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The Beatles - One (1970)

Track listing:
  1. Love Me Do 2:19
  2. From Me To You 1:55
  3. She Loves You 2:19
  4. I Wanna Hold Your Hand 2:24
  5. Can't Buy Me Love 2:10
  6. A Hard Day's Night 2:31
  7. I Feel Fine 2:15
  8. Eight Days A Week 2:42
  9. Ticket To Ride 3:08
  10. Help! 2:16
  11. Yesterday 2:03
  12. Day Tripper 2:45
  13. We Can Work It Out 2:13
  14. Paperback Writer 2:16
  15. Yellow Submarine 2:37
  16. Eleanor Rigby 2:04
  17. Penny Lane 2:58
  18. All You Need Is Love 3:42
  19. Hello, Goodbye 3:23
  20. Lady Madonna 2:14
  21. Hey Jude 6:59
  22. Get Back 3:08
  23. The Ballad of John and Yoko 2:58
  24. Something 2:59
  25. Come Together 4:14
  26. Let It Be 3:48
  27. The Long and Winding Road 3:35

Notes


Apparently, there was a gap in the Beatles' catalog, after all — all the big hits weren't on one tidy, single-disc compilation. It's not the kind of gap you'd necessarily notice — it's kind of like realizing you don't have a pair of navy blue dress socks — but it was a gap all the same, so the group released Beatles 1 late in 2000, coinciding with the publication of their official autobiography, the puzzlingly titled Anthology. The idea behind this compilation is to have all the number one singles the Beatles had, either in the U.K. or U.S., on one disc, and that's pretty much what this generous 27-track collection is. It's easy, nay necessary, to quibble with a couple of the judgment calls — look, "Please Please Me" should be here instead of "From Me to You," and it's unforgivable to bypass "Strawberry Fields Forever" (kick out "Yellow Submarine" or "Eleanor Rigby") — but there's still no question that this is all great music, and there is a bit of a rush hearing all these dazzling songs follow one after another. If there's any complaint, it's that even if it's nice to have something like this, it's not really essential. There's really no reason for anyone that owns all the records to get this too — if you've lived happily without the red or blue albums, you'll live without this. But, if you give this to any six- or seven-year-old, they'll be pop fans, even fanatics, for life. And that's reason enough for it to exist.