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{{Short description|1970 studio album by the Beatles}}{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2021}} | |||
{{Refimprove|date=May 2009}} | |||
{{Use British English|date=November 2015}} | |||
{{About|the Beatles album|the Beatles song|Let It Be (song)|other uses}} | |||
{{For|other albums with the same name|Let It Be (disambiguation)#Albums}} | |||
{{Infobox album | {{Infobox album | ||
| |
| name = Let It Be | ||
| |
| type = studio | ||
| |
| artist = ] | ||
| |
| cover = The Beatles - Let It Be.png | ||
| alt = A black cover with four square photos of the band members' faces | |||
| Released = 8 May 1970 | |||
| released = {{Start date|1970|5|8|df=y}} | |||
| Recorded = February 1968, January 1969, January 1970 and March–April 1970, ] and ], and ], ], ], ] | |||
| |
| recorded = *4, 8 February 1968 | ||
*24–31 January 1969 | |||
| Length = 35:16 | |||
*3, 4, 8 January 1970 | |||
| Language = ] | |||
*1 April 1970 | |||
| Label = ] (]) | |||
| studio = ], ] and ], London | |||
| Producer = ] | |||
| venue = ], London | |||
| Reviews = *] {{Rating|4.5|5}} | |||
| genre = *] | |||
*'']'' {{Rating|2|5}} | |||
*]<ref name="McCormick/DT" /> | |||
*] (A-) | |||
| length = {{duration|m=35|s=10}} | |||
*MMMDI (9/10) | |||
| label = ] | |||
* ] (9.1/10.0) | |||
| producer = ] | |||
*'']'' {{rating|5|5}} | |||
| prev_title = ] | |||
*'']'' (Mixed) | |||
| prev_year = 1969 | |||
*''Rolling Stone'' {{Rating|3|5}} | |||
| next_title = ] | |||
| Last album = '']''<br />(1969) | |||
| |
| next_year = 1970 | ||
| misc = {{Extra chronology | |||
| Next album = | |||
| artist = ] ] | |||
| Misc = {{Singles | |||
| type = studio | |||
| prev_title = ] | |||
| Type = studio | |||
| prev_year = 1970 | |||
| Single 1 = ]"/"] | |||
|
| title = Let It Be | ||
| year = 1970 | |||
}} | |||
| next_title = ] | |||
| next_year = 1970 | |||
}} | |||
{{Singles | |||
| name = Let It Be | |||
| type = studio | |||
| single1 = ] | |||
| single1date = 11 April 1969 | |||
| single2 = ] | |||
| single2date = 6 March 1970 | |||
| single3 = ] | |||
| single3date = 11 May 1970 | |||
}} | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''''Let It Be''''' is the twelfth and final ] <!--'twelfth' in a canonical numbering excluding the US compilation album Magical Mystery Tour but including Yellow Submarine and the rest of the EMI 13 "core catalogue" albums,.--> by the English ] band ]. It was released on 8 May 1970, nearly a month after the official announcement of ], in tandem with the ]. Concerned about recent friction within the band, ] had conceived the project as an attempt to reinvigorate the group by returning to simpler ] configurations.<ref name="Kot"/> Its rehearsals started at ] on 2 January 1969 as part of a planned television documentary showcasing the Beatles' return to live performance. | |||
'''''Let It Be''''' is the twelfth and final ] released by the English ] band ]. It was released on 8 May 1970, by the band's ] label shortly after the group's announced ]. | |||
The filmed rehearsals were marked by ill feeling, leading to ]'s temporary departure from the group. As a condition of his return, the members reconvened at their own ], and recruited guest keyboardist ]. Together, they performed a ] on 30 January, from which three of the album's tracks were drawn. In April, the Beatles issued the lead single "]", backed with "]", after which engineer ] prepared and submitted mixes of the album, then titled ''Get Back'', which the band rejected. As bootlegs of these mixes circulated widely among fans,<ref name="Kot">{{cite news|last=Kot|first=Greg|author-link=Greg Kot|date=17 November 2003|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2003-11-17-0311180043-story.html|title=Let It Be, Paul|newspaper=]|access-date=6 October 2019|archive-date=6 October 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191006225019/https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2003-11-17-0311180043-story.html|url-status=live}}</ref> the project lay in limbo, and the group moved on to the recording of '']'', released that September. | |||
Most of ''Let It Be'' was recorded in January 1969, before the recording and release of the album ''].'' For this reason, some critics and fans, such as ], argue that ''Abbey Road'' should be considered the group's final album and ''Let It Be'' the ]. ''Let It Be'' was originally intended to be released before ''Abbey Road'' during mid-1969 as ''Get Back,'' but the Beatles were unhappy with this version, which was mixed and compiled by ], and it was temporarily shelved. A new version of the album was created from the studio tapes by ] in 1970 and finally released as ''Let It Be.'' The album acts as a ] album for the 1970 ], a ] of the band rehearsing and recording the album. While two songs from the sessions were released as singles before the album's release, "]" and "]," the songs were remixed by Spector for the album. | |||
In January 1970, four months after ] departed from the band, the remaining Beatles completed "]" and recorded "]". The former was issued as the second single from the album with production by ]. When the documentary film was resurrected for a cinema release, as ''Let It Be'', Lennon and Harrison asked American producer ] to assemble the accompanying album. Among Spector's choices was to include a 1968 take of "]" and apply orchestral and choral overdubs to "Let It Be", "Across the Universe" and "]". His work offended McCartney, particularly in the case of "The Long and Winding Road", which was the third and final single of the album. | |||
The rehearsals and recording sessions for the album did not run smoothly because of increasing acrimony among the four Beatles. The group bickered and argued throughout the album's production. ], at one point during the rehearsals, walked out and quit the group after severely arguing with both ] and ], only to be coaxed back some days later. The film version is famous for showcasing a number of conflicts between the group members and has frequently been referred to as a documentary intended to show the making of an album but instead showing "the break-up of a band."{{Citation needed|date=March 2009}} | |||
''Let It Be'' topped record charts in several countries, including both the UK and the US. However, it was a critical failure at the time, and came to be regarded as one of the most controversial rock albums in history, though retrospective reception has been more positive.<ref name="AM">{{cite web |url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/let-it-be-mw0000192939 |title=The Beatles ''Let It Be'' |last=Unterberger |first=Richie |publisher=] |access-date=24 September 2014 |archive-date=27 October 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121027051643/http://www.allmusic.com/album/let-it-be-mw0000192939 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author1=Far Out Staff |title=Ranking the songs of The Beatles' final album 'Let It Be' on the 50th anniversary |url=https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/the-beatles-let-it-be-50th-anniversary-lennon-mccartney-harrison-starr/ |website=Far Out Magazine |date=8 May 2020 |quote=Arguably one of the most controversial albums of all time ... |access-date=3 October 2020 |archive-date=29 September 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200929200211/https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/the-beatles-let-it-be-50th-anniversary-lennon-mccartney-harrison-starr/ |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2003, McCartney spearheaded '']'', an alternative version of ''Let It Be'' that removes Spector's embellishments and alters the tracklist. In 2021, ] was released with session highlights and the original 1969 ''Get Back'' mix, coinciding with '']'', an eight-hour documentary series covering the January 1969 sessions and rooftop concert. | |||
Despite a largely negative review from '']'' magazine at the time of its release, this determination was later retracted with the album being ranked number 86 in the magazine's list of the ] in 2003.{{sfn|Rolling Stone|2007}} | |||
==Background== | |||
'']'' was released in 2003, an alternative version of the album stripping much of ]'s production work. | |||
] completed the five-month sessions for their ] (also known as the "White Album") in mid-October 1968.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2005|p=162}} While the sessions had revealed deep divisions within the group for the first time, leading to ] quitting for two weeks, the band enjoyed the opportunity to re-engage with ensemble playing, as a departure from the psychedelic experimentation that had characterised their recordings since the band's retirement from live performance in August 1966. Before the White Album's release, ] enthused to music journalist ] that the Beatles were "coming out of our shell ... kind of saying: remember what it was like to ''play''?"{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=113}} ] welcomed the return to the band's roots, saying that they were aiming "to get as funky as we were in ]".<ref>{{cite magazine|first=Alan|last=Smith|title=George Is a Rocker Again! (Part 2)|magazine=]|date=28 September 1968|page=3}}</ref> | |||
Concerned about the friction over the previous year, ] was eager for the Beatles to perform live again.{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|p=2}} In early October 1968, he told the press that the band would soon play a live show for subsequent broadcast in a TV special.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=311}} The following month, ] announced that the Beatles had booked ] in north London for 12–23 December and would perform at least one concert during that time.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=313}} When this plan came to nothing, Denis O'Dell, the head of ], suggested that the group be filmed rehearsing at ], in preparation for their return to live performance,{{sfn|The Beatles|2021|p=29}} since he had booked studio space there to shoot '']''.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=327}} | |||
==History== | |||
===Concept=== | |||
By late 1968, Paul McCartney was eager for the Beatles to perform live again, more than two years after they gave up touring. At the time, there was a great deal of tension among the Beatles, who had been pursuing a number of personal projects over the course of the previous six months. The sessions for the previous year's '']'' (aka the "White Album") had been badly affected by a number of serious arguments and strained relations among the group. | |||
The initial plan was that the rehearsal footage would be edited into a short TV documentary promoting the main TV special, in which the Beatles would perform a public concert or perhaps two concerts.{{sfn|The Beatles|2021|p=29}}{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|pp=2, 5}} ] had agreed to direct the project, having worked with the band on some of their promotional films.{{sfn|The Beatles|2021|p=29}} The project's timeline was dictated by Harrison being away in the United States until Christmas and Starr's commitment to begin filming his role in ''The Magic Christian'' in February 1969.<ref name="Irvin/Mojo">{{cite magazine|first=Jim|last=Irvin|title=Get It Better: The Story of ''Let It Be… Naked''|magazine=]|date=November 2003}} Available at (subscription required).</ref> The band intended to perform only new material and were therefore under pressure to finish writing an album's worth of songs.{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=56}} Although the concert venue was not established when rehearsals began on 2 January,{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|p=5}} it was decided that the 18th would serve as a potential dress rehearsal day; the 19th and 20th would serve as concert dates.<ref>The Beatles: Get Back| Jackson| 2021| 00:10:40</ref> | |||
McCartney felt a major problem came from years without touring and using the studio not to record ensemble performances but to make increasingly multi-layered and complex recordings (made up of numerous instrumental parts played individually by each Beatle as ] rather than as a group). That, McCartney felt, caused the Beatles to grow apart and lose their collective group spirit. He believed that the best way to improve band relations and revive enthusiasm was to get the group back into rehearsal as quickly as possible (the ''White Album'' sessions having only been concluded in October 1968) and begin work on a new album that made little or no use of studio artifice or multiple overdubbing. That would allow the group to "get back" to their roots by playing as a true ensemble, or even recording some or all of the new album during a one-off live concert or full concert tour. | |||
==Recording and production== | |||
This idea mirrored the 'back to basics' attitude being taken by a number of rock musicians at this time, particularly in the US, as a reaction against the psychedelic and progressive music dominant in the previous two years which made extensive use of studio trickery and complexity, and McCartney could well have been influenced by this development (McCartney at this time was a big fan of ], a group which was associated with this emerging philosophy). McCartney believed that a return to live performance would reinstill the same sort of ensemble spirit and sense of togetherness that they had in their early years together. | |||
===Twickenham rehearsals=== | |||
{{quote box|quote= It was a disaster. They were still exhausted from the marathon '']'' sessions. Paul bossed George around; George was moody and resentful. John would not even go to the bathroom without Yoko at his side ... The tension was palpable, and it was all being caught on film.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=327}}|source= – ], ''The Beatles Diary''|width=25%|align=right|style=padding:8px;}} | |||
The Twickenham rehearsals quickly disintegrated into what Apple Corps executive ] characterised as a "hostile lethargy".<ref>Brown, Peter and Steven Gaines, "The Love You Make: An Insider's Story of the Beatles". {{ISBN|9781440674075}}.</ref> Lennon and his partner ] had descended into ] after their arrest on drugs charges in October and Ono's subsequent miscarriage.{{sfn|Doggett|2011|pp=55–56}}{{sfn|O'Gorman|2003|p=72}}{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=321}} Unable to supply his quota of new songs for the project, Lennon maintained an icy distance from his bandmates{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=59}} and scorned McCartney's ideas.{{sfn|O'Gorman|2003|p=72}} By contrast, Harrison was inspired by his recent stay in the US; there, he enjoyed jamming with musicians in Los Angeles{{sfn|MacDonald|2007|pp=328–29}} and experienced a musical camaraderie and creative freedom with ] and ] in ] that was lacking in the Beatles.{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=57}}{{sfn|O'Gorman|2003|p=73}} Harrison presented several new songs for consideration at Twickenham, some of which were dismissed by Lennon and McCartney.{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=59}}{{sfn|O'Gorman|2003|p=73}} McCartney's attempts to focus the band on their objective were construed as overly controlling,{{sfn|MacDonald|2007|p=329}} particularly by Harrison.{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=59}} | |||
The atmosphere in the film studios, the early start each day, and the intrusive cameras and microphones of Lindsay-Hogg's film crew combined to heighten the Beatles' discontent.{{sfn|O'Gorman|2003|pp=71–72}} When the band rehearsed McCartney's "]" on 6 January, a tense exchange ensued between McCartney and Harrison about the latter's lead guitar part. During lunch on 10 January, Lennon and Harrison had a heated disagreement in which Harrison berated Lennon for his lack of engagement with the project.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=328}} Harrison was also angry with Lennon for telling a music journalist that the Beatles' Apple organisation was in financial ruin.{{sfn|O'Gorman|2003|p=73}} According to journalist Michael Housego's report in the '']'', Harrison and Lennon's exchange descended into violence with the pair allegedly throwing punches at each other.{{sfn|Winn|2009|pp=248–49}} Harrison denied this in a 16 January interview for the '']'', saying: "There was no punch-up. We just fell out."{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|p=169}}{{refn|group=nb|The film audio tapes from 22 January capture Harrison and Lennon discussing the ''Daily Sketch'' article,{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|p=206}} which was titled "The End of a Beautiful Friendship?"{{sfn|Winn|2009|p=249}} Lennon was offended by the idea that the Beatles would ever use violence against one another and is heard asking O'Dell whether they can sue Housego for his false reporting.{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|p=206}}}} After lunch on 10 January, Harrison announced that he was leaving the band and told the others, "See you round the clubs."<ref name="Irvin/Mojo" /> Starr attributed Harrison's exit to McCartney "dominating" him.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=328}}<ref>{{cite book|first=Peter|last=Doggett|year=2003|chapter=Fight to the Finish|title=]: 1000 Days of Revolution (The Beatles' Final Years – 1 January 1968 to 27 September 1970)|publisher=Emap|location=London|page=138}}</ref> | |||
Additionally, McCartney suggested that the new project could be turned into a multimedia extravaganza, comprising a live concert (or tour), album and motion picture, the latter to take the form of a documentary film recording the making of the album right from the first rehearsals to the proposed live performances (this aspect of the project would also have the handy side effect of fulfilling the group's contractual obligation to ] to produce a third motion picture, dating back to the original deal signed with the company in 1963 which had thus far produced '']'' and '']''. (The original third Beatles feature film, which should have been filmed in 1966, had been abandoned and '']'' did not fulfill the obligation as it was an ] feature.) McCartney proposed that ], who had recently worked with the ], direct the film. | |||
===Apple sessions=== | |||
McCartney also decided to invite renowned producer/engineer Glyn Johns to contribute to the recording. However his proposed role was apparently not clearly defined and McCartney also wished to retain the services of ], meaning that Johns was not entirely sure as to whether he was supposed to be producing (or co-producing) the album or merely engineering it, with Martin having no clear idea of where he stood either. | |||
During a meeting on 15 January, the band agreed to Harrison's terms for returning to the group: they would abandon the plan to stage a public concert and move from the cavernous soundstage at Twickenham to their ], where they would be filmed recording a new album, using the material they had gathered to that point.<ref name="Irvin/Mojo" />{{sfn|Miles|2001|pp=330, 331}} The band's return to work was delayed by the poor quality of the recording and mixing equipment designed by Lennon's friend ]{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=331}} and installed at Apple Studio, in the basement of the Apple Corps building at 3 ]. Producer ], who had been only a marginal presence at Twickenham, arranged to borrow two four-track recorders from ];{{sfn|The Beatles|2021|p=119}} he and audio engineer ] then prepared the facility for the Beatles' use.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=331}} | |||
Sessions (and filming) at Apple began on 21 January.{{sfn|Winn|2009|pp=237, 249}} The atmosphere in the band was markedly improved.{{sfn|The Beatles|2021|p=119}} To help achieve this, Harrison invited keyboardist ] to participate, after meeting him outside the Apple building on 22 January.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=331}} Preston contributed to most of the recording and also became an ] artist.{{sfn|The Beatles|2021|pp=119, 121}} McCartney and Lindsay-Hogg continued to hope for a public concert by the Beatles to cap the project.{{sfn|The Beatles|2021|p=119}} | |||
The other three Beatles were, however, less than wholly enthusiastic about McCartney's proposals – not only had they only just completed work on their previous album, but they were skeptical about the realistic prospects of returning to live performance. Harrison in particular was very opposed to the idea of touring, having taken the strongest dislike of any of the group members to the grueling tours of the Beatlemania era. However he had recently enjoyed a series of jam sessions with ] and ] in the US, rediscovering his liking for straightforward ensemble playing, and he was attracted to the idea of the "back to basics" approach. The same approach greatly appealed to Lennon, who had grown increasingly wary of what he regarded as the excessive technical artifice used on their recordings since '']'' and had also made a recent return to no-frills ensemble playing in the shape of an appearance on the ]' '']''. In addition, all the group members had greatly enjoyed the recording of the song ']' during the recent ''White Album'' sessions which, due to its multiple sections and myriad ] changes, had required all four members of the group sharply to focus and revive their ensemble playing skills to lay down a coherent basic rhythm track before any overdubbing could be applied. In the end, the group agreed to convene for rehearsals immediately following ] to begin work, even though no suitable conclusion or even firm direction for the new project had been agreed. | |||
=== |
=== Rooftop concert === | ||
{{Main|The Beatles' rooftop concert}} | |||
Since all the rehearsals were to be filmed by Lindsay-Hogg and his film crew, the decision was made to use a ] for rehearsals and the sound stage at ] was chosen. The group began rehearsals there on 2 January 1969. This transpired to be a mistake since Twickenham was quickly discovered to be a fairly uninspiring environment (coloured lighting was set up by the film crew to try and improve the aesthetic appeal of the studio but the lights simply succeeded in annoying Lennon) and worse, the large studio proved to be freezing cold in the winter mornings. Additionally, due to the requirements of the film crew, sessions could not take place during the evenings as the group preferred, but had to be booked to start at 8 am. As Lennon later observed, "no one wants to make music at that hour". Lennon also found the continuous presence of the film crew to be highly intrusive and the other Beatles had similar feelings about the attendance of Lennon's girlfriend ]. | |||
According to Beatles historian ], it is uncertain who thought of a rooftop concert, but the idea was conceived just days before the actual event.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2010|p=307}} In Preston's recollection, it was ] who suggested it.{{sfn|Babiuk|2002|p=240}} | |||
Until the last minute, according to Lindsay-Hogg, the Beatles were still undecided about performing the concert.<ref>In the Q&A session with Peter Jackson before the 30 January 2022 IMAX showing of the rooftop performance, Jackson said it was "about a half hour".</ref> He recalled that on 30 January, they had discussed it and then gone silent, until "John said in the silence, 'Fuck it – let's go do it.{{'"}}{{sfn|The Beatles|2021|p=193}} The four Beatles and Preston arrived on the roof at around 12:30 pm.{{sfn|The Beatles|2021|p=196}} When they began to play, there was confusion nearby among members of the public, many of whom were on their lunch break. As the news of the event spread, crowds began to congregate in the streets and on the flat rooftops of nearby buildings.<ref name="BBC">{{cite news |date=30 January 2008 |title=Beatles rooftop birthday: It's 40 years since the fab four's last ever concert |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/6music/news/20090130_beatles_rooftop.shtml |access-date=12 December 2013 |publisher=BBC}}</ref> | |||
No professional ]s were made of these sessions at Twickenham, as the Beatles were simply rehearsing for a proposed live performance rather than attempting to record releasable versions of any songs, although Phil Spector later used a snippet of dialogue from one of these rehearsals (Lennon announcing "Queen says no to pot-smoking FBI members") to introduce ']' on the finished album, sourced from the film crew's ] soundtrack recordings. Numerous ] records taken from the many hours of these soundtrack recordings are in wide circulation and various bits of music and dialogue from the same source was eventually used on the second disc of the 2003 release ''Let It Be... Naked''. | |||
Police officers ascended to the roof just as the Beatles began the second take of "Don't Let Me Down".<ref name="Jackson3">{{Cite web |date=2021-11-26 |title=The Beatles: Get Back Part 3: Days 17–22 |url=https://www.disneyplus.com/video/0a1a935f-d1dd-4514-bb6e-4876c65a9c13 |access-date=2021-11-29 |website=Disney+}}</ref> The concert came to an end with the conclusion of "Get Back". | |||
The group spent their time at Twickenham running through a number of new original compositions by Lennon, McCartney and Harrison as well as jamming various covers of rock 'n' roll numbers and standards from other genres, as well as some instrumentals and even versions of some old Beatles songs. A number of possible locations for the proposed live show were discussed during the rehearsals, with the leading candidates being ] in London,{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|p=2}} a Roman ] in ] (where the Beatles would allow the audience to slowly fill the amphitheatre during the day before eventually performing either at ] or ]) or a ]. McCartney also proposed an unusual concert tour in which the Beatles would turn up unannounced at university halls and small clubs around England to perform, an idea that Lennon apparently regarded as preposterous but was later carried out by McCartney with his post-Beatles band ]. At one point, ] jokingly suggested that he was "warming to the idea of doing it (the concert) in an ]".{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighard|1999|pp=136–138}} | |||
Recording of the project (and filming) wrapped on 31 January.{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|pp=311, 313}} | |||
Unsurprisingly given the conditions at Twickenham and the group members' personal differences, the rehearsals quickly disintegrated into acrimony. By the third day, the group openly discussed whether they should simply break up. Lennon was in the throes of ] addiction and had all but withdrawn creatively from the Beatles, seldom contributing even to the arrangements of his own songs. ] was increasingly resentful — while he was treated respectfully by musical colleagues such as Bob Dylan and ], within the Beatles he felt that his songs were either derided or ignored (at one point during the rehearsals, Lennon responded to Harrison demonstrating his new song "]" to him by stating "We're a rock and roll band – run along, boy" and later chose to ] with Ono, behaviour possibly intended to be a form of mockery, rather than contribute while the other three Beatles attempted to arrange and rehearse the song). With the band seemingly unable to generate much enthusiasm or focus their attention, their playing was largely ragged and unprofessional, not helped by the fact that they were severely out of practice at playing as a live ensemble. McCartney tried to impose some form of order and encourage his bandmates, but his attempts to hold the band together and rally spirits were seen by the others as controlling and patronising. The constant presence of Lennon's companion and artistic partner Yoko Ono—who often spoke in Lennon's place as he sat silently by and frequently distracted him by whispering in his ear when he was trying to concentrate on playing—was a major source of tension. The intrusive film cameras and the uncomfortable settings of Twickenham Studios also contributed to ill feelings. | |||
===''Get Back'' mixes=== | |||
Finally, matters came to a head on 10 January when Harrison had a heated argument with McCartney over what he perceived to be the bassist's patronizing and bossy instructions on how to play his lead guitar part on ']', which later became one of the most famous sequences in the ''Let It Be'' movie. What is not shown in the film is another, allegedly much more severe argument Harrison had with Lennon immediately following his argument with McCartney. Harrison had become fed up with Lennon's creative and communicative disengagement from the band and the two had a blazing row which, according to some sources,{{Weasel-inline|date=August 2009}} descended into violence with Harrison and Lennon allegedly throwing punches at each other (if true, this would apparently be the sole occasion in their adult lives that any members of the Beatles are known to have resorted to violence against each other).{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} After lunch, Harrison announced that he was "leaving the band now" and told the others "see you round the clubs". He promptly walked out, getting in his car and instead of returning home to his wife ] at his ] home ], he drove straight to his parents' home in ], ].{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|p=169}} | |||
]'']] | |||
In early March, Lennon and McCartney called Johns to Abbey Road and offered him free rein to compile an album from the ''Get Back'' recordings.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2005|p=171}} Johns booked time at ] between 10 March and 28 May to mix the album and completed the final banded master tape on 28 May. Only one track, "One After 909", was taken from the rooftop concert, with "]" and "]" (then called "All I Want Is You") being studio recordings instead. Johns also favoured earlier, rougher versions of "Two of Us" and "]" over the more polished performances from the final, 31 January session (which were eventually chosen for the ''Let It Be'' film; the ''Let It Be'' album used the 31 January take of "Two of Us" but the same 26 January take of "The Long and Winding Road" that Johns had used). It also included a ] called "Rocker", a brief rendition of ]' "]", Lennon's "]" and a four-minute edit of "]".{{sfn|Lewisohn|2005|p=176}}{{refn|group=nb|In an interview he gave to some American journalists in early May, Lennon described the ''Get Back'' album as "Apple Skyline", referring to Dylan's just-released '']''.{{sfn|Winn|2009|pp=285–86}}}} A tape copy of this acetate would later make its way to the United States, where it was played on radio stations in ] and ] over September 1969.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.collectorsmusicreviews.com/beatles/beatles-the-legendary-22-9-69-get-back-radio-broadcast-godfather-records-gr-412/|title = Beatles – the Legendary 22-9-69 'Get Back' Radio Broadcast (Godfather Records GR 412) – Collectors Music Reviews| date=23 September 2009 }}</ref> | |||
The cover of the proposed album featured a photograph of the Beatles taken by ] on 13 May in the interior stairwell at ]'s ] headquarters.{{sfn|Spizer|2003|p=162}}{{sfn|Womack|2014|p=543}} The photo was intended as an update of the group's '']'' cover image from 1963 and was particularly favoured by Lennon. The text design and placement similarly mirrored that of the 1963 LP sleeve.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2005|p=176}}{{refn|group=nb|Although discarded for ''Let It Be'', the two contrasting band photos were instead used for the covers of the Beatles' 1973 compilation albums '']'' and '']''.{{sfn|Spizer|2003|pp=162, 228}}{{sfn|Lewisohn|2005|pp=176–77}}}} The sequencing of "One After 909", a Lennon–McCartney composition from the early 1960s, as the opening track furthered the back-to-the-roots aesthetic. The Beatles rejected the album.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=117}} | |||
After Harrison's departure that afternoon, the three remaining Beatles attempted to continue with their rehearsal. A smiling Yoko, seemingly oblivious to how her behaviour might be perceived by McCartney and Starr, responded to the situation by sitting herself down on Harrison's empty chair, an action which appeared highly symbolic even if it was highly unlikely to be intended as such. Yoko promptly took over the rehearsal, leading an ] jam featuring her trademark wailing vocalizations, while Lennon and McCartney derived shrieking feedback from their amplifiers and Starr thrashed about on his drum kit. As a practical solution to the problem of Harrison's absence, Lennon suggested hiring Eric Clapton to replace Harrison, possibly as a full time member of the Beatles if Harrison stuck with his decision to quit the band permanently. McCartney and Starr vetoed this suggestion, with the former arguing that the group could not truly be considered as the Beatles without all four traditional members of the band. | |||
The ''Get Back'' album was intended for release in July 1969, but its release was pushed back to September to coincide with the planned television special and the theatrical film about the making of the album. In September, the release was pushed back to December, because the Beatles had just recorded '']'' and wanted to issue that album instead. On 20 September, six days before ''Abbey Road'' was released, Lennon told McCartney, Starr, and business manager ] (Harrison was not present) that he "wanted a divorce" from the group.{{sfn|Miles|1997|p=561}} By December, the ''Get Back'' album had been shelved. | |||
===Recording sessions=== | |||
A week later the band agreed to Harrison's terms for returning to the group, which included abandoning the cold and cavernous soundstage at Twickenham. Sessions resumed on 22 January when the group moved to ] and multi-track recording began{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|p=205}} which continued until 31 January.{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|p=305}} Harrison brought in keyboardist ] to ease tensions and supplement the band for the live performances. Preston worked with the Beatles throughout their stay at Apple Studios. | |||
On 15 December, the Beatles again approached Johns to compile an album, but this time with the instruction that the songs must match those included in the as yet unreleased ''Get Back'' film. Between 15 December 1969 and 8 January 1970, new mixes were prepared. Johns's new mix omitted "]" as the song did not appear in the film. It added "]" (a ] of the 1968 studio version, as the January 1969 rehearsals had not been properly recorded) and "]", on which only Harrison, McCartney and Starr performed, as Lennon had already left the band. "I Me Mine" was newly recorded on 3 January 1970, as it appeared in the film since no multi-track recording had yet been made. Johns also rearranged the playlist, moving "]" away from "]" onto the first side. The Beatles once again rejected the album.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2005|pp=195, 196}}{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=112}} | |||
The live concert idea culminated with the Beatles and Preston performing on the 30th of January on the rooftop of the Beatles' ] Building at 3 ] before a small audience of friends and employees. The performance was cut short by the police after complaints about noise. The complete concert has circulated among ] collectors for many years. Three numbers recorded at the rooftop concert, namely "Dig a Pony", "I've Got a Feeling", and "One After 909", do appear on the album, while several spoken parts of the concert appear between tracks that were recorded in studio. | |||
=== Final mixing === | |||
The band played hundreds of songs during the ''Get Back''/''Let It Be'' sessions. Aside from original songs ultimately released on the ''Let It Be'' album were early versions of almost all of the songs that appeared on '']'', including "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", and "]". Still others would eventually end up on Beatles solo albums, including Lennon's "]" (called "Child of Nature" at the time and originally written and rehearsed for the '']'') and "]", Harrison's "]", "]" and "Hear Me Lord", and McCartney's "]" and "]" (originally written for the '']''). Much of the band's attention was focused on extended jams on ] as well as a broad range of covers. These included classical pieces such as ]'s "]", jazz standards such as "]", and an encyclopaedic array of songs from the early rock and roll era such as "]", "]", "]", "]" by Mexican composer ] (a song that was part of The Beatles repertoire in the early days) and "]". Only a handful of these were complete performances; the vast majority were fragmentary renditions with a verse or two of misremembered lyrics. The rehearsals and recording sessions were filmed and formed the basis of the Beatles' film of ]. A song not included was "]". | |||
Producer ] was invited by Lennon and Harrison to take on the task of turning the Beatles' abandoned ''Get Back'' recording sessions into a usable album.{{sfn|Hamelman|2009|pp=136–37}} The songs "]" and "]" had been released on a single in April 1969 and "Let It Be" was the A-side of the band's March 1970 single.{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|pp=314, 315}} To coincide with the single, the project was renamed ''Let It Be''. ], now with the new title, was premiered in New York City on 13 May 1970. One week later, UK premieres were held at the ] Gaumont Cinema and the ]. None of the Beatles attended any of the premieres.<ref name="Cross">{{cite book |last=Cross |first=Craig |title=The Beatles: Day-by-Day, Song-by-Song, Record-by-Record |publisher=iUniverse |year=2005 |isbn=0-595-34663-4 |page=306}}</ref>{{listen |filename=Let It Be sample.ogg |title="Let It Be" |description=]' "]" from ''Let It Be'' |filetype=]}} | |||
For the soundtrack album, Spector chose three tracks recorded live from the rooftop performance: "I've Got a Feeling", "One After 909" and "Dig a Pony". "Two of Us" was recorded "live in the studio" with the band members playing together in a single take, and without overdubs or splicing. Spector included "]" and "]", which were improvised during the recordings. "Get Back", on the other hand, included only the section recorded on 27 January 1969, without the coda recorded the next day, and cross-faded to the remarks at the end of the rooftop concert. | |||
===The ''Get Back'' albums=== | |||
After increasing use of ]s and multi-layered recordings on recent albums, there was at first a consensus to record the new album live. In keeping with the back-to-roots concept, the cover artwork was planned to be an update of the cover of their first album, '']'', with the band looking down the stairwell of ]'s headquarters office block in ]. A different photograph from the same photo session was later used on the compilation album '']'' (aka ''The Blue Album''). | |||
Seven of the tracks were thereby released in accordance with the original plans for the ''Get Back'' project, whereas the album versions of "]", "I Me Mine", "Let It Be" and "The Long and Winding Road" include editing, splicing and/or overdubs. "Don't Let Me Down", recorded live in the studio two days before the rooftop concert, was omitted from the album.{{sfn|Sulpy|Schweighardt|1999|pp=315–16}} "Across the Universe" is an edited version of the original 1968 recording, played back at a slower speed (which lowered the ] from ] to ]), which had only been rehearsed at Twickenham and not professionally recorded on multi-track tape during the January 1969 sessions.{{sfn|MacDonald|2007|p=277}} | |||
Engineer ] put together a rough version of ''Get Back'' on ] in March 1969, which included many of the same songs that made the final cut, plus McCartney's "Teddy Boy". Johns played the acetate for the Beatles, who were not really interested in the project any longer. At least one copy of the acetate made its way to America and was aired on local radio stations in ], and ] in September. | |||
]'', was John Lennon’s idea.]] | |||
McCartney was dissatisfied with Spector's treatment of some songs, particularly "The Long and Winding Road". McCartney had conceived of the song as a simple piano ballad, but Spector dubbed in orchestral and choral accompaniment. Lennon defended Spector's work in his "]" interview for '']'', saying, "He was given the shittiest load of badly recorded shit – and with a lousy feeling to it – ever. And he made something out of it. He did a great job. When I heard it, I didn't puke."<ref>{{cite magazine |last1=Wenner |first1=Jann S. |title=Lennon Remembers, Part One |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/lennon-remembers-part-one-186693/ |magazine=Rolling Stone |date=21 January 1971 |access-date=18 April 2020 |archive-date=17 April 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200417094034/https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/lennon-remembers-part-one-186693/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
In March 1969, Lennon and McCartney called Glyn Johns to EMI and offered him free rein to produce an album from the ''Get Back'' recordings.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1996}} Johns booked time at ] between 3 April and 28 May to mix the album and presented the final banded master tape to the group on 28 May. Only one track, "One After 909", was taken from the rooftop concert, with "I've Got a Feeling" and "Dig a Pony" (then called "All I Want Is You") being studio recordings instead. Johns also favoured earlier, rougher versions of "Two of Us" and "Let It Be" over the more polished performances from the final 31 January session (which were eventually chosen for the ''Let It Be'' album). It also included a ] called "Rocker", a brief rendition of ]' "]", Lennon's "]" and, a 5-minute version of "Dig It".{{sfn|Lewisohn|1988|p=176}} | |||
Lennon chose not to credit Johns for his contribution as a producer.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=374}} When EMI informed Martin that he would not get a production credit because Spector produced the final version, Martin commented, "I produced the original, and what you should do is have a credit saying 'Produced by George Martin, over-produced by Phil Spector'."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lewis |first1=Michael |last2=Spignesi |first2=Stephen J. |title=100 Best Beatles Songs: A Passionate Fan's Guide |date=10 October 2009 |publisher=Hachette Books |isbn=9781603762656 |page=42 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3R1_REbXry8C&pg=PT42 |language=en |access-date=12 April 2017 |archive-date=13 April 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170413084507/https://books.google.com/books?id=3R1_REbXry8C&pg=PT42 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
''Get Back'' version one, May 1969:{{sfn|Lewisohn|1988|p=176}} | |||
;Side one | |||
# "]" | |||
# "Rocker" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
==Packaging== | |||
;Side two | |||
].]]In most countries except the United States,{{sfn|Spizer|2003|p=162}} the ''Let It Be'' LP was originally presented in a box with a full colour book. The book contained photos by ] from the January 1969 filming, dialogue from the film, with all expletives removed at EMI's insistence, and essays by ''Rolling Stone'' writers Jonathan Cott and ].{{sfn|Spizer|2003|p=162}}{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|pp=116–17}} Despite the new album title, the book was still titled ''Get Back''.{{sfn|Ingham|2006|p=59}} Its inclusion was another step in the Beatles' efforts to provide increasingly elaborate packaging for their records since '']''.{{sfn|Spizer|2003|p=162}} The book's lavishness increased production costs by 33 per cent, however,{{sfn|Lewisohn|2005|p=199}} driving the retail price higher than for any previous Beatles album.{{sfn|Woffinden|1981|p=34}} | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" (reprise) | |||
In the United States, the ''Let It Be'' album was issued in a gatefold cover and was initially distributed by ] instead of their usual ], with the record using red-tinted Apple labels to reflect this change. (Capitol would acquire United Artists in 1979.) On both sides of the disc, the words "Phil+Ronnie" are inscribed into the inner dead wax. | |||
The ''Get Back'' album was intended for release in July 1969, but its release was pushed back to September to coincide with the planned television special and the theatrical film about the making of the album. In September, the album's release was pushed back to December because the Beatles had just recorded '']'' and wanted to release that album instead. By December the album had been shelved. | |||
The LP cover was designed by ] and includes individual photos of the four band members, again taken by Russell.{{sfn|Womack|2014|p=543}} On the front cover, the photos are set in quadrants on a black surround. The album title appears in white text above the images but, as on ''Abbey Road'' and other Beatles LPs, the cover does not include the band's name.{{sfn|Harris|2003|p=132}} Written by Apple press officer ],{{sfn|Ingham|2006|p=59}} the LP's liner notes described ''Let It Be'' as a "new phase Beatles album", adding that "in come the warmth and the freshness of a live performance; as reproduced for disc by Phil Spector". Martin and Johns were among those listed for "thanks to".{{sfn|Womack|2014|p=543}} | |||
On 15 December, The Beatles again approached ] to produce an album from the 'Get Back' tapes but this time with the instruction that the songs must match those included in the as yet unreleased ''Get Back'' film. Between 15 December 1969 and 8 January 1970, new mixes were prepared. Glyn Johns' new mix omitted "Teddy Boy" as the song did not appear in the film (and possibly because McCartney had indicated to Johns that he had re-recorded the song for his upcoming '']'' album). It also added "Across the Universe" (a ] of the 1968 studio version, as the January 1969 rehearsals of the song were judged unsatisfactory) and "I Me Mine," on which only McCartney, Harrison and ] performed (Lennon was on holiday in Denmark and had essentially left the band by that time).{{sfn|The Beatles Bible|2009}} "I Me Mine" was newly recorded at 3 January 1970, as it appeared in the film and no multi-track recording had yet been made. The Beatles once again rejected the album.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1988|p=196}} | |||
==Critical reception and legacy== | |||
''Get Back'' version two, January 1970:{{sfn|Lewisohn|1988|p=196}} | |||
{{Music ratings | |||
;Side one | |||
| title = Retrospective professional ratings | |||
# "]" | |||
| rev1 = ] | |||
# "Rocker" | |||
| rev1Score = {{Rating|4.5|5}}<ref name="AM" /> | |||
# "]" | |||
| rev2 = '']'' | |||
# "]" | |||
| rev2Score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{cite web|title=The Beatles – Let It Be album review|url=https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/the-beatles-let-it-be-album-review/|website=Far Out Magazine|access-date=2024-10-31}}</ref> | |||
# "]" | |||
| rev3 = '']'' | |||
# "]" | |||
| rev3Score = B−<ref name="Klosterman">{{cite news|last=Klosterman|first=Chuck|author-link=Chuck Klosterman|url=https://www.avclub.com/chuck-klosterman-repeats-the-beatles-1798217828|title=Chuck Klosterman Repeats The Beatles|newspaper=]|location=Chicago|date=8 September 2009|access-date=26 May 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522154556/http://www.avclub.com/articles/chuck-klosterman-repeats-the-beatles%2C32560/|archive-date=22 May 2013|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
# "]" | |||
| rev4 = '']'' | |||
# "]" | |||
| rev4Score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.billboard.com/articles/review/6561045/beatles-let-it-be-track-by-track-album-review|title=The Beatles' 'Let It Be' at 45: Classic Track-by-Track Album Review|magazine=]|date=8 May 2015|access-date=26 July 2017|last=Partridge|first=Kenneth|archive-date=7 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170707195450/http://www.billboard.com/articles/review/6561045/beatles-let-it-be-track-by-track-album-review|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
| rev5 = '']'' | |||
| rev5Score = {{Rating|2.5|4}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3852140.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180108175100/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3852140.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=8 January 2018|title=Beatle Discs|newspaper=]|date=26 October 1987|access-date=20 April 2017|last=McLeese|first=Don|url-access=subscription }}</ref> | |||
| rev6 = '']'' | |||
| rev6Score = A−<ref>{{cite book|chapter-url=https://www.robertchristgau.com/get_album.php?id=3483|chapter=The Beatles: Let It Be|access-date=3 October 2015|title=Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the '70s|last=Christgau|first=Robert|author-link=Robert Christgau|publisher=]|year=1981|isbn=0-89919-026-X|via=robertchristgau.com|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/christgausrecord00robe_1}}</ref> | |||
| rev7 = '']'' | |||
| rev7Score = {{Rating|2|5}}<ref name="McCormick/DT">{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/the-beatles/6139196/The-Beatles-Let-It-Be-8th-May-1970-review.html|title=The Beatles – Let It Be (8th May, 1970), review|newspaper=]|date=8 September 2009|access-date=11 December 2021|last=McCormick|first=Neil|archive-date=16 May 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170516073426/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/the-beatles/6139196/The-Beatles-Let-It-Be-8th-May-1970-review.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
| rev8 = '']'' | |||
| rev8Score = {{Rating|3|5}}<ref>{{cite book|last=Larkin|first=Colin|author-link=Colin Larkin (writer)|year=2006|publisher=]|title=]|volume=1|page=489|isbn=0195313739}}</ref> | |||
| rev9 = '']'' | |||
| rev9score = 9.1/10<ref>{{cite web|url=http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/13430-let-it-be/|title=The Beatles: Let It Be|work=]|date=10 September 2009|access-date=3 October 2015|last=Richardson|first=Mark|archive-date=6 October 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151006211353/http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/13430-let-it-be/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
| rev10 = '']'' | |||
| rev10Score = {{Rating|3|5}}<ref>{{cite book|chapter=The Beatles|last=Sheffield|first=Rob|author-link=Rob Sheffield|title=]|publisher=]|edition=4th|year=2004|editor1-last=Brackett|editor1-first=Nathan|editor2-last=Hoard|editor2-first=Christian|isbn=0-7432-0169-8|pages=}}</ref> | |||
| rev11 = Sputnikmusic | |||
| rev11Score = 4/5<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sputnikmusic.com/review/31609/The-Beatles-Let-It-Be/|title=The Beatles – Let It Be (album review 2) – Sputnikmusic|work=sputnikmusic.com|access-date=3 October 2015|archive-date=7 August 2013|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130807193654/http://www.sputnikmusic.com/review/31609/The-Beatles-Let-It-Be/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
}} | |||
''Let It Be'' topped album charts in both the US and the UK, and the "Let It Be" single and "The Long and Winding Road" also reached number one in the US. Despite its commercial success, according to ''Beatles Diary'' author Keith Badman, "reviews not good".<ref>{{cite book|last=Badman|first=Keith|title=The Beatles Diary Volume 2: After the Break-Up 1970–2001|publisher= Omnibus Press|location=London|year=2001|isbn=978-0-7119-8307-6|page=9}}</ref> '']'' critic Alan Smith wrote: "If the new Beatles' soundtrack is to be their last then it will stand as a cheapskate epitaph, a cardboard tombstone, a sad and tatty end to a musical fusion which wiped clean and drew again the face of pop."<ref>{{cite news|last=Smith|first=Alan|title=The Beatles: ''Let It Be'' (Apple)|work=]|date=9 May 1970|page=2}} Available at {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150907083941/http://www.rocksbackpages.com/Library/Article/the-beatles-let-it-be-apple |date=7 September 2015 }} (subscription required).</ref> Smith added that the album showed "contempt for the intelligence of today's record-buyer" and that the Beatles had "sold out all the principles for which they ever stood".{{sfn|Doggett|2011|p=137}} Reviewing for ''Rolling Stone'', ] was also critical of the album, citing Spector's production embellishments as a weakness: "Musically, boys, you passed the audition. In terms of having the judgment to avoid either over-producing yourselves or casting the fate of your get-back statement to the most notorious of all over-producers, you didn't."<ref name="rollingstone.com">{{cite magazine|last=Mendelsohn|first=John|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/let-it-be-19700611|title=The Beatles Let It Be Album Review|magazine=]|date=11 June 1970|access-date=25 March 2015|archive-date=17 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171017094329/https://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/let-it-be-19700611|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
;Side two | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" | |||
# "]" (reprise) | |||
John Gabree of '']'' magazine found the album "not nearly as bad as the movie" and "positively wonderful" relative to the recent solo releases by McCartney and Starr. Gabree admired "Let It Be", "Get Back" and "Two of Us", but derided "The Long and Winding Road" and "Across the Universe", the last of which he described as "bloated and self-satisfied – the kind of song we've come to expect from these rich, privileged prototeenagers".<ref>{{cite magazine|first=John|last=Gabree|title= Review: The Beatles ''Let It Be''; Paul McCartney ''McCartney''; Ringo Starr ''Sentimental Journey''|magazine=]|date=August 1970|page=110}}</ref> While questioning whether the Beatles' split would remain permanent, ] of '']'' described ''Let It Be'' as "Not a breakthrough record, unless for the predominance of informal, unedited live takes; but definitely a record to give lasting pleasure. They aren't having to scrape the barrel yet."<ref name="Harris/CanUDigIt" /> In his review for '']'', ] deemed the album to be "a last will and testament, from the blackly funereal packaging to the music itself, which sums up so much of what The Beatles as artists have been – unmatchably brilliant at their best, careless and self-indulgent at their least."<ref name="Harris/CanUDigIt">{{cite book|first=John|last=Harris|chapter=Let It Be: Can You Dig It?|title=]: 1000 Days of Revolution (The Beatles' Final Years – 1 January 1968 to 27 September 1970)|publisher=Emap|location=London|year=2003|page=132}}</ref> | |||
===Completion and release=== | |||
In March 1970 the session tapes were given to American producer ]. Spector worked on the tracks and compiled the eventually released album—by now entitled ''Let It Be''. The album and the ] were released on 8 May 1970; the Beatles had already broken up by that time. The movie captured on film the critical tensions within the band, and also included footage from the rooftop concert. The rooftop performance closed with the song "Get Back", and afterwards Lennon said, "I'd like to say 'thank you' on behalf of the group and ourselves, and I hope we passed the audition." The joke was added to the studio version of the song that appeared on the album. | |||
In a retrospective review, ] of ] described ''Let It Be'' as the "only Beatles album to occasion negative, even hostile reviews", but felt that it was "on the whole underrated". He singles out "some good moments of straight hard rock in 'I've Got a Feeling' and 'Dig a Pony'", and praises "Let It Be", "Get Back" and "the folky 'Two of Us'".<ref name="AM" /> Reviewing for '']'' in 2009, ] described ''Let It Be'' as a "slightly sad postscript", adding, "there are still monster tunes here by anyone else's standards, but it lacks sonic clarity, and is peppered with under-developed, sub-standard blues."<ref name="McCormick/DT" /> | |||
Several songs from the recording sessions have been released officially in versions different from those on the ''Let It Be'' album. "Get Back"/"Don't Let Me Down" and "Let It Be" were released as singles in 1969 and 1970, respectively. "]", a Lennon composition recorded in February 1968, had been formerly released as part of the ] charity album '']'' in December 1969, for which it had been overdubbed with bird sounds. The same recording was used for the ''Let it Be'' album, with the bird sounds replaced with new orchestral and choir overdubs, but neither versions presented the song at its originally-recorded D major pitch (the '']'' version was sped up a semitone, while the ''Let It Be'' version was slowed down to D flat). The track appeared for the first time at its original speed on the '']'' album in 2003. An alternative recording (take 2, with altogether different, 1968 overdubs) was presented in 1996 on '']'', where the ] version of "The Long and Winding Road" can also be heard. | |||
''Let It Be'' was ranked number 86 in ''Rolling Stone''{{'}}s list of the ] in 2003,<ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/6598123/86_let_it_be |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060316134717/http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/6598123/86_let_it_be/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=16 March 2006 |title=The RS 500 Greatest Albums of All Time |date=18 November 2003 |magazine=Rolling Stone |access-date=10 December 2007}}</ref> number 392 in the 2012 version,<ref>Wenner, Jann S., ed. (2012). Rolling Stone – Special Collectors Issue – The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. USA: Wenner Media Specials. {{ISBN|978-7-09-893419-6}}</ref> and number 342 in the 2020 edition.<ref>{{Cite magazine|date=22 September 2020|title=The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/best-albums-of-all-time-1062063/|access-date=10 July 2021|magazine=Rolling Stone|language=en-US|archive-date=22 September 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200922163403/https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/best-albums-of-all-time-1062063/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Six tracks were live performances, in accordance with the original album concept: "I've Got a Feeling", "One After 909", and "Dig a Pony" from the rooftop performance, and "Two of Us", "Dig It" and "Maggie Mae" from studio sessions. However, the album versions of "For You Blue", "I Me Mine", "Let It Be", "The Long and Winding Road" and "Get Back" featured editing, splicing, and overdubs. The twelfth track on the album was a slowed-down version of the original 1968 recording of "Across the Universe", which had only been rehearsed at Twickenham and not professionally recorded on multi-track tape during the January 1969 sessions. | |||
It was voted number 890 in the third edition of ]'s '']'' (2000).<ref name="Larkin">{{cite book|title=]|first=Colin|last=Larkin|author-link=Colin Larkin|publisher=]|date=2006|edition=3rd|isbn=0-7535-0493-6|page=273}}</ref> On ], the 50th Anniversary multi-disc Super Deluxe Edition of the album holds a score of 91 out of 100, based on seven professional reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".<ref name="Metacritic">{{cite web|url=https://www.metacritic.com/music/let-it-be-2021-mix-super-deluxe-edition-box-set/the-beatles |title=Let It Be |publisher=]|access-date=21 October 2021}}</ref> | |||
In 1971, ''Let It Be'' won the ].{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=216}} It was also one of the nominations for the ].{{sfn|Womack|2014|p=544}} Despite his objections to Spector's embellishments and the expensive packaging, including the "blatant hype" printed on the LP's back cover,{{sfn|Lewisohn|2005|p=199}} McCartney personally accepted the band's award.{{sfn|Schaffner|1978|p=138}}{{refn|group=nb|McCartney later said that when preparing the ''Let It Be'' album for release in 1970, they all knew that the Beatles were no more and, with regard to the sleeve's "new phase" claim, "nothing was further from the truth." He added that Klein had arranged for the album to be "reproduced" because he did not find it sufficiently commercial.{{sfn|Womack|2014|pp=543–44}}}} That same year, the Beatles won the ] for the ] for the songs in the film.<ref>{{cite web |title=The 43rd Academy Awards, 1971 |url=http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1971 |website=Oscars |date=4 October 2014 |publisher=Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences |access-date=17 April 2017 |language=en |archive-date=2 April 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402003910/http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1971 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
McCartney was deeply dissatisfied with Spector's treatment of some songs, particularly "The Long and Winding Road". McCartney had conceived of the song as a simple piano ballad, but Spector dubbed in orchestral and choral accompaniment. McCartney unsuccessfully attempted to halt release of Spector's version of the song. He was fine with the orchestra, but he wanted the choir and harp to be removed. Despite the criticisms levelled at Spector over the years for his handling of the material, Lennon defended him in his famous '']'' interview 10 years later, saying, "He was given the shittiest load of badly-recorded shit with a lousy feeling to it ever, and he made something of it." | |||
] | |||
In 1988, the Slovenian band ] released a ] version of the album, also titled '']''.{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=381}} Beatles author ] comments on Laibach's notable exclusion of the title track and describes the album as "military style interpretations and choral pieces".{{sfn|Womack|2014|p=544}} For the magazine's October 2010 issue, '']'' released ''Let It Be Revisited'',{{sfn|Womack|2014|p=544}} a CD containing interpretations of the songs by acts such as ], ], ], ], ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Mojo 203 / October 2010|url=http://www.mojo4music.com/1889/mojo-issue-203-october-2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160830143957/http://www.mojo4music.com/1889/mojo-issue-203-october-2010|archive-date=30 August 2016|publisher=]|access-date=11 December 2021}}</ref> | |||
In the UK, the album was originally issued by Apple (and distributed by EMI) in a lavish boxed set that also included a book featuring stills from the ''Let It Be'' film. Several months later, the album was reissued in Great Britain in a standard LP jacket, sans book. In the United States, the ''Let It Be'' album was issued in a standard jacket, without the book. The American release was also originally issued by Apple Records, but because ] distributed the film, United Artists also held the rights to distribute the record in America. (EMI subsidiary ], which held the Beatles' US contract, had simultaneous rights to the music on the album, and could distribute the songs on various singles and compilation albums. Capitol, however, did not have the rights to release or distribute the actual album.) To indicate that ''Let It Be'' was not distributed by Capitol, the original record label in America sported a red apple, rather than the Beatles' usual green ] apple. In early 1976, when the Beatles' Apple Record contract expired, most of the group's catalogue in the United States transferred from Apple to Capitol; ''Let It Be'', however, went out-of-print in America for three years. Then in 1979, Capitol/EMI acquired ]. With this acquisition, Capitol acquired the rights to two Beatles albums previously distributed in the United States by United Artists, ''Let It Be'' and the soundtrack album ''].'' (As ''A Hard Day's Night'' had never been issued by Apple in the United States, it remained in print in America under the United Artists label when the Apple contract expired in 1976.) Shortly after acquiring United Artists Records, Capitol re-issued both UA distributed Beatles albums on the Capitol label. | |||
==Reissues== | |||
The album was first released on CD on 19 October 1987. Along with the other Beatles albums, EMI released a re-mastered CD on 9 September 2009 and an electronic version (24-bit ] and ] formats on a USB drive) on 4 December 2009. Most critics felt that the sound was significantly improved over the 1987 CD, given the superior digital transfer technology available in 2009.{{Citation needed|date=December 2009}} | |||
In 1976, the United Artists release of the ''Let It Be'' album went out of print in America until 1979, when United Artists Records was acquired by Capitol Records. ''Let It Be'' was reissued on the Capitol label, catalogue number SW 11922; during this three year hiatus, many counterfeit copies of the LP appeared on the market in the US.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_pSQEAAAAMBAJ |title=Billboard – |via=] |date=6 November 1976 |publisher=Nielsen Business Media |access-date=21 August 2011}}</ref> | |||
The Beatles would ultimately win the ] for the ] in 1970 for the songs in the movie. | |||
===''Let It Be... Naked''=== | ===''Let It Be... Naked''=== | ||
{{Main|Let It Be... Naked}} | {{Main|Let It Be... Naked}} | ||
At the same time the film's re-release was announced, McCartney announced plans to release a new version of the album that is closer to what he had originally intended for the project. The new collection, '']'', was released on 17 November 2003 in a two-disc format—the second disc contained fly-on-the-wall recordings of the band chit-chatting during the ''Get Back'' Sessions. The songs were re-mixed from the original multitrack recordings. The recording did not contain the humorous spoken passages and lavish orchestral overdubs from ''Let It Be''. The album received mixed reviews, some critics praising the simpler re-mixes and others expressing disappointment that the new album lacked the fun and humor of ''Let It Be''. As of 2009, the film had not yet been re-released. | |||
Paul McCartney, long unhappy with the original Phil Spector produced ''Let It Be'' LP, initiated a remix of the album, titled '']'' which was released in 2003. The album was presented as an alternative attempt to capture the original artistic vision of the project, to "get back" to the rock and roll sound of the band's early years. The album features alternate takes, edits, and mixes of the songs, mainly removing elements added by Spector. The album omits the group chatter, "Maggie Mae" and "Dig It", and adds a live rooftop performance of "Don't Let Me Down", a song omitted from the original album and issued as the B side of the "Get Back" single in 1969.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Naked Truth About The Beatles' Let It BeNaked |url=http://mixonline.com/recording/interviews/audio_naked_truth_beatles/ |last=Hurwitz |first=Matt |publisher=] magazine/ ] |date=1 January 2004 |access-date=21 February 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100131010312/http://mixonline.com/recording/interviews/audio_naked_truth_beatles/ |archive-date=31 January 2010}}.{{cite web |url=http://www.mixonline.com/recording/interviews/audio_naked_truth_beatles/ |title=The Naked Truth About the Beatles' Let It BeNaked |access-date=7 July 2015 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040607023829/http://www.mixonline.com/recording/interviews/audio_naked_truth_beatles/ |archive-date=7 June 2004 }}</ref> | |||
==Reception== | |||
Although ''Let It Be'' would earn the top spot on both the American and British record charts, with the "Let It Be" single and "The Long and Winding Road" also reaching #1 in the United States, the album was met with mixed reviews at the time of its release. ] critic Alan Smith wrote "If the new Beatles soundtrack is to be their last then it will stand as a cheapskate epitaph, a cardboard tombstone, a sad and tatty end to a musical fusion which wiped clean and drew again the face of pop". ] magazine was also critical of the album, citing Spector's production embellishments as a sore point: "Musically, boys, you passed the audition. In terms of having the judgment to avoid either over-producing yourselves or casting the fate of your get-back statement to the most notorious of all over-producers, you didn't...". | |||
===Deluxe editions=== | |||
{{Main|Let It Be: Special Edition}} | |||
In November 2021, '']'', a new documentary directed by ] using footage captured for the ''Let It Be'' film, was released on ] as a three-part ].<ref>{{Cite web|title='The Beatles: Get Back', a Disney+ Original Documentary Series Directed by Peter Jackson, to Debut Exclusively on Disney+|url=https://www.thebeatles.com/news/%E2%80%9C-beatles-get-back%E2%80%9D-disney-original-documentary-series-directed-peter-jackson-debut-exclusively|access-date=7 July 2021|website=The Beatles|language=en|archive-date=17 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210617142958/https://www.thebeatles.com/news/%E2%80%9C-beatles-get-back%E2%80%9D-disney-original-documentary-series-directed-peter-jackson-debut-exclusively|url-status=live}}</ref> It was originally going to be theatrically released in 2020 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the ''Let It Be'' album, but was delayed to November 2021 and moved to Disney+. A book also titled ''The Beatles: Get Back'' was released in October 2021, ahead of the documentary.<ref>{{cite web|date=13 August 2021|title=The Beatles Expanded Let It Be/Get Back Release Is Due In October|url=https://www.noise11.com/news/the-beatles-expanded-let-it-be-get-back-release-is-due-in-october-20210813|access-date=26 August 2021|publisher=noise11.com|archive-date=15 October 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211015165755/https://www.noise11.com/news/the-beatles-expanded-let-it-be-get-back-release-is-due-in-october-20210813|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
A ] of the album was released on 15 October 2021. | |||
==Track listing== | ==Track listing== | ||
===Original release=== | |||
{{tracklist | |||
All songs written by ], except where noted. Lead vocals according to ].{{sfn|MacDonald|2007|pp=276, 328–341, 367}} | |||
| headline = Side one | |||
| all_writing = ], except where noted | |||
| extra_column = Lead vocals | |||
| title1 = ] | |||
| extra1 = McCartney and Lennon | |||
| length1 = 3:33 | |||
| title2 = ] | |||
| extra2 = Lennon | |||
| length2 = 3:52 | |||
| title3 = ] | |||
| extra3 = Lennon | |||
| length3 = 3:47 | |||
| title4 = ] | |||
| note4 = ] | |||
| extra4 = Harrison | |||
| length4 = 2:25 | |||
| title5 = ] | |||
| note5 = Lennon/McCartney/Harrison/] | |||
| extra5 = Lennon | |||
| length5 = 0:49 | |||
| title6 = ] | |||
| extra6 = McCartney | |||
| length6 = 4:04 | |||
| title7 = ] | |||
| note7 = traditional, arr. by Lennon/McCartney/Harrison/Starkey | |||
| extra7 = Lennon and McCartney | |||
| length7 = 0:41 | |||
}} | |||
{{Track listing | |||
{{tracklist | |||
| headline |
| headline = Side one | ||
| all_writing = | |||
| extra_column = Lead vocals | |||
| extra_column = Lead vocals | |||
| title1 = ] | |||
| |
| title1 = ] | ||
| |
| writer1 = | ||
| |
| extra1 = McCartney with Lennon | ||
| |
| length1 = 3:36 | ||
| |
| title2 = ] | ||
| writer2 = | |||
| title3 = ] | |||
| |
| extra2 = Lennon | ||
| |
| length2 = 3:54 | ||
| |
| title3 = ] | ||
| |
| writer3 = | ||
| |
| extra3 = Lennon | ||
| |
| length3 = 3:48 | ||
| |
| title4 = ] | ||
| |
| note4 = ] | ||
| |
| extra4 = Harrison | ||
| length4 = 2:26 | |||
| title5 = ] | |||
| note5 = Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, ] | |||
| extra5 = Lennon | |||
| length5 = 0:50 | |||
| title6 = ] | |||
| writer6 = | |||
| extra6 = McCartney | |||
| length6 = 4:03 | |||
| title7 = ] | |||
| note7 = traditional; arranged by Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, Starkey | |||
| extra7 = Lennon with McCartney | |||
| length7 = 0:40 | |||
| total_length = 19:17 | |||
}} | |||
{{Track listing | |||
| headline = Side two | |||
| extra_column = Lead vocals | |||
| title1 = ] | |||
| writer1 = | |||
| extra1 = McCartney with Lennon | |||
| length1 = 3:37 | |||
| title2 = ] | |||
| writer2 = | |||
| extra2 = Lennon with McCartney | |||
| length2 = 2:54 | |||
| title3 = ] | |||
| writer3 = | |||
| extra3 = McCartney | |||
| length3 = 3:38 | |||
| title4 = ] | |||
| note4 = Harrison | |||
| extra4 = Harrison | |||
| length4 = 2:32 | |||
| title5 = ] | |||
| writer5 = | |||
| extra5 = McCartney | |||
| length5 = 3:09 | |||
| total_length = 15:50 | |||
35:10 | |||
}} | }} | ||
===Rejected Glyn Johns versions=== | |||
According to ]:{{sfn|Lewisohn|2005|pp=176, 196}} | |||
{{col-begin}} | |||
{{col-break}} | |||
'''''Get Back'' version one (May 1969)''' | |||
'''Side one''' | |||
#"One After 909" | |||
#"Rocker / ]" <small>(], ])</small> | |||
#"]" | |||
#"Dig a Pony" | |||
#"I've Got a Feeling" | |||
#"Get Back" | |||
'''Side two''' | |||
#"For You Blue" | |||
#"]" | |||
#"Two of Us" | |||
#"Maggie Mae" | |||
#"Dig It" | |||
#"Let It Be" | |||
#"The Long and Winding Road" | |||
#"Get Back (reprise)" | |||
{{col-break}} | |||
'''''Get Back'' version two (January 1970)''' | |||
'''Side one''' | |||
#"One After 909" | |||
#"Rocker / Save the Last Dance for Me" <small>(Pomus, Shuman)</small> | |||
#"Don't Let Me Down" | |||
#"Dig a Pony" | |||
#"I've Got a Feeling" | |||
#"Get Back" | |||
#"Let It Be" | |||
'''Side two''' | |||
#"For You Blue" | |||
#"Two of Us" | |||
#"Maggie Mae" | |||
#"Dig It" | |||
#"The Long and Winding Road" | |||
#"I Me Mine" | |||
#"Across the Universe" | |||
#"Get Back (reprise)" | |||
{{col-end}} | |||
==Personnel== | ==Personnel== | ||
'''The Beatles''' | |||
*] – vocals, rhythm guitar, lead guitar |
* ] – lead and backing vocals, rhythm guitar, lead guitar on "Get Back", ] on "For You Blue", acoustic guitar on "Two of Us", "Across the Universe" and "Maggie Mae", ] on "Dig It" and "The Long and Winding Road", whistling on "Two of Us" | ||
*] – vocals, bass guitar, |
* ] – lead and backing vocals, bass guitar, acoustic guitar on "Two of Us" and "Maggie Mae", piano on "Dig It", "Across the Universe", "Let It Be", "The Long and Winding Road", and "For You Blue", ] on "I Me Mine", ] on "I Me Mine" and "Let It Be", ]s on "Let It Be" | ||
*] – |
* ] – lead and rhythm guitars, acoustic guitar on "For You Blue" and "I Me Mine", ] on "Across the Universe", lead vocals on "I Me Mine" and "For You Blue", backing vocals | ||
*] – |
* ] – drums, maracas on "Across the Universe" | ||
'''Additional musicians''' | |||
* ] – ] and ] arrangements on "I Me Mine" and "The Long and Winding Road" | |||
* ] – ] arrangements on "Across the Universe", "I Me Mine" and "The Long and Winding Road" | |||
* ] – ] on "Dig It", string and brass arrangements on "Let It Be", production | |||
* ] – backing vocals on "Let It Be" | |||
* ] – electric piano on "Dig a Pony", "I've Got a Feeling", "One After 909", "The Long and Winding Road" and "Get Back", Hammond organ on "Dig It" and "Let It Be" | |||
* Brian Rogers – string and brass arrangements on "Across the Universe" | |||
'''Production''' | |||
* ] – ]ing, ] | |||
* ] – assistant engineer | |||
* George Martin – producer, original mixing (uncredited) | |||
* ] – credited as producer (final overdubs), final mixing | |||
==Charts== | |||
{{col-begin}} | |||
{{col-2}} | |||
'''Weekly charts''' | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;" | |||
|- | |||
!Chart (1970–71) | |||
!Peak<br/>position | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="auchart">{{Cite book|title=]|last=Kent|first=David|author-link=David Kent (historian)|publisher=Australian Chart Book|location=]|year=1993|isbn=0-646-11917-6}}</ref> | |||
|1 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Canadian '']'' ]<ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-119.01-e.php?&file_num=nlc008388.3809&volume=13&issue=22&issue_dt=July%2018%201970&type=1&interval=24&PHPSESSID=m89iq841abagb37ld9c0fdc1f3|title=RPM – Library and Archives Canada|magazine=]|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121011044748/http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-119.01-e.php?&file_num=nlc008388.3809&volume=13&issue=22&issue_dt=July%2018%201970&type=1&interval=24&PHPSESSID=m89iq841abagb37ld9c0fdc1f3|archive-date=11 October 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
|1 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="nlchart">{{cite web|title=dutchcharts.nl The Beatles – Let It Be|publisher=]|url=http://dutchcharts.nl/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|language=nl|work=Hung Medien, dutchcharts.nl|access-date=12 October 2012|format=ASP|archive-date=11 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121111101547/http://dutchcharts.nl/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|1 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Finland (])<ref name=Finland>{{cite book|first=Jake|last=Nyman|year=2005|title=Suomi soi 4: Suuri suomalainen listakirja|edition=1st|publisher=Tammi|location=Helsinki|isbn=951-31-2503-3|language=fi}}</ref> | |||
|align="center"|4 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Italian Albums ('']'')<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.musicaedischi.it/classifiche_archivio.php|title=Classifiche|work=]|language=it|access-date=31 May 2022}} Set "Tipo" on "Album". Then, with "Beatles" in "Artista" and "Let it be" in "Titolo", click "cerca".</ref> | |||
| 1 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="Jachart1">{{cite web|url=http://www7a.biglobe.ne.jp/~yamag/album2409/al_beatles.html |title=Yamachan Land (Japanese Chart Archives) - Albums Chart Daijiten > The Beatles |publisher=] |language=ja |access-date=12 October 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20121219134135/http://www7a.biglobe.ne.jp/~yamag/album2409/al_beatles.html |archive-date=19 December 2012 }}</ref> | |||
|2 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Norwegian ] Albums Chart<ref name="norchart">{{cite web| title =norwegiancharts.com The Beatles – Let It Be| url =http://norwegiancharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a| access-date =12 October 2012| format =ASP| archive-date =4 November 2012| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20121104132247/http://www.norwegiancharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a| url-status =live}}</ref> | |||
|1 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Swedish Albums Chart<ref name="swechart">{{cite web| url=http://www.hitsallertijden.nl/charts/swedish%20charts/SwedishCharts%200969-0872.pdf| title=Swedish Charts 1969–1972| publisher=Hitsallertijden| language=sv| access-date=12 October 2012| archive-date=14 October 2012| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121014071535/http://hitsallertijden.nl/charts/swedish%20charts/SwedishCharts%200969-0872.pdf| url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|2 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="UKcharts">{{cite web|url=http://www.officialcharts.com/artist/10363/beatles/|title=The Beatles – Full official Chart History|work=]|access-date=13 May 2016|archive-date=12 May 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160512024604/http://www.officialcharts.com/artist/10363/beatles/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|1 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|US ]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.billboard.com/artist/the-beatles/chart-history/tlp/|publisher=]|access-date=30 September 2021|title=The Beatles Chart History (Billboard 200)|language=en|date=30 September 2021|archive-date=16 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210316205331/https://www.billboard.com/music/the-beatles/chart-history/TLP|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|1 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="dechart">{{cite web|url = http://www.officialcharts.de/album.asp?artist=The+Beatles&title=Let+It+Be&cat=a&country=de|title = Album Search: The Beatles – Let It Be|language = de|publisher = Media Control|access-date = 12 October 2012|format = ASP|archive-date = 14 July 2014|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140714145439/http://www.officialcharts.de/album.asp?artist=The+Beatles&title=Let+It+Be&cat=a&country=de|url-status = dead}}</ref> | |||
|3 | |||
|} | |||
'''Weekly charts (1987 reissue)''' | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;" | |||
|- | |||
!Chart (1987) | |||
!Peak<br/>position | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Japanese Albums Chart<ref name="Jachart1"/> | |||
|8 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|UK Albums Chart<ref name="UKcharts"/> | |||
|50 | |||
|} | |||
'''Weekly charts (2009 reissue)''' | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;" | |||
|- | |||
!Chart (2009) | |||
!Peak<br/>position | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Austrian Albums Chart<ref name="atchart">{{cite web|title=austriancharts.at The Beatles – Let It Be|work=Hung Medien|language=de|format=ASP|url=http://austriancharts.at/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=10 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121110153702/http://www.austriancharts.at/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|52 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Belgian Albums Chart (Flanders)<ref name="beVlchart">{{cite web|title=ultratop.be The Beatles – Let It Be|url=https://www.ultratop.be/nl/album/18a9/The-Beatles-Let-It-Be|language=nl|publisher=Ultratop|work=Hung Medien|format=ASP|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=14 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121114024919/http://www.ultratop.be/nl/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|37 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="bewachart">{{cite web|title=ultratop.be The Beatles – Let It Be|url=https://www.ultratop.be/fr/album/18a9/The-Beatles-Let-It-Be|language=nl|work=Hung Medien|format=ASP|publisher=Ultratop|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=13 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121113234103/http://www.ultratop.be/fr/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|64 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Danish Albums Chart<ref name="dkchart">{{cite web|title=danishcharts.dk The Beatles – Let It Be|work=danishcharts.dk|url=https://danishcharts.dk/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|format=ASP|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=25 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180725120554/https://danishcharts.dk/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|40 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Finnish Albums Chart<ref name="fichart">{{cite web|title=finnishcharts.com The Beatles – Let It Be|url=http://finnishcharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|work=Hung Medien|format=ASP|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=3 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121103092101/http://finnishcharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|34 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Japanese Albums Chart<ref name="Jachart2">{{cite web| url=http://www.oricon.co.jp/music/release/d/819908/1| title=Highest position and charting weeks of ''Let It Be'' (2009 Remaster) by The Beatles| language=ja| work=oricon.co.jp| publisher=]| access-date=12 October 2012| archive-date=8 November 2012| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121108173839/http://www.oricon.co.jp/music/release/d/819908/1/| url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|18 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="mxchart">{{cite web|title=mexicancharts.com The Beatles – Let It Be|publisher=mexicancharts.com|url=http://mexicancharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130525181524/http://mexicancharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|archive-date=25 May 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
|30 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="porchart">{{cite web|title=portuguesecharts.com The Beatles – Let It Be|work=Hung Medien|format=ASP|url=http://portuguesecharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=24 October 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121024230655/http://portuguesecharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|11 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Spanish Albums Chart<ref name="spanishchart">{{cite web|title=The Beatles – Let It Be|work=spanishcharts.com|url=http://spanishcharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|format=ASP|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=5 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121105214730/http://spanishcharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|45 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="sechart">{{cite web|title=swedishcharts.com The Beatles – Let It Be|format=ASP|url=http://swedishcharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|language=sv|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=11 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121111131738/http://swedishcharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|24 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="chchart">{{cite web|title=The Beatles – Let It Be – hitparade.ch|url=http://hitparade.ch/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|language=de|work=Hung Medien|format=ASP|publisher=Swiss Music Charts|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=13 November 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111113110403/http://hitparade.ch/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|48 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="NZchart">{{cite web|title=charts.nz The Beatles – Let It Be|work=Hung Medien|publisher=]|url=https://charts.nz/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|format=ASP|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=25 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180725115522/https://charts.nz/showitem.asp?interpret=The+Beatles&titel=Let+It+Be&cat=a|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|29 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|UK Albums Chart<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.officialcharts.com/charts/albums-chart/20090913/7502/|title=Official Albums Chart Top 100 (13 September 2009 – 19 September 2009)|work=Official Charts|access-date=14 May 2016|archive-date=3 June 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160603140945/http://www.officialcharts.com/charts/albums-chart/20090913/7502/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|49 | |||
|} | |||
'''Weekly charts (2021 reissue)''' | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center" | |||
! scope="col"| Chart (2021) | |||
! scope="col"| Peak<br />position | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row"|Australian Albums (])<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.aria.com.au/charts/albums-chart/2021-10-25|publisher=]|access-date=24 October 2021|title=ARIA Top 50 Albums for week of 25 October 2021|language=en|date=24 October 2021}}</ref> | |||
|2 | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Flanders|6|artist=The Beatles|album=Let It Be|rowheader=true|access-date=24 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Wallonia|2|artist=The Beatles|album=Let It Be|rowheader=true|access-date=24 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|BillboardCanada|8|M|url=https://www.fyimusicnews.ca/fyi-charts/billboard-canadian-albums|title=Billboard Canadian Albums|work=FYIMusicNews|artist=The Beatles|rowheader=true|access-date=26 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Czech|14|date=202142|rowheader=true|access-date=25 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Finland|5|artist=The Beatles|album=Let It Be|rowheader=true|access-date=24 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Germany4|3|id=6313|artist=The Beatles|album=Let It Be|rowheader=true|access-date=25 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Hungary|34|year=2021|week=42|rowheader=true|access-date=28 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Ireland3|3|date=20211022|rowheader=true|access-date=22 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row"| New Zealand Albums (])<ref>{{cite web|url=https://aotearoamusiccharts.co.nz/archive/albums/2021-10-22|title=NZ Top 40 Albums Chart|publisher=]|date=25 October 2021|access-date=23 October 2021}}</ref> | |||
| 5 | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Poland|22|id=1399|rowheader=true|access-date=28 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Spain|5|artist=The Beatles|album=Let It Be|rowheader=true|access-date=24 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|Switzerland|3|artist=The Beatles|album=Let It Be|rowheader=true|access-date=24 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
{{album chart|UK2|2|date=20211022|rowheader=true|accessdate=25 October 2021}} | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row"|US ]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.billboard.com/articles/news/9650236/young-thugs-punk-number-one-billboard-200-chart/|publisher=]|access-date=25 October 2021|title=Young Thug's "Punk" Debuts at No.1 on Billboard 200 Albums Chart|language=en|date=25 October 2021}}</ref> | |||
| 5 | |||
|} | |||
{{col-break}} | |||
'''Year-end charts''' | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;" | |||
|- | |||
!Chart (1970) | |||
!Position | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="auchart" /> | |||
|6 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|UK Albums Chart<ref name="UKYearend70s">{{cite web|url=http://www.everyhit.com/chartalb3.html |title=1970s Albums Chart Archive |publisher=] |work=everyhit.com |access-date=12 October 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091006222356/http://www.everyhit.com/chartalb3.html |archive-date=6 October 2009 }}</ref> | |||
|6 | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="USYearend70">{{cite web|url=http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/charts/archivesearch/article_display/855911?imw=Y|title=Billboard.BIZ – TOP POP ALBUMS OF 1970|access-date=12 October 2012|archive-date=8 October 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121008070045/http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/charts/archivesearch/article_display/855911?imw=Y|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|31 | |||
|- | |||
!Chart (1972) | |||
!Position | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Japanese Albums Chart<ref name="JAYearend7074">{{cite web|url=http://entamedata.web.fc2.com/music/music_a1970-74.html |title=Top-ten of the Japanese Year-End Albums Charts 1970–1974 |publisher=Oricon |language=ja |access-date=12 October 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120716110547/http://entamedata.web.fc2.com/music/music_a1970-74.html |archive-date=16 July 2012 }}</ref> | |||
|8 | |||
|- | |||
!Chart (1973) | |||
!Position | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|Japanese Albums Chart<ref name="JAYearend7074"/> | |||
|7 | |||
|} | |||
'''Decade-end charts''' | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" | |||
|- | |||
!Chart (1970–1979) | |||
!Position | |||
|- | |||
|align="left"|]<ref name="Jachart3">{{cite book|title=Oricon Album Chart Book: Complete Edition 1970–2005|publisher=Oricon Entertainment|location=], Tokyo|year=2006|isbn=4-87131-077-9}}</ref> | |||
|7 | |||
|} | |||
{{col-end}} | |||
==Certifications== | |||
;Additional musicians | |||
{{certification Table Top|caption=Certifications and sales for ''Let It Be''}} | |||
*] – ], ] and ] ]s ("Across the Universe", "I Me Mine" and "The Long and Winding Road") | |||
{{Certification Table Entry|region=Argentina|type=album|title=Let It Be|artist=The Beatles|award=Platinum|number=2|relyear=1970|certyear=1991|certref=<ref name=capif>{{cite web|url=http://www.capif.org.ar/Default.asp?PerDesde_MM=0&PerDesde_AA=0&PerHasta_MM=0&PerHasta_AA=0&interprete=&album=&LanDesde_MM=1&LanDesde_AA=1980&LanHasta_MM=12&LanHasta_AA=2010&Galardon=O&Tipo=1&ACCION2=+Buscar+&ACCION=Buscar&CO=5&CODOP=ESOP |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706084844/http://www.capif.org.ar/Default.asp?PerDesde_MM=0&PerDesde_AA=0&PerHasta_MM=0&PerHasta_AA=0&interprete=&album=&LanDesde_MM=1&LanDesde_AA=1980&LanHasta_MM=12&LanHasta_AA=2010&Galardon=O&Tipo=1&ACCION2=+Buscar+&ACCION=Buscar&CO=5&CODOP=ESOP |archive-date= 6 July 2011 |title=Discos de oro y platino |access-date=30 September 2019 |publisher=] |language=es |url-status=dead }}</ref>}} | |||
*] – ] and ] ("Dig It") | |||
{{certification Table Entry|title=Let It Be|type=album|artist=The Beatles|region=Australia|certyear=2009|award=Platinum|access-date=12 October 2012}} | |||
*] – ] ("Let It Be" - uncredited on album sleeve) | |||
{{certification Table Entry|title=Let It Be|type=album|artist=The Beatles|region=Canada|relyear=1970|certyear=2022|award=Platinum|number=4|access-date=10 September 2023}} | |||
*] – ] ("I've Got a Feeling", "One After 909", "Get Back") and ] ("Dig It", "Let It Be", "The Long and Winding Road"). | |||
{{certification Table Entry|title=Let It Be|type=album|artist=The Beatles|region=Denmark|relyear=1970|certyear=2016|relmonth=5|certmonth=9|award=Platinum|id=4668|access-date=12 July 2020}} | |||
{{certification Table Entry|title=Let It Be|type=album|artist=The Beatles|region=France|certyear=1977|relyear=1970|award=Gold|source=infodisc|access-date=12 October 2012}} | |||
{{certification Table Entry|title=Let It Be|type=album|artist=The Beatles|region=Italy|certyear=2020|relyear=1970|award=Gold|id=1668|note=sales since 2009|access-date=31 August 2020}} | |||
{{Certification Table Entry|region=New Zealand|type=album|title=Let It Be|artist=The Beatles|award=Platinum| number=2|relyear=1970|id=2009-09-11|source=newchart|access-date=2024-11-20|note=Reissue}} | |||
{{certification Table Entry|title=Let It Be|type=album|artist=Beatles|region=United Kingdom|relyear=1970|award=Platinum|certyear=2019|access-date=3 January 2020|id=3797-1786-2}} | |||
{{certification Table Entry|title=Let It Be|type=album|artist=The Beatles|region=United States|relyear=1970|award=Platinum|number=4|access-date=12 October 2012}} | |||
{{certification Table Bottom | streaming=true}} | |||
{{small|{{sup|{{Dagger}}}} BPI certification awarded only for sales since 1994.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-23927271|title=Beatles albums finally go platinum|work=]|publisher=]|date=2 September 2013|access-date=4 September 2013|archive-date=10 April 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140410171041/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-23927271|url-status=live}}</ref>}} | |||
;Production | |||
*] – ], ] | |||
*] - assistant engineer | |||
*] – ] (final overdubs), final mixing | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* ] | |||
*] (1988) by the ]n band ], which consisted of covers of most of the songs from Beatles' album. | |||
* ] | |||
*] (1970) | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{Reflist| |
{{Reflist|group=nb}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{ |
{{Reflist|30em}} | ||
* {{cite web | |||
===Sources=== | |||
| work=] | |||
{{Refbegin|30em}} | |||
| year=2007 | |||
*{{cite book |last=Babiuk |first=Andy |author-link=Andy Babiuk |year=2002 |title=Beatles Gear: All the Fab Four's Instruments, from Stage to Studio |publisher=Backbeat Books |location=San Francisco, CA |isbn=978-0-87930-731-8}} | |||
| title=The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time | |||
* {{cite book|author=The Beatles|title=The Beatles: Get Back|publisher=Callaway Arts & Entertainment|location=London|year=2021|isbn=978-0-935112962}} | |||
| url=http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/6598123/86_let_it_be | |||
* {{cite book|last=Doggett|first=Peter|author-link=Peter Doggett|title=You Never Give Me Your Money: The Beatles After the Breakup|publisher=It Books|location=New York, NY|year=2011|isbn=978-0-06-177418-8}} | |||
| accessdate=10 December 2007 | |||
* {{cite book|first=Steve|last=Hamelman|chapter=On Their Way Home: The Beatles in 1969 and 1970|editor-last=Womack|editor-first=Kenneth|year=2009|title=The Cambridge Companion to the Beatles|location=Cambridge, UK|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-68976-2}} | |||
| ref={{SfnRef|Rolling Stone|2007}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Ingham|first=Chris|title=The Rough Guide to the Beatles|publisher=Rough Guides/Penguin|location=London|year=2006|isbn=978-1-84836-525-4}} | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book|first=Mark|last=Lewisohn|author-link=Mark Lewisohn|title=The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions: The Official Story of the Abbey Road Years 1962–1970|publisher=Bounty Books|location=London|year=2005|orig-year=1988|isbn=978-0-7537-2545-0}} | |||
* {{cite web | |||
* {{cite book |last=Lewisohn |first=Mark |author-link=Mark Lewisohn |orig-year=1992 |year=2010 |title=The Complete Beatles Chronicle: The Definitive Day-by-Day Guide to the Beatles' Entire Career |publisher=Chicago Review Press |isbn=978-1-56976-534-0}} | |||
| work=The Beatles Bible | |||
* {{cite book |last=MacDonald |first=Ian |author-link=Ian MacDonald |title=Revolution in the Head |year=2007 |publisher=Chicago Review Press|location=Chicago, IL|isbn=978-1-55652-733-3 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/revolutioninhead0003macd }} | |||
| year=2009 | |||
* {{cite book|last=Miles|first=Barry|author-link=Barry Miles|title=The Beatles Diary Volume 1: The Beatles Years|year=2001|publisher=Omnibus Press|location=London|isbn=0-7119-8308-9}} | |||
| title=I Me Mine | |||
* {{cite book|first=Martin|last=O'Gorman|year=2003|chapter=Film on Four|title=]: 1000 Days of Revolution (The Beatles' Final Years – 1 January 1968 to 27 September 1970)|publisher=Emap|location=London|pages=68–75}} | |||
| url=http://www.beatlesbible.com/songs/i-me-mine/ | |||
* {{cite book|last=Schaffner|first=Nicholas|author-link=Nicholas Schaffner|title=The Beatles Forever|year=1978|publisher=McGraw-Hill|location=New York, NY|isbn=0-07-055087-5}} | |||
| ref={{SfnRef|The Beatles Bible|2009}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Spitz |first=Bob |title=The Beatles |publisher=Back Bay Books |year=2005 }} | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Spizer|first=Bruce|author-link=Bruce Spizer|title=The Beatles on Apple Records|publisher=498 Productions|location=New Orleans, LA|year=2003|isbn=0-9662649-4-0}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Sulpy|first1=Doug|last2=Schweighardt|first2=Ray|title=Get Back: The Unauthorized Chronicle of the Beatles' ''Let It Be'' Disaster|publisher=St. Martin's Griffin|location=New York, NY|year=1999|isbn=0-312-19981-3}} | |||
| last=Lewisohn | |||
* {{cite book|last=Winn|first=John C.|year=2009|title=That Magic Feeling: The Beatles' Recorded Legacy, Volume Two, 1966–1970|publisher=Three Rivers Press|location=New York, NY|isbn=978-0-307-45239-9}} | |||
| first=Mark | |||
* {{cite book|last=Woffinden|first=Bob|author-link=Bob Woffinden|title=The Beatles Apart|publisher=Proteus|location=London|year=1981|isbn=0-906071-89-5}} | |||
| year=1988 | |||
* {{cite book|last=Womack|first=Kenneth|author-link=Kenneth Womack|year=2014|title=The Beatles Encyclopedia: Everything Fab Four|publisher=ABC-CLIO|location=Santa Barbara, CA|isbn=978-0-313-39171-2}} | |||
| authorlink=Mark Lewisohn | |||
* Friedhelm Rathjen: ''Get Back. Die Beatles in Twickenham, 2.–14. Januar 1969''. Südwesthörn: Edition ReJoyce 2018, {{ISBN|978-3-947261-08-6}}. | |||
| title=The Beatles Recording Sessions | |||
* Friedhelm Rathjen: ''Let It Be. Die Beatles im Apple-Studio, 21.–31. Januar 1969''. Südwesthörn: Edition ReJoyce 2019, {{ISBN|978-3-947261-09-3}}. | |||
| publisher=] | |||
| location=New York | |||
| isbn=0-517-57066-1 | |||
| ref=harv | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
| last=Lewisohn | |||
| first=Mark | |||
| year=1996 | |||
| authorlink=Mark Lewisohn | |||
| title=The Complete Beatles Chronicle | |||
| publisher=Chancellor Press | |||
| isbn=0-7607-0327-2 | |||
| ref=harv | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
| last=Sulpy | |||
| first=Doug | |||
| year=1999 | |||
| last2=Schweighardt | |||
| first2=Ray | |||
| title=Get Back: The Unauthorized Chronicle of the Beatles "Let it Be" Disaster | |||
| publisher=St. Martin's Griffin | |||
| location=New York | |||
| isbn=0-312-19981-3 | |||
| ref=harv | |||
}} | |||
{{Refend}} | {{Refend}} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
* | |||
* {{Discogs master|type=album|24212|name=Let It Be}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
{{Let It Be|state=expanded}} | |||
{{s-start}} | |||
{{The Beatles albums}} | |||
{{succession box | |||
{{Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media}} | |||
| before = '']'' by Paul McCartney | |||
{{Billy Preston}} | |||
| title = ] ] | |||
{{Phil Spector}} | |||
| years = 13 June – 10 July 1970 | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
| after = '']''<br /> by Various artists}} | |||
{{succession box | |||
| before = '']'' by The Beatles | |||
| title = ] ] | |||
| years = 15 June – 12 July 1970 | |||
| after = '']'' by ]}} | |||
{{end}} | |||
{{The Beatles}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 08:01, 22 January 2025
1970 studio album by the BeatlesFor other albums with the same name, see Let It Be (disambiguation) § Albums.
Let It Be | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by the Beatles | ||||
Released | 8 May 1970 (1970-05-08) | |||
Recorded |
| |||
Venue | Apple Corps rooftop, London | |||
Studio | Apple, EMI and Olympic Sound, London | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 35:10 | |||
Label | Apple | |||
Producer | Phil Spector | |||
The Beatles chronology | ||||
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The Beatles North American chronology | ||||
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Singles from Let It Be | ||||
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Let It Be is the twelfth and final studio album by the English rock band the Beatles. It was released on 8 May 1970, nearly a month after the official announcement of the group's public break-up, in tandem with the documentary of the same name. Concerned about recent friction within the band, Paul McCartney had conceived the project as an attempt to reinvigorate the group by returning to simpler rock 'n' roll configurations. Its rehearsals started at Twickenham Film Studios on 2 January 1969 as part of a planned television documentary showcasing the Beatles' return to live performance.
The filmed rehearsals were marked by ill feeling, leading to George Harrison's temporary departure from the group. As a condition of his return, the members reconvened at their own Apple Studio, and recruited guest keyboardist Billy Preston. Together, they performed a single public concert on the studio's rooftop on 30 January, from which three of the album's tracks were drawn. In April, the Beatles issued the lead single "Get Back", backed with "Don't Let Me Down", after which engineer Glyn Johns prepared and submitted mixes of the album, then titled Get Back, which the band rejected. As bootlegs of these mixes circulated widely among fans, the project lay in limbo, and the group moved on to the recording of Abbey Road, released that September.
In January 1970, four months after John Lennon departed from the band, the remaining Beatles completed "Let It Be" and recorded "I Me Mine". The former was issued as the second single from the album with production by George Martin. When the documentary film was resurrected for a cinema release, as Let It Be, Lennon and Harrison asked American producer Phil Spector to assemble the accompanying album. Among Spector's choices was to include a 1968 take of "Across the Universe" and apply orchestral and choral overdubs to "Let It Be", "Across the Universe" and "The Long and Winding Road". His work offended McCartney, particularly in the case of "The Long and Winding Road", which was the third and final single of the album.
Let It Be topped record charts in several countries, including both the UK and the US. However, it was a critical failure at the time, and came to be regarded as one of the most controversial rock albums in history, though retrospective reception has been more positive. In 2003, McCartney spearheaded Let It Be... Naked, an alternative version of Let It Be that removes Spector's embellishments and alters the tracklist. In 2021, another remixed and expanded edition of Let It Be was released with session highlights and the original 1969 Get Back mix, coinciding with The Beatles: Get Back, an eight-hour documentary series covering the January 1969 sessions and rooftop concert.
Background
The Beatles completed the five-month sessions for their self-titled double album (also known as the "White Album") in mid-October 1968. While the sessions had revealed deep divisions within the group for the first time, leading to Ringo Starr quitting for two weeks, the band enjoyed the opportunity to re-engage with ensemble playing, as a departure from the psychedelic experimentation that had characterised their recordings since the band's retirement from live performance in August 1966. Before the White Album's release, John Lennon enthused to music journalist Jonathan Cott that the Beatles were "coming out of our shell ... kind of saying: remember what it was like to play?" George Harrison welcomed the return to the band's roots, saying that they were aiming "to get as funky as we were in the Cavern".
Concerned about the friction over the previous year, Paul McCartney was eager for the Beatles to perform live again. In early October 1968, he told the press that the band would soon play a live show for subsequent broadcast in a TV special. The following month, Apple Corps announced that the Beatles had booked the Roundhouse in north London for 12–23 December and would perform at least one concert during that time. When this plan came to nothing, Denis O'Dell, the head of Apple Films, suggested that the group be filmed rehearsing at Twickenham Film Studios, in preparation for their return to live performance, since he had booked studio space there to shoot The Magic Christian.
The initial plan was that the rehearsal footage would be edited into a short TV documentary promoting the main TV special, in which the Beatles would perform a public concert or perhaps two concerts. Michael Lindsay-Hogg had agreed to direct the project, having worked with the band on some of their promotional films. The project's timeline was dictated by Harrison being away in the United States until Christmas and Starr's commitment to begin filming his role in The Magic Christian in February 1969. The band intended to perform only new material and were therefore under pressure to finish writing an album's worth of songs. Although the concert venue was not established when rehearsals began on 2 January, it was decided that the 18th would serve as a potential dress rehearsal day; the 19th and 20th would serve as concert dates.
Recording and production
Twickenham rehearsals
– Barry Miles, The Beatles DiaryIt was a disaster. They were still exhausted from the marathon The Beatles sessions. Paul bossed George around; George was moody and resentful. John would not even go to the bathroom without Yoko at his side ... The tension was palpable, and it was all being caught on film.
The Twickenham rehearsals quickly disintegrated into what Apple Corps executive Peter Brown characterised as a "hostile lethargy". Lennon and his partner Yoko Ono had descended into heroin addiction after their arrest on drugs charges in October and Ono's subsequent miscarriage. Unable to supply his quota of new songs for the project, Lennon maintained an icy distance from his bandmates and scorned McCartney's ideas. By contrast, Harrison was inspired by his recent stay in the US; there, he enjoyed jamming with musicians in Los Angeles and experienced a musical camaraderie and creative freedom with Bob Dylan and the Band in upstate New York that was lacking in the Beatles. Harrison presented several new songs for consideration at Twickenham, some of which were dismissed by Lennon and McCartney. McCartney's attempts to focus the band on their objective were construed as overly controlling, particularly by Harrison.
The atmosphere in the film studios, the early start each day, and the intrusive cameras and microphones of Lindsay-Hogg's film crew combined to heighten the Beatles' discontent. When the band rehearsed McCartney's "Two of Us" on 6 January, a tense exchange ensued between McCartney and Harrison about the latter's lead guitar part. During lunch on 10 January, Lennon and Harrison had a heated disagreement in which Harrison berated Lennon for his lack of engagement with the project. Harrison was also angry with Lennon for telling a music journalist that the Beatles' Apple organisation was in financial ruin. According to journalist Michael Housego's report in the Daily Sketch, Harrison and Lennon's exchange descended into violence with the pair allegedly throwing punches at each other. Harrison denied this in a 16 January interview for the Daily Express, saying: "There was no punch-up. We just fell out." After lunch on 10 January, Harrison announced that he was leaving the band and told the others, "See you round the clubs." Starr attributed Harrison's exit to McCartney "dominating" him.
Apple sessions
During a meeting on 15 January, the band agreed to Harrison's terms for returning to the group: they would abandon the plan to stage a public concert and move from the cavernous soundstage at Twickenham to their Apple Studio, where they would be filmed recording a new album, using the material they had gathered to that point. The band's return to work was delayed by the poor quality of the recording and mixing equipment designed by Lennon's friend "Magic" Alex Mardas and installed at Apple Studio, in the basement of the Apple Corps building at 3 Savile Row. Producer George Martin, who had been only a marginal presence at Twickenham, arranged to borrow two four-track recorders from EMI Studios; he and audio engineer Glyn Johns then prepared the facility for the Beatles' use.
Sessions (and filming) at Apple began on 21 January. The atmosphere in the band was markedly improved. To help achieve this, Harrison invited keyboardist Billy Preston to participate, after meeting him outside the Apple building on 22 January. Preston contributed to most of the recording and also became an Apple Records artist. McCartney and Lindsay-Hogg continued to hope for a public concert by the Beatles to cap the project.
Rooftop concert
Main article: The Beatles' rooftop concertAccording to Beatles historian Mark Lewisohn, it is uncertain who thought of a rooftop concert, but the idea was conceived just days before the actual event. In Preston's recollection, it was John Lennon who suggested it.
Until the last minute, according to Lindsay-Hogg, the Beatles were still undecided about performing the concert. He recalled that on 30 January, they had discussed it and then gone silent, until "John said in the silence, 'Fuck it – let's go do it.'" The four Beatles and Preston arrived on the roof at around 12:30 pm. When they began to play, there was confusion nearby among members of the public, many of whom were on their lunch break. As the news of the event spread, crowds began to congregate in the streets and on the flat rooftops of nearby buildings.
Police officers ascended to the roof just as the Beatles began the second take of "Don't Let Me Down". The concert came to an end with the conclusion of "Get Back".
Recording of the project (and filming) wrapped on 31 January.
Get Back mixes
In early March, Lennon and McCartney called Johns to Abbey Road and offered him free rein to compile an album from the Get Back recordings. Johns booked time at Olympic Studios between 10 March and 28 May to mix the album and completed the final banded master tape on 28 May. Only one track, "One After 909", was taken from the rooftop concert, with "I've Got a Feeling" and "Dig a Pony" (then called "All I Want Is You") being studio recordings instead. Johns also favoured earlier, rougher versions of "Two of Us" and "The Long and Winding Road" over the more polished performances from the final, 31 January session (which were eventually chosen for the Let It Be film; the Let It Be album used the 31 January take of "Two of Us" but the same 26 January take of "The Long and Winding Road" that Johns had used). It also included a jam called "Rocker", a brief rendition of the Drifters' "Save the Last Dance for Me", Lennon's "Don't Let Me Down" and a four-minute edit of "Dig It". A tape copy of this acetate would later make its way to the United States, where it was played on radio stations in Buffalo and Boston over September 1969.
The cover of the proposed album featured a photograph of the Beatles taken by Angus McBean on 13 May in the interior stairwell at EMI's Manchester Square headquarters. The photo was intended as an update of the group's Please Please Me cover image from 1963 and was particularly favoured by Lennon. The text design and placement similarly mirrored that of the 1963 LP sleeve. The sequencing of "One After 909", a Lennon–McCartney composition from the early 1960s, as the opening track furthered the back-to-the-roots aesthetic. The Beatles rejected the album.
The Get Back album was intended for release in July 1969, but its release was pushed back to September to coincide with the planned television special and the theatrical film about the making of the album. In September, the release was pushed back to December, because the Beatles had just recorded Abbey Road and wanted to issue that album instead. On 20 September, six days before Abbey Road was released, Lennon told McCartney, Starr, and business manager Allen Klein (Harrison was not present) that he "wanted a divorce" from the group. By December, the Get Back album had been shelved.
On 15 December, the Beatles again approached Johns to compile an album, but this time with the instruction that the songs must match those included in the as yet unreleased Get Back film. Between 15 December 1969 and 8 January 1970, new mixes were prepared. Johns's new mix omitted "Teddy Boy" as the song did not appear in the film. It added "Across the Universe" (a remix of the 1968 studio version, as the January 1969 rehearsals had not been properly recorded) and "I Me Mine", on which only Harrison, McCartney and Starr performed, as Lennon had already left the band. "I Me Mine" was newly recorded on 3 January 1970, as it appeared in the film since no multi-track recording had yet been made. Johns also rearranged the playlist, moving "Let It Be" away from "The Long and Winding Road" onto the first side. The Beatles once again rejected the album.
Final mixing
Producer Phil Spector was invited by Lennon and Harrison to take on the task of turning the Beatles' abandoned Get Back recording sessions into a usable album. The songs "Get Back" and "Don't Let Me Down" had been released on a single in April 1969 and "Let It Be" was the A-side of the band's March 1970 single. To coincide with the single, the project was renamed Let It Be. The film, now with the new title, was premiered in New York City on 13 May 1970. One week later, UK premieres were held at the Liverpool Gaumont Cinema and the London Pavilion. None of the Beatles attended any of the premieres.
"Let It Be" The Beatles' "Let It Be" from Let It BeProblems playing this file? See media help.
For the soundtrack album, Spector chose three tracks recorded live from the rooftop performance: "I've Got a Feeling", "One After 909" and "Dig a Pony". "Two of Us" was recorded "live in the studio" with the band members playing together in a single take, and without overdubs or splicing. Spector included "Dig It" and "Maggie Mae", which were improvised during the recordings. "Get Back", on the other hand, included only the section recorded on 27 January 1969, without the coda recorded the next day, and cross-faded to the remarks at the end of the rooftop concert.
Seven of the tracks were thereby released in accordance with the original plans for the Get Back project, whereas the album versions of "For You Blue", "I Me Mine", "Let It Be" and "The Long and Winding Road" include editing, splicing and/or overdubs. "Don't Let Me Down", recorded live in the studio two days before the rooftop concert, was omitted from the album. "Across the Universe" is an edited version of the original 1968 recording, played back at a slower speed (which lowered the key from D to D♭), which had only been rehearsed at Twickenham and not professionally recorded on multi-track tape during the January 1969 sessions.
McCartney was dissatisfied with Spector's treatment of some songs, particularly "The Long and Winding Road". McCartney had conceived of the song as a simple piano ballad, but Spector dubbed in orchestral and choral accompaniment. Lennon defended Spector's work in his "Lennon Remembers" interview for Rolling Stone, saying, "He was given the shittiest load of badly recorded shit – and with a lousy feeling to it – ever. And he made something out of it. He did a great job. When I heard it, I didn't puke."
Lennon chose not to credit Johns for his contribution as a producer. When EMI informed Martin that he would not get a production credit because Spector produced the final version, Martin commented, "I produced the original, and what you should do is have a credit saying 'Produced by George Martin, over-produced by Phil Spector'."
Packaging
In most countries except the United States, the Let It Be LP was originally presented in a box with a full colour book. The book contained photos by Ethan Russell from the January 1969 filming, dialogue from the film, with all expletives removed at EMI's insistence, and essays by Rolling Stone writers Jonathan Cott and David Dalton. Despite the new album title, the book was still titled Get Back. Its inclusion was another step in the Beatles' efforts to provide increasingly elaborate packaging for their records since Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. The book's lavishness increased production costs by 33 per cent, however, driving the retail price higher than for any previous Beatles album.
In the United States, the Let It Be album was issued in a gatefold cover and was initially distributed by United Artists Records instead of their usual Capitol Records, with the record using red-tinted Apple labels to reflect this change. (Capitol would acquire United Artists in 1979.) On both sides of the disc, the words "Phil+Ronnie" are inscribed into the inner dead wax.
The LP cover was designed by John Kosh and includes individual photos of the four band members, again taken by Russell. On the front cover, the photos are set in quadrants on a black surround. The album title appears in white text above the images but, as on Abbey Road and other Beatles LPs, the cover does not include the band's name. Written by Apple press officer Derek Taylor, the LP's liner notes described Let It Be as a "new phase Beatles album", adding that "in come the warmth and the freshness of a live performance; as reproduced for disc by Phil Spector". Martin and Johns were among those listed for "thanks to".
Critical reception and legacy
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Far Out Magazine | |
The A.V. Club | B− |
Billboard | |
Chicago Sun-Times | |
Christgau's Record Guide | A− |
The Daily Telegraph | |
Encyclopedia of Popular Music | |
Pitchfork | 9.1/10 |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | |
Sputnikmusic | 4/5 |
Let It Be topped album charts in both the US and the UK, and the "Let It Be" single and "The Long and Winding Road" also reached number one in the US. Despite its commercial success, according to Beatles Diary author Keith Badman, "reviews not good". NME critic Alan Smith wrote: "If the new Beatles' soundtrack is to be their last then it will stand as a cheapskate epitaph, a cardboard tombstone, a sad and tatty end to a musical fusion which wiped clean and drew again the face of pop." Smith added that the album showed "contempt for the intelligence of today's record-buyer" and that the Beatles had "sold out all the principles for which they ever stood". Reviewing for Rolling Stone, John Mendelsohn was also critical of the album, citing Spector's production embellishments as a weakness: "Musically, boys, you passed the audition. In terms of having the judgment to avoid either over-producing yourselves or casting the fate of your get-back statement to the most notorious of all over-producers, you didn't."
John Gabree of High Fidelity magazine found the album "not nearly as bad as the movie" and "positively wonderful" relative to the recent solo releases by McCartney and Starr. Gabree admired "Let It Be", "Get Back" and "Two of Us", but derided "The Long and Winding Road" and "Across the Universe", the last of which he described as "bloated and self-satisfied – the kind of song we've come to expect from these rich, privileged prototeenagers". While questioning whether the Beatles' split would remain permanent, William Mann of The Times described Let It Be as "Not a breakthrough record, unless for the predominance of informal, unedited live takes; but definitely a record to give lasting pleasure. They aren't having to scrape the barrel yet." In his review for The Sunday Times, Derek Jewell deemed the album to be "a last will and testament, from the blackly funereal packaging to the music itself, which sums up so much of what The Beatles as artists have been – unmatchably brilliant at their best, careless and self-indulgent at their least."
In a retrospective review, Richie Unterberger of AllMusic described Let It Be as the "only Beatles album to occasion negative, even hostile reviews", but felt that it was "on the whole underrated". He singles out "some good moments of straight hard rock in 'I've Got a Feeling' and 'Dig a Pony'", and praises "Let It Be", "Get Back" and "the folky 'Two of Us'". Reviewing for The Daily Telegraph in 2009, Neil McCormick described Let It Be as a "slightly sad postscript", adding, "there are still monster tunes here by anyone else's standards, but it lacks sonic clarity, and is peppered with under-developed, sub-standard blues."
Let It Be was ranked number 86 in Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time in 2003, number 392 in the 2012 version, and number 342 in the 2020 edition. It was voted number 890 in the third edition of Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums (2000). On Metacritic, the 50th Anniversary multi-disc Super Deluxe Edition of the album holds a score of 91 out of 100, based on seven professional reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".
In 1971, Let It Be won the Grammy Award for the Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special. It was also one of the nominations for the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Vocal Performance by a Duo, Group or Chorus. Despite his objections to Spector's embellishments and the expensive packaging, including the "blatant hype" printed on the LP's back cover, McCartney personally accepted the band's award. That same year, the Beatles won the Academy Award for the Best Original Song Score for the songs in the film.
In 1988, the Slovenian band Laibach released a martial industrial version of the album, also titled Let It Be. Beatles author Kenneth Womack comments on Laibach's notable exclusion of the title track and describes the album as "military style interpretations and choral pieces". For the magazine's October 2010 issue, Mojo released Let It Be Revisited, a CD containing interpretations of the songs by acts such as Beth Orton, Phosphorescent, Judy Collins, Wilko Johnson, the Besnard Lakes, John Grant and the Jim Jones Revue.
Reissues
In 1976, the United Artists release of the Let It Be album went out of print in America until 1979, when United Artists Records was acquired by Capitol Records. Let It Be was reissued on the Capitol label, catalogue number SW 11922; during this three year hiatus, many counterfeit copies of the LP appeared on the market in the US.
Let It Be... Naked
Main article: Let It Be... NakedPaul McCartney, long unhappy with the original Phil Spector produced Let It Be LP, initiated a remix of the album, titled Let It Be... Naked which was released in 2003. The album was presented as an alternative attempt to capture the original artistic vision of the project, to "get back" to the rock and roll sound of the band's early years. The album features alternate takes, edits, and mixes of the songs, mainly removing elements added by Spector. The album omits the group chatter, "Maggie Mae" and "Dig It", and adds a live rooftop performance of "Don't Let Me Down", a song omitted from the original album and issued as the B side of the "Get Back" single in 1969.
Deluxe editions
Main article: Let It Be: Special EditionIn November 2021, The Beatles: Get Back, a new documentary directed by Peter Jackson using footage captured for the Let It Be film, was released on Disney+ as a three-part miniseries. It was originally going to be theatrically released in 2020 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Let It Be album, but was delayed to November 2021 and moved to Disney+. A book also titled The Beatles: Get Back was released in October 2021, ahead of the documentary.
A super deluxe version of the album was released on 15 October 2021.
Track listing
Original release
All songs written by Lennon–McCartney, except where noted. Lead vocals according to Ian MacDonald.
No. | Title | Lead vocals | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Two of Us" | McCartney with Lennon | 3:36 |
2. | "Dig a Pony" | Lennon | 3:54 |
3. | "Across the Universe" | Lennon | 3:48 |
4. | "I Me Mine" (George Harrison) | Harrison | 2:26 |
5. | "Dig It" (Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, Richard Starkey) | Lennon | 0:50 |
6. | "Let It Be" | McCartney | 4:03 |
7. | "Maggie Mae" (traditional; arranged by Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, Starkey) | Lennon with McCartney | 0:40 |
Total length: | 19:17 |
No. | Title | Lead vocals | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "I've Got a Feeling" | McCartney with Lennon | 3:37 |
2. | "One After 909" | Lennon with McCartney | 2:54 |
3. | "The Long and Winding Road" | McCartney | 3:38 |
4. | "For You Blue" (Harrison) | Harrison | 2:32 |
5. | "Get Back" | McCartney | 3:09 |
Total length: | 15:50 35:10 |
Rejected Glyn Johns versions
According to Mark Lewisohn:
Get Back version one (May 1969) Side one
Side two
|
Get Back version two (January 1970) Side one
Side two
|
Personnel
The Beatles
- John Lennon – lead and backing vocals, rhythm guitar, lead guitar on "Get Back", lap steel guitar on "For You Blue", acoustic guitar on "Two of Us", "Across the Universe" and "Maggie Mae", six-string bass guitar on "Dig It" and "The Long and Winding Road", whistling on "Two of Us"
- Paul McCartney – lead and backing vocals, bass guitar, acoustic guitar on "Two of Us" and "Maggie Mae", piano on "Dig It", "Across the Universe", "Let It Be", "The Long and Winding Road", and "For You Blue", Hammond organ on "I Me Mine", electric piano on "I Me Mine" and "Let It Be", maracas on "Let It Be"
- George Harrison – lead and rhythm guitars, acoustic guitar on "For You Blue" and "I Me Mine", tambura on "Across the Universe", lead vocals on "I Me Mine" and "For You Blue", backing vocals
- Ringo Starr – drums, maracas on "Across the Universe"
Additional musicians
- Richard Anthony Hewson – string and brass arrangements on "I Me Mine" and "The Long and Winding Road"
- John Barham – choral arrangements on "Across the Universe", "I Me Mine" and "The Long and Winding Road"
- George Martin – shaker on "Dig It", string and brass arrangements on "Let It Be", production
- Linda McCartney – backing vocals on "Let It Be"
- Billy Preston – electric piano on "Dig a Pony", "I've Got a Feeling", "One After 909", "The Long and Winding Road" and "Get Back", Hammond organ on "Dig It" and "Let It Be"
- Brian Rogers – string and brass arrangements on "Across the Universe"
Production
- Glyn Johns – audio engineering, mixing
- Alan Parsons – assistant engineer
- George Martin – producer, original mixing (uncredited)
- Phil Spector – credited as producer (final overdubs), final mixing
Charts
Weekly charts
Weekly charts (1987 reissue)
Weekly charts (2009 reissue)
Weekly charts (2021 reissue)
|
Year-end charts
Decade-end charts
|
Certifications
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Argentina (CAPIF) | 2× Platinum | 120,000 |
Australia (ARIA) | Platinum | 70,000 |
Canada (Music Canada) | 4× Platinum | 400,000 |
Denmark (IFPI Danmark) | Platinum | 20,000 |
France (SNEP) | Gold | 100,000 |
Italy (FIMI) sales since 2009 |
Gold | 25,000 |
New Zealand (RMNZ) Reissue |
2× Platinum | 30,000 |
United Kingdom (BPI) | Platinum | 300,000 |
United States (RIAA) | 4× Platinum | 4,000,000 |
Sales figures based on certification alone. |
BPI certification awarded only for sales since 1994.
See also
Notes
- The film audio tapes from 22 January capture Harrison and Lennon discussing the Daily Sketch article, which was titled "The End of a Beautiful Friendship?" Lennon was offended by the idea that the Beatles would ever use violence against one another and is heard asking O'Dell whether they can sue Housego for his false reporting.
- In an interview he gave to some American journalists in early May, Lennon described the Get Back album as "Apple Skyline", referring to Dylan's just-released Nashville Skyline.
- Although discarded for Let It Be, the two contrasting band photos were instead used for the covers of the Beatles' 1973 compilation albums 1962–1966 and 1967–1970.
- McCartney later said that when preparing the Let It Be album for release in 1970, they all knew that the Beatles were no more and, with regard to the sleeve's "new phase" claim, "nothing was further from the truth." He added that Klein had arranged for the album to be "reproduced" because he did not find it sufficiently commercial.
References
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- ^ Kot, Greg (17 November 2003). "Let It Be, Paul". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on 6 October 2019. Retrieved 6 October 2019.
- ^ Unterberger, Richie. "The Beatles Let It Be". AllMusic. Archived from the original on 27 October 2012. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
- Far Out Staff (8 May 2020). "Ranking the songs of The Beatles' final album 'Let It Be' on the 50th anniversary". Far Out Magazine. Archived from the original on 29 September 2020. Retrieved 3 October 2020.
Arguably one of the most controversial albums of all time ...
- Lewisohn 2005, p. 162.
- Schaffner 1978, p. 113.
- Smith, Alan (28 September 1968). "George Is a Rocker Again! (Part 2)". NME. p. 3.
- Sulpy & Schweighardt 1999, p. 2.
- Miles 2001, p. 311.
- Miles 2001, p. 313.
- ^ The Beatles 2021, p. 29.
- ^ Miles 2001, p. 327.
- Sulpy & Schweighardt 1999, pp. 2, 5.
- ^ Irvin, Jim (November 2003). "Get It Better: The Story of Let It Be… Naked". Mojo. Available at Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
- Doggett 2011, p. 56.
- Sulpy & Schweighardt 1999, p. 5.
- The Beatles: Get Back| Jackson| 2021| 00:10:40
- Brown, Peter and Steven Gaines, "The Love You Make: An Insider's Story of the Beatles". ISBN 9781440674075.
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- Babiuk 2002, p. 240.
- In the Q&A session with Peter Jackson before the 30 January 2022 IMAX showing of the rooftop performance, Jackson said it was "about a half hour".
- The Beatles 2021, p. 193.
- The Beatles 2021, p. 196.
- "Beatles rooftop birthday: It's 40 years since the fab four's last ever concert". BBC. 30 January 2008. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
- "The Beatles: Get Back Part 3: Days 17–22". Disney+. 26 November 2021. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
- Sulpy & Schweighardt 1999, pp. 311, 313.
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- ^ Lewisohn 2005, p. 176.
- Winn 2009, pp. 285–86.
- "Beatles – the Legendary 22-9-69 'Get Back' Radio Broadcast (Godfather Records GR 412) – Collectors Music Reviews". 23 September 2009.
- ^ Spizer 2003, p. 162.
- ^ Womack 2014, p. 543.
- Spizer 2003, pp. 162, 228.
- Lewisohn 2005, pp. 176–77.
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- Miles 1997, p. 561. sfn error: no target: CITEREFMiles1997 (help)
- Lewisohn 2005, pp. 195, 196.
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- Hamelman 2009, pp. 136–37.
- Sulpy & Schweighardt 1999, pp. 314, 315.
- Cross, Craig (2005). The Beatles: Day-by-Day, Song-by-Song, Record-by-Record. iUniverse. p. 306. ISBN 0-595-34663-4.
- Sulpy & Schweighardt 1999, pp. 315–16.
- MacDonald 2007, p. 277.
- Wenner, Jann S. (21 January 1971). "Lennon Remembers, Part One". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
- Miles 2001, p. 374.
- Lewis, Michael; Spignesi, Stephen J. (10 October 2009). 100 Best Beatles Songs: A Passionate Fan's Guide. Hachette Books. p. 42. ISBN 9781603762656. Archived from the original on 13 April 2017. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
- Schaffner 1978, pp. 116–17.
- ^ Ingham 2006, p. 59.
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- Woffinden 1981, p. 34.
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External links
- Let It Be at Discogs (list of releases)
- The Lost Beatle Tapes / The Making of Let It Be
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Outtakes | |||||
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Albums in the core catalogue are marked in bold. | |||||||||||||
Studio albums |
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Extended plays |
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Selected compilations |
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- 1970 albums
- 1970 soundtrack albums
- The Beatles albums
- The Beatles soundtracks
- Albums arranged by George Martin
- Albums produced by Phil Spector
- Albums recorded at Apple Studios
- Apple Records albums
- Apple Records soundtracks
- Blues albums by English artists
- Documentary film soundtracks
- Scores that won the Best Original Score Academy Award
- Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media