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The Beatles - Let It Be...Naked (CD 2003)

Track Listing
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

1. Fly On The Wall (outtakes and chat from 1969)

Details
Number of CDs:2
Producer:Paul Hicks, Guy Massey And Allan Ro
Recording Type:Mixed
Distributor:EMI
Recording Mode:Stereo

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 Beatlesfrom 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.

Editorial Reviews
3 stars out of 5 - ...It's nice to have the sparer rendition of 'Across the Universe' that Lennon recorded, and the sonic improvements to the album as a whole are undeniable...Entertainment Weekly (11/21/03, pp.81-2) - ...Some of these changes are for the better. The sonic clarity is welcome and the revamped album concludes, as the original should have, with the title track, one of the most moving songs McCartney ever wrote... - Rating: B+Mojo (12/03, p.134) - 5 stars out of 5 - [T]he cleaning up, editing and re-sequencing has brought out a warmth and depth of colour we've not heard before...
Rolling Stone (12/11/2003)

Top Reviews
  Let it Be... Naked
Review created: 18/07/06
2 of 6 people found this review helpful.

If ever an album was born out of acrimony it was Let It Be. Patched together from desultory sessions for an aborted TV documentary (eventually released in cinemas) it was originally McCartney's baby. He'd urged the fraying foursome into action, reasoning that a return to their twelve bar roots might re-energise a unit who'd grown sick of each other. He was mistaken. The following experience saw Harrison feel sidelined to the point of leaving (albeit temporarily) and a marked increase in Lennon's snide side. With Macca washing his hands of the project it was left to Lennon (in league with cartoon villain, Allan Klein) to hand the tapes over to Phil Spector and produce the album we know and sort of love to this day. Thirty years later the bass player has his revenge; Spector (and engineer Glyn Johns)'s work is erased and these are the results...

To be fair to Spector, his additions (saccharine strings on ''The Long And Winding Road'', choir on ''Across The Universe'', redubbed drums from Ringo etc.) were never that appalling and served to cover some of the sloppiest playing the Merseygod's ever committed to tape. Yet this project does cast the album in a fresh and remarkably invigorating light. Gone are the snippets and knockabout stuff (''Maggie Mae'', ''Dig It'' etc) and finally the heartfelt ''Don't Let Me Down'' (from the rooftop session) gets a proper airing. But what really surprises is the way in which the boys at Abbey Road have used the digital fairy dust to beef up songs that have deteriorated into cliché by overfamiliarity. ''Two Of Us'' is affectingly jaunty, ''Get Back'' (the album's original working title) rocks once more and the stripped back ''Let It Be'' seems injected with soulful power, especially on the middle eight which bubbles with Georges leslied guitar solo. Billy Preston's hammond is also more to the fore, adding extra texture. Only ''The Long And Winding Road'' remains a dirge in any version.

Most importantly, for those who fear this is just a vanity project by Macca, this whole exercise was approved by all three remaining Fabs and the real highlight is Lennon's own ''Across The Universe''. Stripped of Spector's lavish treatments to Lennon alone with Harrison on tamboura, it rings out as one of John's finest works, mercifully missing the cynicism for which he was renowned and brimming with cosmic optimism.

Of course the real irony is that this work - the last album to be released under the band's name - actually prefigured their final masterpiece. It was Macca again who managed to coax the boys back to their spiritual home in St John's Wood to make Abbey Road - proof positive that they still had more to offer. Unfortunately it was Let It Be that soured things beyond repair. This new slant on the events is at least a small recompense for all that bad feeling.

Credit: Chris Jones


Review ID: 10000000001413861
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Reviews
  LET IT BE... NAKED
Review created: 31/01/08

I love the different versions of all the original songs from the Let it Be album - but then I do love different versions - like the Shania Twain "UP!" threesome. Not that I am comparing the Beatles to Shania of course, but different moods sometimes need different versions, and the main CD in this two disc set is just great to me - an old time 60's music fan. Can't get my head round the second CD - Fly on the wall - though as it does not seem to have anything worth listening to - in my opinion! Give it a try and it you don't like it put in back on ebay!


Review ID: 10000000005304627
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  Pop Perfection, Master musicians at work
Review created: 31/03/07
0 of 1 people found this review helpful.

Not as good as the original, but still amazing!
The Beatles are perhaps the greatest popular musicians of all time, and when you listen to this album you will understand why. Not their best album, but still plenty of incredible songs on here - that will never go out of date. Incredible Stuff. Guaranteed something for everyone.
Everything from the Sleeve to the music is Legendary - Plus in HMV/Virgin these beatles albums are always around 12-15 so grab yourself a bargain.

If you find this useful please rate me


Review ID: 10000000003254168
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