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Please Please Me

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This article is about the album. For the single by the same title, see Please Please Me (song).

Please please me by the Beatles (side 1) - Parlophone gold and black label
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Please please me by the Beatles (side 1) - Parlophone gold and black label

Please Please Me is the first album recorded by the Beatles. The album was released on March 22, 1963, in the United Kingdom, due to the constant efforts of producer George Martin. To date, the Beatles had released only two singles ("Love Me Do"/"P.S. I Love You" - October 5, 1962; "Please Please Me"/"Ask Me Why" - January 11, 1963). The former was a moderate success, due in part to their manager’s record store buying a large volume of the single. The latter, however, as Martin pronounced after they finished recording the song, was their first number one hit in the UK. At the time, groups rarely released an LP unless the album was supported by a massive hit or popular film. Martin pushed for the album to be released, and many of the tracks came to be hits in the UK and the United States; some didn't become hits until the LP was re-released two years later (see Capitol's The Early Beatles). Copies of the original pressing of this album, in good condition, fetch up to £5000 today. American audiences saw only one Beatles single ("Please Please Me"/"Ask Me Why" - February 25, 1963) before Please Please Me was released (under the title Introducing... The Beatles on Vee-Jay Records). "Please Please Me" and "Ask Me Why" were not included on the original American release of the album. In the United Kingdom, the album remained atop the charts for an unprecedented 30 weeks.

The most remarkable thing about this album was that it was recorded in just fifteen hours on February 11, 1963, except for "Love Me Do", "P.S. I Love You" (September 11, 1962), "Please Please Me", and "Ask Me Why" (November 26, 1962). Some of the tracks on the album were not actually composed by the group, but were covers of rock standards of the time and are interesting for the insight they give into the band's own tastes in music.

Please Please Me was recorded on a two-track recorder at Abbey Road Studios, released originally in mono and then stereo. The stereo version has only been released on vinyl and cassette.

Most of the songs were recorded with the following credits (exceptions are noted):

George Harrison: lead guitar
John Lennon: rhythm guitar
Paul McCartney: bass guitar
Ringo Starr: drums

The record label

The first editions of the "Please Please Me" LP are the only Beatles LPs to have the gold and black Parlophone label (gold writing on a black background); the mono version is very collectable and the stereo version is very highly collectable. The next "Please Please Me" LP label had the yellow and black Parlophone LP label (black with yellow writing) and more modern labels are usually black with silver writing. Some of the newest versions (primarily from the 70's and up) have the Apple Records label.

The Cover

The photo on the front was taken inside EMI's London headquarters, but George Martin suggested that they should stand outside the Insect House at London Zoo instead.

Track listing

Side one

All Tracks McCartney/Lennon, except where noted,

  1. "I Saw Her Standing There" – 2:55
  2. "Misery" – 1:50
  3. "Anna (Go to Him)" (Alexander) – 2:57
  4. "Chains" (Goffin/King) – 2:26
  5. "Boys" (Dixon/Farrell) – 2:27
  6. "Ask Me Why" – 2:27
  7. "Please Please Me" – 2:03, [SAMPLE (62k)]

Side two

  1. "Love Me Do" – 2:22
  2. "P.S. I Love You" – 2:05
  3. "Baby It's You" (David/Williams/Bacharach) – 2:38
  4. "Do You Want to Know a Secret" – 1:59, [SAMPLE (90k)]
  5. "A Taste of Honey" (Scott/Marlow) – 2:05
  6. "There's a Place" – 1:52
  7. "Twist and Shout" (Medley/Russel) – 2:33, [SAMPLE (123k)]

Covers

\"Anna (Go to Him)\"

\"Chains\"

\"Boys\"

\"Baby It's You\"

\"A Taste of Honey\"

\"Twist and Shout\"

Originals

\"I Saw Her Standing There\"

\"Misery\"

\"Ask Me Why\"

\"Love Me Do\"

\"P.S. I Love You\"

\"Do You Want to Know a Secret\"

\"There's a Place\"

\"Please Please Me\"

Influence

The Beatles synthesized multiple genres of music from the 1950s and early 1960s. Girl groups (The Shirelles, The Angels, The Crystals), as well as other early rock and roll (Little Richard), soul (Roy Orbison), surf rock (The Beach Boys) and R&B (Smokey Robinson) artists. In particular, "Misery" and "There's a Place" are influenced by the best of the girl groups, incorporated a dance-able beat with beautiful harmonies and downbeat subject matter. Little Richard's influence can be heard in songs like "I Saw Her Standing There", with McCartney's gospeli-inflected bridge climax. In "Please Please Me", Harrison's guitar riff, which seems to be a response to the lyrics, sound strongly influenced by The Everly Brothers, ascending, climactic style. The same song was an explicit ode to Lennon's hero, Roy Orbison. Songs like "Love Me Do" reflected an influence from American blues, while jazz chords can be heard in "P.S. I Love You", which also shows a vocal debt to Buddy Holly. "Do You Want to Know a Secret" has identifiably doo wop vocals, influenced, according to George Harrison, by The Stereo's 1961 hit "I Really Love You".

Stylistically, Please Please Me was massively influential, bringing the most influential group into international consciousness. The Beatles' interpretation of rock came to dominate the world's popular music scene starting soon after the release of this album, and has thus come to influence most genres of music that came afterwards. The most direct descendant is the harmony-driven pop of groups like The Beach Boys (All Summer Long - 1964) and The Zombies (Odessey and Oracle - 1968), and power pop, beginning the early 1970s (Big Star; Radio City - 1974). In addition, the British Invasion was led by the Beatles, and all of the groups involved sounded at least somewhat like the Beatles, ranging from the folk-pop of The Kinks (The Kink Kontroversy - 1965) to the harder rock of The Rolling Stones (England's Newest Hitmakers - 1964) and The Who (The Who Sings My Generation - 1965). The Beatles' casual, danceable sound helped provide the basis for what would eventually become heavy metal, pub bands like The Yardbirds (Five Live Yardbirds - 1964) and The Small Faces (The Small Faces - 1966). In addition, the Beatles would go on to help lead the hippies in the late 1960s, and thus came to influence the music of that time, folk-pop like The Band (The Band - 1969) and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (Déjà Vu - 1970), as well as the acid rock of the Jimi Hendrix Experience (Are You Experienced? - 1967) and Cream (Disraeli Gears - 1967).

Personnel

Charting singles

Billboard Music Charts (North America)

1964Do You Want To Know A SecretPop SinglesNo. 2
1964Love Me DoPop SinglesNo. 1
1964P.S. I Love YouPop SinglesNo. 10
1964Please Please MePop SinglesNo. 3
1964There's A PlacePop SinglesNo. 74
1986Twist And ShoutThe Billboard Hot 100No. 23

Album Charting

Highest chart position: Disc Weekly) #1; Melody Maker) #1; NME) #1; Record Retailer) #1 It stayed top for 30 weeks (from 11th May 1963) Weeks in chart: 74 (seventy weeks from 6th April 1963, and four weeks from 7th March 1987)

External links

The Beatles
John Lennon | Paul McCartney | George Harrison | Ringo Starr
Pete Best | Stuart Sutcliffe
Management
Brian Epstein | Allen Klein | Apple Records
Production
George Martin | Geoff Emerick | Norman Smith | Phil Spector | Abbey Road Studios
Official studio albums
Please Please Me (1963) | With the Beatles (1963) | A Hard Day's Night (1964) | Beatles for Sale (1964) | Help! (1965) | Rubber Soul (1965) | Revolver (1966) | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) | Magical Mystery Tour (1967) | The Beatles (1968) | Yellow Submarine (1969) | Abbey Road (1969) | Let It Be (1970)
A Hard Day's Night (1964) | Help! (1965) | Magical Mystery Tour (1967) | Yellow Submarine (1968) | Let it Be (1970)
History | Lennon-McCartney | Bootlegs | Discography | Anthology | Influence | The Quarrymen | London | Beatlemania | Beatlesque | Fifth Beatle | Paul Is Dead | British Invasion | Apple Corps | Northern Songs | Harrisongs | Startling Music
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