The original 1965 stereo mixes, however, were problematic. Hard-panned vocals on one channel, drums on the other, and a thin, brittle high end—the result of engineers still learning how to mix for home hi-fi rather than mono jukeboxes.
Deep in a dimly lit flat in Camden, Mark hit "Play." Usually, Beatles bootlegs were a mess of hiss and pop, but this was different. The room filled with the sharp, metallic ring of George Harrison’s Gretsch [1]. The original 1965 stereo mixes, however, were problematic
"": Features multiple takes (1, 3, 20-24) and rehearsal versions. The original 1965 stereo mixes
by the label Helter Skelter (HSR 16/17/18). It is a comprehensive collection of nearly every available studio outtake, alternate mix, and rare track from the recording era. Release Details and Quality Audio Restoration drums on the other