It was 46 years ago today (May 4th, 1977) that The Beatles At The Hollywood Bowl was released. The live album, which featured songs from all three of the group's shows at the venue, August 23rd, 1964 and August 29th and 30th, 1965, was remixed and produced by George Martin for release. The collection, which to date is the Beatles' only official live album, and their first previously unreleased archival collection, went on to peak at Number Two on the Billboard 200 album charts.
The Beatles At The Hollywood Bowl featured the constant shriek of 17,000 fans and proved that the group, who had long been said to be a slipshod and barely-adequate live act, was actually a tight ensemble that was able to faithfully reproduce their classic hits and album favorites on stage.
As was the case with the 1970's Beatles compilations, John Lennon took an active interest in the project and went so far as to suggest the album's title. Interestingly, despite the involvement of Lennon, Martin, and the Beatles' longtime engineer Geoff Emerick, the word since the album's release is that the group was adamantly against the project being issued, which led to a 14-year moratorium on vault releases.

