User talk:Dmanskater11/Beatles Rock Band Song List Sandbox

The Beatles: Rock Band is a 2009 music video game currently being developed by Harmonix Music Systems and distributed by MTV Games and Electronic Arts. The game, a spin-off to the Rock Band Series. This Game Is Based Completely Off Of The Beatles Carrers.

Soundtrack
The game will include 45 master tracks chosen from twelve of The Beatles albums recorded during their 1962–1969 tenure with EMI Records. Several non-album singles and the mashup track "Within You Without You/Tomorrow Never Knows" from the 2006 remix album Love have also been included. Previously unreleased studio chatter will also be included. The game will include The Beatles tracks whose publishing rights are owned by Sony/ATV Music Publishing Company. Though Michael Jackson, who owned 50% of the publishing rights to The Beatles songs through Sony/ATV, died in June 2009, any potential estate sale of those rights will not affect the songs or the release of The Beatles: Rock Band, according to Harmonix.

Currently, 44 of the game's 45 on-disc songs have been revealed by Harmonix (including "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" and "With a Little Help From My Friends" as separate songs that join into each other). They are as follows:


 * Songs are only playable back-to-back as a single track.
 * A mashup of the two songs, originally from the Love album.

Downloadable content
Additional songs will be available for the game as downloadable content. This includes full albums; the remaining songs from Abbey Road will be released for the game shortly after launch to eventually be followed by Rubber Soul and Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. The song "All You Need Is Love" will also be among the first batch of downloadable content, proceeds from which will be donated to Doctors Without Borders. The song will initially be available as a timed exclusive for Xbox 360 on the same day the game is released. It will later become available for the PlayStation 3 and Wii. While there is potential for the entire catalogue of the band to be made available, such a situation would be "stretching it a bit", according to Harmonix' John Drake, and that future content will likely be initially focused on "rounding out" the catalogue.