R_of_G said:
To be honest, I'm not all that much in favor of remastered versions of those albums. They're historic documents and I'd rather hear them the way they sounded when they were released...
Then your only alternative is the original vinyl. Mastering tapes for CD necessarily involves judgments and compromises...but of course, so did mastering those same tapes to vinyl in the first place.
Mastering tapes for CD is an art/science that has come a long way since the Beatles catalog was first issued on CD. The technology exists to get CDs a lot closer to feel of vinyl now, but you also can't discount the ears of whoever is doing the mastering.
Tom Scholz of Boston always hated the CD versions of his albums. He finally got the chance to remaster the first two Boston albums (the good ones) himself. I was skeptical, but since the remastered CDs were only $10 each, I gave 'em a shot. Even in my car on the way home from Best Buy, I had to say that they sounded subtly but effectively better...smoother and just easier to listen to.
I'll have to reserve judgment on the Beatles remasters until I hear them. They could be great, they could be not so much different to justify the cost, but I'll wager they'll be better. That said, I didn't like the remastering done to the music in the DVD version of "A Hard Days Night," but that may have been because it stood out as "different" in the context of the movie soundtrack.
As I understand it, there will be some video features in the Beatles remasters (but not the movies), along with studio banter like what was featured in the Cirque du Soleil "Love" show. Will those extras and the new mastering job be worth the bucks? We'll see in September.