Description
This Really Easy Piano The Beatles book is full of easy arrangements of 23 classic songs by The Beatles, all for the elementary piano student. This set of songs, spanning the full career of the Fab Four, is complete with background notes and a host of playing hints and tips.
LANGUAGE | ENG-UK |
STORE | Sheet Music & Songbooks |
GENRE | Pop & Rock |
Really Easy Piano The Beatles Song List:
- A Hard Days Night (Personality: The Beatles)
- All My Loving (Personality: The Beatles)
- Can’t Buy Me Love (Personality: The Beatles)
- Eleanor Rigby (Personality: The Beatles)
- Golden Slumbers (Personality: The Beatles)
- Help! (Personality: The Beatles)
- Here Comes The Sun (Personality: The Beatles)
- Here, There And Everywhere (Personality: The Beatles)
- Hey Jude (Personality: The Beatles)
- In My Life (Personality: The Beatles)
- Lady Madonna (Personality: The Beatles)
- Let It Be (Personality: The Beatles)
- Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds (Personality: The Beatles)
- Michelle (Personality: The Beatles)
- Nowhere Man (Personality: The Beatles)
- Octopus’s (Personality: The Beatles)
- Penny Lane (Personality: The Beatles)
- She Loves You (Personality: The Beatles)
- Something (Personality: The Beatles)
- Ticket To Ride (Personality: The Beatles)
- When Im Sixty-four (Personality: The Beatles)
- Yellow Submarine (Personality: The Beatles)
- Yesterday (Personality: The Beatles
In autumn 1961 Brian Epstein, a local Liverpool record store manager, saw the band and fell in love. Unshakably convinced of their commercial potential, Epstein became their manager and proceeded to bombard the major British music companies with letters and tape recordings of the band, finally winning a contract with Parlophone, a subsidiary of the giant EMI group of music labels. The man in charge of their career at Parlophone was George Martin, a classically trained musician who from the start put his stamp on the Beatles, first by suggesting the band hire a more polished drummer (they chose Starr) and then by rearranging their second recorded song (and first big British hit), “Please Please me” changing it from a slow dirge into an up-tempo romp. The rest as they say …..is history