One of the coolest scenes in Boyhood, Richard Linklater’s remarkable, 12-years-in-the-making film about one child’s life from first to twelfth grade, involves Mason (Ethan Hawke) giving his son Mason Jr. (Ellar Coltrane) a unique birthday present. It’s called The Black Album, and it’s a mix CD compilation of the best of the Beatles’ solo music, from Ringo Starr’s “Photograph,” to George Harrison’s “All Things Must Pass,” which is a particularly appropriate song for a film like Boyhood.

Mason talks about the album and what it means, and we hear one selection from it (Paul McCartney & Wings’ “Band On The Run”) on the film’s soundtrack, but we never get a look at the full track listing. At a Q&A after a Boyhood screening in Chicago last week, Linklater was asked whether a complete lineup of songs from The Black Album exists, or if the CD Mason hands Mason Jr. was just a prop. Linklater replied that the album was real—at least as real as a never-circulated bootleg can be—and that he and his team had been discussing ways to release the track list to the public.

And here it is, via Buzzfeed. It turns out The Black Album was originally created by Hawke as a gift to his real-life daughter Maya (this is not the first way in which the fictional story of Boyhood echoes the actual lives of its characters). You can read Hawke’s liner notes for the project at Buzzfeed, but here is the complete track listing for your own mix-taping, playlist-making pleasure:

The Black Album from Boyhood