| All
Things
Must
Pass:
Remembering
George
Harrison |
| Commentary |
| Greg
Weaver |
| 30
November
2001 |

In Memory of
George
Harrison
(25 March 1943
- 29 November
2001)
Very
nearly the
first words I
heard as my
radio alarm
gently nudged
me toward
consciousness
last Friday
morning were
the words,
"George
Harrison,
former Beatle,
is dead of
cancer at age
58." I
found my still
sleepy train
of thought
reeling back
to my
childhood in
Arizona in
early spring
1964. While
playing with a
friend, a song
had come on
the family
transistor
radio; a
memorable
little ditty
called "I
Want to Hold
Your
Hand."
The vision
seemed so
clear.
I
spent this
past weekend
listening to
all my Beatles
albums and his
solo work,
trying to put
his work in
perspective. I
can't imagine
there is a
single reader
anywhere in
the world who
won't
recognize his
name. He was
one fourth of
a storm known
as the Beatles
that had
caught the
public's
attention in
1963 and
lasted nearly
seven years
through the
spring of
1970. As an
aside, I did
all this
reminiscing
with the new
Music Hall
MMF-7 and it
is just a
superbly
musical
turntable
(full review
in the works).
Born
to Harold and
Louise
Harrison on 25
February 1943
(making him
the youngest
Beatle), he
grew up in a
fairly typical
working class
family with
two brothers
and one sister
in the bombed
out district
of Liverpool,
London. His
father worked
in the
international
shipping yards
of Liverpool,
a job that
gave him easy
access to new
records from
the United
States. One of
George's early
favorites was
Jimmy Rogers,
and during his
school years,
he listened to
guitarists
like Carl
Perkins, Duane
Eddy and Chet
Atkins. He
soon
gravitated to
the burgeoning
Rock And Roll
movement and
players like
Buddy Holly
and Eddie
Cochran. His
fascination
with these
idols soon led
him to pick up
a guitar when
he was 13
years old. By
age 15, his
schoolmate
Paul McCartney
had introduced
him to an
older Art
College
student and
fellow
musician, John
Lennon. He
soon found
himself
sitting in
when one of
the members of
The Quarry Men
didn't show,
and by 16 had
become a
permanent
member of the
group. He is
actually
responsible
for teaching
John to play
guitar.
By
1960, another
of John's Art
College
friends,
Stuart
Sutcliff,
joined the
Quarry Men on
bass, and Pete
Best became
their full
time drummer
by that
summer. The
group played
clubs in
London, now
changing their
name to The
Silver
Beatles. They
eventually got
a series of
gigs in the
red-light
district of
Hamburg
Germany, where
they finally
dropped the
"Silver"
from the name
and became
just The
Beatles. They
continued to
play clubs in
London and
Hamburg
through 1961,
but in early
1962, Sutcliff
died of a
brain
hemorrhage and
by that fall,
Best was voted
out of the
band, for
reasons still
not entirely
clear. When
Ringo Starr
(Richard
Starkey)
joined the
Beatles in
August of
1962, the Fab
Four were set.
Brian
Epstein, a
London record
shop owner,
took time over
lunch to go
hear this
local group
and was so
impressed that
he asked the
band to let
him be their
manager. Once
producer
George Martin
got involved,
the rest is
history.
Their
first album,
released in
the UK in 1963
was Please
Please Me,
followed
shortly by
Introducing
the Beatles.
With the
Beatles was
their third
record of
1963, and
really set the
stage for
their US
invasion. 1964
saw the
release of
Meet the
Beatles, which
lets us hear
the first solo
Harrison
composition
"Don't
Bother
Me,"
effectively
speaking to
his basic
desire to stay
out of the
spotlight. The
Beatles 2nd
Album (who
taught these
guys to
count?) came
out later that
year, and with
Beatlemania
now in full
force, the
group made
what would
come to be
recognized as
the first
music video, A
Hard Day's
Night. It was
with the title
song on that
album that
George
introduced
fans to brand
new type of
guitar, the
12-string
Richenbacker.
George met
Patty Boyd on
the set of the
film, and they
eventually
married in
January 1966.
George
tried to
contribute
songs to the
early Beatles
albums, but
was dominated
by the song
writing
dynamic of
Lennon-McCartney.
He was
consistently
ignored and
relegated to
playing
"these
notes, this
way on this
song" by
both Lennon
and McCartney,
but given his
gentle nature
and quiet
demeanor, he
said very
little about
it. In those
years, George
was seen as
"the
quiet
Beatle",
since he
didn't smile
that much and
truly didn't
relish the
limelight.
That year saw
two more
albums,
Something New
and Beatles
For Sale.
With
their three
works in 1965,
George began
to be
successful at
getting some
of his songs
included on
their albums.
That year also
brought a
self-lampooning
of Beatlemania
with Help. One
scene in Help
shows George
accepting a
book on
eastern
religion from
a man riding
down the beach
on horseback.
This was to
prove to be
the beginning
of a new
George
Harrison and a
lifelong
devotion to
spirituality
and the
pursuit of
eastern
religion.
This
influence
first really
shows itself
on the Rubber
Soul album
with George
introducing
the sitar to
pop fans on
the song
"Norwegian
Wood." By
now, George
had begun to
go to John
with his songs
before studio
sessions in an
attempt to
lobby for his
work to appear
on Beatle's
albums. By
Revolver, he
was beginning
to come into
his own,
leading with
his anthem
"Taxman,"
an open
complaint
about the tax
burden the
Beatles were
feeling in the
UK, and two
others,
"I Want
to Tell
You," and
"Love You
To." It
was also about
this time that
he started
serious study
in
Transcendental
Meditation
with Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi
and was
introduced to
Ravi Shankar
at a dinner
party in
London.
By
the summer of
love (1967),
LSD had come
to be seen by
many as a
means toward
increased
awareness and
heightened
spirituality.
The Beatles
were no
exception and
this
experimentation
led George
even closer to
the religions
of the east.
This
experimentation
by the band is
apparent in
1967's Sgt.
Peppers Lonely
Hearts Club
Band, and
carried over
on Magical
Mystery Tour
as well.
While
Magical
Mystery Tour
was climbing
the charts,
George
released the
first solo
Beatle album,
and the first
production on
the Apple
label,
Wonderwall
Music. Though
George neither
sang nor
played on this
album, it is
significant as
it marked the
first
individual
project by any
member of the
Beatles.
Upon
completion of
Sgt. Pepper's,
the whole band
took a long
trip to India.
This trip, and
its impact on
the entire
group,
affected
1968's The
Beatles,
better known
as the White
Album. By this
time, George's
influence and
talent as a
songwriter had
become more
dominant than
ever, giving
us one of his
most
hauntingly
beautiful
songs, and an
unquestioned
Beatle
classic,
"While My
Guitar Gently
Weeps."
His
second solo
work.
Electronic
Sound came in
1969 and
consisted of
two tone poems
of electronic
music realized
on a moog. His
mentor for
this
experimental
work was
California
electronic
composer
Bernie Krause,
and though it
didn't fare
well, it was
one of the
most radical
directions he
had taken
musically to
date.
Though
bickering
between the
members was at
an all time
high, and
maybe perhaps
even because
of it, George
began to take
on a stronger
role as a
songwriting.
With the Abby
Road record in
1969, he
clearly shines
through with
such standards
as "Here
Comes The
Sun" and
"Something."
But by spring
of 1970, the
magic that had
been the
Beatles was
finally
pronounced
dead. Though
John had
drifted away
from the group
with new wife
Yoko Ono,
fueling
speculation
that the end
was apparent,
it was Paul's
formal
announced that
he was leaving
the Beatles
that spring
that finally
quelled the
most
significant
pop and rock
group of its
era.
Suddenly,
George
Harrison found
himself free.
Free of the
egos,
restraint and
repression of
the
Lennon-McCartney
stranglehold.
In 1970,
George
Harrison gave
us what most
feel to be his
seminal work,
All Things
Must Pass. Here
we get such
classics as
"My Sweet
Lord",
"Isn't it
a Pity"
and "What
is Life."
For the
record, there
was a
successful
lawsuit filed
by the
publisher of
the 1962
Chiffons hit,
"He's So
Fine,"
with the court
finally ruling
that the
remarkably
similar chord
progression
was the result
of unconscious
plagiarism.
This judgement
really
affected
George, and
those close to
him at the
time say that
it was a
devastating
blow his
self-confidence.
1971
brought us The
Concert for
Bangladesh, a
two evening
event held in
New York's
Madison Square
Garden that
was a
collaboration with
long-time
friends Eric
Clapton, Leon
Russell, Ravi
Shankar, Ringo
Starr and Bob
Dylan in an
effort to
raise money
for that
famine-ravaged
nation. I saw
this concert
film when it
was screened
at the all
night party
held by my
High School
Senior
graduating
class, and it
literally
amounts to the
first rock
benefit in
history.
Living
In the
Material
World,
released in
1973, is a
close
contender for
the accolade
of his best
work. Buoyant
and uplifting
at times,
humorously
ironic at
others, here
George seems
remarkably
confident in
both his
abilities as a
singer and
songwriter for
the first
time, and it
has been a
personal
favorite of
this listener
since first
play.
Several
more albums
followed in
annual
sequence, Dark
Horse in 1974,
Extra Texture
in 1975 and
33&1/3 in
1977 on the
heels of the
creation of
his own label,
Dark Horse.
His intense
devotion to
his personal
spirituality
had taken its
toll on his
marriage. He
and Patty
divorced, and
amid much
controversy,
she remarried
Eric Clapton
the same year.
George
attended the
wedding, but
there were
rumors that
the two had
been in love
for some time.
The Derek and
the Domino's
album Layla
& Other
Assorted Love
Songs was said
to have been
inspired by
Eric's
feelings for
Patty.
George
had met a
secretary at
A&M
Records in
1974, Olivia
Arias, while
planning a
project there.
They soon
discovered
that they had
much in common
and became
good friends,
and after the
divorce, she
moved in with
George. The
two married
shortly after
the birth of
their only
son, Dhani in
August 1978.
Besides
releasing the
George
Harrison
record the
following
year, in an
attempt to
assist his
friend Eric
Idle of the
Monty Python
comedy troop,
George created
Handmade
Films. His
first project
was The Life
of Brian, a
parody of the
life of Christ
that no one
else seemed
interested in
producing.
Before selling
Handmade Films
in the mid
eighties, he
had also
produced the
classics Time
Bandits and
the Beatles
mocumentary,
All You Need
Is Cash, also
known as The
Rutles. That
same year, his
biography, I,
Me, Mine was
released.
Always
staying out of
the public
eye, the
murder of John
Lennon in 1980
drove him even
further from
away from
public
scrutiny.
Through much
of the early
and mid 80's,
George
remained out
of sight,
releasing two
albums
Somewhere In
England and
Gone Troppo.
But it was
1987's
moderate
success with
Cloud Nine
that brought
him back to
the spotlight
and creative
recognition.
It
was while
recording a B
side for a
European
single release
from Cloud
Nine, a new
song called
"Handle
me with
Care",
that lead to
the creation
of The
Traveling
Wilbury's, Vol
1. Along with
Harrison, the
Wilbury's were
Bob Dylan, Tom
Petty, Roy
Orbison and
Jeff Lynne and
the first
release was a
critical
success that
delighted the
public enough
to send the
album to
number three,
with two
singles,
"Handle
with
Care" and
"End of
the
Line,"
hitting the
charts.
Tragically,
Roy Orbison
died of a
heart attack
only 6 weeks
after the
album's
release in
1988.
This
rash of recent
success
spurred George
to come out of
seclusion for
a brief period
and renewed
his interest
in touring.
This resulted
in a 1991 tour
of Japan and
the subsequent
album, Live in
Japan. Though
George hated
touring, the
album did
moderately
well, no doubt
following on
the success of
Cloud Nine and
the Traveling
Wilburys, Vol.
1.
After
the Live
album, he once
again withdrew
to his private
life with his
wife and son.
A one time
heavy smoker,
in July of
1997, the
family
announced that
his doctors
had discovered
a lump in his
throat. A
month later,
the surgery
was pronounced
successful and
he disappeared
uninterrupted
once again
into his
private. Then,
in 1999, a
deranged fan
entered the
Harrison
mansion in
West London,
attacked and
stabbed
George. Olivia
actually
fought off the
attacker
wielding a
lamp and is
credited with
stopping the
assailant
before he
killed George.
The fan was
found not
guilty by
reason of
mental defect
and George
went on with
his life.
Then,
in May of
2001, cancer
was found in
his lungs. Two
months later,
his physicians
found an
inoperable
tumor in his
brain. The
fight with
cancer caught
up with this
ex-Beatle at a
friend's home
in Los
Angeles, and
finally
claimed his
life at 1:30
p.m., Friday
29 November
2001. At the
time of his
death, he was
working on
expanding and
remastering
his classic
All Things
Must Pass
album, and
there was talk
of an updated
DVD of the
Concert for
Bangladesh.
Those
who knew him
say they
remember him
as the quite
one who never
stopped
talking; the
"me, me,
me" one
who gave
generously to
a fault; the
spiritual one
who never
stopped
laughing. He
was a musical
innovator who
much preferred
being a
musician to
being a rock
star. He was
one fourth of
the most
explosive and
influential
rock bands
that ever
existed. He
was a
spiritual man,
constantly
searching for
understanding
and trying to
be a better
human being.
With his
passing the
long-standing
hopes that
somehow and
someday the
Beatles would
get back
together,
ostensibly
with Julian or
Sean standing
in for their
father, have
been dashed
forever. He
will be
missed. All
things must
pass….

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