Sold Date:
October 30, 2015
Start Date:
November 30, 2014
Final Price:
$57.99
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
9349
Buyer Feedback:
13
Beatles-The Beatles Christmas Album-'63-69 COMPILATION FOR FAN CLUB-NEW GREEN LP
Beatles -The Beatles Christmas Album-'63-69
The Beatles Christmas Album
NEW LP ON GREEN VINYL
reissue
NEW BUT NOT SEALED
featured a selection of singles released exclusively for fan club consumption over the years 1963-69.
The compilation album of all The Beatles Christmas Songs is amazing!
The chorus is awesome and hearing them play different characters throughout the song is beyond entertaining.
Beautiful reissue Copy Of The 1970 Fan Club Only Split Apple Label Promotional Only LP.
The
Beatles' Christmas Album (released as From Then to You in the UK), was a
1970 compilation album of the Christmas records issued via the Beatles'
Fan Club—and made available solely to members of their official fan clubs in the UK and the US.
History
Each
year from 1963 to 1969, the Beatles had recorded a short Christmas
message for their fans, composed of carols, skits, jokes, and thanks to
the loyal "Beatle People". Each recording was pressed onto a 7" flexi
disc and mailed free to the British members of the Fan Club. In 1970, in
the wake of the band's break-up, Apple released the compilation of all
seven.
1963: The Beatles Christmas Record
Recorded: 17 October 1963
Released: 6 December 1963
Total time: 5:08
The
first Christmas recording from the Beatles featured several renditions
of the traditional carol "Good King Wenceslas" and individual messages
from the four, ending with a closing chorus of "Ricky the Red-Nosed
Ringo". This offering, as well as 1964's, appears to be largely
scripted. An edited version of this recording was sent to members of the
Beatles' American fan club in December 1964. The recording was also
included as an unlockable bonus in the video game The Beatles: Rock Band
and was made available as a free download from the iTunes Music Store
between 23 December 2010, and 9 January 2011.
1964: Another Beatles Christmas Record
Recorded: 26 October 1964
Released: 18 December 1964
Total time: 4:02
The
song "Jingle Bells" is sung, followed by individual messages to the
fans. John mocks the prepared statement doing an imitation of Paul
Harvey and includes his own pseudo-words and ad-libbing. When Paul asks
him if he wrote this himself, he says, "No it's somebody bad
hand-wroter. It's been a busy year Beople peadles one way and another
but it's been a great year too. You fans have seen to that. Page two...
Thanks a lot folks and a happy-er Christmas and a Merry Grew Year.
Crimble maybe." (The statement is apparently handwritten as at various
points in the recording, Paul reads "making them" as "melting them"
before correcting himself and George reads "quite a time" as "quiet
time" before correcting himself with "great time" as well.) Finishing up
the record is a brief rendition of the traditional song "Oh Can You
Wash Your Father's Shirt?"
Another Beatles' Christmas Record was not
sent to American fans. Rather, at Christmastime 1964, US fans received
an edited version of The Beatles' Christmas Record, which was sent to
British fan club members in 1963. Also, as opposed to using flexi-discs,
the US fan club sent the message in a tri-fold cardboard mailer, with
the "record" embedded in one of the flaps of cardboard.
1965: The Beatles' Third Christmas Record
Recorded: 8 November 1965
Released: 17 December 1965
Total time: 6:27
Several
off-key, a cappella versions of "Yesterday" are dispersed throughout
the record, alongside Lennon's "Happy Christmas to Ya List'nas", "Auld
Lang Syne", a one-and-a-half-line version of the Four Tops' "It's the
Same Old Song", which they quickly stop before they violate the
copyright, and an original poem titled "Christmas Comes But Once a
Year".
Members of the Beatles' US fan club did not receive this (or
any) Christmas flexi-disc in 1965. Rather, they received a black and
white postcard, with a photo of the Fab Four and the message "Season's
Greetings – Paul, Ringo, George, John." The Beatle Bulletin, the
publication of the US fan club, explained in its April 1966 edition that
the tape arrived too late to prepare the record in time for Christmas.
1966: The Beatles' Fourth Christmas Record – Pantomime: Everywhere It's Christmas
Recorded: 25 November 1966
Released: 16 December 1966
Total time: 6:43
A
disjointed collection of original songs and dramatic skits are featured
in the 1966 offering. The songs include "Everywhere It's Christmas",
"Orowainya", and "Please Don't Bring Your Banjo Back." The sketches
performed include "Podgy the Bear and Jasper" and "Felpin Mansions."
Once
again, the US fan club members did not get a flexi-disc. Instead, they
received a postcard with the message on one side and a short version of
The Beatle Bulletin on the other, with enough room for a mailing label
and postage.
1967: Christmas Time is Here Again!
Recorded: 28 November 1967
Released: 15 December 1967
Total time: 6:11
An
elaborate production, Christmas Time is Here Again! was developed
around the concept of several groups auditioning for a BBC radio show.
The title song serves as a refrain throughout the record. The Beatles
portray a multitude of characters, including game show contestants,
aspiring musicians ("Plenty of Jam Jars", by the Ravellers), and actors
in a radio drama ("Theatre Hour"). At the end John reads a poem, "When
Christmas Time Is Over." This offering was likely a deliberate homage
to/continuation of the broadly similar "Craig Torso" specials produced
for BBC Radio 1 that same year by the Beatles' friends and collaborators
the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band, and also shares much in common with their
then-unreleased track "You Know My Name (Look Up The Number)", recorded
six months previously.
While British fans received a flexi-disc in an elaborate sleeve, American fans received a postcard similar to that of 1966.
1968: The Beatles' 1968 Christmas Record
Recorded: Separately, November–December 1968
Released: 20 December 1968
Total time: 7:53
The
first Beatles Christmas fan club disc to be recorded separately, the
1968 offering is a collage of odd noises, musical snippets, and
individual messages. McCartney's song "Happy Christmas, Happy New Year"
is featured, along with John's poems "Jock and Yono" and "Once Upon a
Pool Table." Also notable is a rendition of "Nowhere Man" by the
ukulele-playing Tiny Tim. Also included is a sped-up snippet of the
Beatles' own "Helter Skelter" and a brief snippet of Perrey &
Kingsley's "Baroque Hoedown" which was used three years later in
Disneyland's Main Street Electrical Parade. "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" and
"Birthday" are also heard in the background for part of the message.The
dialogue and songs for the flexi-disc were organised and edited together
by Kenny Everett.
Finally, the US fans got a flexi-disc for Christmas in 1968, but it came in a modified version of the 1967 UK sleeve.
1969: The Beatles' Seventh Christmas Record
Recorded: Separately, November–December 1969
Released: 19 December 1969
Total time: 7:39
The
final Beatles Christmas offering was also recorded separately, as the
band were crumbling at this point. It features an extensive visit with
John and Yoko at their Tittenhurst Park estate, where they play "what
will Santa bring me?" games. Harrison only appears briefly, and Starr
only shows up to plug his recent film, The Magic Christian. Paul sings
his original ad-lib, "This is to Wish You a Merry, Merry Christmas."
Starting at 1:30, at the tail-end of Ringo's song, the guitar solos from
"The End" are heard, followed by Yoko interviewing John.
For the
only time, the American and British jackets were identical. The US
version of the flexi-disc had an elaborate drawing of the Beatles' faces
on it.
1970 album and aftermath
The Beatles' Christmas
Album was most likely sent to US fan club members in the spring of 1971.
Though it served to remind fan-club members that the Beatles were no
more, it had the advantage of much better sound quality than the old
flexi-discs, though both the UK and US copies of the album were mastered
from copies of the original flexi-discs, not original tapes. it was the
first time the 1964 and 1965 messages were available in America. Not
long after the album was issued, numerous counterfeits and bootlegs
appeared on the market, which continue to circulate to this day.
In
December 1982, two albums claiming to comprise a legitimate release of
the Beatles' Christmas messages appeared on the US market. One of them,
which contained the 1963 through 1966 holiday records, was called
Christmas Reflections, on a label called Desert Vibrations Heritage
Series (HSRD-SP1). The other, with the 1967 through 1969 messages, was
called Happy Michaelmas and was on a label called The Adirondack Group
(AG-8146). Less than a year later, on 29 September 1983, an entrepreneur
announced that he was going to issue all seven messages on one record,
which he planned to call John, Paul, George and Ringo. The Beatles'
representatives quickly sued, claiming copyright and trademark
violations, and won in court. As a result, the 1983 album was never
released, and the two 1982 LPs were withdrawn.
Very little of the
Beatles' Christmas messages were released to the general public outside
the fan club. An edited and abridged version of the 1963 single
appeared as unlockable bonus content in The Beatles: Rock Band video
game. Dialogue from the 1965 and 1966 recordings were featured as the
tail-end of the 2006 compilation, Love. After the final number, "All You
Need Is Love", has ended, the listener is then treated to the
non-sensical ad-libs from the group that appeared at the end of the 1966
flexi-disc. Mere seconds later, this is merged into the final moments
from the 1967 flexi-disc, complete with Paul's ad-lib line, "Jolly
Good". The first three minutes of the music bed of the 1967 single, with
greetings recorded for the 1966 single superimposed during the final
minute, under the name "Christmas Time (Is Here Again)". It was issued
as one of the B-sides of the "Free as a Bird" single in December 1995.
Ringo Starr recorded his own cover of "Christmas Time Is Here Again" on his 1999 Christmas album, I Wanna Be Santa Claus.