Thursday February 16, 2012

Beatles leap into digital age

LONDON —

Beatlemania is set to break out again on Wednesday when The Beatles’ digitally remastered albums and a new computer game are released.

The legendary British quartet’s entire back catalogue has been remastered and cleaned up, while the Fab Four appear in “The Beatles: Rock Band,” which is tipped to become one of the world’s biggest selling computer games.

The Beatles’ company Apple Corps has historically shunned releasing their music in digital formats due to piracy concerns.

But “Rock Band” players will be able to download entire albums in the coming months as the 1960s icons catch up with 21st century technology.

The Beatles’ back catalogue was first released on compact disc in 1987, though many fans felt the sound quality did not match the original vinyl, while technological advances since then have highlighted flaws and imperfections.

The new versions include the group’s 12 albums, plus the “Magical Mystery Tour” soundtrack and the Past Masters releases covering non-album singles.

Two box sets are also being released: one in stereo and the other in mono. The albums are those released in Britain, and retain the original artwork and track listings.

It is the first time that the group’s first four albums - “Please Please Me,” “With The Beatles,” “A Hard Day’s Night” and “Beatles for Sale” - have been released on compact disc entirely in stereo.

The albums were digitally remastered over a four-year period at Abbey Road Studios in London, where The Beatles - lead guitarist George Harrison, rhythm guitarist John Lennon, bassist Paul McCartney and drummer Ringo Starr - recorded most of their music.

The remasters were done “utilizing state of the art recording technology alongside vintage studio equipment, carefully maintaining the authenticity and integrity of the original analogue recordings,” Apple Corps and record label EMI said.

“The result of this painstaking process is the highest fidelity the catalogue has seen since its original release. It was agreed that electrical clicks, microphone vocal pops, excessive sibilance and bad edits should be improved where possible, so long as it didn’t impact on the original integrity of the songs,” they said.

De-noising technology was only used for less than five of The Beatles’ 525 minutes of music.

To mark the revival, the BBC is running a Beatles Week, with programs examining the band in the studio, their first visit to the United States, their impact in the former Soviet Union and the Beatlemania phenomenon. The broadcasts feature previously unreleased out-takes and studio chat.

Meanwhile, the Fab Four have been recreated in virtual forms in “The Beatles: Rock Band,” a game that lets players join the band as they springboard from gigs in their native Liverpool, northwest England, to global stardom.

Players strum away at plastic replicas of guitars played by Lennon, Harrison and McCartney, keep the beat on a version of Starr’s drum kit, or try out Beatles harmonies.

Forty-five songs are included with the video game, and more of the bands’ tunes will be sold as digital downloads from the internet.

The “Abbey Road” album will be released in October, followed by “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” in November and “Rubber Soul” in December.

The video game will be available for play on the three major consoles: Microsoft’s Xbox 360, Sony’s PlayStation 3, and Nintendo’s Wii.

A 30-second clip has been produced to promote the game, using archive footage, actors and computer trickery to bring the famous Abbey Road cover to life.

“The project is a fun idea which broadens the appeal of The Beatles and their music,” McCartney said.

The concept for the video game was honed with input from McCartney and Starr as well as from Beatles widows Yoko Ono and Olivia Harrison.

“How wonderful that The Beatles’ legacy will find its natural progression into the 21st century through the computerized world we live in,” Starr said. “The game is good, the graphics are very good - and we were great.”

Wire reports

  • 0

    gogogo

    The Beatles’ company Apple Corps has historically shunned releasing their music in digital formats due to piracy concerns.

    That's incorrect, they wanted to release their stuff, Paul has publicly admitted this several times. The problem was parties involved could not come to an agreement on the royalty rates. I guess this has been resolved.

  • 0

    KallyPygous

    The game sounds particularly turbid.

  • 0

    Noripinhead

    John Lennon must be rolling over in his grave about this. Seriously. The life of the Beatles reduced to an interactive computer game. The music, cleaned up and sanitized of all its warts and peculiarities for the grandchildren of baby boomers. Roll Over Beethoven.

  • 0

    Nessie

    John Lennon must be rolling over in his grave about this.

    Well he'd be moaning about something, that's for sure.

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