Beatles, The - Please Please Me / From Me To You album flac
Performer: Beatles, TheTitle: Please Please Me / From Me To You
Released: 1964
MP3 album: 1817 mb
FLAC album: 1731 mb
Rating: 4.9
Other formats: ASF AUD AA MP4 APE VQF RA
Genre: Pop
had played "Please Please Me" on WLS in Chicago. Biondi was fired by WLS in May and relocated to KRLA 1110 in Los Angeles in June . Vee-Jay chose to couple "From Me to You" with "Please Please Me" when it re-released the single on 3 January 1964, shortly after film of the Beatles had appeared on The Jack Paar Program, the NBC television prime-time version of Paar's previous "Tonight Show". Had Vee-Jay known how all-encompassing Beatlemania would become, it likely would.
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Please Please Me was recorded on a two-track BTR recording machine, leaving little opportunity for overdubs or elaborate arrangements. The album contained both sides of The Beatles' first two singles – Love Me Do, PS I Love You, Please Please Me and Ask Me Why – plus 10 new recordings made on 11 February 1963. That day's recording cost just £400 and lasted for just under 10 working hours. There wasn't a lot of money at Parlophone.
Ten of the album's fourteen tracks were recorded in just one day - 11th February, 1963. These included a mixture of stage favourites and "Lennon-McCartney originals". The four remaining songs had been committed to tape in 1962 having formed the B-side of their debut release and both sides of their second single.
Will provide more photos upon request! This is a UK (Great Britain ) Pressing. The year when this album of songs was released is 1968. The Beatles - Please Please Me 180 Gram, Rmst, Reissue. This is where it all began. Beatles 45rpm vinyl record - Please Please Me & From Me to You - Vee-Jay VJ-581.
Please Please Me Lyrics. Last night I said these words to my girl I know you never even try girl. Come on (Come on) Come on (Come on) Come on (Come on) Come on (Come on) Please please me, whoa yeah, like I please you. You don't need me to show the way, love Why do I always have to say, love. The title track off the Beatles' debut album Please Please Me, and seventh of the tracklist. The second single by The Beatles released in Britain (after Love Me Do), it encapsulates the band’s sound in that era perhaps better than any song in their catalogue. George Martin has declared that the song was rather dreary and slow, and helped them redo it to the fast-paced track that manages to encompass harmonica, guitar, and vocal harmony in just 2 minutes. com/watch?v 2MnuNvzyfI4.






