The EP consists of four tracks. Two are live recordings; a cover of
The Beatles' "
Day Tripper" and "Can't Hold On", which are listed as being from 1979 and 1978, respectively. The other two are studio recordings; "Such a Good Girl" and "Take Me I'm Yours", which are listed as being from 1977 and 1976, respectively. Each copy of the record features a picture of one of the four band members on each side of the label. The pictures are randomized, and some copies included the same band member on each side. "Day Tripper" was not actually recorded live. While the band had recorded a live cover of the song in June of 1979 in Chicago that was intended for this release, the audio quality of the recording was found to be too poor to use. It was then re-recorded in the studio in March of 1980 with
Jack Douglas and the sound of the crowd from the original live recording was added in. "Can't Hold On" was from the
concerts the band recorded at
Nippon Budokan in 1978 and has since been included on the
Budokan II and
Cheap Trick at Budokan: The Complete Concert albums. "Such a Good Girl" and "Take Me I'm Yours" were recorded with engineer Gary Ladinsky between December 1979 and January 1980, not 1976 and 1977 as the release claims, although a 1975 demo recording of "Take Me I'm Yours" exists. Eight other tracks were recorded during the sessions with Gary Ladinsky, the purpose of which was to be a "publishing demo" that was not intended to be released to the public. The sessions became the subject of a rumor that they were recorded for an album that had been shelved by the record label. Today, they are considered to be the final recordings of Cheap Trick's "golden era". The final versions of most of these recordings are scarce (see outtakes below), while "rough" versions of seven tracks from these sessions were officially released via the "Bun E’s Basement Bootlegs"
YouTube channel. Jack Douglas edited the tracks from these sessions later in January of 1980. ==Current availability==