Beatles Discography Blogspot
Create a label for each album (e.g., “Revolver”), each Beatle (“Lennon,” “McCartney”), and each era (“Studio Years”).
If you’ve landed on this Beatles discography Blogspot page, you’re likely one of three people: a new fan who just discovered “A Day in the Life,” a vinyl collector hunting for mono vs. stereo differences, or a lifelong listener who still argues about whether Rubber Soul or Revolver is better. Welcome home.
The Beatles didn’t just release music. They redefined what an album could be. In just eight years (1963–1970), they released 13 official studio albums in the UK, plus a handful of compilations that have become essential listens. This Beatles discography Blogspot article will break down every single one—track by track, quirk by quirk—so you can listen along, compare pressings, or settle arguments with your fellow Beatlemaniacs.
Let’s start at the very beginning (a very good place to start).
The last album recorded (though Let It Be came out later). Perfection. Side 2 medley is a symphonic pop suite. beatles discography blogspot
Side A:
“Come Together” (John’s Chuck Berry/”You Can’t Catch Me” plagiarism lawsuit bait)
“Something” (George’s best – Frank Sinatra called it the greatest love song of the previous 50 years)
“Maxwell’s Silver Hammer” (Paul’s vaudeville murder song – everyone else hated recording it)
“Oh! Darling” (Paul’s Little Richard impression)
“Octopus’s Garden” (Ringo co-write with George)
“I Want You (She’s So Heavy)” (blues jam + white noise cut-off)
Side B (the medley):
Best blogspot debate: Is Abbey Road better than Sgt. Pepper? Yes. Hands down.
Before diving in, note: The Beatles’ US discography (thanks to Capitol Records) was a mess of different track listings, fake stereo, and omitted songs. For this Beatles discography Blogspot guide, we stick to the official UK canon—the 13 albums as recognized on streaming services and the 2009/2018 remasters. Create a label for each album (e
To stand out among thousands of Beatles blogs, find your unique voice.
| Generic Approach | Better BlogSpot Approach | | :--- | :--- | | “This album is great.” | “How Ringo’s drum fill at 1:23 on ‘Rain’ changed my understanding of time.” | | List the release date. | Describe the weather in London the day it was released. | | Copy Wikipedia. | Interview a fellow fan about their memories of buying the record. |
Pro Tip: Use BlogSpot’s “scheduled posts” feature. Release one album analysis per week. Build an audience over 13 weeks.
You cannot upload entire albums to BlogSpot. Instead: The last album recorded (though Let It Be came out later)
For each album, include a simple HTML table at the top of your post:
| Side One | Side Two | | :--- | :--- | | 1. Song Title | 1. Song Title | | 2. Song Title | 2. Song Title |
Then below, write your review. This helps Google “read” the tracklist.