The most streamed Beatles song – 700 million plays more than any other – is not by Lennon/McCartney but George who, as author Seth Rogovoy points out, is still widely considered “an economy-class Beatle” though his contributions were central to the success of their records. Seth’s new book ‘Within You Without You: Listening to George Harrison’ sets out to right this monstrous wrong! As does this conversation with the two of us which covers …
… did My Sweet Lord’s court case puncture his sense of ambition?
… how he changed Taxman for American audiences.
… the statement made by starting All Things Must Pass with a Dylan/Harrison composition.
… how he was fleeced by not one but two managers - Allen Klein and Denis O’Brien.
… what we learnt from watching ‘Get Back’.
… Broadway ballads, Vaudeville, jazz and the solo on ‘Til There Was You.
… remortgaging Friar Park for Life Of Brian and pushing for the Anthology “payday”.
… his glorious spiritual/material contradiction – “the Pisces sign is two fish going in opposite directions”.
… a social mobility that John and Paul both envied.
… falling out of love with live performance.
… the beliefs of his early ‘20s he sustained all his life.
… and the staples of George Harrison’s Jukebox.
Order Seth’s book here:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Within-You-Without-Listening-Harrison/dp/019762782X
Find out more about how to help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
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