Sixty years to the day since The Beatles played Shea Stadium in New York on their second American tour... hard to fathom that it's been THAT long since that watershed moment in rock history.
I was going to pen one of my extended screeds in celebration of and in relation to this day... but it appears that Rolling Stone magazine beat me to it. I don't think I can improve upon this article, which contains the following summation:
"...Shea was more than just the first high-profile stadium concert. It showed everyone how huge, untamable, crazed pop music could be. It destroyed the hopes of everyone who still thought the Beatles — and their young female audience — were just a passing fad, which was still the conventional adult wisdom in 1965. The Fabs couldn’t be dismissed anymore, and neither could the girls. It shattered all the cliches about how show-biz was supposed to work. Never before had that many humans joined together in one place to celebrate music — and on a deeper level, to celebrate each other. That’s why “Shea Stadium” is still the two-word code for the culmination of pop dreams at their loudest, lustiest, scariest, and most deranged."
Can't add much else to this phrase, or the overall writeup in general... so I'll just shut up and provide the music!
I was thinking about posting the venerable Purple Chick Sheaken Not Stirred two-disc set - but I think that the one offered here is better. Here's the Shea! Stadium Ultra Deluxe set, a fan-generated compilation that popped up on a Beatles bootleg site a couple of years ago. This set features the ENTIRE concert, with music from opening acts including King Curtis, Brenda Holloway, Sounds Incorporated and Cannibal & The Headhunters; 1991 stereo versions and 2003 remix/remastering of the Fab Four's set; and bonus tracks.And speaking of bonuses...
Knowing that the Shea Stadium show was going to be a big deal, NEMS Enterprises (band manager Brian Epstein's holding company) and Sullivan Productions (television host and show presenter Ed Sullivan's firm) arranged for the concert to be intensively documented on film. More than a dozen cameras were deployed in and around the stadium and backstage to capture the frenzy of the moment. The hours of tape generated were then edited down to a fifty-minute-long documentary, The Beatles At Shea Stadium, which premiered in England in early 1966, but not shown in America until January 1967.
The Beatles At Shea Stadium should not be considered a "true documentary", however. A couple of songs played that night were not included due to concerns about the film's length. The remaining songs were heavily edited.in post-production - some being overdubbed, and a couple replaced with studio versions already existing on record or rerecorded by The Beatles at a London session in early January 1966. The Shea! Stadium Ultra Deluxe set includes the soundtrack from this movie (in mono format)... and I included the film here as well, for your review and amusement.
So, again, for this post, I'm providing:
- Shea! Stadium Ultra Deluxe, a five-disc bootleg set released in 2023; and
- The Beatles At Shea Stadium concert film, released to television and theaters in 1966
I hope these offerings help you to either relive or experience for the first time the revelry, euphoria and hysteria from one of the landmark shows in music history! Enjoy, and as always, let me know what you think.
- The Beatles- Shea! Stadium Ultra Deluxe (5-disc set): Send Email
- The Beatles - The Beatles At Shea Stadium: Send Email




hi, sent email request and greatly appreciate your kind work
ReplyDeletemickjab@aol.com
got the albums .. thank you very much !! love the beatles.
ReplyDeleteI think I saw the film when I was a young lad of 5. Can't wait to hear the entire the package! Thanls for what you do here!
ReplyDeleteSweet! Thanks for the link, and appreciate all that you've done!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the links. Xmas came early this year.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the download links Mr. Heckhole! Can't wait to listen to this. Thanks again.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for the link. Much appreciated
ReplyDeleteSuper Beatles comp.
ReplyDeleteBig thanks for the Shea soundtrack. It rocks!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the Beatles Shea Staduim links.
ReplyDeleteThey are very much appreciated!
THANK YOU for the Fabs at Shea!! Fantastic and much appreciated!!
ReplyDeleteShea! Stadium Ultra Deluxe [5 “discs”]
ReplyDeleteA Brief Review by LRE (not dead yet) King
Every Beatles collector must have some version of the 1965 Shea Stadium performance in the collection, and you’re probably never going to find a better way to have it than from among the these versions. Even if Apple manages to improve the audio further, the changes are likely to be incremental and chances are you will never listen to that release more than you might these (although you will still buy it, of course).
The (mono) tape of the Complete Concert Experience is enjoyable, especially if you’re interested in seeing what the Fabs’ early contemporaries were up to. The TV mono soundtrack is about as good as you’re going to get of the original soundtrack, but of course with missing tracks and alleged fixes. Also included are a 1991 Stereo Soundtrack, a 2023 Stereo Remix of the soundtrack, and Bonus Tracks consisting essentially of Anthology Remixes.
How good are the 1991 and 2023 stereo mixes? The instruments are surprisingly good with much (but not all) of the original distortion under control. But the vocals still occasionally fade into the mix, and probably always will. The 2023 mix further reduces the crowd noises to little more than a constant hiss.
Do they improve on the originals? Sure, but not as much as you might expect — or hope. The most recent (2023) stereo mix might have been state of the art a couple of years ago but AutoTune and new AI developments (or Peter Jackson’s ironically named MAL [Machine-Assisted Learning] technology) could improve them a bit further — but at what cost? How much better do we want these to be before they are changed too much and lose the excitement of the original experience (not to mention the actual performances)? Like the Hamburg tapes, we’re never going to have pristine audio, and that’s just the way it has to be.