Episodes of Family Guy 1-7 are on each season release in the UK

March 4th, 2010

Ok, there is much confusion about what episodes of Family Guy 1-7 are on each season release in the UK. It is pretty messed up! So here is a list of all the episodes and which box set they are on in the UK. The numbers after each episode are the USA episode numbers.

Season One
Disk 1:
Death Has A Shadow (1-1)
I Never Met The Dead Man (1-2)
Mind Over Murder (1-4)
Chitty Chitty Death Bang (1-3)
A Hero Sits Next Door (1-5)
The Son Also Draws (1-6)
Brian: Portrait of a Dog (1-7)
Disk 2:
Peter, Peter, Caviar Eater (2-1)
Running Mates (2-10)
Holy Crap (2-2)
If I’m Dyin’, I’m Lyin’ (2-9)
Love Thy Trophy (2-5)
Death Is A Bitch (2-6)
The King Is Dead (2-7)

Season Two
Disk 1:
Da Boom (2-3)
Brian In Love (2-4)
I Am Peter, Hear Me Roar (2-8)
A Picture Is Worth 1,000 Bucks (2-11)
Fifteen Minutes of Shame (2-12)
Road To Rhode Island (2-13)
Let’s Go To The Hop (2-14)
Dammit Janet! (2-15)
Disk 2:
There’s Something About Paulie (2-16)
He’s Too Sexy For His Fat (2-17)
E. Peterbus Unum (2-18)
The Story On Page One (2-19)
Wasted Talent (2-20)
Fore, Father (2-21)
When You Wish Upon A Weinstein (3-22)

Season Three
Disk 1:
The Thin White Line (3-1)
Brian Does Hollywood (3-2)
Mr. Griffin Goes To Washington (3-3)
One If By Clam, Two If By Sea (3-4)
And The Weiner Is… (3-5)
Death Lives (3-6)
Lethal Weapons (3-7)
Disk 2:
The Kiss Seen Around The World (3-8)
Mr. Saturday Knight (3-9)
A Fish Out Of Water (3-10)
Emission Impossible (3-11)
To Live And Die In Dixie (3-12)
Screwed The Pooch (3-13)
Peter Griffin: Husband, Father…Brother? (3-14)
Disk 3:
Ready, Willing and Disabled (3-15)
A Very Special Family Guy Freakin’ Christmas (3-16)
Brian Wallows and Peter’s Swallows (3-17)
From Method To Madness (3-18)
Stuck Together, Torn Apart (3-19)
Road To Europe (3-20)
Family Guy Viewer Mail #1 (3-21)

Season Four
Disk 1:
North By North Quahog (4-1)
Fast Times At Buddy Cianci Jr. High (4-2)
Blind Ambition (4-3)
Don’t Make Me Over (4-4)
Disk 2:
The Cleveland-Loretta Quagmire (4-5)
Petarded (4-6)
Brian The Bachelor (4-7)
8 Simple Rules For Buying My Teenage Daughter (4-8)
Disk 3:
Breaking Out Is Hard To Do (4-9)
Model Misbehavior (4-10)
Peter’s Got Woods (4-11)
Perfect Castaway (4-12)
Jungle Love (4-13)
Special Features – Quite a few!

Season Five
Disk 1:
PTV (4-14)
Brian Goes Back To College (4-15)
The Courtship of Stewie’s Father (4-16)
The Fat Guy Strangler (4-17)
The Father, The Son, And The Holy Fonz (4-18)
Disk 2:
Brian Sings & Swings (4-19)
Patriot Games (4-20)
I Take Thee Quagmire (4-21)
Sibling Rivalry (4-22)
Deep Throats (4-23)
Disk 3:
Peterotica (4-24)
You May Now Kiss The…Uh…Guy Who Receives (4-25)
Petergeist (4-26)
The Griffin Family History (4-27)
Special Features – Deleted Scenes (pretty sad there’s no more than that!)

Season Six
Disk 1:
Stewie Loves Lois (5-1)
Mother Tucker (5-2)
Hell Comes To Quahog (5-3)
Saving Private Brian (5-4)
Whistle While Your Wife Works (5-5)
Prick Up Your Ears (5-6)
Disk 2:
Chick Cancer (5-7)
Barely Legal (5-8)
Road To Rupert (5-9)
Peter’s Two Dads (5-10)
The Tan Aquatic With Steve Zissou (5-11)
Airport ‘07 (5-12)
Bill and Peter’s Bogus Journey (5-13)
Special Features – a few

Season Seven
Disk 1:
No Meals On Wheels (5-14)
Boys Do Cry (5-15)
No Chris Left Behind (5-16)
It Takes A Village Idiot, And I Married One (5-17)
Meet The Quagmires (5-18)
Disk 2:
Movin’ Out (Brian’s Song) (6-2)
Believe It Or Not, Joe’s Walking On Air (6-3)
Stewie Kills Lois (6-4)
Lois Kills Stewie (6-5)
McStroke (6-8)
Padre de Familia (6-6)
Peter’s Daughter (6-7)
Disk 3:
Special Features – Includes ‘100th Episode Special’ from Season 6

USA Episodes NOT on any UK discs so far (that I have seen):
Stewie B. Goode (4-28)
Bango Was His Name Oh (4-29)
Stu & Stewie’s Excellent Adventre (4-30)
Back To The Woods (6-9)
Play It Again, Brian (6-10)
The Former Life of Brian (6-11)
Long John Peter (6-12)
Any of the Season 7 (USA) episodes

On a separate release:
Blue Harvest (6-1)

So there you are. Hope this helps!

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The Beatles-Remastered Stereo

January 28th, 2010

Buy The Beatles-Remastered Stereo Click here

The Beatles-Remastered Stereo. As many of you, I am a huge Beatles fan. To me they are simply the best thing that ever happened to 20th century music. Their songs echo everywhere we go in the works of countless bands they influenced. And they are still beautiful after all these years.

So it was with a lot of anticipation that I bought this The Beatles-Remastered Stereo. And as I opened The Beatles-Remastered Stereo, I must say I was overwhelmed with all the care, love and effort put by EMI in making this set the Beatles celebration they deserve.

ABOUT The Beatles-Remastered Stereo ITSELF
The whole package comes in a beautifully crafted box with the Beatles logo. Opening The Beatles-Remastered Stereo, I found the most beautiful set of CDs. Each one in a digipack reproducing the original artwork. Those digipack editions are very fragile because basically it is all paper. So I do recommend the purchase of this stereo box – so the CDs are kept safe.

The digipacks come with photos and the artwork of each disc is simply gorgeous.

ABOUT THE MUSIC
Wow… I sounds beautiful.
Not only the stereo sounds great, the whole sound looks sharper, clearer and brighter. The Beatles-Remastered Stereo look like it was all recorded yesterday (ha!).

Listening to ELEANOR RIGBY, MICHELLE, YESTERDAY, FOR NO ONE, AND I LOVE HER, I FEEL FINE and CAN’T BUY ME LOVE (for example) was a wonderful experience. The recording simply comes to life with a beautiful stereo sound like nothing I ever heard. Those old editions from 1987 really sound awful when compared. For No One is a great example: the french horn part is is much more dynamic and warm.

The later recordings like ABBEY ROAD and GET BACK sound simply amazing. GET BACK (the song) is so clearer I felt I was listening to all instruments live in my room. It sounds like all instruments are really there together without the muffled sound of the old edition (funny I say “muffled” now since I was used to think those old editions were great). The Beatles-Remastered Stereo is like listening to it all for the first time.

On ABBEY ROAD, for example, the great string of non stop songs in the middle of the album is so rich I had to play certain segments again (because I was amazed). POLYTHENE PAM and SHE CAME THROUGH THE BATHROOM WINDOW are amazing! – And they left me feeling that The Beatles’ lesser known songs must all be rediscovered because they sound so good! George Harrison’s SOMETHING almost made me cry.

Finally we have The Beatles-Remastered Stereo we can blast through our speakers and completely obliterate any Justin Timberlake or Jonas Brothers our neighbors are playing. (laughs) Just put GLASS ONION, I AM THE WALRUS or CARRY THAT WEIGHT and look at the neighbors’ kids’ eyes as they put Kanye West’s CD back in its case. (laughs)

I was afraid The Beatles-Remastered Stereo separation would feel plastic and artificial – I don’t know why – but no, I did not have that feeling while listening to this set. It seems The Beatles-Remastered Stereo was all recorded and handled with lots of care, love and cutting edge technology.

This is a great day to celebrate the biggest band ever!
And congratulations to the EMI team who made this possible and put this all together.

I’m very happy to own this The Beatles-Remastered Stereo.

Thank you Poputrade.com

Sorry Stereo, But Beatles in Mono Rocks a Lot More

January 28th, 2010

Welcome to Wholesale The Beatles in Mono DVDs on poputrade

Beatles’ record producer and arranger George Martin—the Fifth Beatle—once said: “You’ve never really heard Sgt Pepper until you’ve heard it in mono.” As it turned out after hours of listening tests, it’s completely true.

The first article I ever got published was an opinion piece on Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. I was 16 at the time and, needless to say, quite naive. I wasn’t very much into non-Beatles music at that age, mainly because I didn’t have much access to it. It wasn’t until the next year that I was able to buy music regularly, having at last my own stereo system. But back then, my music world was all about the Beatles—and crap 90s radio pop. My dad had Sgt Pepper along with the rest of the Beatles’ records and some compilations of classic rock, from Chuck Berry to bloody Kansas, so that was my music world.

I couldn’t stop listening to Sgt Pepper. Non stop, I played it and played it until my ears bleed and then I played it some more. It was the stereo version, not the mono mix, and it has lived with me ever since. Then, a few months ago I read in The Word—a very good British music magazine—that the Beatles in mono are—like George Martin implied—better than the Beatles in stereo. Apparently, the Beatles didn’t give a damn about the stereo mix, only about the mono. In fact, they cared so little that they passed on the stereo mixing sessions: Once the mono was done, they left the building.

So I started looking for them. Finding the actual mono mix in the market was impossible. Not to talk about the fact that I don’t have a turntable anymore. For some reason, the Beatles company didn’t have the mono mixes of the Beatles’ albums available either—they are going to re-release them now, it seems, remastered—so I got into Torrent to hunt them down. I couldn’t find them in the first try. I found a couple of MP3 rips, but I wanted to have FLAC rips of the original vinyls. After some time I gave up, forgetting about the mono Beatles until the Gizmodo’s audio week.

I thought trying it would be interesting for a feature, so I started looking for them again and got 192kbps MP3s, which I compared to the stereo version at the same bit rate. Since Sgt Pepper was my album, I started to listen to its songs in pairs, with my earmuff headphones on.

I was blown away. George Martin was oh so right: The songs do sound different. I was so surprised, that at the beginning I freaked out. “What? What? How? What the fuck?” was in my mind all the time.

When Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band came up, my first impression was that the sound had more thump than the stereo mix. A lot more thump, for a lack of a better word. It was like someone was beating me with a hammer. It was kind of noisy, but it filled my head and pushed me in a way the stereo version didn’t.

Then good old Ringo—my favorite Beatle—came up singing With A Little Help From My Friends. Same effect. It felt weird, but so much better. I kept coming back to the stereo versions for comparison and, before I noticed, I was thinking: “These sounds a lot weaker. These sound artificial.” Gone was the separation of instruments in the right and left channel too, which now feels so artificial. It was artificial, since stereo was a novelty back then: Most people still listened to music in mono and stereo was the “new thing.” As a result, producers overused it, just for the sake of it, like when 3D cinema came out and everything was an excuse to fire arrows and rocks and monsters at the public.

I definitely liked the way the mono version sounded—a lot more, even while I knew the stereo version till the last beat and note. LSD came up: same result. The sound is crisper and nearer. The bass a lot better. Again that special thump, even while this is such a delicate song. Getting Better gets better, and so does the rest, Fixing a Hole, She’s Leaving Home, Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite… I just couldn’t have enough.

But that wasn’t all. In the mono version you can hear stuff that is not in the stereo version. And not just bits, but quite a lot of things. Instruments, notes, even lyrics. Take the reprise version of Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band: It is full of shouting—Lennon going bananas at the end, and other bits at the beginning—that is not in the stereo mix.

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The Beatles is amazing

January 28th, 2010

Welcome to Wholesale The Beatles in Mono DVDs on poputrade

In the article below we cited the song There’s a Place as being on the Beatles second album, With the Beatles. It was actually on their first album, Please Please Me.


Something strange happened to the public perception of the Beatles in the 90s. Britpop’s open worship finally elevated them to an utterly unimpeachable position – it’s impossible to imagine any artist today daring to be photographed defacing a Beatles sleeve, as Johnny Rotten once was – but it promoted a foreshortened version of the Fab Four, one whose career begins with Rubber Soul, or at a push, 1965’s Help! These days, their first four albums are invariably vastly outsold by those that came later, when drugs and sitars and the fear of encountering an unexpected vocal contribution from Yoko Ono had caused their more conservative fans to flee: “The Beatles have got awfully strange these days,” as famous Windsor-based rock critic Queen Elizabeth II is alleged to have protested in 1967. As a result, The Beatles enjoyed by HRH – mop-topped and besuited, packaged for family consumption – appear to have ended up tainted by a certain naffness in modern eyes.

But at the time, they were clearly anything but. They may be more sophisticated, varied and vastly more influential on current music, but The White Album and Revolver didn’t change the world in the way Please Please Me and With The Beatles did. If you believe the late Ian MacDonald’s peerless book Revolution in the Head, the latter albums signalled a social change “away from the old class-based order of deference to ‘elders and betters’ to the frank and fearless energy of the younger generation”. Set against that, inspiring Be Here Now and Beetlebum seems pretty small beer.

Nevertheless, if you weren’t around in 1963, it’s sometimes been difficult to work out precisely why the music contained on the early Beatles albums had such impact. If you grew up in the 70s or later, you invariably heard them in that terrible early-60s brand of stereo, with the instruments bunged in one speaker and the vocals in the other, as if a blustery old man with a bowler hat had covertly crept into Abbey Road and attempted to sabotage the coming youth revolution by making its harbingers seem as pathetic as possible. The 1987 Beatles CDs restored the first four albums to mono, but they still sounded brittle and tinny, as if they’d have difficulty changing a lightbulb, let alone the social order of Britain.

This may be where The Beatles in Mono comes into its own. At first glance, it looks an extravagant frippery: a £240 11-CD box set, featuring perfect miniature reproductions of albums pristinely remastered in a sonic format rendered obsolete almost half a century ago. But until 1969, the Beatles were disinterested in stereo: they oversaw the mono mixes of their albums, then left the rest to George Martin. The box set can thus proudly claim to offer “the closest you can get to hearing the authentic sound of the Beatles“. On the later albums, that amounts to a handful of cosmetic differences: if it’s striking to hear Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds with added psychedelic phasing effects, it doesn’t radically alter your perception of the song. The early albums, however, are transformed.

The Beatles sound taut, vital and surprisingly brutal. Plenty of 60s British bands covered material by black US artists: they tended to bowdlerise it, but The Beatles made it more visceral. There’s something authentically deranged about their covers of Twist and Shout and Money. Smokey Robinson’s fabulous You Really Got a Hold On Me has its emotional compass shifted from melancholy to torment, with electrifying results.

If their debut suffers from a deficit of great original material, that only makes the subsequent qualitative leaps all the more astonishing. Within a matter of months, they had gone from the schmaltz of PS I Love You and Ask Me Why to the accomplishment and forcefulness of With The Beatles‘ There’s a Place and Not a Second Time. Equally striking is how early and strongly The Beatles‘ respective personalities foregrounded themselves. The kind of anguish that was Lennon’s stock-in-trade from Help! through to I Want You (She’s So Heavy) is evident from the start: literally his first lead vocal on a Beatles album is “the world is treating me bad – misery”. With The Beatles‘ Don’t Bother Me is the first in a long line of George Harrison songs in which people were advised to bugger off.

By the time of 1964’s The Beatles for Sale, they’re confidently pushing at the boundaries of their chirpy image. It opens with No Reply, I’m a Loser and Baby’s in Black: utterly downcast, emotionally raw. Listening to them here, they sound not like a relic from a forgotten era of the 60s, but as thrilling and daring as they must have once done blaring from a Dansette in a suburban bedroom. You’d have to have cloth ears not to understand what the fuss was about.

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Introduction-The Beatles in Mono and stereo reissues

January 28th, 2010

Welcome to Wholesale The Beatles in Mono DVDs on poputrade

Introduction: The following is pretty much a full review of both the mono and stereo reissues largely written in real time as a series of e-mails to an old friend who once owned a legendary record store here in Chicago. The story of the reissues really comes down to the technical limitations of two-track, four-track, eight-track, etc. recordings and the relative complexity of the music of the Beatles. Listening occurred on what would be considered an audiophile system with Quad 988’s as the speakers. If following reading this review, you wish to read an expanded essay by me on the box sets, please visit The Beatles Wiki site by Hyperarts.

Please Please Me: The sound on the mono is just amazing. You can hear the echo in the room as John sings Anna. The vocals just soar. Ringo was just so good, even at this early stage and so was Paul. They supported and framed the songs so perfectly. And just think, in twenty-one minutes, or so, Twist And Shout! Stereo can’t hold a candle to this, if for no other reason than the left/right “stereo” found later in With The Beatles, Rubber Soul and Revolver.

With The Beatles: As with Please Please Me, the mono sounds so, so, nice. As the stereo has that annoying left/right “stereo,” no contest: mono hands down.

A Hard Day’s Night: Seems better and more enjoyable in stereo. I think the reason is that they now had four tracks so George Martin could do proper stereo mixes and still have a mostly fresh first generationish sound. Remember, there were only two track available for Please Please Me. However, when they got to Rubber Soul and Revolver, four tracks weren’t enough, which required, in some instances, numerous dubs of the four tracks to another four track tape, merging the four tracks to one track, thereby opening up three new tracks. While this degraded the sound somewhat it also made it difficult to back-track and do the after-thought stereo mixes, which is why we have the atrocious “stereo” of Rubber Soul and Revolver. Consequently, the reason the monos of these albums rule has mostly to do with technical limitations. While the mixes on A Hard Day’s Night are true stereo mixes, they carry George Martin’s idiosyncratic, but really right, decision to put the vocals in the center, the rhythm section to the left and the other instruments to the right. I always have loved how Martin took care to isolate the brilliant work of Ringo and Paul so many times instead of just following the convention of placing the drums in the center. This is why one of Martin’s memoirs is entitled: “All You Need Is Ears.”

The Beatles For Sale: Comments, preference and reasons for preference similar to A Hard Day’s Night.

Help: Well, thank God we have three different versions to compare to make life ever so easy. First, mono is the definitive mix, that’s a plus. As a minus, while it sounds richer, it is also a bit muddy compared to the stereo mixes. As for the stereo mixes, the remaster of George Martin’s ‘87 remix does show some limiting in this new incarnation. A bit a hard to dial in the right volume. Sounds fuller, but that’s the limiting. Not sure I care for this version too much. As for the `65 stereo version, that comes on the same disc as the mono version, as this album is somewhat acoustic, the absence of the limiting that was done to the new stereo remix/remaster is a plus. The delicacy is there in I Need You. Overall, the “old” stereo is prettier than the “new” stereo. One can argue over whether the “new” stereo or the “”old” stereo is better, I come down on the side of the “old” stereo, I like pretty. But as you get both the mono and the “old” stereo on the single mono disc, the cheapskate in me screams if you had a pistol to your head and only had to purchase one version of Help, it would be the “mono” disc.

Rubber Soul: Mono over stereo, if for no other reason than the left/rt channel mix that plagued Please, Please Me, With The Beatles and Revlover.

Revolver: There is a section of I Want To Tell You where Ringo is just so muscular and explosive in the mono that is missing in stereo and this is before we get to the issue of the left/right “stereo” of the stereo mix. Plus, there is just this overall richness of sound to the mono that is missing in the stereo. That said, it is a bit cooler to hear Tomorrow Never Knows in stereo. But, overall, mono.

Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band: The things you have heard are correct about the mono mix, the clarity and control over the notes, instruments and vocals is all there. Overall, it just sounds better, fuller and richer than the stereo, plus it is what the boys intended. Oddly, the thing that was most breathtaking was She’s Leaving Home; just a full, gorgeous, sound. In stereo, it just sounds relatively wrong; thin compared to the mono. That said, because Day In The Life is such a mind-f the stereo is the definitive version of this song.

Magical Mystery Tour: While Pepper’s sounded better in Mono, MMT sounds better in stereo.

The Beatles (The White Album): Both versions have their merits, you need both. If you can only go for one, it’s the stereo.

Abbey Road: The defining moment of these reissues, and why it took four years, may be found on AR’s I Want You (She’s So Heavy). Because they couldn’t take the tape hiss out without compromising the sound, they didn’t. But when it came to John’s final “yeah” which was over saturated and clipped previously, they were able to take the clipping out, and for the first time, you can hear all of John’s vocal. Second side now, Here Comes the Sun and now Because. Wonderful sound throughout. Can’t wait for Ringo at the end.

Let It Be: Now that I have had the time to compare three versions of LIB, an original 1970 EMI vinyl, this remastered CD and LIB Naked, it turns out that LIB is one of the more interesting remaster releases. First, LIB Naked has it all. It is true to the original vision of the Beatles for this music. It has clarity, correct dynamics and musicality. One of the places you can hear this best is in the title track and the differences between the Martin and Spector mixes. Martin got the church-like nature of the song. Consequently, you get more organ and the choir-boy harmonies of John and George, which Spector dubbed over with horns, strings and over the top solos by George. And I’m with Sir Paul concerning the damage done by Phil to The Long And Winding Road. As for the 1970 LIB vinyl, it has its problems from a sonic standpoint, particularly as it is a Phil Spector production. This brings us to this remastered CD. It trumps the 1970 standard vinyl in clarity but not LIB Naked. The real surprise is that the compression added to this remaster actually makes this a more Phil Spectoresque production than the original. And surprisingly, I like it, at least compared with the 1970 vinyl. Still, Naked is what you want.

Mono Past Masters: Right now, listening to the The Inner Light, which I hate, but it sounds so, so, so good in mono that I may actually like it. And, look out, Paul’s bass piano notes in Hey Jude are right there as is Ringo’s tambourine. Can’t wait for Revolution plus the mono songs from Yellow Submarine. The mono Past Masters would have been perfection if they had added a stereo Let It Be and The Ballad Of John and Yoko. After all, the “stereo” Past Masters is actually a mixture of stereo and mono.

So kids, here’s where we end. Your core, oddly enough, should be the mono box set. Augment this with the stereo Hard Day’s Night, The Beatles For Sale, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Magical Mystery Tour, The Beatles, Abbey Road, Let It Be and stereo Past Masters.

Addendum: As I live in Chicago, and have access to one of the country’s remaining great stereo stores, that also boast three incredibly knowledgeable owners and an original Sgt. Peppers British Stereo pressing, following posting this review I went over there to compare the original vinyl with the two new CD reissues. We listened to the reference system, Naim Audio electronic and Quad speakers. There was total agreement on what we heard. First, Pepper’s mono CD had better tonal balance than Peppers stereo CD. Pepper’s stereo CD had better coloration than the mono, but this was defeated by the harshness of the sound (more on harshness shortly). Thus, overall, between the two CD’s we preferred the mono CD. All that said, the stereo original British vinyl pressing crushed both. It had both tonal correctness and coloration.
Now as to the harshness issue, please be mindful that I have listened to these discs on two audiophile systems. Something like harshness is likely to be more prevalent the higher up you get in the stereo food chain. Thus, someone who doesn’t have an audiophile system may not experience the harshness at all, but it really is there. This may render some of the stereo CDs more listenable for these people than they were for me, at least when it comes to Pepper’s.

9/12/09 THANKS TO ALL: The past few days, following the posting of my review, have been a lot of fun. So many people have taken the time to write me, quite a number saying the review was flat-out the best review of any sort they have read. Others shared memories and feelings about how important this music is to them. Amazingly, two brother, one in Boston one in Paris, found they were reading the same thread and were kind of amazed by the co-incidence. All in all, it has been a very rewarding experience. I thank Amazon for providing this opportunity, and those of you present and future who have/will take(n) the time to play.

Wholesale the beatles in Mono from poputrade is your best choice. All the beatles in Mono are all factory brand new. There are a big discounts for big orders.

Welcome to Wholesale The Beatles in Mono DVDs on poputrade

Wholesale The Beatles in Mono DVDs on poputrade

January 28th, 2010

Welcome to Wholesale The Beatles in Mono DVDs on poputrade

The Beatles in Mono is a box set compilation comprising the remastered monophonic recordings by The Beatles. The Beatles in Mono was released on 9 September 2009, the same day the remastered stereo recordings and companion The Beatles Stereo Box Set were also released, along with The Beatles: Rock Band videogame. The remastering project for both mono and stereo versions was led by EMI senior studio engineers Allan Rouse and Guy Massey.
The Beatles in Mono Contents
1 Intention
2 Disc listing
3 Chart performance

Intention

The Beatles in Mono was released to reflect the fact that all the Beatles‘ catalogue (aside from Let It Be and Abbey Road) was originally intended to be mixed down and released in mono. For example, in the case of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, all the mono mixes were done together with the Beatles themselves, throughout the recording of the album, whereas the stereo mixes were done only in six days by George Martin, Geoff Emerick and Richard Lush after the album had been finished, with none of the Beatles attending. George Harrison commented:

“ At that time [...] the console was about this big with four faders on it. And there was one speaker right in the middle [...] and that was it. When they invented stereo, I remember thinking ‘Why? What do you want two speakers for?’, because it ruined the sound from our point of view. You know, we had everything coming out of one speaker; now it had to come out of two speakers. It sounded like… very… naked.

Disc listing

The Beatles in Mono thirteen-disc collection contains the remastered mono versions of every Beatles album released in true mono. The original 1965 stereo mixes of Help! and Rubber Soul are included as bonuses on their respective albums. (Both albums also had been digitally remixed for the CD release in 1987.) The Beatles in Mono contains a new two-disc compilation album entitled Mono Masters, which compiles all the mono mixes of singles, B-sides and EP tracks that did not originally appear on any of the UK albums.

Please Please Me (1963)
With The Beatles (1963)
A Hard Day’s Night (1964)
Beatles for Sale (1964)
Help! (1965)
Rubber Soul (1965)
Revolver (1966)
Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967)
Magical Mystery Tour (1967)
The Beatles (1968)
Mono Masters (1962–1970)
The albums Yellow Submarine, Abbey Road and Let It Be are not included in The Beatles in Mono. A mono version of Yellow Submarine was released in the UK, but it was only a fold-down from the stereo mix, not a unique, separate mono mix. The previously unavailable true mono mixes of the four new Beatles songs released on the Yellow Submarine album (“Only a Northern Song”, “All Together Now”, “Hey Bulldog” and “It’s All Too Much”), originally intended for a separate, but ultimately scrapped, mono EP, which would have also included a mono mix of “Across the Universe”, are included on the Mono Masters compilation. Abbey Road and Let It Be were issued in the UK in mono on Reel-To-Reel tape and on LP in Brazil and other countries, but again, only as fold-downs from the respective stereo versions.

Also omitted from this set, but included in the Stereo box, is a DVD containing the mini-documentaries included with the stereo remasters of the different albums.

The Beatles, which is included in the set, was originally released in mono only in the UK and a few other countries, but not in the USA. However, The Beatles in Mono mixes of “Helter Skelter” and “Don’t Pass Me By” had been released in the USA in 1980 on the Capitol Records Rarities compilation album.

Chart performance

The Beatles in Mono debuted at #40 in Billboard’s Top 200 and the magazine reported that 12,000 copies were sold in its first week of release. In Japan, it debuted at #10, selling over 20,000 copies in its first week on the Oricon album charts.

Wholesale Quear as Folk Complete 1-5

September 16th, 2009

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Summary of Queer as Folk

Based on the British series of the same name, Showtime’s ‘Queer as Folk’ presents the American version. Following the lives of five gay men in Pittsburgh, ‘Queer as Folk’ is a riveting drama full of sex, drugs, adventure, friendship and love. Although the creators of ‘Queer as Folk’ wanted to present an honest depiction of gay life, it is by no means a comprehensive depiction. In addition to the usual sexual escapades and relationships of the five friends, the show explores critical gay political and health issues…
Queer as Folk is an innovative, provocative, and groundbreaking series that has now ended after a five year run, the series chronicled the friendships, careers, loves, trials, tribulations, and ambitions of a diverse group of gay men and lesbians living in Pittsburgh, PA. Blending strong drama with necessary…

Showtime’s hit show QUEER AS FOLK has sparked a great deal of controversy, both for centering a show entirely around gay men, and for the subsequent portrayals of those men. Brian Kinney is the figure around whom the homosexual residents of a gay neighborhood in Pittsburgh coalesce. In SEASON FOUR, Brian’s relationship with Justin is strectched to its limits, but also matures at the same time. Michael and Ben, another couple on the show, have to deal with Ben’s sickness as well as the success of Michael’s comic book featuring a gay superhero. Finally, Melanie and Lindsay face a threat to their relationship when Lindsay begins experimenting with her sexuality.

Leading Role: Michelle Clunie, Thea Gill, Gale Harold, Randy Harrison, Scott Lowell, Peter Paige, Hal Sparks, Sharon Gless, Robert Gant, Jack Wetherall

Directors: Michael DeCarlo, John Fawcett

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Summary of Married With Children

September 16th, 2009

Wholesale Married With Children season 1-10 29DVD Boxset on poputrade.com

Get ready for over 3 hours of bawdy Bundy fun! Its Married… with Children, the brilliantly tasteless, daringly raunchy and devilishly clever series that introduced us to working-class hero Al Bundy (Ed ONeill), his housework-hating wife Peg (Katey Sagal) and their obnoxious offspring Kelly (Christina Applegate) and Bud (David Faustino). Theyre rude, theyre crude and this collection of the funniest moments from the family that put the fun into dysfunctional will have you laughing for hours!
The Bundys are a stereotypical “white trash” American family. Al is a shoe salesman who is fond of frequently reliving his doubtful 15 seconds of fame on the football field. Al is terrified of the all-to-frequent amorous advances his ditsy wife Peggy, a woman who must spend most of Al’s wages at the salon and the mall. They have two children: Kelly, the stunning but superficial party animal, and Bud, who is too wrapped up in himself to realize his goal of “scoring” with a girl…
Married… with Children is a show about shoe salesman Al Bundy who raises his dysfunctional family.
Peg Bundy is Al’s wife, she is addicted to shopping and watching Oprah.
Marcy Rhoades/D’Arcy is the Bundys’ neighbor who works as a banker. Marcy was married to Steve Rhoades, another banker, for a few years but they ended up getting a divorce.
A year later Marcy met and got married to Jefferson D’Arcy, a former spy who had various jobs, but he preferred being a house husband.
Kelly Bundy is the attractive daughter with the intelligence of a fruitfly.
Bud Bundy is the son who has bad luck with women.

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MR.Bean’s Holiday Complete Collection

September 16th, 2009

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This DVD set which proclaims itself to be the “whole” Bean isn’t quite what it appears to be. While it does contain, in essence, all 14 episodes of the classic series, many of the episodes are slightly or even significantly EDITED. Two glaring examples are: in “Merry Christmas, Mr. Bean,” the scene of Mr. Bean winning the turkey by guessing it’s weight, then throwing it in the back of his car has been CUT. It is NOT here. In “Do-it-Yourself, Mr. Bean,” the entire 4-5 minute scene of Bean inside Harrod’s trying to take the sale chair away from the old people who get there first has also been CUT. He goes inside… and comes back out with the chair. There is NO scene inside. I would hardly call this the WHOLE Bean. Many other minor segments of him driving have also been cut. All in all, each episode now runs 24-25 minutes instead of the general 27 to 30 minutes. It’s a real shame that this set couldn’t have been done right, even if it took a fourth disc to do it. I will miss those little moments that are now apparently lost forever. However, what we are left with, edited or not, is still a nice collection… thus, I have to at least give it 3 stars despite my disappointment at it not being truly COMPLETE. I really doubt we will ever see a special “uncut” release, so go ahead and add this set to your collection. The picture’s better than ever and the special features are nice but a wee bit minimal. Enough complaining, it’s still the best show around… even with his bits and pieces removed.
Mr. Bean enters a church raffle and wins a vacation trip to France as well as a camcorder. After boarding a Eurostar train and arriving in Paris, the French language proves a barrier for Bean, as he struggles to get across the city to catch a train to the south of France from the Gare de Lyon. Taking time to order a meal, he finds the consumption of a seafood platter to be a challenge. Just before catching his train, he asks Emil, a Russian film director on his way to be a judge at the Cannes Film festival to use his camcorder to record his boarding, but accidentally causes Emil being left behind at the station. Bean attempts to cheer up the director’s son Stepan as the train continues south but matters are made more hectic by the fact that Emil has reported his son to have been kidnapped and Bean losing his wallet and essential travel documents at a pay phone where he and Stepan attempt to contact Emil. Heading in the direction of Cannes, Bean finds himself in the cast and disrupting the flow of a commercial being shot by the egotistical director Carson Clay. He and Stepan finally hitch a ride with the young and vivacious actress Sabine who is heading to Cannes to attend the premiere of Clay’s film, in which she appears. After Bean sneaks into the showing, his camcorder images are destined to enliven the proceedings.

 

Rowan Atkinson returns to the iconic role that made him an international star in Mr. Bean’s Holiday. In his latest misadventure, Mr. Bean—the nearly wordless misfit who seems to be followed by a trail of pratfalls and hijinks—goes on holiday to the French Riviera and becomes ensnared in a European adventure of cinematic proportions. Tired of the dreary, wet London weather, Bean packs up his suitcase and camcorder to head to Cannes for some sun on the beach. Ah…vacation. But his trip doesn’t go as smoothly as he had hoped when the bumbling Bean falls face first into a series of mishaps and fortunate coincidences, far-fetched enough to make his own avant-garde film.
Mr. Bean — the stick-legged goofball man-child created by Rowan Atkinson on television in the early ’90s, and in the 1997 feature Bean — undertakes his second cinematic adventure in the comic romp Mr. Bean’s Holiday. Growing thoroughly sick of the wet, cold, and clammy London weather, Mr. Bean (Atkinson) finds just the right tonic when he wins a trip to sunny southern France, all expenses paid, with a new digital video camera to accompany him. However, he runs headfirst into a series of outrageous and unpleasant situations, such as winding up in a French restaurant where a maître d’ (Jean Rochefort) convinces him to eat bizarre varieties of seafood that he’s never before encountered, and discovering that the “Very Fast Train” certainly lives up to its name. Eventually, Mr. Bean (accompanied by a Russian traveling companion whom he meets along his journey) stumbles onto the French Riviera and spoils the latest movie production of snobbish, egomaniacal filmmaker Carson Clay (Willem Dafoe) — little realizing that his own klutzy video footage will accidentally end up in Clay’s film and be screened at the upcoming Cannes Film Festival. Unlike the first big-screen incarnation of Atkinson’s character, Mr. Bean’s Holiday adheres more closely to the formula of the original series by rendering the character almost completely mute.

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Wholesale Tales From The Crypt Complete Season 1-7

September 14th, 2009

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Television viewers got a fright in 1989, when TALES FROM THE CRYPT made the transition from EC comic book to TV show. Hosted by the Cryptkeeper, each episode of the show offered a new, ghoulish tale for the audience to sink their teeth (or fangs) into. The show originated on HBO, and all six episodes from the first season are included here. It was such a success that myriad CRYPT-inspired spinoffs resulted, including an animated series, several feature films, and seemingly infinite merchandising opportunities. A popular favorite among horror-film fans, TALES FROM THE CRYPT also appeals to viewers who love the visceral thrill of jumping out of their seats as terrifying scenes unfold in front of them. The first seven seasons of the show are gathered on this collection.

The success of this series spawned a Saturday morning cartoon series, Tales From the Cryptkeeper, a short lived Saturday morning gameshow on CBS, Secrets of the Cryptkeeper’s Haunted House, and lots of merchandise. Two feature films, Demon Knight and Bordello of Blood, were also produced. In 2006, Ritual, a third film originally released overseas (without the Crypt Keeper wraparounds) in 2001 was finally released on DVD.

Two other movies based on the EC Comics Tales From the Crypt and The Vault of Horror were released back in 1972 and 1973 respectively. But they are not connected to this series and will not be listed here!

Since it’s cancellation, Tales from the Crypt has aired in syndication on HBO, Fox, the Sci-Fi Channel, and In Canada on CBC and the Space Channel. Most recently, the series has been airing on AMC, usually in late-night weekends.

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