George Harrison
Of
all the individual solo output following the break-up of The
Beatles, George Harrison provided the real surprise with the 1970
triple album set All Things Must Pass, a three million-selling
US Number One. Never a big contributor
to the Beatles' writing credits, his solo effort is thought to contain
all the songs that Lennon and McCartney rejected during his tenure
with the Fab Four. True or not, it was hailed as a masterpiece and
achieved a degree of success he was unfortunately never able to
repeat.
In 1971 Harrison organized
two charity concerts at New York's Madison Square Garden to
raise money for the victims of the war and famine in Bangladesh. He
took on this task in response to a personal plea from his friend,
sitar player Ravi Shankar.
Appearing on the
bill with Harrison were Ringo Starr, Bob
Dylan and The Band, Eric
Clapton, Klaus Voorman, Leon Russell and Billy
Preston. The shows
became the most successful charity events to date, but sadly huge tax
demands in the UK and US prevented a great deal of the money raised
from going through to those for whom it was intended. George then
wrote a personal cheque to boost the Bangladesh Relief Fund and the
concerts became a valuable lesson for future fundraisers of the need
to avoid being crippled by bureaucracy. The charity shows were also
recorded as a triple-album box set, which when released in December
1971 topped the UK charts and made it to Number 2 in the US.
In 1976, the US
District Court ruled that Harrison had adapted The
Chiffons' He's
So Fine for his My Sweet Lord single. While the court ruled
that the adaptation could have been subconscious, they still allowed
damages of over half a million.
In
the ensuing quarter century, Harrison withdrew from public life,
staying behind the walls of Friars Park, a mock Gothic curio in
Henley-on-Thames. He married Olivia Arias, his personal secretary at
A&M Records, in 1978. Recording intermittently, his albums still
contained proof of their author's talents, and his response to John
Lennon's assassination, All Those Years Ago, from 1981's Somewhere
In England, was as touching as its subject demanded.
Away
from music, George began an involvement in film, stepping in to
bankroll Monty Python's The Life Of Brian when the original
backers pulled out. In 1979 he formed Handmade Films with Denis
O'Brien, funding The Long Good Friday and Withnail and I,
though the partnership turned sour following 1986's Madonna-starring
flop Shanghai Surprise, with Harrison winning an $11 million
lawsuit against his former partner.
Aside
from collaborating with Roy Orbison, Tom Petty and
Bob Dylan as part
of the ad-hoc supergroup The Traveling
Wilburys, Harrison achieved an
unforeseen commercial peak with 1987's Cloud Nine. Its debut
single release, Got My Mind Set On You, reached Number 2 in the
UK - but if its success was an opportunity for a large-scale public
return, Harrison wasn't interested. His last public work was on Free
As A Bird and Real Love, the two John Lennon songs updated
by the surviving Beatles. Harrison turned in some excellent
contributions: his opening slide guitar solo on the former being
particularly gorgeous.
George
Harrison's next appearance in the headlines was less celebratory. In
December 1999 he was attacked and stabbed by an obsessed Beatles fan, Michael
Abram, who had broken into Friars Park. The attack shattered
Harrison's closely guarded privacy and low-key lifestyle. Following
the attack it was revealed that George had been treated for throat
cancer. His decades-long Senior Service habit had perhaps taken its
toll: he later developed lung cancer and, in 2001, underwent an
operation in Switzerland for a brain tumor. Still, towards the end of
his life, George seemed to regain that sense of quiet and calm, partly
founded on the philosophies that had first turned his head in the
mid-60s.
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