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Various Artists - All This & World War Two (1976)

Track listing:
  1. Magical Mystery Tour Ambrosia 3:45
  2. Lucy In The Sky with Diamonds Elton John 5:55
  3. Golden Slumbers Carry That Weight Bee Gees 3:04
  4. I Am The Walrus Leo Sayer 3:40
  5. She's Leaving Home Bryan Ferry 3:00
  6. Lovely Rita Roy Wood 1:11
  7. When I'm Sixty-Four Keith Moon 2:32
  8. Get Back Rod Stewart 4:16
  9. Let It Be Leo Sayer 3:38
  10. Yesterday David Essex 2:39
  11. With A Little Help From my Friends Jeff Lynne 6:42
  12. Because Lynsey De Paul 1:50
  13. She Came In Through the Bathroom Window Bee Gees 3:18
  14. Michelle Richard Cocciante 3:53
  15. We Can Work It Out The Four Seasons 2:34
  16. The Fool On The Hill Helen Reddy 3:29
  17. Maxwell's Silver Hammer Frankie Laine 3:22
  18. Hey Jude The Brothers Johnson 4:48
  19. Polythene Pam Roy Wood 1:29
  20. Sun King Bee Gees 2:00
  21. Getting Better Status Quo 2:16
  22. The Long And Winding Road Leo Sayer 4:35
  23. Help! Henry Gross 3:00
  24. Strawberry Fields Forever Peter Gabriel 2:25
  25. A Day In The Life Frankie Valli 3:55
  26. Come Together Tina Turner 3:57
  27. You Never Give Me Your Money Wil Malone 5:17

Notes


Record executive Russ Regan, instrumental for his behind-the-scenes work with Harriet Schock, Genya Ravan, and producer Jimmy Miller, was involved in the creation of this soundtrack to the 20th Century Fox documentary film All This and World War II. Produced by Lou Reizner, the London Symphony Orchestra and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, arranged by Wil Malone and conducted by Harry Rabinowitz, back up an amazing array of stars on Beatles covers. What this is, truly, is one of the first Beatles tribute albums, and it is extraordinary. Peter Gabriel performing "Strawberry Fields Forever should be a staple on classic hits radio stations. It's a natural, but how about David Essex doing "Yesterday," Leo Sayer on "Let It Be," or the Four Seasons interpreting "We Can Work It Out"? Where the dismal soundtrack to the film Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band had hits and misses, this is a very cohesive and impressive work of art. The Brothers Johnson re-create Hey Jude, and its soulful reading is not what Earth, Wind and Fire did to "Got To Get You Into My Life" -- their Top Ten 1978 hit from the Sgt. Pepper soundtrack -- but it is just as cool. In 1994 BMG released Symphonic Music of the Rolling Stones, which had Marianne Faithful sounding like Melanie Safka on "Ruby Tuesday" (or is it the other way around) and Mick Jagger re-creating "Angie," but that was 18 years after this, and doesn't have the marquee value of this double-vinyl LP chock full of stars. This is four sides of orchestrated Beatles, with the Status Quo, Ambrosia, and Bryan Ferry on a version of "She's Leaving Home" that was meant exclusively for him, as is Helen Reddy's take on "Fool on the Hill." Leo Sayer gets to do "The Long and Winding Road" as well as "I Am the Walrus," while Frankie Valli does "A Day in the Life" to augment his Four Seasons track. It is nice to see Jeff Lynne and Roy Wood on the same album again, Wood with "Polythene Pam"and "Lovely Rita," future Beatles co-producer Jeff Lynne cutting his teeth on about seven minutes of "With a Little Help From My Friends"/"Nowhere Man." Tina Turner reprises her classic "Come Together," Elton John, of course, has to weigh in with "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," while the Bee Gees are spread out over the record doing bits and pieces of the Abbey Road medley, "Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight" on side one, less than two minutes of "She Came in Through the Bathroom Window" on side two, and two minutes of "Sun King" on side three. Frankie Laine, Status Quo, and a delirious Keith Moon add to the festivities, but it is the Peter Gabriel track which gets the nod as the over-the-top performance here; Moon's rant is so out-there and off-key it disturbs the momentum. We have to give him a pass, though. It's Keith Moon, and he never made it to 64! Keep in mind that, two years later, the Bee Gees, Helen Reddy, Frankie Valli, and Tina Turner would show up in the Sgt. Peppers Lonely Heart Club Band soundtrack and film as well, so maybe this is where the idea for that came to be. Utilizing the Elton John number-one hit from two years earlier, "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," insures that a Beatle is involved in this project, as John Lennon performed on that single under the name Dr. Winston O'Boogie, though it might have been interesting had they added the Royal Philharmonicto the original tape. Well, on second thought, maybe not. Still, it is a classic, classic album that deserves a better place in rock history, certainly more so than the aforementioned Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band soundtrack. Definitely worth seeking out.