The Beatles’ 1964 U.S. Albums Make Up New Mono Vinyl Box

· Ultimate Classic Rock

A new box set that collects the Beatles' U.S. albums from 1964 will arrive later this year.

The Beatles: 1964 U.S. Albums in Mono includes seven albums originally released by Capitol Records (and in one case United Artists) between January 1964 and March 1965 in mono sound. The vinyl collection was cut from the original mono masters of the LPs and will be available on Nov. 22.

The box gathers the albums from their debut Capitol release, Meet the Beatles!, through The Early Beatles, which collected songs from the group's first U.K. album, Please Please Me, most of which were included on the Vee-Jay Records release from 1964, Introducing the Beatles.

READ MORE: Every Beatles Song Ranked

The mono mixes of these albums have been unavailable since 1995. You can watch a trailer for the upcoming box set below.

The Beatles' U.K. albums differed from their U.S. editions until the June 1967 release of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. While some of the records were altered slightly (like 1966's Revolver that had a revised track listing between markets), others - such as The Beatles' Second Album and Something New - were exclusive to American listeners, compiling songs from the band's U.K. singles and albums.

What's on the Beatles' '1964 U.S. Albums in Mono'?

The Beatles: 1964 U.S. Albums in Mono includes Meet the Beatles! (originally released on Jan. 20, 1964); The Beatles’ Second Album (April 10, 1964); A Hard Day’s Night (Original Motion Picture Sound Track) (June 26, 1964; released by United Artists); Something New (July 20, 1964); The Beatles’ Story (Nov. 23, 1964); Beatles ’65 (Dec. 15, 1964); and The Early Beatles (March 22, 1965).

Four of those albums reached No. 1; Something New made it to No. 2, The Beatles' Story hit the Top 10 and The Early Beatles stalled just outside the Top 40.

All but the interview-only double LP The Beatles Story will also be available separately.

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13. 'Yellow Submarine' (1969)

The soundtrack to the animated Beatles movie (which they didn't provide the voices for, by the way) includes two previously released cuts, a handful of leftover session tracks from the era and an entire side of orchestra music from the film. Completists probably need the four new songs; everyone else can skip them.


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12. 'Magical Mystery Tour' (1967)

Released as an EP in the U.K. and as an album in the U.S., 'Magical Mystery Tour' is spotty, especially when compared to the Beatles' other records from the era. But several of its songs – "Strawberry Fields Forever," "Penny Lane" and "All You Need Is Love," especially – rank among the group's all-time best.


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11. 'Beatles for Sale' (1964)

Tasked with recording their fourth album in a little more than a year, the Beatlemania-battered quartet quickly shuttled to the studio for a loose set of covers, tossed-off originals and a few gems. Success was taking its toll on the group by now, and the tired, ho-hum 'Beatles for Sale' proved it. Just look at their weary faces on the cover.


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10. 'Let It Be' (1970)

The last album to be released by the Beatles was recorded before 'Abbey Road,' but tumultuous sessions and a messy post-production schedule delayed its debut for a year. In a way, 'Let It Be' makes a pivotal swan song, with many of the songs coming off as eulogies for a once-great group. They're still mostly excellent here, but the cracks widened beyond repair.


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9. 'Help!' (1965)

Ostensibly the soundtrack to their second movie, the Beatles' fifth album is their first real declaration of independence. They'd launch a creative whirlwind a few months later on 'Rubber Soul' that would pretty much last until the end of their career. But that album's seeds are planted here on songs like "Ticket to Ride," "Yesterday" and the hit title track.


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8. 'Please Please Me' (1963)

The Beatles recorded their debut album in one 13-hour session. And it sounds like it. The group is energized as they plow through a stage repertoire of jumpy original tunes (opener "I Saw Her Standing There") and revitalized covers (closer "Twist and Shout"). They'd get sharper and tighter in the studio, but this is the sound of the band in all of its primal, ragged glory.


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7. 'With the Beatles' (1963)

The Beatles' second album was sorta reworked as 'Meet the Beatles!' for the group's U.S. debut, and we prefer that version. But the original U.K. 'With the Beatles' stands as the official record these days. And it's not bad, mixing sprightly originals ("All My Loving") with well-oiled covers ("Please Mister Postman"). Beatlemania pretty much starts here.


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6. 'A Hard Day's Night' (1964)

The first album to include songs written entirely by the band (well, John Lennon and Paul McCartney), 'A Hard Day's Night' is pretty much 30 minutes of pure Beatlemania. From the shimmering chord that kicks off both the album and the title track, the Beatles never let up. It's easy to get caught up in their enthusiasm.


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5. 'Rubber Soul' (1965)

The Beatles responded to Beatlemania, Bob Dylan and pop music in general with their milestone sixth album. It inspired tons of artists – including Brian Wilson, who crafted the Beach Boys' 'Pet Sounds' in reply; the Beatles, in turn, responded with 'Sgt. Pepper's' – to move into a new era, free of commercial expectations and LP filler. They were only just beginning.


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4. 'Abbey Road' (1969)

The last album recorded by the Beatles (but released before the temporarily shelved 'Let It Be'), 'Abbey Road' presented a briefly reinvigorated group trying one last time to pull it all together. George Harrison delivered two of his best songs ("Something," "Here Comes the Sun"), John Lennon plugged in and rocked out ("Come Together") and Paul McCartney checked in with a sprawling centerpiece, the eight-song, 16-minute medley that stands as one of his greatest achievements.


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3. The White Album (1968)

The Beatles all but splintered into four solo artists on their messy, epic and brilliant self-titled LP (commonly known as the White Album). It took two records to contain all their ideas – some of them great, some of them maddening, all of them fascinating. It was only a matter of time before they went their separate ways; the White Album, for better or worse, leads the charge.


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2. 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band' (1967)

Pop music grew up in 1967, when the Beatles forged a masterpiece of sound, texture and melody. Its kaleidoscopic approach to record-making – layer after layer of instruments and voices piled on top of each other until it all blurs into one colorful explosion – would become a marker and pattern for everything that came after it. In many ways, it still hasn't been topped.


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1. 'Revolver' (1966)

The Beatles turned themselves inside out on 'Revolver,' exercising a creative freedom following their retirement from the road. They used the studio as their playground, turning the record's 14 songs into the sort of mind-expanding musical template that would influence artists for generations to come. 'Sgt. Pepper's' may be the more complete work, but 'Revolver' is way more fun.

Next: The Beatles 'Now and Then' Song Review