Contemporary reviews Cash Box described the album as "[a] delightful Bluegrass romp" and predicted it would be a success among Beatles fans, while also having good chances in the country and western market. The review named five tracks as the album's highlights, including: "What Goes On", "Norwegian Wood", "I've Just Seen a Face", "
Ticket to Ride" and "Yellow Submarine".
Billboard magazine called the album "[a] novel idea" and suggested the covers of "
Baby's in Black" and "Norwegian Wood" had the potential to gain airplay on both pop and country radio stations. In a review for
Bluegrass Unlimited magazine, Neil V. Rosenberg described Val's mandolin playing as the album's "outstanding feature". Applauding the breaks on "What Goes On" and "
Help!", Rosenberg characterizes Val's playing as "clean, uncluttered, [and] a distinctive style with great feeling". He calls the singing on "I Saw Her Standing There" "forced", while describing "Norwegian Wood" as the high point of the album in terms of both its vocal and instrumental performance. He further praises Spicher and Wingfield's contributions, while also lauding Siggins for his humorous arrangement of "Yellow Submarine". He concludes that the album is "more interesting than captivating" and finds "Norwegian Wood" the only cover on the album which "stands on its own as a great bluegrass performance".
Retrospective assessment Reviewing the album's 1995 CD release for
CMJ New Music Monthly magazine, Andrea Moed writes that in hindsight the LP was "visionary... foreshadowing both the 'newgrass' movement of the '70s and the pop stylings of people like
Mike Nesmith". She remarks that the playing on "
She's a Woman" and "Help!" display a "technical virtuosity [that] almost makes you forget the songs' origins". Reviewing the same release for the
Chicago Tribune, Tom Popson suggests the covers point to either the "universality in Beatles material or the Charles River Valley Boys' skill at adaptation – or both". He concludes that the album is "more a pleasant diversion than tour-de-force", writing that while "Norwegian Wood" is a good adaption, "Ticket to Ride" and "Help!" "seem ungainly in their new context". In a retrospective assessment for the
MusicHound Folk album guide, Stephen L. Betts scored the album a four out of five. He compares the cover of "Yellow Submarine" to the sound of American country music duo
Homer and Jethro. He comments that the songs chosen work well for bluegrass, and that the album "perhaps... works because it was done at the height of
Beatlemania, and not as a revisionist afterthought... [it] is hardly a novelty record". Critic Kurt Wolff writes that while the album began as an attempt to capitalize on Beatlemania, the music "turns out to be surprisingly strong and well-arranged". He opines that the album – in particular, the covers of "Baby's in Black", "Ticket to Ride" and "
Paperback Writer" – helps provide the "all-too-familiar numbers a hopped-up bluegrass spin that makes them sound fresher than they have in years". Reviewing for
AllMusic, Pemberton Roach awarded the album three out of five stars. Like Wolff, he similarly describes the album as "surprisingly... excellent". He suggests that the band imbue the songs "with an authentic Kentucky mountain flavor", with the only kitsch on the album being the pronunciation of "Yellow Submarine" as "Yeller Submarine". He concludes that the LP remains both interesting as a novelty record and as "an excellent bluegrass album by any measure, regardless of the unusual source of its material". == Legacy ==