The Return of “The Beatles Anthology” – “Beatles Anthology 2025” is an Amazing Upgrade in Both Picture and Sound

Let’s just say that for Beatles fans Christmas had indeed come early.

This past November, a mere couple of weeks ago in fact, The Beatles 1995 documentary “The Beatles Anthology” received a splendid upgrade in not only the picture and sound of the documentary itself but the accompanying CD sets of “Anthology 1, 2 and 3” (as well as a brand new “Anthology 4” 2 CD set) 
have also been upgraded and are truly gift to behold.

For anyone who remembers the then hotly anticipated Beatles Anthology documentary and CDs, the Beatles Anthology was not only a well-received project critically but it was also a blockbuster hit commercially.

The Beatles Anthology project spawned three Billboard Top 200 Number 1 albums (the Anthology 1, 2 and 3 2CD sets) that sold in the multi-millions which included the first two new Beatles songs in twenty five years (“Free As a Bird” from “Anthology 1” and “Real Love” from“Anthology 2”) as well as the hugely rated three part TV special of the documentary which was eventually expanded into a multi-hour DVD set that was also a best-seller.

Now, thirty years later, the whole Beatles Anthology project (both video and the accompanying audio CD sets) have been majorly upgraded on the video side by famed director Peter Jackson and on the audio side by original Beatles producer George Martin’s son Giles who is now the overseer of The Beatles audio catalog.

It’s apparent that the remaining Beatles and their company Apple, who release all things Beatles, are aiming to once again expand the audience for The Beatles with this sparking new Anthology project and I’m sure they hope to invite people into The Beatles story with the best looking and sounding Beatles Anthology that the technology of 2025 will allow.

As is the norm for the 2020’s there is a LOT of negativity about how this new The Beatles Anthology has turned out. There are of course a lot of older fans who are enraged at the things that have been changed in the video documentary and not impressed enough by the audio upgrade that they are simply trying to write the entire Anthology 2025 as a cash grab that serves no purpose other then making a buck.

I majorly disagree.

For starters I find both CD sets and the Anthology documentary a joy to listen to and watch and find the upgrades so well done that I personally will lean toward the 2025 versions as definitive.

Let me go case by case.

The Video Documentary:

Wow, what a massive upgrade. I find all nine hours of the new 2025 version of Anthology just glorious to watch. Yes, it’s not perfect. Things have been trimmed from the 2003 expanded addition but new things have been added as well and most of the video is simply stunning to look at – at least all the footage taken from a film source.

There was some funky AI enhancing done to some of the video footage that can smooth out the faces a bit much but overall 90 percent of the video is in my opinion a major upgrade – it’s mostly superb.

Now I don’t subscribe to Disney+ which is the only place you can stream the new 2025 Beatles Anthology so I thought it might be a while for me to judge the video upgrade of the new series myself.

Since this is the 21st century though there are other sources out there, and amazingly fast I must say, where one can find the new 2025 Anthology other than steaming.

I myself have come across a magnificent Blu-ray three-disc set of the entire series that has the same quality of picture as the Disney+ showing, I did see about an hour of it as a friend’s house, and in lovely 5.1 surround sound.

Unfortunately there’s no Atmos mix on this Blu-ray set but it’s a small price to pay to be able to enjoy the entire nine-hour series in this quality in a physical format. I doubt that the series will make it to a physical format as Apple chose Disney as the place to stream it and they don’t want physical formats anymore.

That’s not to say that after the Disney+ contract ends The Beatles couldn’t change their mind and issue it on DVD and Blu-ray I’m just not counting on it.

Don’t ask me where you can find the new 2025 Anthology but I will say that it is out there on the Internet in both DVD and Blu-ray – all you have to do is look.

The Audio CDs:

This is what I hear most fans complain about. A lot of fans don’t think the audio has been upgraded enough for them to buy this material again. Fair enough, to each his own, but the vitriol I hear aimed at both Giles Martin and Apple Records and The Beatles about how they are just cynically making a cash grab with this new Anthology project is just nuts.

Sure they want to make money, it’s a BUSINESS, but there was a lot of work put into the end product and I for one think the audio sounds great.

Take Anthology 1 for instance. Disc one of this set has the oldest and most dodgy sounding recordings from The Beatles pre-EMI years and even I have tended to skip most of disc one whenever I listen to this set.

I have to say though there has been a major upgrade to not only the acetate of “That’ll Be the Day” and “In Spite of All the Danger” (they both sound like new recordings to me) but the live stuff, especially the 1963 tracks live from Swedish radio which now explode from the speakers, is so much more listenable and fun that I want to play disc one again which is a major improvement to me.

And the cream on top of all the new Anthology CDs is the brand new Anthology 4 2CD set that has thirteen newly released outtakes that are a joy to listen to and enjoy. Are these early takes of “Tell Me Why”, “I Need You” and “If I Fell” for example revelations – no. Are they great to hear – yes!

I love how these early stripped down takes basically show how The Beatles would sound live in 1964/65 if they could be heard from the din of the screaming crowds that mare most of their live recordings. If new live songs were discovered fans would be losing their minds I’m not sure why the sound of The Beatles in an almost live fashion in great audio quality is a let down but it sure works for me.

Conclusion:

Anyway, I won’t go into what was cut and what was added to the new video of Anthology all I can say is that this presentation has the right pacing, the right sound and such a superb picture that it stands as the definitive version of The Beatles Anthology, and that goes for the CDs as well, that all I can say is … wow.

Above and below you can see photos of the new Beatles Anthology Collection 8 CD set as well as the Blu-ray of the 2025 Disney+ documentary that also includes screen shots of some of the video content.

As usual be safe and well and have a great Holiday Season if I don’t post before Christmas.

See you soon and have a Merry Crimble Beatle People!

Below is a comparison of the DVD from 2003 vs the new 2025 Blu-ray of the 2025 Beatles Anthology – the DVD is on the left and the Blu-Ray is on the right.

Haunted By the Past – The Beatles Anthology Returns

Believe it or not this November will mark thirty years since The Beatles issued their critically acclaimed multi-media “Anthology” documentary series. Thirty years! It hardly seems possible.

Not only was “The Beatles Anthology” a multi-part video documentary, it also spawned three double CD sets, all of which hit the number one spot of the Billboard Hot 200, as well as a lovely coffee table book that expanded on the interviews in the documentary.

Originally conceived shortly after the group’s break-up in 1970, with the working title of The Long and Winding Road, The Beatles Anthology was the result of many years of searching for and compiling all the pertinent video and audio from the bands history as a group.

This huge mass of archival footage and music was pieced together with interview footage from the three surviving Beatles, as well as archival interview video and audio from John Lennon, to form The Beatles Anthology which is the band’s final and only official version of what happened to them in their journey as a group called The Beatles.

At the time the series was released in 1995 it was the beginning of The Beatles opening up their vaults in a major way as the group finally began to embrace its own legendary past.

Previously the “Live at the BBC” album, which was released 1994, was the only comprehensive set of unreleased music that had managed to come out as a fully-sanctioned new Beatles release since their break-up in 1970 so this new video and audio documentary was quite the revelation.

Of course the way “The Beatles Anthology” ultimately turned out was also due in large part to all of the high quality bootlegs of unreleased Beatles music that had been flooding the underground market since around 1988 which gave a much wanted glimpse into how The Beatles worked in the studio carefully crafting their recorded output.

And if that wasn’t enough also included among all the archival material were two brand new Beatles songs, the first new Beatles songs since 1970 – “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love”

In January 1994, Paul McCartney was given unreleased demos of songs John Lennon made at home in the ’70s. Amongst those songs The Beatles picked three – “Free As a Bird” ,“Real Love” and “Now and Then” – to embellish by adding new vocals and backing tracks and dropping Lennon’s voice and piano into the mix thus creating the first new Beatles songs in over twenty-five years.

Of course both “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love” were big hits both reaching the upper regions of the charts worldwide while “Now and Then” had a much longer gestation finally being released in 2023 and hitting the top of the British charts and placing in the Top Ten in the US.

Now here we are in 2025 and The Beatles Anthology is coming out once again this time with a special anniversary edition in both video and audio.

The Disney Channel will exclusively stream the 2025 video series that has been upgraded in picture and sound by renowned director Peter Jackson starting this November on the 21st – thirty years to the week the original Anthology premiered on US television.

Now totally nine episodes, including an extra episode featuring new footage of the surviving Beatles working on the music during the making of the original Anthology series from the 1990s, this new 2025 version of The Beatles Anthology is something that I’m personally looking forward to seeing. 

The brief clip of some of the restored footage looks very enticing so I’m hoping that the much needed buffing up of all the magnificent footage that encompassed the original Anthology documentary is well worth the wait.

There will also be a new box set of the music from The Beatles Anthology that will comprise the original three double CDs (and triple vinyl packages) as well as a new Anthology 4 set that will include 13 previously unreleased studio outtakes and outtakes that previously appeared on the special deluxe sets of Beatles albums that have been released since the 2017 “Sgt. Pepper” box set.

This new version of the Anthology audio sets has been remastered by Giles Martin and both “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love” have both been remixed by original producer Jeff Lynne and feature much clearer vocals from John  Lennon. 

I’ve the new mix of “Free As a Bird” and I must say I really like it. Lennon’s voice is so much more prominent that it seems as if he’s singing with Paul McCartney and George Harrison as opposed to his voice sounding like it was floating in the mix below them as in the original 1995 mix.

I love that the original mixes of both “Free As a Bird” and “Real Love” will still be available as part of the Anthology 1 and Anthology 2 sets in the new box set as well as the new mixes which will appear on the new Anthology 4 set.

Now there has been a lot of bad buzz from fans online to this new set which is a little baffling to me. Most fans don’t seem to want the remastered Anthology 1, 2 and 3 sets as a group as they mainly want the new Anthology 4 which contains the 13 previously unissued outtakes which can only be purchased as part of the new Anthology collection.

I mean I get that for sure but I personally have wanted a remastered complete set of all the Anthology albums so I’m stoked to have the complete collection.

As for Disney+ I’m a little bit more concerned that they’re streaming the new series as they tend to not want to release their content in physical form. To me The Beatles Anthology is the one set by the group that I’d rather have in physical form than streaming as all of the older clips and interviews are a terrific watch and I do go back to them often.

I’d prefer a Blu-ray set of the new series but will be happy to at least see how Peter Jackson has transformed the look of the footage and hopefully I won’t be disappointed. I’m guessing it will look fabulous but time will tell.

I’ve included photos above of the terrific Beatles Anthology Director’s Cut bootleg DVD set that features a rough cut of the series with different interview footage and different edits that is really fun to compare to the finished version.

In an ideal world this would make a wonderful bonus addition to any physical release of The Beatles Anthology but I’m sure that that would never happen.

As it is I’m excited to see and hear this new revamped Beatles Anthology 2025 and will report what I think of the makeovers when they are released this Fall.

Until then enjoy the photos above and be well and see you soon.

List of songs on the new Anthology 4 set (from thebeatles.com):

Anthology 4

CD Disc One:

  1. I Saw Her Standing There (Take 2)
  2. Money (That’s What I Want) (RM7 undubbed)
  3. This Boy (Takes 12 and 13)
  4. Tell Me Why (Takes 4 and 5)
  5. If I Fell (Take 11)
  6. Matchbox (Take 1)
  7. Every Little Thing (Takes 6 and 7)
  8. I Need You (Take 1)
  9. I’ve Just Seen A Face (Take 3)
  10. In My Life (Take 1)
  11. Nowhere Man (First version – Take 2)
  12. Got To Get You Into My Life (Second version – unnumbered mix)
  13. Love You To (Take 7)
  14. Strawberry Fields Forever (Take 26)
  15. She’s Leaving Home (Take 1 – instrumental)
  16. Baby, You’re A Rich Man (Takes 11 and 12)
  17. All You Need Is Love (Rehearsal for BBC broadcast)
  18. The Fool On The Hill (Take 5 – Instrumental)
  19. I Am The Walrus (Take 19 – strings, brass, clarinet overdub)

CD Disc Two:

  1. Hey Bulldog (Take 4 – instrumental)
  2. Good Night (Take 10 with a guitar part from Take 5)
  3. While My Guitar Gently Weeps (Third Version – Take 27)
  4. (You’re So Square) Baby I Don’t Care (Studio jam)
  5. Helter Skelter (Second version – Take 17)
  6. I Will (Take 29)
  7. Can You Take Me Back? (Take 1)
  8. Julia (Two rehearsals)
  9. Get Back (Take 8)
  10. Octopus’s Garden (Rehearsal)
  11. Don’t Let Me Down (First rooftop performance)
  12. You Never Give Me Your Money (Take 36)
  13. Here Comes The Sun (Take 9)
  14. Something (Take 39 – instrumental – strings only)
  15. Free As A Bird (2025 mix)
  16. Real Love (2025 mix)
  17. Now And Then

At Last: A True Mono Pressing of “The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees” (From Venezuela) Has Landed!

Good things come to those who wait – or so they say.

As for me I have to say this year has turned out to be one of my best years so far for vinyl purchases and it’s only 16 days old!

Today I received a package containing a Venezuelan pressing of The Monkees fifth album “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees” and to top it off this particular pressing is in MONO! True, glorious mono!!!

If you read this blog at all you’ll know that the true mono mix of “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees” album on vinyl is supremely rare and very difficult to find. The true mono mix was of course first issued in the United States but there were several other countries that also released this particular mix.

(Note: Countries that issued the true mono mix of “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees” include: Australia, El Salvador, India, Israel, Mexico, Philippines, Puerto Rico, South Africa, USA and Venezuela – this list comes from the superb Monkees Website Monkee45s.net)

The several countries like the UK and Canada that did issue a mono mix of “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees” album didn’t use the true mono mix but instead used a fold down of the stereo mix. While this version sounds fine it’s missing all of the unique mixes that make the true mono USA mix sound so special.

I’ve had a couple of those fold down versions and while they’re decent listens they’re nothing like listening to the actual mono mix which is my preferred way of hearing this album.

As far as the songs go the two most radically different sounding mixes are for “Auntie’s Municipal Court” and “Tapioca Tundra” as they both sound far superior to their stereo counterparts with a snap to the guitars and vocals that’s not present in stereo.

Many of the other songs have subtler differences like more echo or a better blend of the instruments and overall the sound of this mono version comes across as a bit grittier and a bit more psychedelic sounding than the regular stereo mix that most people have know for decades. 

And trust me, it’s nearly next to impossible to locate a mono Colgems pressing of “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees” in the wild as I’ve searched for over forty years and never found one. I do see online people finding them at antique stores or yard sales but I’ve personally never found one.

Of course I could always have paid a fortune for a USA mono mix on ebay but the hunt for a decent copy at a decent price has always been one of my favorite pastimes and lo and behold the day after my last birthday, January 14th, this gem landed in my mailbox. Happy birthday to me.

There has been a reissue on Rhino Records in 2009 of the true mono mix that was taken from a vinyl copy of a foreign mono pressing of this album and while that version is decent there’s no comparison to a true mono pressing which has a sparkle and vibrancy that’s missing on any other version.

For some reason the the mono transfer from that 2009 3 CD box set of “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees” just sounds lackluster compared to a 1968 mono vinyl copy. Don’t get me wrong it’s a decent transfer but this Venezuelan vinyl copy just blows away the sound of the version on the 3 CD set for sure.

Until the mono master tape of “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees” is found the best way to hear this unique mono mix is a vinyl copy of the album from 1968.

(Note 2: the mono master for “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees” has been missing in action for decades. There are mono mixes on tape of some of the songs from the album but the entire mono master has yet to be found.)

I do have some of the mono mixes of songs from “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees” on two Mexican EPs (see a previous blog post in search) and those sound just as exciting as this mono LP that I just received. For anyone who’s never heard the true mono mix from a vinyl source it’s an unbelievably great sounding recording and well worth tracking down if you can find one at a decent price.

Weirdly enough just this past Friday I was looking online at the Discogs Website (a great Website to buy physical media – discogs.com) and stumbled upon a listing for a Venezuelan mono copy for $40.

Of course my eyes nearly popped out of my head and while there were photos of an actual Venezuelan pressing I had the sneaky suspicion that these weren’t photographs of the album that this person was selling. They were the same photos of the mono version from Monkee45s.net.

Because the price was so good I decided I’d go ahead and order it and if I got burned I got burned. The seller said the album cover and the vinyl itself were both in VG condition with ink marks on the back of the cover and a few tape marks on the front and back of the cover as well.

After receiving the album yesterday and playing it I am happy to state that the covers really in pretty decent shape except for the marker on the back (truly in VG condition) which doesn’t matter to me as the vinyl inside I would say is VG++. And it does indeed play the rare true mono mix!

In fact I can honestly say this is probably the best sounding vinyl copy of any Monkees foreign pressing  I’ve ever purchased! Not a hint of crack or pop and it looks like it’s been super well cared for and in great shape.

Needless to say I couldn’t be more pleased and after all these years having tried to hunt down the true mono mix on vinyl all I can say is it was well worth the wait.

So there you have it. Happy 2025 and may the rest of this year bring such good luck in physical media pursuits!

As usual you can see photos above of this groovy mono copy of “The Birds, The Bees and The Monkees”.

Until next time be happy and well and see you soon!

 

Beatles Capitol Album Finds: Record Clubs, In Shrink, Cut-Outs and a C1-90444

Sometimes persistence pays off.

For the last three months I’ve been going to two of my favorite antique malls and scoping out their records.

As luck would have it both places have been dribbling out fantastic copies of some Beatles Capitol albums that have had the vinyl itself in spectacular quality (all of these pressings play and look like new) and amazingly three of the covers where still in the shrink wrap.

Now in the midst of me finding these lovely Capitol pressings the announcement came out that the 1964 Beatles Capitol albums are being reissued on vinyl this upcoming November in updated and supposedly improved sound.

Anyone that knows the Capitol albums may know that sound quality isn’t at the top of the list for these albums as they are very different sounding than their UK counterparts. They sometimes have added reverb and fake stereo that make them a very different and to many lesser sound quality then the British albums.

The upcoming Capitol albums releases are only being issued in mono, thus avoiding the fake stereo problem, but they do include a lot of fold down mixes (stereo mixes folded down to mono thus not true mono mixes) which in itself is a bit of an issue.

However, these albums overall have an exciting energy and are a time capsule of the 1964 American Beatles experience and are valuable additions to any Beatles collection and well worth owning.

And of course I would happen to find these particular 1964 Beatles Capitol albums just before they announced the reissues but since they all sound superbly quiet and are the best examples I’ve ever found of original Capitol albums I’m a happy camper.

The fact that I spent a whopping $65 for all six of these discs doesn’t hurt either!

(Note: these were incredible deals as the six new mono reissues that are coming out in November cost roughly $30 a piece)

Today I thought I’d share these finds as there are fantastic quality Beatles albums still out there but you have to look far and wide and especially search out of the way places as they sometimes price discs very reasonably.

The six discs I got are:

Meet the Beatles! – Stereo Capitol Record Club, Rainbow Logines pressing

The Beatles’ Second Album – Stereo Capitol Record Club, Rainbow Logines pressing

Revolver – Stereo pressing Capitol Record Club, Lime Green Logines pressing (in shrink)

Meet the Beatles! – Original Capitol Mono pressing (bought in 1968 as a cut-out, see mark in right top corner and still in shrink)

The Beatles’ Second Album – Original Capitol Mono pressing (bought in 1968 as a cut-out, see mark in right top corner and still in shrink)

The Beatles’ Second Album 1988 C1-90444 stereo pressing, the last analogue pressing of this album and the best sounding vinyl version of this album currently available

I found the two mono copies in the shrink a couple of months ago at an antique mall close to where I live. This particular mall usually has good prices and these two were no exception. Priced at $9.99 a piece they were a steal and are the best looking and sounding issues of these albums I’ve ever found.

It’s also interesting that they both have a drill hole in the upper right hand corner. I’m guessing these were purchased in late 1967/early 1968 when mono albums were being phased out. I’ve heard that a lot of mono issues made it to the discount/cut-out bins as stereo was now king and they needed to off load the mono stock so this may be the case with these.

Of course the seller was no where to be found so I have no idea but that would be my guess.

The three stereo Record Club discs I found were all from the same antique mall about an hour and a half from me. Over the last three months I’ve gone up there and each trip I’ve brought back a lovely record club issue and all were around $10 as well.

(Note 2: the Capitol record club issues of The Beatles albums sold in much less quantities then the regular store copies and are way rarer and hard to find. The Capitol rainbow pressings are the rarest as they were only made for about a year or so before being replaced with the lime green label versions)

Again, the seller was no where to be found as it’s just a booth in an antique mall but I find it interesting that he was selling these record club issues way cheaper then regular Capitol pressings he had for sale and those were in markedly worse condition then these record club issues.

Did he think the record club issues weren’t as good? I have never seen any record club issues in the last few years in person, online they sell for way more then $10 I’ll tell you that, so I was surprised to continually find these for sale at this mall.

I may go back in a month or so and see if anymore pop up but these three discs all sound superb. The covers on two of them are a bit worn but all these discs look and sound as good as you can possibly expect and were all some of the best finds I’ve ever had for Beatles albums.

The last find also came from this week as a different antique mall across the street from the mall I found the record club issues had a lovely 1988 stereo pressing of The Beatles’ Second Album again in stellar condition.

This particular pressing is the last time this 1964 Capitol stereo pressing was made and it is by far the best sounding issue of this album as it sounds as good as it’s going to get with a truly wonderful pressing that’s completely silent.

The Beatles Capitol albums that came out with the C1 catalog numbers form 1988 are the way to go sound wise for these discs if you can find them. And for the cost of $15 to me this disc was a bargain as these issues can sometimes be salty if you can find them.

So as usual I am contemplating buying some of the new Capitol 1964 mono copies in November but may only buy a couple of them to see how they sound as I pretty much have excellent copies of both the mono and stereo Capitol Beatles albums now.

(Note 3: famous last words, I’ll probably cave and if I do I will post my thoughts here).

Well that’s all for now.

I thought I’d post my Capitol Beatles finds in anticipation of the newer reissues that come out in November.

I have to say I am lucky that I have a few antique malls and a couple of hole in the wall record stores within driving distance that always under price their records.

At least in 2024 I’ve had good luck and my suggestion is if you have the time find some out of the way antique malls as usually I have better luck with obscure records as most dealers are unaware of rarities like the record club issues and tend to price them reasonably.

As usual there are plenty of photos above and below of these gems so feel free to take a look.

Until next time be well and see you soon!