|

GAZETTE STAFF / NEW YORK CITY
by Ernest Barteldes
REMEMBERING GEORGE
George Harrison 1943-2001
"It's
all too much for me to take..."
(Harrison, 1967)
" sn't
it ironic", wrote one reader last weekend ,"that George passed away just
as you wrote an article on a tribute for John Lennon?" I replied that he
was right. But that is how unexpected things come by.
As a second-generation fan of The Beatles(I was introduced to them by
my father), I always had an admiration to the quiet moptop as I gradually
fell in love with the songs by the Fab Four.
My admiration of Harrison grew to a point that, in 1996, I wooed the
woman who is now my wife by playing "Something" to her before a crowded
restaurant in Brazil.
While I was fascinated by tunes such as "Ticket To Ride"and "Let It
Be", I also paid close attention to what George had done in the group - I
was specially fond of "Something", "Here Comes The Sun", and "I Need You",
which were mostly written after the band had quit touring and concentrated
their work in the studio.
Later in life, I began to notice how George's guitar playing had been
essential to The Beatles.
Before Harrison, most rock guitarists played solos between vocals, and
chords dominated most of the tunes when the vocalist sang. Harrison, who
was deeply influenced by Chet Atkins, Carl Perkins and Scotty Moore(Elvis'
under-rated guitarist), took his rock guitar to another level by creating
riffs between verses that were not so common in rock and roll. Pay close
attention to George's guitar work on early Beatle tunes such as "I Want To
Hold Your Hand", "Till There Was You" and "All My Loving", and you will
notice a genious in the making, who created a signature style by emulating
his masters in his own way - which is the best form of flattery -
emulating someone else's style by creating something new.
As The Beatles began experimenting instrumentally, George followed suit
by introducing new elements into pop music. During the "years of dash and
daring", Harrison intoduced the volume tone pedal(later known as "Wah-Wah")
in "Yes It Is" and his own "I Need You". George was also a pioneer by
incorporating instruments then considered unusual for pop, such as the
sitar(used for the first time in John's "Norwegian Wood" and copied by the
Rolling Stones in "Paint It Black")and the slide guitar(For You Blue).
Of course, other guitarists wound up developing what George introduced
to a larger scale. Duane Allman(who died in 1972) is still considered the
best slide guitarist ever, and no-one ever used the wah-wah like Jimi
Hendrix did. Anyhow, it must be recognized that it was George who
experimented (or at least had the nerve to do it in records) with those
gadgets before others ever did.
George was the composer of two of the group's most psychodelic songs.
"It's All Too Much" begins with a distorted guitar which was unheard of in
Beatles albums. The other one, "It's Only a Northern Song", is bizarrely
strange and unlike anything else.
Although many credit Lennon for his political statements(specially
"Revolution"), it was George who first confronted the system.
When he realized that most of the money they were making went away in
taxes, he wrote the caustic "Taxman", in which he fingered both the
Conservative and the Labor party leaders("ah, ah, Mr. Wilson, ah, ah Mr.
Heath) as he gave his views of the (extremely) unfair British tax
system(and my advice for those who die/declare the pennies on your eyes).
It was obvious that George's talent was
suffocated by Lennon and McCartney. As The Beatles broke up, Harrison
released a triple album, titled "All Things Must Pass", which mostly
contained songs he'd written when he was still in the group.
So was he clouded by his bandmates that when Frank Sinatra sang
"Something", he introduced Harrison's beautiful love song as "my favorite
Lennon/McCartney song".
Such situation obviously generated a lot of bitterness in the quiet
Beatle. In his autobiography, "I Me Mine", he barely mentions Lennon,
although he would later admit, on his 1981 tribute to his former
colleague, "All Those Years Ago"(which included McCartney, Ringo and
producer George Martin), that he had "always looked up" to John.
Some of the bitterness, however, did not wane with the years. As The
Beatles reunited in 1994 to record "Free As A Bird"and "Real Love", George
brought in producer Jeff Lynne(formerly with ELO) as a signal that he
would not be comfortable with working with their former producer, George
Martin, who often sided with Lennon and McCartney when one of his
compositions was rejected.
Harrison, although prolific, eventually got tired of the life of a rock
star. After a number of albums and hits during the seventies, his
spiritual search (sided with his love of fast cars) gradually took him away
from show business, as he busied himself with family life.
During the late eighties, he staged a comeback with "Cloud Nine", and
he also teamed with Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne for
two albums (the second minus Orbison, who passed away in 1988) with the
all-star "Traveling Wilburys".
During that time, he guested in Orbison's final album(Mystery Girl) and
on Eric Clapton's "Journeyman"(he wrote and played in "Run So Far"),
played slide guitar in a Bob Dylan album, participated on the soundtrack
of "Lethal Weapon III", was featured on "Prince's Trust" and toured Japan
with Clapton and his band.
In the nineties, however, he disappeared again, and we rarely heard of
him, except for his collaboration with The Beatles on the Anthology
project and his guitar solos on Ringo's "Vertical Man"album.
The last I heard of George was that he had collaborated in a Jim
Capaldi's new single, "Anna Julia"(which is a remake of a Brazilian hit),
and a track on a charity album which has been, as of this writing, only
released in England.
George Harrison's passing saddens all Beatle fans, and forever buries
the hope of ever seeing The Beatles reunited - a dream that was kept alive
even after John Lennon passed away.
May God bless his soul, and here's hoping that he has found the
spiritual fulfillment he spent most of his years searching for.
Ernest Barteldes is an ESL and Portuguese teacher. In addition to that,
he is a freelance writer whose work has been published by The Greenwich
Village Gazette, The Staten Island Advance, The Staten Island Register,
The SI Muse, Brazzil magazine, The Villager , GLSSite, Entertainment Today
and other publications. He lives in Staten Island, NY. He can be reached
at ebarteldes@nycny.net
READ LAST WEEK'S
STORY: CLICK HERE
A writer needs feedback in order to write properly.
Please send feedback to: ebarteldes@nycny.net
http://www.bacchin.com.br/barteldes
Visit Ernest’s ESL Page:
http://www.barteldes.freeyellow.comb
|