Label: Sgt. – 99658744
Series: TMOQ Gazette – Volume 23
Format: CD, Compilation, Unofficial Release + DVD, Compilation, Unofficial Release
Country: Europe
Released: 2016
DVD + CD
1-1 Paul's Piano Piece based on Adagio For Strings (S. Barber)
1-2 Don't Let Me Down
1-3 Maxwell's Silver Hammer
1-4 To Of Us
1-5 I've Got A Feeling
1-6 Oh! Darling
1-7 One After 909
1-8 Jazz Piano Song (McCartney/Starkey)
1-9 Across The Universe
1-10 Dig A Pony
1-11 Suzy Parker
1-12 I Me Mine
1-13 For Your Blue
1-14 Besame Mucho (Velázquez/Skylar)
1-15 Octopus's Garden (Starkey)
1-16 You've Really Got A Hold Of Me (Smokey Robinson)
1-17 The Long And Winding Road
1-18 Medley: Rip It Up / Shake Rattle And Roll
1-19 Medley: Kansas City / Miss Ann
1-20 Lawdy Miss Clawdy
1-21 Dig It
1-22 Let It Be
1-23 Get Back
1-24 Don't Let Me Down
1-25 I've Got A Feeling
1-26 One After 909
1-27 Dig A Pony
1-28 Get Back
1-29 Get Back Reprise
Licensed From – His Master's Choice – HMC 035
Licensed Through – Sgt. – 99658744
Let It Be is a 1970 documentary film about The Beatles rehearsing and recording songs for the album Let It Be in January 1969. The film features an unannounced rooftop concert by the group, their last performance in public. Released just after the album, it was the final original Beatles release.
The film was originally planned as a television documentary which would accompany a concert broadcast. When plans for a broadcast were dropped, the project became a feature film. Although the film does not dwell on the dissension within the group at the time, it provides some glimpses into the dynamics that would lead to the Beatles' break-up.
The film has not been officially available since the 1980s, although original and bootleg copies of home video releases still circulate. The film's director Michael Lindsay-Hogg stated in 2011 that a DVD and Blu-ray was possibly going to be released in 2013, but did not happen due to the film's negative (though accurate) portrayal of The Beatles. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr collectively won an Academy Award for Best Original Song Score for the film.
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