Theme song for the Strawberry Walrus Beatles collectibles web site.
Duration : 0:2:45
Theme song for the Strawberry Walrus Beatles collectibles web site.
Duration : 0:2:45
http://www.iantiqueonline.com extensive collection of Beatles LPs,
Duration : 0:0:26
Leading Australian and internationally renowned caricaturist Tony Rafty is selling his much loved Beatles caricature which bears the original signatures of all four Beatles obtained when they toured Australia in 1964.
The caricature is a rare piece of Beatles memorabilia art bearing the signatures of all members of the group.
Duration : 0:4:4
A collection of memorabilia that only scratches the surface of all that’s out there of our heroes, the fab four.
Duration : 0:5:7
The Beatles – Penny Lane (Copyright 1967 EMI Records)
“Penny Lane” is a song by The Beatles, written by Paul McCartney, recorded during the Sgt. Pepper sessions, and released in February 1967 (see 1967 in music) as one side of a double A-sided single, along with John Lennon’s “Strawberry Fields Forever”. The single was the result of the record company wanting a new release after several months of no new Beatles releases. In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked the song at #449 on its list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
Production began in Studio 2 at Abbey Road on 29 December 1966 with piano as the main instrument. On 17 January 1967, professional classical trumpeter David Mason recorded the piccolo trumpet solo. The solo, inspired by a performance of Bach’s 2nd Brandenburg Concerto, is in a mock-Baroque style for which the piccolo trumpet (a small instrument built about one octave higher than the standard instrument) is particularly suited, having a clean and clear sound which penetrates well through thicker midrange textures. Penny Lane production effects include percussion effects, piano through a Vox guitar amplifier with added reverb.
The original US promo single mix of “Penny Lane” had an additional flourish of piccolo trumpet notes at the end of the song. This mix was quickly superseded by one without the last trumpet passage, but not before a handful of copies had been pressed and sent to radio stations. These recordings are among the rarest and most valuable Beatles collectibles. A stereo mix of the song with the additional trumpet added back in was included on the US Rarities compilation in 1980.
In other news, I have added the lyrics to this song so you can sing along, or perhaps learn the song! This is how I learned my first Beatles song! Enjoy
Album: Magical Mystery Tour, The Beatles 1
Recorded: Januay 17, 1967
Released: February 13, 1967
Duration : 0:3:3
A tour of The Beatles memorabilia at Hard Rock Vault in Orlando.
Duration : 0:3:54
The Beatles “Revolution No. 9.1″
9minutes and 20 seconds of being inside-out the box. All this is really, is a photo tour of my “The Beatles” memorabilia collection, with a heavy dose of audio out-takes from the movie “Let it Be”. Or as John sang, “Let it A, Let it B. Let it C, Let it D, E, F, Double wouble wouble U, G.” I took bits of about 45 minutes of out-takes from a really poor quality, but still fun to watch movie, and added echo, reversed some of it, spliced and edited it down to this. John, Paul, George, and Ringo are joined by 5thBeatleBilly on the keyboard. If your not a hard core Beatles freak, you may want to spend your time doing something more useful like underwater basket weaving. However, if you like me like all, or mostly all-things Beatles, sit back, light some incense, turn down the lights, turn up the volume, enlarge the viewing screen, and take a little trip back to 1969. Produced By: The Department of Redundancy Department Productions. 2007
Proverbs 14:4
Duration : 0:9:20
Update on the animated Beatles DVD, its contest, more videos, the Paul McCartney autograph, and more things I’ve added to my ever-growing collection of Beatles memorabilia….or as one viewer so elegantlycalled it, “Cack.”
Duration : 0:4:36
Also gonna have a lot of beatles decor and memorabilia in it.
If that helps at all, probably not hahah
Being as I was a teenager in the 60’s and a hippie college student in the 70’s (and was a huge Beatle fan from 1964 on) i can tell you that burnt orange, bright purple, sunshine yellow, lime green and turquoise blue were favorite decor colors of those decades. But, since we mostly lived in rented apartments or dorms. most of the wall colors were "landlord beige" or white and we covered them with posters or wall hangings which were mostly either tie-dyed sheets or paisley Indian cotton bedspreads. British, American and peace symbol flags were popular wall decor too. Also large cutouts of giant flowers and rainbows. In one apartment where I was allowed to paint the wall (the University owned the building and was going to tear it down the next year) I painted a mural of the cover of the Yellow Submarine album. In my teen bedroom you could not even see the walls because they were so covered with huge Beatle and Rolling Stone posters and hundreds of Beatles bubble gum cards! (yes, there was such a thing.)
News story of Beatles Vintage Collectibles at the time the release of “The Beatles Anthology”.
Story by Sarah Wallace of WABC Eyewitness News Channel 7 in N.Y.C. back in Nov. 18, 1995
Interviewing Leslie Herson, (R.I.P) of
Love Saves The Day, 119 Second Ave. (in the East Village), N.Y.C. (no longer there)
Other footage at : Venus Records, 13 St. Marks Place, N.Y.C. (no longer there)
Duration : 0:2:11