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- From: edc@evolution.bchs.uh.edu (edward s. chen)
- Newsgroups: rec.music.beatles
- Subject: Re: X-Mass lp some questions from
- Date: 16 Nov 1992 01:02:39 GMT
- Organization: Little to none, or maybe not......
- Lines: 111
- Message-ID: <1e6rvfINNfl6@menudo.uh.edu>
- References: <1992Nov15.155349.1@hamp.hampshire.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: evolution.bchs.uh.edu
-
- In article <1992Nov15.155349.1@hamp.hampshire.edu> nzander@hamp.hampshire.edu writes:
- >
- >I just bought a re-issue of the "Michaelmas" lp (ATLAS rec.), and now
- > I have a few questions.
- >
- >1) For what Chirstmas year was is made.
- >2) Was only one made (I thought I'd heard a different version of it on the
- > radio)
- >3) Which beatle contributed to what.
- >
- >
- >Merry Chirstmas,
-
- "The Beatles Christmas Album" has never officially been released. The
- "Michaelmas" LP is a bootleg of dubious origin, which manages to present
- only half of the Beatles annual Christmas messages, and rather bizarrely
- edited in some places, and artificially extended in others. There was
- another LP in that set, featuring the remaining messages.
-
- A bit of background:
-
- By Christmas 1963, the Beatles record sales in Britain were well over two
- million, and their official fan club had swelled over 20,000 members. In
- appreciation of their fans, the boys recorded a Christmas single. The single
- was sent through the mail as a flexi-disc, with a specially prepared cover.
- In 1970, the Beatles were dissolved in everything except name, so an LP was
- produced, and sent to the fans. Although the covers are different, the
- contents were identical in both America and England.
-
- 1963: The Beatles Christmas Record (5:00)
- -- LYN492
- -- Recorded October 17,1963
- -- Features "Good King Wenceslas", and a little ditty about
- "Rudolph the Red Nosed Ringo"
-
- 1964: Another Beatles Christmas Record (3:58)
- -- LYN757
- -- Recorded October 26-28, 1964
- -- Features the boys doing "Jingle Bells"
-
- 1965: The Beatles Third Christmas Record (6:22)
- -- LYN948
- -- Recorded October 19,1965
- -- For the first time, the Boys parody one of their own
- compositions on a Xmas disc, here a butchered "Yesterday"
-
- 1966: The Beatles Fourth Christmas Record - Pantomime: Everywhere it's
- Christmas (6:38)
- -- LYN1145
- -- Recorded November 25,1966
- -- The boys parody anything and everything, the most memorable
- being a segment about "Podgy the Bear and Jasper", in search
- of matches, candles, and buns.
-
- 1967: The Beates Fifth Christmas Record - Christmastime (is here again) (6:38)
- -- LYN1360
- -- Recorded November 28,1967
- -- The last message recorded with all four boys in the studio together
- -- Another pantomime type record, but this time they include a special
- song recorded just for the proceedings (Christmastime is here again)
-
- 1968: The Beatles Sixth Christmas Record - Christmas 1968 (7:50)
- -- LYN 11743/4
- -- Each of the boys recorded their parts individually throughout
- November 1968.
- -- The first Christmas record "produced" by someone other then George
- Martin. Kenny Everett compiled the tapes into a cohesive whole.
- -- Tiny Tim appears singing a rather bizarre version of "Nowhere Man"
- -- Included is some original poetry by John Lennon, some of it being
- little more then thinly veiled complaints over the other three not
- accepting Yoko.
-
- 1969: The Beatles Seventh Christmas Record - Happy Christmas 1969 (7:40)
- -- LYN1970/1
- -- This record might as well have been called "Happy Christmas 1969,
- From John, Yoko, and three other guys". George's contribution is
- a single short message, while Paul contributes a throwaway tune that
- probably couldn't have been released anywhere else, and Ringo plugs
- his then-current film.
-
- 1970: From Then to You - The Beatles Christmas Record 1970
- (Apple LYN2154) -- UK
-
- The Beatles Christmas Album (Apple SBC100) -- US
-
-
- This is probably the single best document of the Beatles history. You can
- hear the excitement of the "lads" at being famous throughout the country, and
- on the cusp of world fame. This continues, until the simple "thank you very
- much for buying our records" became stale, just as touring and singing "She
- Loves You" for people not listening became a bore. Drug-inspired visions
- helped the far-out, Goon-type pantomime records, and finally the break-up of
- the band.
-
- Unfortunately, the fan club records are the only place this material has
- been released for anything approaching public consumption. Originals
- can be found in the $30.00 - $50.00 range, and counterfeits for considerably
- less. (There is one *very* nice one around which was pressed on swirled,
- multicolored vinyl). A promotional disc was made in Christmas 1990, and
- sent to selected radio stations containing all seven Christmas messages, along
- with assorted holiday songs from the solo Beatles. ("Ding Dong, Ding Dong",
- "Happy Christmas (WAR IS OVER)", "Wonderful Christmastime", "Rudolph the Red
- Nosed Reggae" and the like). I've seen it selling in the $50.00 - $60.00
- range, but it is the only copy of this material on CD.
-
- <ESC>
- --
- ..You either kiss the future or the past goodbye...
- -- Ringo Starr (written by O'Deherty / Velez)
-
-
-