Get ready for Record Store Day with 30% off The Beatles' White Album deluxe edition in Amazon's Spring Sale

Everybody's got something to hide except for me and my monkey, and Amazon

Amazon Spring Sale Beatles deal

The 2019 Amazon Spring Sale is underway, and as well as all the usual consumer durables, Simba mattress deals and Amazon device price cuts Amazon quite literally has Beatles for Sale. Not in the form of the album called Beatles for Sale, sadly, but on the rather more ginormous Beatles White Album (Super Deluxe Edition)

• Buy The White Album (Super Deluxe) on sextuple CD for £80.47 (30% off)

• Buy The White Album (Super Deluxe) on quadruple vinyl for £55.95 (25% off)

Amazon's Spring Sale runs from Monday 8 April until midnight Monday 15. Record Store Day, perhaps not coincidentally, is on Saturday 13 April.

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<a href="https://target.georiot.com/Proxy.ashx?tsid=8434&GR_URL=https%3A%2F%2Famazon.co.uk%2FBeatles-White-Album%2Fdp%2FB07HFYZY7D%2Fref%3Dtmm_acd_swatch_0%3F_encoding%3DUTF8%26qid%3D%26sr%3D%26tag%3Dhawk-future-21%26ascsubtag%3Dhawk-custom-tracking-21" data-link-merchant="Amazon UK"" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">The Beatles White Album (6 CD) | £80.47 | Was £114.95 | Save £34.48
The White Album (technically it's just named The Beatles, but nobody calls it that) was among the first rock double albums and is a sprawling mess of songs both catchy and profound and, uh, not quite so catchy or profound. Now, with the addition of demos and rough takes of songs that ended up on The White Album, Let It Be, or nowhere, it's a sextuple-CD treasure trove for Beatles fans. Normally it's quite expensive at well over £100 but today it's only a little bit expensive, at £80.47. Oh and you also get a Blu-ray with 5.1 surround sound mixes of the original album, done by producer George Martin's son (and sometime Sonos pitch man), Giles Martin.

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<a href="https://target.georiot.com/Proxy.ashx?tsid=8434&GR_URL=https%3A%2F%2Famazon.co.uk%2FBeatles-White-Album-VINYL%2Fdp%2FB07HFZKLBL%2Fref%3Dtmm_vnl_swatch_0%3F_encoding%3DUTF8%26qid%3D%26sr%3D%26tag%3Dhawk-future-21%26ascsubtag%3Dhawk-custom-tracking-21" data-link-merchant="Amazon UK"" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">The Beatles White Album (4 LP) | £55.95 | Was £74.60 | Save £18.65
Vinyl lovers miss out on the surround sound mixes and some of the session tracks on the six-CD edition, but you do get nicer packaging, the remastered White Album and two disks of demos recorded in Esher – ironically, perhaps the least rock and roll place in the entire world.

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Duncan Bell

Duncan is the former lifestyle editor of T3 and has been writing about tech for almost 15 years. He has covered everything from smartphones to headphones, TV to AC and air fryers to the movies of James Bond and obscure anime. His current brief is everything to do with the home and kitchen, which is good because he is an excellent cook, if he says so himself. He also covers cycling and ebikes – like over-using italics, this is another passion of his. In his long and varied lifestyle-tech career he is one of the few people to have been a fitness editor despite being unfit and a cars editor for not one but two websites, despite being unable to drive. He also has about 400 vacuum cleaners, and is possibly the UK's leading expert on cordless vacuum cleaners, despite being decidedly messy. A cricket fan for over 30 years, he also recently become T3's cricket editor, writing about how to stream obscure T20 tournaments, and turning out some typically no-nonsense opinions on the world's top teams and players.

Before T3, Duncan was a music and film reviewer, worked for a magazine about gambling that employed a surprisingly large number of convicted criminals, and then a magazine called Bizarre that was essentially like a cross between Reddit and DeviantArt, before the invention of the internet. There was also a lengthy period where he essentially wrote all of T3 magazine every month for about 3 years. 

A broadcaster, raconteur and public speaker, Duncan used to be on telly loads, but an unfortunate incident put a stop to that, so he now largely contents himself with telling people, "I used to be on the TV, you know."