London-Finish and five years after the most important and influential rock ‘N’ Roll Splitent, the Beatles will launch a new collection of unprecedented shots, as well as a classic documentary series remastered and expanded as part of a restart of a “anthology” project of the 1990s.
Paul McCartney, 83, one of the two surviving members of the band with Ringo Starr, 85, made fun of the announcement in an Instagram post on Tuesday, and the official website of the band confirmed Thursday.
The “Anthology” series was a multimedia project from the mid -90s that brought together McCartney, Starr and George Harrison and included three double CD albums, a television documentary and two new songs, “Free as a Bird” and “Real Love”.
The television series related the meteoric rise of the band from the clubs of Liverpool, England and Hamburg, Germany, to global fame, and sour separation in 1970.
It has been restored by teams led by the director of “Lord of the Rings” Peter Jackson and will broadcast on Disney+ on November 21. There will be a new episode, entitled “Episode Nine”, which shows images behind the “Anthology” meeting in 1994-95.
The three “anthology” albums are also remastered and relaxed along with a new fourth volume with unknown tracks of the ’94 -95 sessions.
The Beatles fans anxiously consumed the three “anthology” albums of the study exits and alternative versions in the 1990s, which captured the lush humor of the band in their first days and the creative domain they showed later. The band’s music inspired countless younger acts that were circling stardom at that time, including Oasis.
“Free as a Bird” and “Real Love” were the first new songs of the band in more than 30 years, and both were possible thanks to a low quality and low quality demonstration tape recorded by John Lennon in his New York apartment in 1977.
After Lennon died in 1980, the film finally passed McCartney through Lennon’s widow, Yoko Ono, and some creative studies of co -producer Jeff Lynne allowed the other beatles to play along with the weak and ghostly voices and piano, recorded in a simple four -track recorder.
The same tape formed the base of the “now and then” Grammy winner, the final track to present all the FAB Four, thrown in 2023.
The 2020 decade has been a rich time for the celebration of the Beatles legacy. Peter Jackson’s “Get Back” documentary showed his final album; The documentary “Beatles ’64”, produced by Martin Scorsese, reported the effects of Beatlemania after his whirlwind first visit to the United States, and McCartney continues to tour and play the Beatles classics worldwide. His American tour begins in Palm Springs, California, on September 27.
However, a question still unanswered for the obsessives of the Beatles is whether the elusive “Carnival of Light” will be launched. Made at the beginning of the sessions of “Sgt. Pepper” in 1967, the 14 -minute avant -garde rarity was made for an event in London. It was mainly driven by McCartney, but presented all the Beatles, who later supposedly vetoed his inclusion in “Anthology 2” in 1996.