During its early years, the label enjoyed a fair degree of commercial success, most notably with Mary Hopkin and Badfinger, as well as discovering acts such as James Taylor and Billy Preston who would go on to greater success with other labels.
However, some releases which were designated a UK-sequence catalogue number were only issued in certain mainland European countries.
Additionally, with the Beatles still being under contract to EMI, all of the group's records (and the majority of their UK solo releases) retained the numbering systems of Parlophone (for the UK, New Zealand and South Africa), Capitol (for the US) and EMI (for Australia).
7 Mail order only EP featuring: The Iveys "Storm in a Teacup" / James Taylor "Something's Wrong" / Jackie Lomax "Little Yellow Pill" / Mary Hopkin "Pebble and the Man".
[7] 18 Four track EP featuring: Mary Hopkin "Those Were The Days" / Billy Preston "That's the Way God Planned It" / Jackie Lomax "Sour Milk Sea" / Badfinger "Come and Get It".
[8] 19 Re-issued from 1975 with the same catalogue number (and sometimes artwork) on Capitol after McCartney's contract moved from Parlophone.
48 Due to extreme demands on production, EMI also contracted Decca and Philips to press this release.
49 Due to extreme demands on production, EMI also contracted Philips to press this release.
23 Regular album release to replace the Box Set package which accompanied the original UK issue.
This album had previously been issued in full on Philles Records in the US and has since been reissued many times on various labels.
Zapple was a short-lived subsidiary of Apple designed to release spoken word and avant garde recordings.
[24] Apple began the process of reissuing the back catalogue on compact disc in 1991, with many of the CDs containing bonus tracks.
This list does not include Beatles or solo albums, which were re-released on compact disc by Parlophone or Capitol.
The stereo box also features a DVD "The Mini Documentaries" which contains all the short films that are on the CDs in CD-ROM format.
Although the Apple logo is shown on all the 2009 remasters, the labels on the actual discs are those that appeared on the original LPs.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" feature a Parlophone label.
The DVD that accompanies "The Beatles in Stereo" box set has a red Apple label (similar to that on the original US "Let It Be" LP).
Shortly afterwards, the entire remastered catalogue was finally made available to download on iTunes after years of legal wrangling between the Beatles and Apple Inc. 29 Also available as a USB flash drive.
With the 1990s reissues out of print, many of the original Apple albums were re-released for a second time in new remastered versions in October 2010.
These remasters were also made available on iTunes, just a few weeks before the Beatles back catalogue was finally released for download.
Several of the iTunes versions included exclusive tracks not available on the standard CD issue, although these tracks were included on a bonus double CD as part of the Apple Box Set, which collected all of the remastered albums in one package.
All of the 2010 remasters had been previously issued in the 1990s reissue programme apart from a 21-track compilation entitled Come and Get It: The Best of Apple Records which included a number of single-only tracks which now received their first official release on compact disc.