Remember When: A Pair of Compilations Put The Beatles Back on the Charts
The hangover from The Beatles‘ breakup was still stubbornly lingering in 1973. Legal proceedings entangling the principals were very much still in play. Fans of the Fab Four certainly couldn’t take for granted any sign of unity from the four band members.
All of which is to say the timing of the release of two greatest hits compilations, 1962-1966 and 1967-1970, couldn’t have been any better. The collections rose to the top of the charts and sparked a massive wave of nostalgia for the dearly missed group.
Oddly enough, the whole affair might not have happened were it not for someone trying to beat the group to the punch. A company based in New Jersey released a pair of four-disc collections in 1972 titled The Beatles Alpha/Omega. At the time, copyright laws weren’t nearly as strict as they are now, so the creators of these collections decided to roll the dice.
The song selection for these sets was quite haphazard, as it not only included some random Beatles tracks that were far from hits, but it also peppered in some solo Fab Four material as well. Sound quality wasn’t ideal, as the recordings were just pulled from existing LPs, rather than the group’s master recordings.
Source: americansongwriter.com/Jim Beviglia