| 1. | Ringo arrives at Essendon Aerodrome Melbourne Australia 14th June 1964 | (commentary by Brian Naylor) | 2:34 |
| 2. | Interview with Ringo and Brian Epstein, Essendon Aerodrome 14th June 1964 | 4:21 | |
| 3. | Beatles arrive at Essendon Aerodrome Melbourne Australia 14th June 1964 | 9:20 | |
| 4. | Edited highlights from 3 hours of Beatlemania at the Southern Cross Hotel Melbourne, including the Beatles on the roof top, 14th June 1964 | 10:31 | |
| The early concert 17th June 1964. | |||
| 5. | Fever | Johnny Chester | 3:21 |
| 6. | Fingertips | Sounds Incorporated | 18:18 |
| 7. | Brontosaurus Stomp | ||
| 8. | Spartans | ||
| 9. | Drum Solo | ||
| 10. | Maria | ||
| 11. | William Tell Overture | ||
| 12. | Introduction by announcer & the Beatles "plugging in" | 0:57 | |
| 13. | I Saw Her Standing There | The Beatles | 23:42 |
| 14. | You Can't Do That | ||
| 15. | All My Loving | ||
| 16. | She Loves You | ||
| 17. | 'Till There Was You | ||
| 18. | Roll Over Beethoven | ||
| 19. | Can't Buy Me Love | ||
| 20. | This Boy | ||
| 21. | Twist & Shout |
| 1. | What I'd Say | Johnny Devlin | 3:20 |
| 2. | Fingertips | Sounds Incorporated | 18:34 |
| 3. | Brontosaurus Stomp | ||
| 4. | Spartans | ||
| 5. | Drum Solo | ||
| 6. | Maria | ||
| 7. | William Tell Overture | ||
| 8. | Introduction by announcer | 2:23 | |
| 9. | I Saw Her Standing There* | The Beatles | 27:13 |
| 10. | You Can't Do That* | ||
| 11. | All My Loving* | ||
| 12. | She Loves You* | ||
| 13. | 'Till There Was You* | ||
| 14. | Roll Over Beethoven* | ||
| 15. | Can't Buy Me Love* | ||
| 16. | This Boy | ||
| 17. | Twist & Shout* | ||
| 18. | Long Tall Sally* | ||
| 19. | Press Conference at the Southern Cross Hotel Melbourne 14th June 1964 | 21:27 |
(* Video versions, with different sound mixes, were used in the TV Broadcast Beatles Sing For Shell)
Liner notes:
These live recordings presented in
this 2 CD set have been recently re-discovered in Delaware,USA,in
May 1998.
The tapes were sourced from a retired American photographer,who
had covered the Australian - Far East leg of the Beatles 1964
world tour for a New York newspaper.
He had apparently been in possession of a copy of these tapes
since the heady days of June 1964.
Due to the poor conditions in which the tapes had been
stored,preliminary assessment of the tapes,showed that some
degradation of the sound quality of the recordings had
occurred,in particular during the Beatles' support acts section
of the tapes.
However,much of the Beatles recordings remain unscathed,and with
the use of modern sound and production techniques,every attempt
has been made to present the best ever quality of these
historical shows.
These recordings for the first time present the best known source
tapes currently available for the two concerts held at
Melbourne's Festival Hall on July 17th 1964.
Previously,bootlegs have attempted to present these recordings as
genuine and complete,but often have either omitted
tracks,substituted tracks from over shows or have used inferior
audio tracks from video tape.
These recordings of the two 17th June 1964 Melbourne shows are
totally different to those versions previously available on other
bootlegs or the "Beatles sing for Shell" Australian TV
broadcast in 1964 (& on a number of occasions since then).
While it is uncertain as to the exact origin of these
recordings,it is plainly obvious by the different mix and lower
level of crowd noise relative to the music,that these recordings
have originated from a separate recordings system to that used
record the video (+ associated audio) for the TV broadcast.
Whether these are actual inline recordings or from a separate
microphone set up,it is near to impossible to tell.
However considering the era in which they were recorded along
with the fact that multi-track mixes and recorders did not
exist,except for the rarefied hallows of recording studios (and
in 1964 only 2 & 4 track units existed),the latter scenario
is the most probable.
But we will never know for certain.
Also for the first time,a significant portion of the Beatles
support acts have been made available to the public.
Unfortunately,in trying to present to you what
"Beatlemania" must have felt & sounded like in
1964, with the inclusion of press conferences,interviews and
arrival material,all of the available support act's material was
not able to be included in this set. (maybe next time...)
The tapes,when re-discovered,had very little information or
documentation to indicate their historical nature or importance.
One tape had "17/6/64 Tape No.1" and the other
"17/6/64 Tape No.2" (For our American friends,please
note that Australia follows the British date nomenclature of
Day:Month:Year).
Thus for any one who happened to find the tapes,unless the
significance of the date 17/6/64 was apparent or they managed to
sit through the extremely poor quality (sound wise) of the
support acts,they would never know what lay on the inner portions
of the tapes.
Besides the sonic improvements & restorations to the
tapes,one of the main items which needed to be determined was if
in fact these tapes were (both) from 17/6/64 concerts.
Historical "bootleg" (both vinyl and CD) have had two
distinct concerts available from the Melbourne leg of the Beatles
1964 Australian Tour.
However,it soon was apparent that the information could not be
relied upon as the dates for the other releases ranged from June
16th through to July 1st 1964 (on July 1st,the Beatles were mid
flight,somewhere between Singapore and Frankfurt)
It is our belief that these two concerts are from the
17/6/64,given the following :
(1) the,albeit limited,information on tape reels themselves
(2) one of the concerts (the late concert) is identical to the
video concert footage filmed on the 17th June for the Melbourne
based GTV-9 Television network,and shown on Australian TV as
"Beatles Sing For Shell" (note: although the music is
the same,the actual mix is different to that available on the
video tape)
(3) The mix and "sound" of the two concerts is very
similar and to achieve such a similarity on consecutive evenings
would be near to impossible.Rather,consecutive concerts on the
same night,with equipment and settings on recorders not being
altered,is more probable.
(4) During the Sounds Incorporated set on the first tape,it is
mentioned that this particular evening was their last in
Melbourne,while Paul McCartney says the same during his monologue
between Twist & Shout and Long Tall Sally from the second
tape.
Besides confirming the date of the concerts,identification of
which reel-to-reel tape contained the early concert and which
contained the late concert needed to be done.
Here the evidence is somewhat circumstantial,but without other
evidence it is the best we have to go by.
Again we have the fact that (1) the tapes were numbered
"No.1"tape and "No.2"tape.(an obvious
deduction is that tape No.1 is the early concert and tape No.2 is
the late concert).
(2)The second tape (as already mentioned) corresponds to the
concert which was video taped,and used for the "Beatles Sing
For Shell" TV broadcast.(this can be confirmed very easily
by listening to the last portion of Long Tall Sally,where John
suddenly stops playing because a male spectator has rushed onto
the stage to shake his hand).
It seems the obvious deduction that the TV station would have
video taped the final concert of the day (17/6/64),maybe using
the early concert to set up equipment and sort of technical
problems.
Remember in 1964 video tape was a very expensive commodity.(for
those of you who do not own a copy of the Melbourne
video,technical problems still occurred,as portions of a number
of tracks are either not recorded or have glitches in them)
One of the most puzzling aspects of these tapes is that there is
only one version of Long Tall Sally,that being from the late
(video-taped) concert.(Paul's "thank you" and
introduction to Long Tall Sally is also missing from the early
concert tape.)
In fact of all the Melbourne Festival Hall bootlegs released over
the past 21 years,there has only ever been one version of Long
Tall Sally (i.e. the one with John momentarily stopping playing).
Recent CD Bootleg releases such as "All the Best From
Australia" have substitutes this single version of Long Tall
Sally for both their 16/6/64 and 17/6/64 concerts (which in fact
should have been dated as the late and early 17/6/64 concerts) or
in the case of "Melbourne Complete!",where the date is
correct,the order of the concerts has been swapped around,to have
the announcer's full introduction at the start of the CD.
One final point of confusion is that although no bootleg has ever
had two different version of Long Tall Sally from Melbourne 1964
concerts,some bootlegs actually have a second (from the early
concert) Paul McCartney "thank you" and introduction
monologue to Long Tall Sally. (This is where he thanks the
president of Melbourne fan club..... and "...his
girl...")
This Paul monologue was not evident of the tapes which were used
as the basis for this CD release.
While not directly saying that this "other" Paul
monologue is a fake,or has been taken from another concert,the
bootlegs on which this Paul monologue exists,all precede this
monologue with a version of Twist & Shout which ends with
(what appears to be) two hits of a snare drum.
The tapes which we have used only show at the end of Twist &
Shout a single drum hit for the late concert or the no-hit for
the early concert.
And to even murky the waters further,the "two snare drum
hit" is exactly the same as that at the end of the late
concert version of This Boy.
So what are two of Ringo's drum beats,from the late concert
version of This Boy,doing trying to cover an obvious edit point
between Twist & Shout and Paul's monologue from the early
concert,on these previously available bootlegs?
confused?
Then we have This Boy..... Until the re-discovery of the tapes
which have lead to this release,there had only been one version
of This Boy available from the Melbourne concerts.
And again,over the past 21 years,bootleggers had substituted the
single version of This Boy into all available concerts.
The main difference between the two versions of This Boy is that
the early version seems to almost fall apart,as the Beatles are
playing it,in the same manner as the final version of Get Back
from the Rooftop concert,some five years later,just stumbles
along.(also at the end of the late concert version,some one -
maybe John - makes what can only be described at "turkey
noise".... have a listen)
Of the support acts,the entire Sounds Incorporated sets from both
the early and late concerts have been included in this two CD
set.
Surprisingly,the sonic quality of the recording of the Sounds
Incorporated drummer,appears to be far better than that afforded
to Ringo's drum sound.
Why this is,is anyone's guess....
To complete the bill,two local Australian acts were engaged as
support acts.
We have presented one track from each of the two local acts.
Johnny Chester sings the track Fever,from the early concert and
from the late concert,Johnny Delvin sings (the not so old in
1964,Ray Charles classic) What'd I Say,backed by the group the
Phantoms.
The interview and arrival portions of this CD set have been
sourced from various (aging) documentary cine-film and video
tapes,which were taken during the tour of Australia by the local
and oversea news agencies.