I was asked by ebay why I gave this product a 5 star rating. IT'S THE BEATLES!!!!!!! This version gives some slightly alternative arangements plus it throws in Don't let me down ---- which was released as a single and wasn't on the original Let it be album. Well worth the investment!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
1 disc is a bunch of conversations between different Beatles, and is meaningless (to me). the other disc is most of the songs from the originally-released album. the difference is the this disc does not have the enhancements (strings, horns, etc) made by Phil Spector to "polish up" the songs.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
Track listing DISC 1: LET IT BE... NAKED: 1. Get Back 2. Dig A Pony 3. For You Blue 4. Long And Winding Road 5. Two Of Us 6. I've Got A Feeling 7. One After 909 8. Don't Let Me Down 9. I Me Mine 10. Across The Universe 11. Let It Be DISC 2: FLY ON THE WALL: 1. A Unique Insight Into The Beatles At Work in Rehearsal And In The Studio During January 1969: Sun King / Don't Let Me Down / One After 909 / Because I Know You Love Me So / Don't Pass Me By / Taking A Trip To Carolina / John's Piano Piece / Child Of Details Contributing artists: Billy Preston Producer: George Martin, The Beatles Distributor: EMI Music Distribution Recording type: Studio Recording mode: Stereo SPAR Code: n/a Album notes LET IT BE...NAKED contains a FLY ON THE WALL bonus disc including song rehearsals and conversation snatches. The Beatles: John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Ringo Starr. Additional personnel: Billy Preston (keyboards). Includes liner notes by Kevin Howlett and interview excerpts with The Beatles from the original LET IT BE book. In its original form, LET IT BE signaled the end of an era, closing the book on the Beatles, as well as literally and figuratively marking the end of the '60s. The 1970 release evolved from friction-filled sessions the Beatles intended to be an organic, bare-bones return to their roots. Instead, the endless hours of tapes were eventually handed over to Phil Spector, since neither the quickly splintering Beatles nor their longtime producer George Martin wanted to sift through the voluminous results. LET IT BE... NAKED sets the record straight, revisiting the contentious sessions, stripping away the Spectorian orchestrations, reworking the running order, and losing all extemporaneous in-studio banter. On this version of the album, filler tracks ("Dig It," "Maggie Mae") are dropped, while juicy b-side "Don't Let Me Down" is added. The most obvious revamping is on the songs handled heavily by Spector. Removing the orchestrations from "The Long and Winding Road" and "Across the Universe" gives Paul McCartney's vocals considerably more resonance on the former, doing the same for John Lennon's voice and guitar on the latter. This alternate take on LET IT BE enhances the album's power, reclaiming the raw, unadorned quality that was meant to be its calling card from the beginning.Read full review
Originally, The Beatles had planned to "Get Back" to their musical roots, so to speak, by recording an album of only the four of them, without any additional overdubs or embellishments. While it started off that way in January 1969, it certainly did not end up like this. The idea was to make a rather bare-bones attempt at a simple recorded album, with the usual line-up of John on Rhythm Guitar, George on Lead Guitar, Paul on Bass, and Ringo on Drums; just like they used to do it, during the earlier part of their career together. Finally, in 2003, the album that The Beatles had planned to make together all along was finally released to the general public. "Let It Be...Naked" shows you exactly what they had in mind from the beginning. The 11 songs included were remixed and remastered for a superior sound quality that is basically just the foursome, with the addition of ketboard player Billy Preston. The result is a fine album that has its strengths in every track. Gone are filler like "Maggie Mae" and "Dig It", replaced by an alternate take of "Don't Let Me Down". The album starts off with the classic rocker "Get Back", which is presented here in an abbreviated form. Songs like "Let It Be", "Across The Universe", "I Me Mine" and "The Long And Winding Road" sound even more pure and simple this time around. "George's "For You Blue" and the duet "Two Of Us" retain their simplicity, while "One After 909" still rocks the house. As a bonus is "Fly On The Wall", over 20 minutes of material that show the group doing warm-ups, rehearsals and in-studio chat. Just like its predecessor "Yellow Submarine Songtrack", this album shows how good The Beatles can sound well into the 21st century!Read full review
This is a great CD. I had this as an LP when I was 15 years old and have fond memories of it. Let it be naked is not the same as the original. It is still good. What I wanted was to have the original version. I didn't know things were changed when it was remastered. I am going to buy the original and list the nake version on ebay.
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