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The Beatles’ “I'LL GET YOU” — True Stereo With Mono Power Preserved | 2026 Remix

Eight years before John Lennon famously opened what would become his most iconic solo song with the word “Imagine,” he and Paul began another song with that same word — one written in the familiar surroundings of Aunt Mimi’s Menlove Avenue home.

By 1971, “Imagine” would arrive in stereo as part of a very different recording world. Back in 1963, however, The Beatles’ “I’ll Get You” was still locked into the limitations of its era, with no true stereo version ever officially released. In just eight short years, the way music was recorded, mixed, and presented had changed dramatically.

This is a mono-to-true-stereo remix of “I’ll Get You,” the flip side of The Beatles’ first million-selling hit, “She Loves You.” In 1963, “She Loves You” / “I’ll Get You” was turned down in the United States by EMI-owned Capitol Records, but was picked up by the lesser-known Swan label. Despite the record taking Britain by storm, its original U.S. release arrived with little promotion or fanfare.

That changed in 1964. Once Beatlemania gripped America, Swan wisely re-released the single — and this time, it soared all the way to No. 1 in March, replacing “I Want To Hold Your Hand” at the top spot.

Unfortunately, the original two-track recording tapes for “I’ll Get You” were either lost or destroyed by EMI. At that early stage, archiving Beatles recordings was not yet treated with the importance it soon would be. After The Beatles generated a string of 1963 hits that remains astonishing to this day, that attitude changed — but for songs like this one, it was already too late.

That loss robbed listeners of the chance to hear true stereo mixes of recordings that became such an important part of The Beatles’ legacy. Fake stereo, or duophonic-style, versions were created to fill the void, but those mixes have always been one step above unlistenable. For decades, mono was the only enjoyable way to hear “I’ll Get You.”

Today’s de-mixing technology has finally made it possible to approach the song differently — to create stereo from a mono source while still respecting the feel and energy of the original recording.

And that is exactly what I’ve done with this remix: I created eight separated, isolated tracks from one mono track.

Track 1: Handclaps
Track 2: Bass
Track 3: Kick drum
Track 4: Snare drum
Track 5: Remaining percussion
Track 6: Guitars and harmonica
Track 7: Lead vocals
Track 8: Backing vocals

These separated tracks were then mixed into what you are hearing now, using a stereo approach inspired by mixing techniques that would become more common just a few years after The Beatles originally recorded this song.

“I’ll Get You” was recorded on the same day as “She Loves You,” during the evening hours of July 1, 1963, at EMI Studios in London. The exact number of takes is unknown because no detailed session documentation survives. What is known is that the song carried the working title “Get You In The End,” and that a very young Geoff Emerick served as second engineer on the session.

Those who witnessed the recordings from that day later recalled the remarkable energy in the studio — the sound of a group still early in its recording career, but already generating the kind of excitement that would soon change everything.

Thank you for listening… in stereo!

Видео The Beatles’ “I'LL GET YOU” — True Stereo With Mono Power Preserved | 2026 Remix канала britt2001b
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