For other persons named
George Harrison, see George Harrison
(disambiguation).
| George Harrison |

George
Harrison visiting the Oval Office in 1974.
|
| Background information |
| Also known as |
L'Angelo
Misterioso
Nelson/Spike Wilbury |
| Born |
25 February 1943(1943-02-25)
Liverpool,
England |
| Died |
29 November 2001 (aged 58)
Los
Angeles, California,
USA |
| Genre(s) |
Rock, Pop |
| Occupation(s) |
Musician, Songwriter, Producer |
| Instrument(s) |
Bass, Guitar, Vocals, Ukelele, Mandolin, Sitar, Tambura, Piano |
| Years active |
1958 - 2001 |
| Label(s) |
Parlophone,Capitol,Apple
Vee-Jay,EMI,Dark Horse Records |
Associated
acts |
The
Beatles
Traveling Wilburys
The Quarrymen |
| Website |
GeorgeHarrison.com |
George Harrison, MBE (25
February 1943
– 29
November 2001)
was an Academy Award and Grammy
Award-winning English
rock
guitarist,
singer, songwriter,
author
and sitarist
best known as the lead guitarist of The
Beatles. Following the band's demise, Harrison had a
successful career as a solo artist and later as part of the Traveling
Wilburys super
group where he was known as both Nelson Wilbury and Spike Wilbury. He
was also a film producer, with his production
company Handmade Films, involving people as
diverse as Madonna and the members of Monty
Python. From an initial exposure whilst a member of the Beatles, he
maintained a high public profile regarding his religious and spiritual
life.
|
Contents
- 1 Overview
- 2 Early
years: 1943–1958
- 3 1958–1960:
The Quarrymen and the Silver Beetles
- 4 1960–1970:
The Beatles
- 5 Solo
career
- 5.1 1970s
- 5.2 1980s
- 5.3 1990s
- 6 Death
- 7 Personal
and family life
- 8 Cars
- 9 Honours
- 10 Beatles
songs written or co-written by Harrison
- 11 Discography
- 12 Notes
- 13 References
- 14 External
links
|
Overview
During The Beatles' heyday, John
Lennon and Paul McCartney were its
main songwriters though Harrison generally wrote or sang lead on one or
two songs for each album. His compositions earned him growing
admiration as a talent in his own right. Despite his artistic growth he
remained overshadowed by the Lennon/McCartney duo. After the band's
breakup it was Harrison who achieved the first #1 single ("My
Sweet Lord") and #1 album (All
Things Must Pass) by any ex-Beatle. Besides his
notable talents as a singer, songwriter, guitarist,
and sitarist,
he was also a record producer.
While still a Beatle, Harrison became attracted to Indian
music and Hinduism.
Both would subsequently play a prominent role in Harrison’s life and
music. His use of the sitar
introduced the instrument to millions of Western listeners. He adopted
Hinduism (as there is no conversion in hinduism) and his last rites
were performed according to Hindu tradition. With his ashes disperse in
the holy River Ganges.
After The Beatles' breakup Harrison had a successful solo
career, scoring hits with "My Sweet Lord" (1970), "Give Me Love
(Give Me Peace on Earth)" (1973), "What is Life","All
Those Years Ago" (1981), and "Got My Mind Set on You"
(1987). Harrison's landmark triple album, All Things Must Pass,
currently holds the distinction of being the best selling album by a
solo Beatle.
He also organized the first large-scale benefit
concert, The Concert for Bangladesh,
which took place on 1 August 1971. Harrison was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame as a solo artist in 2004.
Harrison was also a film producer and founded Handmade
Films in 1979. The company's films include Monty
Python’s The Life of Brian
(in which he had a very minor cameo), Time
Bandits, Withnail
and I, and Mona
Lisa. Harrison also has a cameo role in the
Rutles parody film All You Need Is Cash.
Harrison died of cancer on November 29, 2001 at the age of 58.
Early years: 1943–1958
Harrison was born to Louise and Harold Harrison in Liverpool, England into a Catholic
family with deep roots in Ireland. His maternal grand-parents hailed
from Ireland's County Wexford, A good deal of confusion as to his
real birthday arose from a family birth record which noted him as being
born around 12:10am on 25 February 1943.
He later confirmed his birthday was 24 February 1943 at 11:42pm. Harrison's childhood home was
located at 12 Arnold Grove, Wavertree,
Liverpool until 1950, when the family moved to 25 Upton Green, Speke.
He first attended school at Dovedale Road Infants & Juniors
School, just off Penny Lane. There he passed his Eleven-plus
examination and was awarded a place at the Liverpool Institute for
Boys (in the building now housing the Liverpool
Institute for Performing Arts), in which he met Paul
McCartney and attended from 1954 to 1959. The Institute for
Boys was an English grammar school and, despite his
qualification, Harrison was regarded as a poor student; contemporaries
described him as someone who would "sit alone in the corner".
He left school in the summer of 1959 without attaining any academic
credentials (or even being allowed to sit his O-levels). After
school he would play guitar all night until his fingers bled and
he had formed a skiffle
group called 'The Rebels' with his brother Peter and a friend Arthur
Kelly.
1958–1960: The Quarrymen and the
Silver Beetles
-
Harrison got to know Paul McCartney, beginning
in 1954, but they had other things in common. Both had lived in Speke
on an outer council (public housing) estate and they also traveled on
the same Corporation bus (sometimes with Harrison's father at the
wheel), secretly smoking cigarettes on the top deck (which McCartney
has said is the inspiration for some of his portion of "A
Day in the Life"),
on the way to the Liverpool Institute. McCartney introduced Harrison to
John Lennon and to the group. Harrison's father, as chairman of the
social committee of the nearby Garston bus depot, helped them get
bookings in social clubs nearby. By early 1958 Harrison had begun
playing lead guitar
in the band (initially called the Quarrymen, later the
Silver Beetles), which in 1960 became The Beatles.
Upon leaving school in the summer of 1959, Harrison worked
briefly as an apprentice electrician at Blacklers
Stores in Liverpool.
The training helped Harrison become the member who knew the most about
rigging their sound equipment.
By the mid-60's Harrison would set up his own multitrack
recording gear at his Esher home, Kinfauns, making song
demos for himself and The Beatles.
1960–1970: The Beatles
-
In the early days of the group, when it was still called the
Quarrymen, Harrison was asked by McCartney to join. Harrison was the
youngest member of the group, initially looked upon as a kid by the others.
He was never officially asked to join the group, but hung out with the
others and filled in when he was needed, and was soon looked upon as
one of the group.
During the early years of the group's rise to local fame, Harrison's
mother often cheered him on from the audience, much to the
consternation of Lennon's Aunt Mimi, who once complained to her that
they could all have "lovely peaceful lives" but for Mrs Harrison's
encouraging the group. While McCartney was the "cute Beatle" and Lennon
the leader, Harrison was still a favourite of the female fans. At some
concerts, the group was occasionally showered with Jelly
Babies, which Harrison had said to be his favourite sweet
(unfortunately American fans could not get hold of this soft British
confection, replacing them instead with hard jelly beans, much to the
group's discomfort).
Harrison was not at first regarded as a virtuoso guitarist,
especially in the early days of The Beatles' recording career. Several
of Harrison's Beatles guitar solos were recorded under specific
directions from McCartney, who on occasion demanded that Harrison play
what he envisioned virtually note-for-note.
Other Harrison solos were directed or modified by producer George
Martin, who also vetoed several of Harrison's song and instrumental
offerings. Martin admitted years later, "I was always rather beastly to
George."
Toward the end of the 1960s, however, Harrison became known as
a fluent, inventive, and highly accomplished lead and rhythm guitarist.
In the 1970s and thereafter, his skilled slide
work became his signature sound.
Harrison was the first of The Beatles to arrive on American
soil, when he visited his sister, Louise, in Benton,
Illinois in September 1963, some five months before the group appeared
on The Ed Sullivan Show.
During this visit, George browsed a record store and inquired about his
group's music.
The store owner had not even heard of them, and British pop music
was conspicuously absent in the States: even top performer Cliff
Richard's recent movie, Summer
Holiday, was relegated to second billing when
it played. Harrison returned to England, reporting to his bandmates that it
might be difficult for them to succeed in America.
During the era of Beatlemania, Harrison was characterised
as the "quiet Beatle", noted for his introspective manner and his
tendency not to speak in press conferences.
He studied situations and people closely, though, and was the most
interested of any Beatle in the group's finances, often quizzing Brian
Epstein about them.
Despite his "quiet Beatle" image, George also had a slightly wild side.
Once, at a bar, a photographer got on Harrison's bad side. He got too
close, and George proceeded to throw his drink at the offending press
member.
He could also wisecrack as well as anyone in the band; when a reporter
asked what they did in their hotel suite between shows, Harrison told
him, "We ice-skate."
During The Beatles' first trip to the U.S., in February 1964, Harrison
received a new "360/12" model guitar from the Rickenbacker
company; this was a 12-string electric made to look onstage like a
6-string. He began using the 360 in the studio on Lennon's "You Can't
Do That" and other songs. Roger McGuinn liked the effect so much
that it became his signature guitar sound with the Byrds.
Harrison wrote his first song, "Don't
Bother Me", during a sick day in 1963, as an exercise "to see if I
'could' write a song", as he remembered. "Don't Bother Me" appeared on
the second Beatles album (With
the Beatles) later that year, on Meet
the Beatles! in the US in early 1964, and also
briefly in the film A Hard Day's Night.
After that, The Beatles did not record another Harrison song until
1965, when he contributed "I Need You" and "You
Like Me Too Much" to the album Help!.
Harrison was the lead vocal on all The Beatles songs that he
wrote by himself. He also sang lead vocal on other songs, including "Chains"
and "Do You Want to Know a
Secret" on Please Please Me,
"Roll Over Beethoven" and "Devil
in Her Heart" on With the Beatles,
"I'm Happy Just to
Dance with You" on A Hard Day's Night, and "Everybody's Trying
to Be My Baby" on Beatles for Sale.
A turning point in Harrison's career came during an American tour in
1965, when his friend David Crosby of the Byrds
introduced him to Indian classical music and the work of sitar maestro Ravi Shankar.
Harrison quickly became fascinated with the instrument, immersed
himself in Indian music and was pivotal in popularising the sitar in
particular and Indian music in general in the West.
Buying a sitar himself as The Beatles came back from a Far
East tour, he became the first Western popular musician to play one on
a pop record, on the Rubber Soul
track "Norwegian Wood
(This Bird Has Flown)". He championed Shankar with Western audiences
and was largely responsible for having him included on the bill at the Monterey
Pop Festival in June
1967. Shankar
had not admired Harrison's first Indian-influenced efforts, but the two
became friends, and Harrison began his first formal musical studies
with Shankar.
A personal turning point for Harrison came during the filming
of the movie Help!, on
location in the Bahamas,
when a Hindu
devotee presented each Beatle with a book about reincarnation.
Harrison's interest in Indian culture expanded to his embracing Hinduism. A
pilgrimage with wife Pattie to India, where Harrison studied sitar, met
several gurus
and visited various holy places, filled the months between the end of
the final Beatles tour in 1966 and the commencement of the Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band sessions.
It was through his wife (and when back in England) that
Harrison met Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who
introduced The Beatles, their wives and girlfriends to Transcendental Meditation.
While they parted company with the Maharishi some months afterwards,
Harrison continued his pursuit of Eastern
philosophy.
In the summer of 1969, he produced the single "Hare
Krishna Mantra", performed by the devotees of the London Radha Krishna Temple.
That same year, he and fellow Beatle John
Lennon met A.C.
Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, Founder-acharya of the International
Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON). Soon after, Harrison
embraced the Hare Krishna tradition (particularly japa-yoga
chanting with beads; a meditation technique similar to the Roman
Catholic rosary),
and remained associated with it until his death.
In 1969, George Harrison asked Peter
Asher to look up Raven (U.S. band) while he was in
New York City.
Asher offered Raven (U.S. band) an Apple
Records recording contract in the kitchen of Steve Paul's Scene
however, Raven turned the offer down after being informed that Harrison
was unavailable to produce and instead would have to settle for Asher..
Raven (U.S. band) went on to sign
with Columbia Records.
When, during his lifetime, Harrison bequeathed to ISKCON his
Letchmore Heath mansion (renamed Bhaktivedanta
Manor) north of London, he redoubled speculations that he
would leave ISKCON a large sum in his will.
Whilst some sources indicate he left nothing to the organisation,
others report he did leave a sum of 20 million pounds.
Harrison formed a close friendship with Eric
Clapton in the late 1960s, and they co-wrote the song "Badge,"
which was released on Cream's Goodbye
album in 1969. Someone — variously reported as Harrison, Starr, or
Clapton — misread Harrison's handwritten "bridge" (a term for a section
of a song which typically links the verse to the chorus) as "badge",
and this became the title. Harrison also played rhythm guitar on the
song up until the bridge. For contractual reasons,
Harrison was required to use the pseudonym "L'Angelo Misterioso." One
of Harrison's compositions for The Beatles' Abbey
Road album, "Here
Comes the Sun", was written in Clapton's back garden. Clapton also
guested on the Harrison-penned Beatles track "While My Guitar Gently
Weeps."
Harrison's songwriting improved greatly through the years, but
his material did not earn respect from his fellow Beatles until near
the group's breakup (McCartney told Lennon in 1969: "George's songs
this year are at least as good as ours"). Harrison later said that he
always had difficulty getting the band to record his songs.
Notable 1965–70 Harrison compositions include the much live
played: "If I Needed Someone", "I
Want to Tell You", "Think for Yourself", "Taxman", "Within You Without You", "Blue
Jay Way", "Only a Northern Song", "Old
Brown Shoe, "I
Need You", "Don't Bother Me", "While My Guitar Gently
Weeps" (featuring lead guitar by Eric Clapton), "Piggies" (later
featured inadvertently in the notorious Charles
Manson murder case), "Savoy Truffle", "Something", "The
Inner Light", "Here Comes the Sun", "I Me Mine"
(the last Beatles recording and the title of a book Harrison published
a decade later), and "For You Blue" (about his ex-wife Patti
Boyd, featuring lap steel guitar by John Lennon).
Friction among Harrison, Lennon, and McCartney increased
markedly during the recording of The
Beatles, as Harrison threatened to leave the
group on several occasions.
Between 1967 and 1969, McCartney on several occasions expressed
dissatisfaction with Harrison's guitar playing. Tensions came to a head
during the filming of rehearsal sessions at Twickenham
Studios for what eventually became the Let
It Be documentary film. Conflicts between
Harrison and McCartney appear in several scenes in the film, including
one in which Harrison retorts to McCartney, "OK, well, I don't mind.
I'll play whatever you want me to play or I won't play at all if you
don't want me to play. Whatever it is that'll please
you, I'll do it." Frustrated by ongoing slights, the poor working
conditions in the cold and sterile film studio, and Lennon's creative
disengagement from the group, Harrison quit the band on 10 January. He
returned on 22 January after negotiations with the other Beatles at two
business meetings.
The group's internal relations were more cordial (though still
strained) during recordings for the album Abbey
Road. The album included "Something"
and "Here Comes the Sun", probably
Harrison's most popular Beatles songs. "Something" is considered to be
one of his best works and was recorded by both Elvis
Presley and Frank Sinatra, who deemed it "the
greatest love song of the last fifty years." (However, Sinatra credited
the song as his "favourite Lennon-McCartney composition",
rather than crediting Harrison when making the compliment.) Harrison's
increasing productivity, coupled with his difficulties in getting The
Beatles to record his music, meant that by the end of the group's
career he had amassed a considerable stockpile of unreleased material.
When Harrison was asked years later what kind of music The
Beatles might have made if they had stayed together, his answer was to
the point: "The solo stuff that we've done would have been on Beatle
albums." Harrison's assessment is confirmed by the fact that many of
the songs on their early solo albums premiered at various times during
The Beatles' recording sessions but were not actually recorded by the
group.
Harrison was only 26 years old at the time of The Beatles'
last recording session on 4 January 1970 (Lennon, who had left the
group the previous September, did not attend the session).
Solo career
1970s
After The Beatles split in 1970, Harrison released a number of albums,
both as solo projects and as a member of other groups, using his slide
guitar. After years of being limited in his contributions to The
Beatles, he released a large number of the songs he had stockpiled in
the first major solo work released after the breakup, All
Things Must Pass, the first triple album by a
single artist in rock history.
All Things Must Pass was a triumphant entry
into the solo market by Harrison and marked by four full sides of
excellent Beatle-worthy material, followed by an additional two sides
of extended rock jams by Harrison and other musician friends. In terms
of its breadth and virtuosity, it in some ways resembled The
White Album, but this work was the achievement
of a sole individual.
It certainly gave pause to many who considered George to be
out of the league of Lennon and McCartney as a performer and
songwriter. Along with the John Lennon/Plastic Ono
Band album and Paul McCartney's Ram,
All Things Must Pass is generally deemed one of the
three finest solo efforts by the ex-Beatles.
The album, which topped the charts, included the number-one
hit singles "My Sweet Lord" and "Isn't It a Pity"
as well as the top-10 single "What Is Life." Harrison was later sued
for copyright infringement over
"My Sweet Lord," because of its surface similarity to the 1963 Chiffons
single "He's
So Fine". Harrison denied deliberately stealing the song, but he lost
the resulting court case in 1976. In the ruling, the court accepted the
possibility that Harrison had "subconsciously copied" the Chiffons'
melody as the basis for his own song. Disputes over damages dragged on
into the 1990s, with manager Allen Klein changing sides by buying
Bright Tunes, which published "He's So Fine", and continuing the suit
after parting with Harrison. Harrison ultimately wound up as the owner
of both songs (Huntley 2004).
The Concert for Bangladesh
"All Things Must Pass" was revived in early 2001, when a
remastered version was released. It peaked at #4 on Billboard's Pop
Catalog chart, with Harrison taking part in Internet chats to help
promote it. It reappeared on that chart following Harrison's death.
Featured on the 30th Anniversary edition were five bonus tracks,
including the top-notch outtake "I Live For You" as well as a new,
updated version of "My Sweet Lord." ATMP has been certified by the RIAA
as having sold six million copies in the U.S. alone. In early 2007, it
was determined that "All Things Must Pass" indeed was a #1 album in the
United Kingdom when first released in the winter of 1970-71. Because
some sales were not properly counted, the album originally peaked at #4
in Britain.
Harrison was the first rock star to organise a major charity
concert. His Concert for Bangladesh
on August
1, 1971,
drew over 40,000 people to two shows in New
York's Madison Square Garden with the
intention of aiding the starving refugees from the war in Bangladesh.
Ravi Shankar opened the
proceedings, which included such other popular musicians as Bob Dylan
(who rarely appeared live in the early 1970s), Eric
Clapton, who made his first public appearance in months (due
to a heroin addiction which began when Derek
and the Dominos broke up), Leon Russell, Badfinger, Billy
Preston and fellow Beatle Ringo Starr. Unfortunately,
tax troubles and questionable expenses tied up many of the concert's
proceeds (see [3]).
Apple Corps released a newly arranged concert DVD and CD in October
2005 (with all artists' sales royalties continuing to go to UNICEF), which
contained additional material such as previously unreleased rehearsal
footage of "If Not For You", featuring Harrison and Dylan.
In addition to his own works, during this time Harrison
co-wrote or produced two hits for Starr ("It Don't Come Easy" and
"Photograph") and appeared on tracks by Lennon "How
Do You Sleep?", Harry Nilsson ("You're Breakin' My
Heart"), Badfinger
("Day After Day") on which he played slide guitar, Billy
Preston ("That's The Way God Planned It") and Cheech
& Chong ("Basketball Jones").
Harrison's next album was Living in the Material
World in 1973. "Give Me Love
(Give Me Peace on Earth)" was a big hit (it reached #1 in the U.S.),
and "Sue Me Sue You Blues" was a window into the former Beatles'
miserable legal travails, but overall the record was seen as too
overtly religious, though it did reach #1 on the U.S. album chart for 5
weeks. A reissue of the album, along with fine bonus tracks "Deep Blue"
and "Miss O'Dell" and a bonus DVD was released in September 2006 and
reached #38 on Billboard's Pop Catalog chart.
In 1974, Harrison released Dark
Horse and at the same time launched a major
tour of the United States. The tour was panned for its long mid-concert
act of Pandit Ravi Shankar & Friends and
for Harrison's hoarse voice. The album made the Top 20 in the US album
chart, but was a failure in the UK, because of a combination of
declining interest and negative reviews. The single "Ding Dong, Ding
Dong", a Top 40 UK hit, was criticised for its unadventurous lyric,
though it has since become a favourite record with radio programmers in
the closing moments of each year, and at New Year's Eve parties.
It was during this period while in Los
Angeles, preparing for the 1974 tour, that he also opened offices for
his new Dark Horse Records on the A&M
Records lot, on La Brea Avenue in Los Angeles. It was in those offices
that he met Olivia Trinidad Arias, who was
assigned to work at his label with Terry Doran from Apple and Jack
Oliver who came over from London to run the label. The relationship
with Olivia progressed during the rehearsals, and she joined Harrison
on his 1974 tour, during which their relationship blossomed into
something more, resulting in her permanent relocation to Friar Park
in Henley-on-Thames, England,
George's home.
Subsequent to the 1974 tour he returned to his home in the UK,
and commuted between there and Los Angeles for the next few years,
while Dark Horse issued a small number of records by performers such as
Splinter,
Attitudes,
and Ravi Shankar. He also planned to issue his own records through Dark
Horse, after his contract with EMI expired.
Amid a music media rife with Beatle-reunion speculation,
Harrison was probably the least accommodating of these theories,
telling the press in 1974 that while he would not mind working with Lennon
and Starr
again, he could not see himself being involved in a band with McCartney,
who had limited his contributions while in The Beatles. He told the
press that if someone wanted to hear Beatles-style music, they could
"go listen to Wings," McCartney's new band.
(Schaffner 1977)
His final studio album for EMI (and Apple Records) was Extra
Texture (Read All About It), featuring a diecut
cover. The album spawned two singles, "You" and "This Guitar
(Can't Keep From Crying)", which became Apple's final original single
release in 1975. (Schaffner 1977)
Following the former Beatles' departure from Capitol, the
record company was in a position to licence releases featuring Beatles
and post-Beatles work on the same album, and used Harrison for this
experiment. The Best of George
Harrison (1976) combined his best Beatles songs
with a slim selection of his best solo Apple work. Harrison made plain
his annoyance with the track listing and the fact that he was not
consulted. It did not chart in the UK.
Business and personal troubles took their toll on Harrison
during 1976. When his first Dark Horse album (Thirty
Three & 1/3, his age at the time) was
due, Harrison was suffering from hepatitis
and could not complete the production. After A&M threatened to
take him to court, Warner Bros. Records stepped
in, buying out Harrison's Dark Horse contract with A&M, and
allowing him time to regain his health.
Thirty Three & 1/3
was his most successful late-1970s album, reaching #11 on the U.S.
charts, and it featured the hits "This Song" (a satire of the "My
Sweet Lord" ruling) and "Crackerbox Palace" (a humorous and
surrealistic number, looking back on his life to date; the title was
the name of comedian Lord Buckley's former home in Hollywood,
California,
which Harrison visited, while "Mr. Greif" was George Greif, Buckley's
former manager).
After his second marriage and the birth of son Dhani
Harrison, Harrison's next album was self-titled. 1979's George Harrison
included the singles "Blow Away", "Love Comes To Everyone" and
"Faster".
1980s
In 1980,
Harrison became the only ex-Beatle to write an autobiography, I Me Mine.
Former Beatles publicist Derek Taylor helped with the book,
which was initially released in a high-priced limited edition by Genesis
Publications. The book said little about The Beatles, focusing instead
on Harrison's hobbies, such as gardening and Formula
One automobile racing. It also included the lyrics to his songs and
many rare photographs.
Harrison was deeply shocked by the December 1980 murder of John
Lennon. The crime reinforced his decades-long worries about
safety from stalkers. It was also a deep personal loss, although unlike
former bandmates McCartney and Starr, Harrison had little contact with
Lennon in the years before the murder. Harrison modified the lyrics of
a song he had written for Starr to make it a tribute song to Lennon. "All Those Years Ago"
received substantial radio airplay, reaching #2 on the US charts. All
three remaining Beatles performed on it, although it was expressly a
Harrison single. "Teardrops" was issued as a follow-up single, but was
not nearly as successful.
Both singles were taken from the album Somewhere
in England, released in 1981. The album was
originally slated for release in late 1980, but Warner
Bros. rejected it, ordering Harrison to replace several tracks, and to
change the album cover as well. This was another professional
humiliation.
In 1981 Harrison played guitar on one track of Mick
Fleetwood's record The Visitor: Lindsey
Buckingham's song "Walk a Thin Line".
Aside from a song on the Porky's
Revenge soundtrack in 1984, his version of a little-known Bob Dylan
song "I Don't Want To Do It", Harrison released no new records for five
years after 1982's Gone Troppo was
met with apparent indifference. Harrison returned in 1987 with the highly
successful album Cloud Nine,
co-produced with Jeff Lynne of Electric Light Orchestra,
and enjoyed a hit (#1 in the U.S.; #2 in the U.K) when his rendition of
James Ray's early 1960s number "Got My Mind Set on You" was
released as a single; another single, "When
We Was Fab", a retrospective of The Beatles' days complete with musical
flavours for each bandmate, was also a minor hit. MTV regularly played
the two videos, and elevated Harrison's public profile with another
generation of music listeners. The album reached #8 and #10 on the U.S.
and U.K. charts, respectively. In the U.S., several tracks also enjoyed
high placement on Billboard's Album Rock chart -- "Devil's Radio,"
"This Is Love" and "Cloud 9" in addition to the aforementioned singles.
In 1985,
Harrison made a rare public appearance on the HBO special Carl
Perkins and Friends along with Starr and Clapton among
others. He only agreed to appear because he was a close admirer of
Perkins where The Beatles covered three of his songs, one ("Matchbox") was
recorded with Perkins in the studio.
During the late 1980s, he was instrumental in forming the Traveling
Wilburys with Roy Orbison, Jeff
Lynne, Bob Dylan, and Tom Petty
when they gathered in Dylan's garage to quickly record an additional
track for a projected Harrison European single release. The record
company realised the track ("Handle With Care") was too
good for its original purpose as a B-side and asked for a full,
separate album. This had to be completed within two weeks, as Dylan was
scheduled to start a tour. The album was released in October
1988 and recorded under pseudonyms as half-brothers (supposed sons
of Charles Truscott Wilbury, Sr.), Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1.
One of Harrison's most artistically successful ventures during
this period was his involvement in film production through his company Handmade
Films. The Beatles had been fans of the anarchic humour of the
Goons, and Harrison became a dedicated fan of their stylistic
successors, Monty Python. He provided financial
backing for the Python film The
Life of Brian after the original backers (EMI
Films) withdrew, fearing the subject matter of the film was too
controversial. Other films produced by Handmade included Mona
Lisa, Time
Bandits, Shanghai
Surprise and Withnail
and I. He made several cameo appearances in
these movies, including appearing as a nightclub singer in Shanghai
Surprise and as Mr Papadopolous in Life
of Brian. He also appeared in an episode of the
hit television series The Simpsons. One of his most memorable
cameos was as a reporter in the cult Beatles parody the
Rutles, created by ex-Python Eric Idle. Despite this string of
successes, Handmade Films fell into mismanagement in the 1990s, much
like The Beatles' Apple Corps, and the demands severely
depleted Harrison's finances.
Early in 1989, Harrison, Lynne and another ex-Beatle Starr,
all appeared on Tom Petty's "I Won't Back Down", where
Harrison played electric guitar. The same year also
saw the release of Best of Dark Horse
1976-1989, a compilation drawn from his later
solo work. This album also included two new songs, "Poor Little Girl",
and "Cockamamie Business" (which saw him once again looking wryly upon
his Beatle past), as well as "Cheer Down" which had first been released
earlier in the year on the soundtrack to the Mel Gibson
movie Lethal Weapon 2.
Unlike his previous greatest hits package, Harrison made sure to
oversee this compilation.
1990s
The first year of the new decade saw a new Traveling Wilburys
album, despite the death of Roy Orbison in late 1988. The band
reportedly approached Del Shannon about filling the vacant
slot, but Shannon committed suicide in February 1990. The second album,
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3
was recorded as a four-piece. It was not nearly as successful as the
previous album, but still managed to spawn the singles "She's My Baby",
"Inside Out", and "Wilbury Twist".
In 1991,
Harrison staged a tour of Japan along with Eric
Clapton. It was his first tour since the ill-fated 1974 U.S.
tour, and, although he seemed to enjoy it, there were to be no others.
The Live in Japan
recording came from these shows. In October 1992, Harrison played three
songs ("If Not For You", "Absolutely Sweet Marie", and "My
Back Pages") at a huge Bob Dylan tribute concert at Madison
Square Garden in New York City.
In 1994-1996, Harrison reunited with the surviving former
Beatles and Traveling Wilburys producer Jeff Lynne for The
Beatles Anthology project, which included the recording of two new
Beatles songs built around solo vocal tapes recorded by Lennon in the
1970s, as well as the lengthy interviews on The Beatles' history. The
project was spurred on in part by Harrison's financial difficulties at
the time, stemming from problems with his Handmade Films venture.
In 1995,
at the height of the britpop movement—which was heavily
influenced by Harrison's music—he became embroiled in a feud with Oasis'
Gallagher brothers. Devoted fans of The Beatles, the brothers were
offended when Harrison referred to them as "silly" and "a passing fad".
Noel
Gallagher responded by saying "George was always the quiet
Beatle—maybe he should keep that up" whilst Liam
Gallagher described him as a "nipple" and threatened to play
golf off Harrison's head should they ever meet. Apparently, the feud
was short lived, and when Noel Gallagher and Harrison actually met,
they got on well.
In 1996, Harrison recorded, produced and played on "Distance
Makes No Difference With Love" with Carl Perkins for his "Go-Cat-Go" record.
Harrison later in his career.
Harrison's final television appearance was not intended as
such; in fact, he was not the featured artist, and the appearance was
to promote Chants of India,
another collaboration with Ravi Shankar released in 1997, at the height of
interest in chant
music. John Fugelsang, then of VH1, conducted the
interview, and at one point an acoustic guitar was produced, and handed
to Harrison. When an audience member asked to hear "a Beatles song,"
Harrison pulled a sheepish look and answered, "I don't think I know
any!" Harrison then played "All Things Must Pass" and "Any Road", a
song which subsequently appeared on the 2002 "Brainwashed" album.
In January 1998 Harrison attended the funeral of his boyhood
idol, Carl
Perkins, in Jackson, Tennessee. Harrison
played an impromptu version of Perkins' song "Your True Love" during
the service.
A former heavy smoker, Harrison endured an ongoing
battle with cancer
throughout the late 1990s, having growths removed first from his throat,
then his lung.
In late 1999 Harrison survived a knife attack by an intruder
in his home, which in some ways mirrored John Lennon's murder. On the
evening of 30 December 1999, Michael Abram broke into the Harrisons' Friar Park
home in Henley-on-Thames and stabbed George
multiple times, ultimately puncturing his lung. Harrison and his wife, Olivia, fought the
intruder and detained him for the police. 35-year-old Abram, who
believed he was possessed by Harrison and was
on a "mission from God" to kill him, was
later acquitted on grounds of insanity. Harrison was traumatized by the
invasion and attack and afterward severely limited his public
appearances.
In 2001,
Harrison appeared as a guest musician on the Electric Light Orchestra
album Zoom, played
slide guitar on the song "Love Letters" for Bill
Wyman's Rhythm Kings, remastered and restored unreleased
tracks from the Traveling Wilburys, and wrote a new song, "Horse
to the Water." The latter song ended up as Harrison's final recording
session, on October
2, just 58 days before his death. It appeared on Jools
Holland's album Small World, Big Band.
Harrison was a great fan of the ukulele and usually had one with him, while
travelling, in his later years.
Death
Harrison's cancer recurred in 2001 and was found to have metastasised.
Despite aggressive treatment, it was soon found to be terminal. He set
about getting his affairs in order and spent his final months with his
family and close friends. He also worked on songs for an album with his
son Dhani, which was released after his death.
Harrison died in a Hollywood Hills mansion that was once leased by McCartney
and was previously owned by Courtney Love.
(Reuters reported that the house had been leased in the name of Gavin
de Becker, a security consultant working for Harrison).
Harrison died on 29 November 2001. He was 58 years old.
Harrison's death was ascribed to lung cancer that had metastasised to the
brain. He was cremated
and, although it was widely reported that his ashes were scattered in
the Ganges
River, the ceremony was not conducted at the expected time.
The actual disposition of the ashes has not been publicly disclosed.
After his death, the Harrison family released the following
statement: "He left this world as he lived in it: conscious of God, fearless of death
and at peace, surrounded by family and friends. Harrison had often
said, "Everything else can wait, but the search for God cannot wait; and
love one another."
Harrison and Aaliyah made UK chart history when they
scored the first (and so far the only) pair of back-to-back posthumous number
one hits as Aaliyah's "More than a Woman" (released on 7 January 2002 and topped the
chart on 13
January 2002)
was followed by Harrison's "My Sweet Lord" (re-released on 14 January
2002 and
topped the chart on 20 January 2002).
Harrison's final album, Brainwashed,
was completed by Dhani Harrison and Jeff
Lynne and released on 18 November 2002. It received generally positive reviews in
the United States, and peaked at #18 on the Billboard charts. A
media-only single, "Stuck Inside a Cloud", was heavily played on U.K.
and U.S. radio to promote the album (#27 on Billboard's Adult
Contemporary chart), while the official single "Any Road", released in
May 2003, reached #37 on the British chart.
Personal and family life
Harrison was the youngest of four children (his older siblings
were sister Louise and brothers Peter and Harry). His father, Harry,
had been a sailor until the children came along; he then changed
careers, becoming a city bus driver to stay close to home. His
mother Louise taught ballroom dancing at home. The family always
encouraged George; his mother lent him the money for his first guitars
and kept him company (sometimes until late hours) as he taught himself
to play. Harrison paid his mother back by making deliveries for the
local butcher; Lennon's family were among
those along his route. His next job (after leaving school) was his
apprenticeship at Blacklers, while playing nights with the early
Beatles; to meet their first tour commitments, Harrison had to take his
summer holiday early.
George's father, Harry, was disappointed that George had to
quit at Blacklers to make the first Beatles trip to Hamburg in 1960,
wanting him instead to have a trade, but he reasoned that if things
didn't work out, George was young and had time to start over. Harrison
himself had hopes of being a working musician for a few years, then
possibly trying to get into art school.
Harrison with Pattie Boyd in A Hard Day's Night
Harrison married model Pattie Boyd on 21 January
1966 at Leatherhead
and Esher
registry office, with Paul McCartney as best man, and is reputed to
have written the song "Something" for her in 1969, although he
himself denied this, saying he was actually thinking about a song for Ray
Charles. In the late 1960s, Eric Clapton fell in love
with Boyd, and famously poured out his unrequited passion on the title
song of the landmark Derek and the Dominos album Layla and Other
Assorted Love Songs (1970). Some time after its
release Boyd left Harrison, and she and Clapton subsequently married.
Despite this, the two men remained close friends, calling themselves
"husbands-in-law."
Harrison's mother died in 1970 aged 58; His father also died
aged 70, eight years later,
Harrison married for a second time, to Olivia
Trinidad Arias (born 18 May 1948), in 1978. The ceremony took place on 2
September They had one son, Dhani Harrison, Dhani looks
so remarkably like his father that McCartney
quipped on stage at Concert for George: "Olivia told
me that it looks like George stayed young and we all got old." After
the 1999 stabbing incident in which Arias subdued Harrison's assailant
nearly single-handedly, Harrison was sent a fax by close friend Tom Petty
that simply read, "Aren't you glad you married a Mexican girl?" [4]
Harrison was a tremendous fan of Monty
Python, forming his Handmade Films company for the
purpose of financing the group's film The
Life of Brian. It was through his love of the comedy group's work that
he met Python member Eric Idle. The two became close friends,
with Harrison appearing on Idle's Rutland Weekend
Television series and in his Beatles spoof, The
Rutles' All You Need Is Cash.
Idle also performed at the Concert for George, held to commemorate
Harrison. Idle writes at length about his love for and friendship with
Harrison, and his fond memories of the singer, in his memoir The
Greedy Bastard Diary.
Cars
Harrison was a fan of sports cars and motor
racing; even before becoming a musician, he collected photos of racing
drivers and their cars. He was often seen in the paddock areas of the British
Grand Prix at Silverstone as well as other
motor racing venues. He credited Jackie Stewart with encouraging him
to return to recording in the late 1970s, and he wrote "Faster" as a
tribute to Stewart (who also appeared in the accompanying promotional
video) and Niki
Lauda. Proceeds from its release went to the Gunnar
Nilsson cancer charity, set up following the Swedish driver's death
from the disease in 1978.
Harrison was a huge fan of the small British racing car, the Mini
Cooper. Throughout the 60's he drove his Minis to shows and clubs
around London. In The Beatles Anthology,
there is a story of a drug-induced trip involving his Mini Cooper, and
footage of Harrison driving his Coopers around race tracks at high
speeds.
Also in The Beatles Anthology, Harrison,
McCartney, and Starr are shown sitting around a table at Friar Park
with a colour poster of the late Brazilian Formula 1 World Champion Ayrton
Senna behind them. Harrison also owned a $1 million McLaren F1
road car. The 3-seater McLaren can be seen carrying Harrison,
McCartney, and Starr in segment of The Beatles Anthology,
prior to the video for the single "Free As A Bird" and also in that of "Any Road".
Honours
On 12
June 1965
Harrison and the three other Beatles were appointed Members of the
Order of the British Empire (MBE), and received their
insignia from the Queen at an
investiture at Buckingham Palace on 26 October.
The minor planet 4149, discovered on 9 March 1984 by B. A. Skiff at
the Anderson Mesa Station of the Lowell Observatory, was named after
Harrison.
In December 1992, Harrison became the first recipient of
Billboard's Century Award -- presented to music artists for significant
bodies of work. Fellow Traveling Wilbury Tom Petty introduced Harrison,
who made a rare public appearance to receive the prestigious honor.
On 29 November 2002, on the first anniversary of Harrison's
death, McCartney, Starr,
Eric
Clapton, Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers, Jeff Lynne, Billy
Preston, Joe Brown, Jools
Holland, Sam Brown, Olivia
Harrison, and Dhani Harrison were among
many others who attended the Concert For George at the Royal
Albert Hall in London.
McCartney played "Something", and started the song by
playing a ukulele
unaccompanied. He explained this by saying that when he and Harrison
got together, they would often play Beatles songs (and their own) on a ukulele.
McCartney, Clapton, and Starr reunited on "While My Guitar Gently
Weeps" for the first time since the song was recorded. The profits from
the concert went to Harrison's charity, the Material World Charitable
Foundation.
In 2003, Harrison was ranked number 21 in Rolling
Stone's list of The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.
Harrison was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame as a solo artist on 15 March 2004.
The career and legacy of George Harrison were the featured
cover story for the 10 December 2001, issue of Time
magazine. This marked the first issue of Time magazine published after 11
September 2001
that had as its featured cover story a person or topic that was totally
unrelated to the September 11, 2001
terrorist attacks.
Harrison was inducted into the Madison Square Garden Walk of
Fame on 1
August 2006.
In June 2007, it was announced that Harrison would receive a
star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2008. Meanwhile, that same month,
portraits of Harrison and John Lennon were unveiled at the Mirage Hotel
in Las Vegas, where they will be on permanent display.
Beatles songs written or
co-written by Harrison
- List
of Beatles songs written by George Harrison
Discography
-
Main article: George Harrison
discography
Notes
-
Harry, Bill (2000). The Beatles
Encyclopedia: Revised and Updated. London: Virgin Publishing,
492. ISBN
0-7535-0481-2.
-
Harrison told people he was actually born on the 24th as a joke. All
cited sources show his birth date as 25 February.
-
Top 100 Albums (2006-07-31).
Retrieved on 2007-03-09.
-
The Times Peter Harrison obituary.
Retrieved on 2007-07-22.
-
page 31, The Beatles Anthology, Chronicle Books LLC, 2000
-
Lewisohn, Mark (1992). The
Complete Beatles Chronicle. Pyramid Books, 13.
-
Loewen, Nancy (1989). Profiles
in music. Vero Beach: Rourke Enterprises, Inc., 26-27.
-
Broken link.
-
Lewisohn, Mark (1992). The
Complete Beatles Chronicle, 122.
-
The Longest Cocktail
Party, (pg. 119)
-
Once Life Matters: A New Beginning, (Author: Marty Angelo, Raven
Manager, Impact Publishing, ISBN
0961895446)
-
[1]
-
[2]
-
MacDonald,
Ian (2005). Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and
the Sixties, Second Revised Edition, London: Pimlico (Rand),
337. ISBN
1-844-13828-3.
-
Sulpy, Doug; Schweighardt, Ray
(2003). Get Back: The Unauthorized Chronicle of the Beatles'
Let It Be Disaster. Helter Skelter Publishing. ISBN 1-900924-83-8.
-
Lewisohn,
Mark (1988). The Beatles Recording Sessions. New
York: Harmony Books, 195. ISBN
0-517-57066-1.
-
Huntley, Elliot J (2004). Mystical
One: George Harrison: After the Breakup of the Beatles.
Guernica Editions Inc.. ISBN
1-55071-197-0.
-
Green, Joshua. Yoga and the Quiet Beatle.
Retrieved on 2007-05-08.
-
Harrison death mystery solved
(2002-02-13).
-
Beatle George Harrison dies CNN.com
(2001-12-01).
-
Biography
for George Harrison. Internet Movie Database.
Retrieved on 2007-03-09.
-
(4149) Harrison.
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
-
(2003) Album notes for Concert for George
by various artists [booklet]. Burbank: Warner
Brothers (74546).
-
The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.
Rolling
Stone.
References
- Giuliano, Geoffrey (1997). Dark
Horse: The Life and Art of George Harrison, rev. ed., New
York: Da Capo Press. ISBN
0-306-80747-5.
- Harrison, George (1980). I,
Me, Mine. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-42787-3.
External links
| v • d • e George
Harrison
|
|
Discography
Studio
albums: All
Things Must Pass • Living in the Material
World • Dark
Horse • Extra Texture
(Read All About It) • Thirty
Three & 1/3 • George Harrison
• Somewhere
in England • Gone
Troppo • Cloud Nine
• Brainwashed
With
Traveling Wilburys:
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1
• Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3
Live
albums: The Concert for
Bangla Desh • Live
in Japan
Compilations: The Best of George
Harrison • |