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Please Please Me <Limited> [VINYL]
 
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Please Please Me [VINYL] [Import]

The Beatles Vinyl
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (58 customer reviews)

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Biography

"The story began in Harold Macmillan’s “never had it so good” ’50s Britain. It should be fiction: four teenagers with no more than eight O’Levels between them, running and biking and busing and busking all over Liverpool in search of new chords and old guitars and half-decent drum kit and any gig at all.

They were determined to amount to something – in George’s words “we just had this amazing inner… Read more in Amazon's The Beatles Store

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Product details

  • Vinyl (2 Feb 2004)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: EMI
  • ASIN: B0000UB4YQ
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (58 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 520,051 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Their first-ever album, Please Please Me is raw and rough and still very rock & roll. Having already scored two hits when this appeared, Lennon and McCartney were only just beginning to flex their writing muscles and so relied heavily on the cover material to see them through. Their insecurity about their own abilities seems curious in hindsight since they'd pulled the title song and "I Saw Her Standing There" (with thanks to Little Richard) out of their hats. But they were an unknown quantity, still to launch a million bands and take pop music to places it had never dreamed off. A small step for four men, a giant leap for music. --Chris Nickson

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
72 of 79 people found the following review helpful
By Budge Burgess TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Audio CD
Why would you need to read a review of a Beatles' album? If you've been a fan for many years, you know exactly what you want and exactly what you're getting. If you're coming to them new, do you really want a potted history of this particular recording, locating its place in the band's development?

I don't listen to Beatles music for a cerebral or spiritual experience, nor to be able to impress anyone with the fact that I can pinpoint when and where they recorded that track - George was recovering from an in-growing toenail, Ringo had just bought a new set of drumsticks. I listen to the Beatles for the emotions I've nurtured over forty years of more. So can I convince you that my passion for a particular album or track will parallel yours? Of course not!

For me, the excitement generated by the Beatles is something I grew up with. I was thirteen when they had their first hit. The first records I ever bought were by the Beatles. I joined the Fan Club. I covered my walls in photos. I was threatened with expulsion from school because of the length of my hair. I even managed, as a teenager in a small Scottish town, to obtain copies of 'Merseybeat' - the Liverpool music paper. It says something about the dynamism of the 60's that Liverpool could have its own music paper (this was way before desktop publishing, the Internet, etc.).

"Please Please Me" was released in March, 1963, and was the Beatles first album ("With the Beatles" would follow). Inspired by the title song reaching number one in the charts, the LP was famously based on their current stage act - compare and contrast these studio recordings with the live version available on the unofficial, "Live at the Star Club" offerings.

These were the days when bands played live: they grew up on the circuit, playing pubs, clubs, and dives, hoping to establish enough of a fan base to secure a recording contract ... and a chance to record someone else's song, maybe cover an already successful US hit.

But the Beatles broke out of this restrictive process. "Please Please Me" combines cover versions of standards with numbers written by Lennon and McCartney, and marks their growing confidence as songwriters.

That was the dynamic attraction of the Beatles. Their music was - remains - raw and exciting. There was something liberating about it. Here were ordinary lads from Liverpool who could write their own stuff, not depend on professional songwriters to grind out hits for them. There was an immediacy about their words. This was the decade when the first working class kids were making their way to university. It was an age of sensed meritocracy and upward mobility. The Beatles were flying the banner for the triumph of talent over elitism, for the victory of regional accents over the sterile BBC English we were normally fed. And the Beatles had seized the baton from the USA and were now setting the cultural initiative for the rest of the world to follow.

And I knew all this at school. My mother sent me to an all boys school. I'd noticed girls. There were a couple I passed every morning who I really noticed. But I'd never talked to one! And here were the Beatles. You could imagine dancing with some mini skirted lassie in the sweaty din of the Cavern Club. These were songs of love and lust, of energy and passion, of time and place.

That's the significance of Beatles music. For a generation, it changed their world. For the future of pop, it set new standards and directions. And for the individual, it established patterns of memories and emotions which are still alive to this day.

The music of the Beatles inscribes a unique history for every fan. Songs which you associate with someone or somewhere special, songs you associate with laughter, pain, love, despair, loss or triumph, songs which provide the punctuation marks to your own life's narrative. Few other artists have come close to this.

"Please Please Me" established a yardstick for the quality of recording: here are songs which have a beat, which are well sung and provide dynamic bass lines, but they are also songs with passion and depth, songs which elevate your spirits and make you feel positive. Still melodically simple, but embodying a universal sentiment, the songs on "Please Please Me" lack artifice or pretence that they are by anyone else but the Beatles. This is assertive music, music with personality. And it's timeless.

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Audio CD
Recorded in a mammoth 24 hour recording session, Please Please Me introduced the world to those 'loveable' moptops. The amazing thing is that 4 years later they were 'grinding' (sgt)pepper which took over 6 months to record. Essentially an album of their live set, please please me took the pop world and turned it on its head. My personal favourite is Twist and Shout which was deliberately recorded last (lennon wanted his voice raw) and stands out as one of the best cover versions of a song..however 'I saw here standing there' by McCartney IS one of the greatest Rock N Roll songs ever released.

Without a doubt one of the greatest rock n roll albums ever made.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By LXIX TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Audio CD
John Lennon first met Paul McCartney in July 1957, so the Beatles' debut album is the culmination of about 5 years of hard work - mainly gigging in the Northwest of England and Hamburg. Debut albums are often notoriously good as they have fermented for so long. The Beatles, of course, went from strength to strength in subsequent releases. It's hard to imagine that this record is almost 50 years old at my time of writing. It was created with very primitive sound recording technology (compared to today) and at a time when record producers wore a shirt and tie to work. It also only cost £400 to make. How times change. It's also hard to imagine that in 5 years these same guys would evolve from tracks like 'Love Me Do' and 'PS. I Love You' to songs like 'A Day in the Life' and 'I Am The Walrus.'

The key to the Beatles' songwriting is in their use of 3 key words: "I", "ME" and "YOU". Listen to their songs and note how often these 3 words constantly occur, particularly in the first half of their recording career.

As for the album - it has 14 tracks (8 Lennon/McCartney songs and 6 cover version), the majority of which were recorded in a single day at Abbey Road Studios in London. No track exceeds 3 minutes in duration and the total running time of the 14 songs is 32.27 mins. The fact that there are any original songs on 'Please Please Me' was revolutionary in itself. This was the time when 'A&R' really meant matching Artistes (performers) with Repertoire (from songwriters). The Beatles were self-contained and could write their own material. This is something that we now take for granted. The Beatles continued to revolutionise the music industry in subsequent years - for example, in being the first to perform at sports stadiums, and in opening the commercial path to American success for other British bands.

Note that the vocals on this CD will come through your right speaker. If you run it through a hi fi system at a decent volume with your ear to the right speaker then you'll think you are standing at the microphones beside Lennon, McCartney and Harrison. Quite remarkable.

My only gripe is with the record label as the packaging is unfortunately in cardboard form. This means making some contact with the CD when moving it and out of the sleeve (something I usually prefer to avoid, as they're nowhere near as durable as first thought when they came out in 1982).

Overall, this is a momentous, turning point album in the British music industry and the commencement of the recording career of a band that became a cultural institution that will continue to reverberate throughout the ages, probably for many centuries to come. Had Brian Epstein not been in the HMV record store in Oxford Street that day with the Beatles failed Decca demo session (in order to turn a reel into a sample record), then this music may not have come to the attention of George Martin and Parlophone. It makes you wonder how many near misses are actually out there in music, literature and the arts etc.

Extras include a 20 page inlay booklet (including commentary and a series of photos) and a 5 minute documentary video clip.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Go to the Cavern
The first Beatles LP does not play well using headphones due to the basic stereo left / right; instrumentals / vocals. It's fantastic when played on speakers! Read more
Published 1 month ago by mykylyn
Absolutely Brilliant
This for me is the absolute best of the Beatles' albums. It may not be the most clever, but from a sheer enjoyment point of view , it is in a class of it's own. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Mr. B. K. Edmunds
one of their finest
Please Please Me - Twist and Shout - Love Me Do.
Alongside Do You Want to Know a Secret and PS I love You.
Pretty faultless 60s founding pop - very well remastered. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Ginola14
100% Satisfaction
The CD was delivered very quickly and plays very well.
No complaints at all - well pleased.
Thank You!
Published 12 months ago by Bluenose
raw, optimistic, fun
They may not be their most revered LPs by music journo's, but the early Beatles knock spots off the bloated studio art projects of later years. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Red not Dead
The First Album
The first album from the Fab Four is a very repectable and enjoyable album to listen too. Stand out tracks for me are obviously the title track and first single 'Please Please Me',... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Andrew Whitby
Please Please Me
Please please me is The Beatles debut album, released on march 22nd 1963. Recorded at the famous EMI studio at Abbey Road and published by parlophone records, the album was some... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Luke Thrower
delivery of item
The CD ordered on the 29th Dec on the trial one day delivery. It was stated that if ordered withinthe next 7 hours delivery was guaranteed to be the following day. Read more
Published 17 months ago by george
Why Should This Be a Classic Album?
The only reason for the question is that this is The Beatles' first album and The Beatles was a really important band for pop/rock music. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Reijo Piippula
The past is a different country.
Take yourself back (if you were born then) to the days of steam trains to telegram boys to coal fires to the days when life was harder but simpler. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Patrick Wood
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