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George Harold Harrison, MBE (February 25, 1943 – November 29, 2001) was a
popular British guitarist, singer, songwriter, record producer, and film
producer, best known as a member of The Beatles.
Harrison was the lead guitarist of The Beatles. During the band’s extremely
successful career, John Lennon and Paul McCartney were its main songwriters.
However, Harrison usually wrote and sang lead on one or two songs per album,
including the popular "If I Needed Someone", "Taxman", "While My Guitar
Gently Weeps", "Here Comes the Sun", and "Something.
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As lead guitarist for the Beatles, George Harrison provided the band with a
lyrical style of playing in which every note mattered. Harrison was one of
millions of young Britons inspired to take up the guitar by British skiffle
king Lonnie Donegan's recording of "Rock Island Line." But he had more
dedication than most, and with the encouragement of a slightly older school
friend -- Paul McCartney -- he advanced quickly in his technique and command
of the instrument. Harrison developed his style and technique slowly and
painstakingly over the several years, learning everything he could from the
records of Carl Perkins, Duane Eddy, Chet Atkins, Buddy Holly, and Eddie
Cochran. By age 15, he was allowed to sit in with the Quarry Men, the
Liverpool group founded by John Lennon, of which McCartney was a member; by
16, he was a full-fledged member of the group. The Beatles finally coalesced
around Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, and drummer Ringo Starr in 1962, with
Harrison established on lead guitar. The Beatlemania years, from 1963
through 1966, were a mixed blessing for Harrison. The Beatles' studio sound
was generally characterized by very prominent rhythm guitar parts, and on
many of the Beatles' early songs, Harrison's lead guitar was buried beneath
the chiming chords of Lennon's instrument. Additionally, he was thwarted as
a songwriter by the presence of Lennon and McCartney; the quality and
proliferation of their output left very little room on the group's albums
for songs by anyone else. Despite these problems, Harrison grew markedly as
a musician between 1963 and 1966, writing a handful of good songs and one
classic ("If I Needed Someone"), and also making his first acquaintance of
the sitar, an Indian instrument whose sound fascinated him. In 1966,
Harrison finally seemed to find his voice with two of his songs on the
Revolver album, "Taxman" and "Love You Too." In the wake of the group's
decision to stop touring, Harrison's playing and songwriting grew
exponentially. The period from 1968 onward was Harrison's richest with the
Beatles. He displayed a smooth, elegant slide guitar technique that showed
up on their last three albums; and he contributed two classic songs, "While
My Guitar Gently Weeps" and "Here Comes the Sun," along with "Something,"
which became the first Harrison song on the A-side of a Beatles single.
Although never known as a strong singer, Harrison's vocals were always
distinctive, especially when placed in the right setting; for his first solo
record following the group's 1970 breakup, All Things Must Pass, Harrison
collaborated with producer Phil Spector, whose so-called "Wall of Sound"
technique adapted well to Harrison's voice. All Things Must Pass and the
accompanying single "My Sweet Lord" had the distinction of being the first
solo recordings by any of the Beatles to top the charts following their
breakup. Unfortunately, Harrison was later successfully sued by the
publisher of the 1962 Chiffons hit "He's So Fine," which bore a striking
resemblance to "My Sweet Lord." Harrison followed All Things Must Pass with
rock's first major charity event, The Concert for Bangladesh, which was
staged as two shows at New York's Madison Square Garden in 1971 to help
raise money for aid to that famine-ravaged nation. The second of the two all-star
shows was released as a movie and a live triple album. Harrison's next
studio album, Living in the Material World, initially sold well, but its
leaner, less opulent production lacked the majestic force of All Things Must
Pass, and it lacked the earlier album's mass appeal. Subsequent Harrison
albums from the 1970s into the '80s always had an audience, but -- except
for Somewhere in England (1981), released in the wake of the murder of John
Lennon with the memorial song "All Those Years Ago" -- none seemed terribly
well-crafted or -executed. During this same period, Harrison embarked on a
successful career as a movie producer with the founding of Handmade Films.
In 1987, Harrison made a return to the top of the charts with his album
Cloud Nine, which featured his most inspired work in years, most notably a
cover of an old Rudy Clark gospel number called "Got My Mind Set on You,"
which reached number one on the charts. In 1988, Harrison, Bob Dylan, Tom
Petty, Jeff Lynne, and Roy Orbison formed the Traveling Wilburys, who
released two very successful albums. It was also around this time that
Harrison appeared with his former bandmate Ringo Starr, Dave Edmunds,
Rosanne Cash, and the Stray Cats' Lee Rocker (who was born the year the
Beatles made their first recordings) in a superb live-in-front-of-the-cameras
rockabilly performance accompanying Harrison's one-time idol Carl Perkins;
which was subsequently released on video cassette and laser disc. All of
this success heralded a short-lived re-emergence for the musician out of
private life, resulting in a 1991 tour of Japan that yielded a live album (Live
in Japan). Harrison had hated concertizing since the harrowing days of the
Beatles' international career, and had done one poorly received concert tour
in the mid-'70s; he seemed more comfortable in 1991, and the album performed
moderately well, driven by the presence of his then-recent hits. He withdrew
into private life after that, devoting himself to his life with his second
wife and their son, and only re-emerged before the public when necessary,
such as defending the Beatles' copyrights in court cases. In 1999, Harrison
was assaulted in his home and seriously injured by a deranged fan, but he
recovered and in 2000 he began work on remastering and expanding his classic
All Things Must Pass album. The reissue of that album at the outset of 2001
heralded an unusually public publicity campaign by Harrison, who accompanied
its re-release with an interview record that anticipated the eventual
reissue of the rest of his catalog. Harrison had been treated for throat
cancer in the late '90s, but in 2001 it was revealed that he was suffering
from an inoperable form of brain cancer. At the time of his death on
November 29, 2001, The Concert for Bangladesh album had been announced for
upgraded reissue in January of 2002, and a DVD of the film was in release
internationally. |
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GEORGE HARRISON PICTURES |
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