For the first time, I will be taking a look not at a musical collection by the Beatles, but rather at an outstanding collection of videos based on their greatest hits package simply known as 1, which was a worldwide smash when it was released in the year 2000. Fifteen years later, a deluxe Blu-ray set was made available, featuring videos or films of each of the twenty-seven number one songs appearing on the original. Twenty-three additional films and videos brought the total up to an impressive fifty. A CD with remastered versions of all twenty-seven number one hits was included, as well. And all of this was housed in a hard cover booklet with photos and entries detailing the sources of the visual material.
For the selections tied in with the original CD, I will group each entry as I did for that collection.Love Me Do - The Beatles were filmed in August of 1963 performing without an audience for a BBC television program entitled The Mersey Sound. The first recorded version of the song from September 4th, 1962 with Ringo on drums was played with the footage seen here. Also, interspersed with the performance clip, are shots including manager Brian Epstein in his NEMS record shop, the boys reading fan letters and putting on make-up in a dressing room, riding on the Mersey ferry in Liverpool, and some actual fans at a concert.
From Me to You - This clip from the famous Royal Variety Command Performance shows the curtain opening with the band already playing. The ITV broadcast then briefly puts the group name on the screen for the home viewers not yet familiar with them in November of 1963. Only after the number is concluded are John and Paul seen moving their microphones forward of the curtain line in preparation for the introduction of their next song.
She Loves You - The Beatles appeared on the Swedish television program Drop In (pictured above) at the end of their weeklong visit to that country in October of 1963 - their first foreign tour. The fans sitting at the band's feet are amused when Paul and George shake their heads while singing the falsetto "woo." And, at the end of the number, we see the boys step back to do their patented unison bow - a classy, old-fashioned move that Epstein added to their act.
I Want to Hold Your Hand - For the Granada TV program Late Scene Extra, the group is clearly miming to their latest single in November of '63. There are no microphones to be seen, and John and George are strumming acoustic guitars. The set features a giant camera and mock-ups of the Daily Echo newspaper.
Can't Buy Me Love - During the final week of principal photography for A Hard Day's Night, the group actually began rehearsals for a television special entitled Around the Beatles. Talk about a grueling schedule! They also had a session to record the numbers that they would be doing on the program. This clip shows them miming to the new recording of this hit single. Oddly, the camera focuses more on John than Paul, even though John does not sing on the original. Some extra screaming was added to that from the audience all "around the Beatles" before the actual broadcast.
A Hard Day's Night - In June of 1965, the boys made a triumphant return to Paris, playing for much more enthusiastic crowds than those that had attended their January '64 shows. This footage from one of the '65 concerts was featured on a television special called Les Beatles. Aside from the usual shots of frantic girls in the audience, we see some young boys happily clapping along, as well as one teenage boy ecstatically dancing alone.
I Feel Fine - This is the first of several promotional films made at Twickenham Film Studios in November of 1965 for distribution worldwide (more about them in my next entry). Some gym equipment sits on the empty studio floor as the distinctive feedback at the top of the song is heard. John, Paul and George enter wearing their guitars and pretend to play and sing along with the record, George singing into a standing punching bag in place of a microphone. Ringo eventually runs in and hops onto an exercise bicycle which he pedals sporadically.
Eight Days A Week - The first color film in this collection was assembled expressly for it using footage from the historic Shea Stadium concert in 1965. The Beatles fly over the stadium in a helicopter looking down on the massive crowd, a cop covers his ears as they run out onto the field, girls scream, pass out, are chased down by security, the boys cavort on stage, and Brian Epstein proudly stands off to the side taking it all in. They did not perform this song, by the way. In fact, they never played it live.
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