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At the height of their immense fame, the Beatles held a mock funeral for themselves with this iconically eccentric album.
A piece of equipment used by The Beatles to record their final studio album is being auctioned. The band recorded ‘Abbey Road’ in London in 1969, using a EMI TG12345 console to perfect its ...
The Beatles' console used to record 'Abbey Road' has been restored and is going on sale. The unique "one-off" EMI TG12345 recording console was used by the 'Here Comes The Sun' legends on their ...
The unique EMI TG12345 console was custom-built for EMI Studios in 1968, and just a year later was used to record one of the most important albums of rock history – Abbey Road – the last album that ...
The console used to record The Beatles‘ legendary ‘Abbey Road’ has been restored and is up for sale on Reverb. The EMI TG12345 recording console – which was used by the Fab Four to create ...
“This particular console is a one-off,” Dave Harries, a technical engineer who worked with The Beatles while they recorded Abbey Road, is quoted in the same article. “It sounds so good that ...
“Abbey Road is one of the best albums that’s ever been made, and it sounds so good because of this recording console,” said Dave Harries, who participated in numerous Beatles recording ...
Dave Harries, an engineer who worked with the Beatles during those sessions, credited the console as the reason Abbey Road sounds so good. “The album has a distinctive sound that hallmarked the ...
The board going on sale is the original EMI TG12345 prototype, which was built in 1969 and installed in Abbey Road Studios, where it was used for about a year. The Beatles used the console to ...
The legendary, one-of-one EMI TG1234 recording console that The Beatles used to record the Abbey Road album will be for sale on Reverb, starting on October 29. The announcement reads: The EMI ...
Over the course of five recent years, though, the former EMI engineer and Beatles collaborator Brian Gibson oversaw a restoration process. The piece was reunited with 70 percent of its original ...