‘Help!’ soundtrack album by The Beatles peaks at #1 in USA 60 years ago today (Sep 11 1965)


Video: 'Beatles - Help - American Version' (13 videos)

(Saturday, September 11, 1965)Help! soundtrack album by The Beatles peaked at #1 on Billboard‘s 200 album chart.

Issued by Capitol Records in both mono (MAS-2386) and stereo (SMAS-2386), the record serves as the group’s eighth Capitol LP and 10th overall in the United States, giving fans on this side of the Atlantic a different version than the one released in Britain.

Side one features the songs from the Beatles’ second feature film, while side two contains selections from the movie’s orchestral score, composed and conducted by Ken Thorne.

The U.S. version also includes a distinctive “James Bond”–style instrumental introduction to the title track and one of the first uses of the Indian sitar on a rock or pop album — the first appearance of the instrument on a Beatles record.

“Ticket to Ride” is presented in Duophonic stereo, a reprocessed mono track, and the mono album uses a folded-down stereo mix of “Help!” rather than the true mono single version.

American listeners won’t hear all of the songs found on the British release in one place. Capitol spread the remaining non-film tracks across three other U.S. albums.

It was the group’s sixth of an all-time record 19 number one albums on the chart (1964-2000).