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The Beatles to release new outtakes collection and restored documentary series

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LONDON — More than 55 years after rock’n’roll’s most important and influential band split up, The Beatles are to release a new collection of unheard outtakes, as well as a remastered and expanded classic documentary series as part of a reboot of the 1990s “Anthology” project.

Paul McCartney, 83, one of the two surviving members of the band alongside Ringo Starr, 85, teased the announcement in an Instagram post on Tuesday, and the band’s official website confirmed on Thursday.

The “Anthology” series was a mid-’90s multimedia project that reunited McCartney, Starr, and George Harrison and included three double CD albums, a TV documentary, and two new songs, “Free as a Bird” and “Real Love.”

The TV series chronicled the band’s meteoric rise from the clubs of Liverpool and Hamburg to global fame — and the acrimonious split in 1970.

It has been restored by teams led by “Lord of the Rings” director Peter Jackson and will stream on Disney+ from Nov. 21. There will be a new episode, titled “Episode Nine,” that shows behind-the-scenes footage from the “Anthology” reunion in 1994-5.

The three “Anthology” albums are also to be remastered and re-released alongside a new fourth volume featuring unheard tracks from the 94-95 sessions.

Beatles aficionados eagerly consumed the three “Anthology” albums’ studio outtakes and alternate versions in the 1990s, which captured the exuberant humor of the band in its early days and the creative mastery they showed later on. The band’s music inspired countless younger acts who were making their strides to stardom at the time, including Oasis.

“Free as a Bird” and “Real Love” were the first new songs from the band in more than 30 years, and both were made possible thanks to a shaky, low-quality demo tape recorded by John Lennon in his New York apartment in 1977.

After Lennon died in 1980, the tape was eventually passed to McCartney by Lennon’s widow, Yoko Ono, and some creative studio trickery from co-producer Jeff Lynne allowed the other Beatles to play along with the faint, ghostly vocals and piano, recorded on a simple four-track tape recorder.

The same tape formed the basis of the Grammy-winning “Now and Then,” the final track to feature all the Fab Four, released in 2023.

The 2020s have been a rich time for celebration of The Beatles’ legacy. Peter Jackson’s “Get Back” documentary showed the making of their final album; the “Beatles ’64” documentary, produced by Martin Scorsese, chronicled the effects of Beatlemania after their whirlwind first visit to the U.S., and McCartney continues to tour and play Beatles classics across the world. His U.S. tour kicks off in Palm Springs on Sept. 27.

However, one question still unanswered for Beatles obsessives is whether the elusive “Carnival of Light” will ever be released. Made at the start of the “Sgt Pepper” sessions in 1967, the 14-minute avant-garde oddity was made for an event in London. It was driven principally by McCartney but featured all the Beatles, who later reportedly vetoed its inclusion on “Anthology 2” in 1996.

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