind" and a National Lampoon parody of John Lennon ranting called "Magical Misery Tour", from the album "That's Not Funny, That's Sick".

Even the individual solo careers of each Beatle has spawned a countless number of bootlegs of live shows, studio out-takes and demos.

In January of 2003, following an investigation by The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry and London detectives, police raids in England and the Netherlands recovered nearly 500 original Beatles studio tapes, recorded during the Let It Be sessions. Five people were arrested.

It has been assumed that these people formed the main division of Yellow Dog, which released these session tapes under what became the 38-album series Day by Day. The Let It Be session tapes are in the form of Nagra Tape Rolls, which were used to record audio to later synch to film for inclusion in the film Let It Be.

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