Beatles Discography — Blogspot
“Come Together” (John’s Chuck Berry/”You Can’t Catch Me” plagiarism lawsuit bait) “Something” (George’s best – Frank Sinatra called it the greatest love song of the previous 50 years) “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer” (Paul’s vaudeville murder song – everyone else hated recording it) “Oh! Darling” (Paul’s Little Richard impression) “Octopus’s Garden” (Ringo co-write with George) “I Want You (She’s So Heavy)” (blues jam + white noise cut-off)
The Beatles didn’t just release music. They redefined what an album could be. In just eight years (1963–1970), they released 13 official studio albums in the UK, plus a handful of compilations that have become essential listens. This Beatles discography Blogspot article will break down every single one—track by track, quirk by quirk—so you can listen along, compare pressings, or settle arguments with your fellow Beatlemaniacs. beatles discography blogspot
“Two of Us” (Paul & John acoustic, but they’re barely speaking) “Dig a Pony” “Across the Universe” (John’s cosmic poem – the Let It Be version has orchestral overdubs) “I Me Mine” (George, recorded after John quit) “Dig It” (12-minute jam edited to 50 seconds) “Let It Be” (Paul’s mother Mary in a dream) “Maggie Mae” (Liverpool folk song snippet) “I’ve Got a Feeling” (Paul/John mashup) “One After 909” (written 1958, finally recorded) “The Long and Winding Road” (Phil Spector’s strings, which Paul hated) “For You Blue” (George’s 12-bar) “Get Back” (as a single, better) In just eight years (1963–1970), they released 13