Take The Beatles Ladies Slim Fit T-Shirt: Live in Japan (Back Print) in black soft-style cotton — officially licensed Beatles merchandise carrying the 1966 Tokyo tour iconography on a fitted ladies cut.
The Beatles played five concerts at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo between 30 June and 2 July 1966. The booking was politically controversial, since the Budokan had been built for the 1964 Olympics and was traditionally reserved for martial-arts events. Recordings of those shows have been bootlegged and officially released for decades, and the Live in Japan back print pulls from that historic visit's iconography directly.
Soft-style cotton in a ladies slim-fit silhouette with short sleeves, the back-print graphic centred between the shoulder blades. Available in a black colourway.
- Rockoff officially licensed product
- Style: Ladies Slim Fit T-Shirt
- Design: Live in Japan
- Design Features: Back print
- Colour: Black
- Material: Soft-style cotton
- Great for: Beatles collectors, 1966-tour fans, Budokan history devotees, gigs
Take The Beatles Ladies Slim Fit T-Shirt: Live in Japan (Back Print) in black soft-style cotton — officially licensed Beatles merchandise carrying the 1966 Tokyo tour iconography on a fitted ladies cut.
The Beatles played five concerts at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo between 30 June and 2 July 1966. The booking was politically controversial, since the Budokan had been built for the 1964 Olympics and was traditionally reserved for martial-arts events. Recordings of those shows have been bootlegged and officially released for decades, and the Live in Japan back print pulls from that historic visit's iconography directly.
Soft-style cotton in a ladies slim-fit silhouette with short sleeves, the back-print graphic centred between the shoulder blades. Available in a black colourway.
- Rockoff officially licensed product
- Style: Ladies Slim Fit T-Shirt
- Design: Live in Japan
- Design Features: Back print
- Colour: Black
- Material: Soft-style cotton
- Great for: Beatles collectors, 1966-tour fans, Budokan history devotees, gigs