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CD I
1. Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club
Band
2. A Little Help From My Friends
3. I Want to Tell You
4. Yer Blues
5. Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)
6. Got to Get You Into My Life
7. Cloud Nine
8. Steel and Glass
9. It Don't Come Easy
10. If I Needed Someone
11. Maybe I'm Amazed
12. Mother
13. Old Brown Shoe
14. Penny Lane
15. Taxman
16. Here, There and Everywhere
17. Whatever Gets You Through the Night
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CD 3
1. Here Comes the Sun
2. My Love
3. I Saw Her Standing There
4. Hi Hi Hi
5. Photograph
6. Paperback Writer
7. Beautiful Boy
8. My Sweet Lord
9. Live and Let Die
10. Cold Turkey
11. Cheer Down
12. Band on the Run
13. Scared
14. Lady Madonna
15. Love Me Do
16. Michelle
17. While My Guitar Gently Weeps
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The 2002 Live album
The Beatles
stopped touring as a group in the mid-1960s, but after 1970 they
continued to appeared on stage in various combinations and with other
musicians from time to time. McCartney took the most opportunities to
appear publicly, but each of the four had many occasions over the years
to perform both Beatles and Beatles Releasing Collective numbers.
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CD II
1. Magical Mystery Tour
2. Piggies
3. Octopus' Garden
4. It's So Hard
5. What Is Life
6. Hey Jude
7. Working Class Hero
8. Rock Show
9. Something
10. Drive My Car
11. Woman is the Nigger of the World
12. Let Me Roll It
13. Dark Horse
14. Yesterday
15. Instant Karma
16. Don't Pass Me
17. Mull of Kintyre
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CD IV
1. Imagine/Give Peace a Chance
2. New York City/Freedom
3. Isn't It a Pity
4. Come Together
5. For You Blue
6. Get Back
7. Love
8. Wah Wah
9. Fool On the Hill
10. Devil's Radio
11. I Don't Wanna Face It
12. Back Off Boogaloo/Sgt. Pepper's Reprise
13. I'm Losing You
14. Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight/The End
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Nonetheless
they resisted releasing the performances on records or CDs. Only with
the recent proliferation of inferior bootleg productions of their live
music, did they—the three remaining Beatles, that is—look at the
treasure trove of live performances they had available with an eye to
releasing high-quality concert version.
Perhaps the
terminal illness of George Harrison speeded this process, for George may
be the Beatle whose reputation is most
enhanced by this concert collection. After 1970 he was accepted as an
equal to Lennon and McCartney as a songwriter in BRC and when he
performed his numbers in public he surrounded himself with the cream of
contemporary musicians, including Eric Clapton, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty,
Leon Russell and Jeff Lynne.
But even the
most reclusive and shortest-lived Beatle, John Lennon, made appearances
for special events, playing with "sidemen" such as Clapton and
Elton John. |