Jack Herschorn said he got the tape in London “in 1968 or 1969” from a “well-known record producer” who he declines to name.
Rob Frith doesn't recall when exactly he purchased a tape he assumed was a Beatles bootleg, as it was part of a record collection he bought. It turned out to be a demo tape.
for Decca Records. The tape features the Beatles’ original drummer Pete Best, not Ringo Starr. Most of the songs are covers like Money, To Know Him is to Love Him and The Sheik of Araby.
According to Mark Lewisohn’s The Complete Beatles Recordings Sessions: The Official Story of the Abbey Road Years 1962-1970, ...
Guitar World's Beatlemaniacs assemble for the deepest of deep dives into the recorded output of a pop-cultural icon and ...
Leading the British Invasion just behind their comrades-come-rivals The Beatles, The Stones grew from an earnest ... averaging around eight a year and most were not even featured on the original Decca ...
The same single was issued in the US on Decca 31382, referencing the UK catalog ... All eight songs are on the Polydor CD "The Beatles' First", reissued as "The Early Tapes". For some reason "Ain't ...
The company, established by Henry and Josiah Solomon in Sheffield, had expanded from its original business ... the recording process at Decca. Quieter, multi-track tape machines were supported ...
The tape produced the viral video that hit the ... altered the video and then destroyed the original footage, even though it knew about and repeatedly reported about the federal investigation.” ...
The network bought “the only known copy” of the tape from the hotel, edited it in a free software and then “destroyed the original footage even though it knew about and repeatedly reported ...