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 Posted:   Apr 4, 2017 - 12:19 PM   
 By:   Rameau   (Member)

Well it's been fifty years since the summer of love, & there's two new editions of this classic album being released, a two disc & a six disc, released on May 26th (that could change). There was a picture of the six disc edition on Amazon.ca, but that's been taken down now (they probably jumped the gun). There's all sorts of talk on the net as to what's on offer, a new stereo mix? The mono version? Maybe even inserting Strawberry Fields & Penny Lane, I think the six disc set has a DVD & Blu-ray. I'm sure all will become clear before too long.

Just got this from another site:

Brand new stereo mix by Giles Martin and Sam Okell from the original master tapes

Deluxe 2 CD set including CD of previously unreleased session takes

.................................................

6 disc Set includes two CDs of extras: A deeper dive with 100 minutes of outtakes, previously unheard and unreleased, plus new stereo mixes of Strawberry Fields Forever and Penny Lane

Mono album with six extra tracks including lost version of Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds

DVD and Blu-Ray "The Making of Sgt Pepper" fully restored plus 5.1 surround sound and Hi Res stereo mixes.

144 page book featuring photos, lyrics, etc.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 4, 2017 - 12:49 PM   
 By:   jenkwombat   (Member)

Reportedly, the 6-disc version is supposed to come with download-only outtakes from the sessions (previously unreleased). That kind of bugs me; I want that stuff on a pressed CD, not download. But, to have the mono mix remastered, the stereo mix remastered, 2-LPs and a new surround mix which are all supposed to be included with it too, I'd still get it, Beatle nut that I am... smile

 
 Posted:   Apr 4, 2017 - 2:07 PM   
 By:   Octoberman   (Member)

Some of this has been confirmed, while a lot of it has been merely rampant speculation on the Hoffman boards.

I tend to trust the Super Deluxe Edition site on things like this.
They deal with actual real info.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 4, 2017 - 4:59 PM   
 By:   Rameau   (Member)

I think the two disc set will do me. A new stereo mix & an extra CD of some of the recording sessions. When they originally mixed it for mono it took some time & all the Beatles were involved, then the Beatles went on off somewhere for a break & George Martin & his engineer knocked of the stereo mix in a few hours, so a good thoughtful stereo mix will work wonders.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 5, 2017 - 3:50 AM   
 By:   jenkwombat   (Member)

Now I'm hearing the 6-CD Super Deluxe Version is going to be:

Disc One = CD 1: Stereo Mix + outtakes
Disc Two = CD 2: Session Outtakes
Disc Three= CD 3: Session Outtakes
Disc Four = CD 4: Mono Mix + outtakes
Disc Five = DVD
Disc Six = Blu-Ray

Man, I hope this is the real deal, and not the down-load version of the story.... smile

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 5, 2017 - 6:20 AM   
 By:   Rameau   (Member)

The six disc is a bit expensive for me, but you can save around a third by ordering it from Amazon Italy. The two-disc set is £20, which doesn't seem bad, it would cost me a pound or two more to buy a soundtrack CD.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 12, 2017 - 12:59 PM   
 By:   jenkwombat   (Member)


Disc One = CD 1: New Stereo Mix + outtakes
Disc Two = CD 2: Session Outtakes
Disc Three= CD 3: Session Outtakes
Disc Four = CD 4: Mono Mix + outtakes
Disc Five = DVD
Disc Six = Blu-Ray


Well, THIS is the final configuration --- pretty much what I posted before, except the first CD is a NEW stereo mix instead of the 1967 stereo mix; you'll have to hang on to your 2009 Remaster to have that in decent quality, I guess. Thankfully, theses ARE CDs, NOT download. smile Did anyone else here Pre-Order this, or was I the only one? (BTW, Amazon seemed to have it for the best price, so that was my choice....)

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 12, 2017 - 1:57 PM   
 By:   Rameau   (Member)

I was going to pre-order it (the two CD set), but I'll probably wait, & maybe even...buy it from a shop. I see the price has come down from £20 to £16 on Amazon. The old, not so good stereo mix has got no place in this set. I hope they continue the good work with Rubber Soul & Revolver. Not much interest in this release here, but I suppose wrong forum really.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 12, 2017 - 2:06 PM   
 By:   jenkwombat   (Member)

They played part of the new stereo mix on "Breakfast With The Beatles" a few days ago, and to my ears, it sounded excellent!! Can't wait to own it!! smile

(BTW Remeau, I agree with you, although my real wish is that they'd do it with The White Album. Regarding the lack of interest in this: Yeah, there seemed to be more interest in the short-lived Monkees thread than the Beatles. Curious. embarrassment)

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 12, 2017 - 2:10 PM   
 By:   Rameau   (Member)

An interview with Giles Martin about the new mix:

http://www.superdeluxeedition.com/feature/the-beatles-remixed-sgt-pepper-unveiled-at-abbey-road-studios/

 
 Posted:   Apr 12, 2017 - 2:12 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

' Maybe even inserting Strawberry Fields & Penny Lane,...."

oH MAN! The fact those songs, intended for the lp but dropped, weren't included. has always gnawed at me.
I made my own personal SPLHB cassette wherein side one ends with SFF and side two begins with PL>
I dropped the lame WHEN I'M SIXTY FOUR and WITHIN YOU WITHOUT YOU. I should have kept WYWY , but I am not sure if they could have released the lp with it included.
I was trying to re program it as it could have actually been done in "67. The Beatles themselves would never release a lp without a Harrison composition, so I made a mhistorical error.
brm

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 12, 2017 - 2:20 PM   
 By:   jenkwombat   (Member)

' Maybe even inserting Strawberry Fields & Penny Lane,...."

oH MAN! The fact those songs, intended for the lp but dropped, weren't included. has always gnawed at me.
I made my own personal SPLHB cassette wherein side one ends with SFF and side two begins with PL>
I dropped the lame WHEN I'M SIXTY FOUR and WITHIN YOU WITHOUT YOU. I should have kept WYWY , but I am not sure if they could have released the lp with it included.
I was trying to re program it as it could have actually been done in "67. The Beatles themselves would never release a lp without a Harrison composition, so I made a mhistorical error.
brm


I made a CD-R of the album with all 16 songs --- "Only A Northern Song" being the 16th --- sequenced MY WAY, and I really like it. Funny that this new release seems to pretend that "Only A Northern Song" WASN'T part of the sessions. Talk about historical revisionism... frown

 
 Posted:   Apr 12, 2017 - 2:24 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

' Maybe even inserting Strawberry Fields & Penny Lane,...."

oH MAN! The fact those songs, intended for the lp but dropped, weren't included. has always gnawed at me.
I made my own personal SPLHB cassette wherein side one ends with SFF and side two begins with PL>
I dropped the lame WHEN I'M SIXTY FOUR and WITHIN YOU WITHOUT YOU. I should have kept WYWY , but I am not sure if they could have released the lp with it included.
I was trying to re program it as it could have actually been done in "67. The Beatles themselves would never release a lp without a Harrison composition, so I made a mhistorical error.
brm


I made a CD-R of the album with all 16 songs --- "Only A Northern Song" being the 16th --- sequenced MY WAY, and I really like it. Funny that this new release seems to pretend that "Only A Northern Song" WASN'T part of the sessions. Talk about historical revisionism... frown


wELL, THAT WOULD BE better than WYWY but not as in keeping with the era - Indian music being a fad at the time (not sure if IOANS was ever seriously considered for PEPPER, though)
PL & SFF were planned as the keystone songs for the album, but were dropped because they felt it was a "rip-off" to include previously released singles on an album!!!

 
 Posted:   Apr 12, 2017 - 2:56 PM   
 By:   Sean Nethery   (Member)

So glad you all kept the fire burning on this thread for two reasons - a great suggestion for my family for Father's Day (the big package, bien sur), and that I now know about http://www.superdeluxeedition.com!

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 12, 2017 - 2:59 PM   
 By:   jenkwombat   (Member)

I was happy to revive it, Mr. Nethery!

Just wish more people had an interest in this type of music... frown


ADDED: If you get it, I hope your family enjoys it! smile

 
 Posted:   Apr 14, 2017 - 11:50 AM   
 By:   Sean Nethery   (Member)

Oh, most definitely will. Everybody in the family thinks of The Beatles as about the 1960's equivalent of Mozart - working in the same genres as everybody else but creating something eternal and sublime.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 27, 2017 - 8:33 AM   
 By:   Rameau   (Member)

For the less than a handful of Brit fans here, the plans the BBC has to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary:



To mark the 50th anniversary of the release of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band by The Beatles on 1 June 1967, the BBC will celebrate with programmes across radio and TV.
Considered by critics and music lovers to be one of the greatest records ever made and a major cultural moment not only for this country but globally, the album features classic songs including , A Day In The Life, With A Little Help From My Friends, She’s Leaving Home and Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds.

The range of programmes will explore the stories around the recording, release and subsequent life of this seminal album.

In early June, BBC Two presents Sgt. Pepper’s Musical Revolution, a new documentary from Huge Films directed by Francis Hanly, which will present Sgt. Pepper as you have never heard it before. The film will include extracts from material never before accessible outside of Abbey Road, studio chats between the band, out-takes, isolated instrumental and vocal tracks as well as passages from alternative takes of these world-famous songs.

The programme will be written and presented by one of Britain’s leading composers and most admired music broadcasters, Howard Goodall. He will be getting to grips with the album’s musical nuts and bolts.

Howard Goodall says: “Whatever music you like to listen to, if it was written after 1 June 1967 then more likely than not it will have been influenced, one way or another, by Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. The record’s sheer ambition in its conception, composition, arrangements and ground-breaking recording techniques sets it apart from others of the time. It’s a landmark in 20th century music, and I’ve hugely enjoyed exploring the story behind the music.”

Producer Martin R. Smith says: “This will be Sgt. Pepper as you’ve never heard it before. We’ve been granted unprecedented access to The Beatles’ own archive, photographs and multi-track studio tapes so we’ll be able to give an insider’s view into the making of this landmark album and, through Howard Goodall's insight, just why it was so revolutionary.”

Jan Younghusband, Head of Music TV Commissioning, says: "So delighted to have Howard Goodall back on BBC Two with his brilliant insights into this outstanding album and how it all came about, and to celebrate this special moment in our music history."

Using visually-striking set dressing, projections and props the film will be conjuring up the multi-coloured, phantasmagorical world of Sgt. Pepper. Following on chronologically from the 2016 documentary Eight Days A Week - The Touring Years, Sgt Pepper’s Musical Revolution will show what happened when the studio took over from the stage and the screams.

To help assess the phenomenon of Sgt. Pepper the programme will find out out why the album came to be made. It will rediscover The Beatles at a pivotal moment in their career - both as a band and as four individuals, each with his own musical tastes, and ambitions. Having given up touring, they poured their energies into the studio: Sgt. Pepper, as Paul McCartney remarked, would be the performance.

BBC Radio will also commemorate the anniversary across Radio 2, Radio 4 Extra and 6 Music.

BBC Radio 2 will present two documentary series - Sgt. Pepper Forever and Paul Merton On The Beatles.

Over two programmes, broadcast on 24 May and 31 May, Martin Freeman presents Sgt. Pepper Forever, which will reveal the revolutionary studio techniques used during the remarkable sessions dating from November 1966 to April 1967 and also examine the album’s huge impact on the history of music. They will feature ‘work-in-progress' versions of Sgt. Pepper tracks - and the songs on the double A-side single Strawberry Fields Forever/Penny Lane, which were also recorded during the sessions - to illustrate the pioneering techniques used by The Beatles and George Martin.

This two-part documentary special, written and produced by Kevin Howlett of Howlett Media Productions, features interviews with Paul, George, Ringo and George Martin, and in a new interview composer Howard Goodall talks about, and illustrates on piano, the musical innovations of the album’s songs.

Having worked with the original four-track tapes to create a new stereo mix of Sgt. Pepper for its 50th anniversary, producer Giles Martin (son of Sir George Martin) describes the innovative recording techniques used at the time and how he approached making his new version.

There will also be interview material with the album cover’s co-designer Peter Blake, Beatles press officer Derek Taylor, Tony King (George Martin’s assistant in 1967), Mike Leander (the arranger of She’s Leaving Home), poet Adrian Mitchell, DJ John Peel and some of the producers and musicians who were influenced by the achievements of the album, including T Bone Burnett, Dave Grohl, Tom Petty, Jimmy Webb and Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys.

Martin Freeman says: “Sgt. Pepper is the most celebrated album by my favourite band. These documentaries will shed light on how The Beatles, with George Martin, created a piece of work that marked a watershed for what a long playing record could be. It’s my absolute pleasure to help tell you about it."

Paul Merton on The Beatles is a four-part series, produced by Radio 2’s Mark Hagen, which airs weekly from Monday 29 May.

The four programmes allow Paul to take a quirkily individual look at The Beatles’ career and legacy. In his world, The Beatles didn’t break up at the end of the 60s but instead went on creating albums and returning to the concert stage - and these four programmes all attempt to answer the 'what if' question.

In the opening show, remembering the covers that the band performed on their early albums, Paul looks at the way this trend continued in their individual solo careers, with John, Paul George and Ringo playing songs originally recorded by the Everly Brothers, Buddy Holly, Carl Perkins and more.

The second and third programmes imagine the band’s return to live performance with two idealised concerts including songs like Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds, What Goes On, Let It Be and Here Comes The Sun.

And in a special final show Paul Merton attempts to answer that most beloved Beatle fanatic question: what album would the band have made after Let It Be and Abbey Road if they hadn’t broken up?

Paul Merton says: “I’ve had great fun selecting tracks from John, Paul, George and Ringo’s solo careers to firstly create a magical live ‘Beatles’ concert, and secondly a new ‘Beatles’ double album. I am immensely looking forward to sharing my choices with the Radio 2 listeners.”

BBC Radio 4 Extra will delve deep in to the iconic album artwork to bring listeners a special day of programmes from 9am-10pm, inspired by the famous faces that are featured on the Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover.

On Saturday 3 June, Samira Ahmed will introduce a diverse 13 hour mix of documentaries, dramas and comedies that all focus on this celebrated crowd, from Marlene Dietrich to Albert Einstein, Marlon Brando to Oscar Wilde. Programmes will include Alan Bennett reading Lewis Carroll’s Alice In Wonderland, Joan Bakewell interviewing Jonny Weissmuller for Start The Week in 1975, a drama about the classic comedy duo Laurel & Hardy starring John Sessions and Robbie Coltrane, and a look at the life of William Burroughs from the musician Laurie Anderson.

In between, brand new interviews will reveal more about the members of this Lonely Hearts Club Band, discover why these people were chosen for the cover, and explore what it was like to be there on the actual day this art work was created.

Produced by Luke Doran for the BBC, across one day let BBC Radio 4 Extra bring the Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band to life in this unique and imaginative celebration.

On BBC Radio 6 Music, Mark Radcliffe and Stuart Maconie will be broadcasting their show on Thursday 15 June (1pm-4pm) from Liverpool, celebrating the music of the city from Sgt. Pepper to the present day.

Sgt. Pepper’s Musical Revolution was commissioned and executive produced for BBC Two by Jan Younghusband, Head of Commissioning, Music TV. It is made by Huge Films, director is Francis Hanly and the producers are Martin R. Smith and Jonathan Clyde.

Paul Merton on The Beatles and Sgt. Pepper Forever were commissioned by Robert Gallacher, Editor, Commissioning and Scheduling, Radio 2.

Radcliffe and Maconie is a Smooth Operations production for BBC Radio 6.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 27, 2017 - 3:44 PM   
 By:   jenkwombat   (Member)

Martin Freeman says: “Sgt. Pepper is the most celebrated album by my favourite band. These documentaries will shed light on how The Beatles, with George Martin, created a piece of work that marked a watershed for what a long playing record could be. It’s my absolute pleasure to help tell you about it."

Is this THE Martin Freeman, of THE LORD OF THE RINGS and SHERLOCK fame? If so, I've always liked him. I had no idea he was a Beatle fan. One more reason to like him! smile

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 27, 2017 - 6:29 PM   
 By:   OnyaBirri   (Member)

... These documentaries will shed light on how The Beatles, with George Martin, created a piece of work that marked a watershed for what a long playing record could be.

Plenty of other artists demonstrated "what a long playing record could be" prior to the Beatles. I guess this guy is not familiar with those records.

 
 
 Posted:   Apr 28, 2017 - 4:12 AM   
 By:   Rameau   (Member)

... These documentaries will shed light on how The Beatles, with George Martin, created a piece of work that marked a watershed for what a long playing record could be.

Plenty of other artists demonstrated "what a long playing record could be" prior to the Beatles. I guess this guy is not familiar with those records.


Well you left out the word, watershead to make your point.

We're talking about 1967, so of course there was many amazing LPs released before then (Pet Sounds & Blonde On Blonde immediately come to mind). There's many (me included) who think Revolver is their best album, & my favourites are, A Hard Days Night & Rubber Soul (& I hope they also get the stereo remix treatment). I was 16 in London when Pepper was released, & it hit the scene like a wrecking ball, & I think it's great when something as ephemeral as a pop record is celebrated 50 years on, so many of my favourite records have slipped into obscurity...& it's releases like this that are going to get me through the forthcoming UK general election.

 
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