Anthology 2 – Benjamin Ray

Anthology 2
Apple Records, 1996
Reviewed by Benjamin Ray
Published on Oct 5, 2004

I wanted to get to this before Chris Thelen trashed it.

Well, that and because it’s a very interesting snapshot into
Beatle history.

Arguably, the most creative period in this band’s history was
between 1965 and 1967 – specifically,
Help! and
Magical Mystery Tour. I will never understand how any band
could create such incredible works of art and undergo so many
stylistic changes and experiments in just three years. This
anthology tries hard to encapsulate those three years and, while it
is destined to fail, it ends up being the best of the three
Anthology double-discs.

The first CD starts with the waning days of Beatlemania and the
fun the band was rapidly having less of. Highlights such as the
unreleased “If You’ve Got Trouble” and “12-Bar Original” give way
to a very early, very different “Tomorrow Never Knows” and a
giggle-laden “And Your Bird Can Sing.” My personal favorite is a
string-only version of “Eleanor Rigby” which is both sad and
gripping at once; personally, I would have preferred this version
over the album track. Many of the songs here are similar to their
original versions, appearing in different takes or as backing
tracks, yet one can still glimpse into the creative process as a
sort of fly-on-the-wall, peering into magic at work.

CD Two consists of most of
Sgt. Pepper in alternate forms, including an instrumental
“Within You Without You” and the basic track of “Good Morning Good
Morning.” It’s interesting to hear early versions of “Strawberry
Fields Forever;” one version even has Ringo pounding out a drum
solo at the end, proving he was more than just a beat-keeper. The
rest of the CD, though, has versions similar to their album
counterparts, and while they are fun to hear they don’t add much to
the Beatles canon.

For an interesting snapshot of genius in progress, this two-disc
set is worth the money. Beatles completists will delight in hearing
different versions of songs they love. All others, though, would do
well to purchase the five albums this set encompasses, five of the
best albums in rock history, to hear what the songs on this
anthology led up to.

Rating: B

Leave a Reply