Eric Griffiths and Len Garry make their first appearances on a studio recording, with drummer Colin Hanton also returning to the band for the first time since 1959, having previously appeared on the "In Spite of All The Danger" recording in 1958 as a b-side to a cover of Buddy Holly's "That'll Be the Day".
It is also the only full length album featuring Pete Shotton, who also returned to the band in 1997 but later retired due to ill health.
The album was recorded in Liverpool in 1997 (produced, engineered and mixed by Lance Thomas) and released the same year.
The content of the album is drawn from the early repertoire of the original Quarrymen (which included John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison) and features fifteen songs that were regularly performed live by The Quarrymen in the late 1950s.
Bruce Eder of AllMusic stated that the musicians were "spirited and enthusiastic".