In January 1969, the Beatles began rehearsing new songs at
Twickenham Film Studios for a planned concert to be recorded and released as a television special and album. From the start, the project was hindered by disagreements, indecision and tensions within the group, culminating in
George Harrison's temporary departure from the band. Harrison returned after a few days and rehearsals were moved to their new studio located in the basement of
Apple headquarters at 3
Savile Row. Unlike Twickenham, these sessions were recorded on
multitrack tape recorders. After the first week of rehearsals at Apple,
Glyn Johns had an idea for an album giving the listener a "
fly on the wall" insight into the Beatles at work in the studio. He mixed several tracks and made
acetates for each Beatle to listen to and the response to his idea was a "resounding no". In early March, John Lennon and Paul McCartney asked Johns to assemble an album from the tapes. Johns stayed with his earlier "fly on the wall" idea, selecting several early rehearsal takes of some songs for the album. Johns completed mixing and assembling the album, to be titled
Get Back, in May 1969. The album was scheduled for release that July; but with their next album,
Abbey Road, already underway and the accompanying film unfinished, it was pushed back until December. ==Sources==