England, 1962: Four hairy boys, who came from the humblest outskirts of Liverpool, released their first smash hit “Love me do”. This refreshing new sound was really well accepted and their music embraced by youngsters all over the world. They were simple yet catchy songs. People really loved them anyway and they knew it. That was the key to their success.
“When I met them it was love at first sight. It wasn’t that they were great singers or great performers or great songwriters. It was that they had enormous charisma, and they were the kind of
people that you actually felt better being with." George Martin, The Beatles' producer.
At the age of 13 George Harrison was no more than a young skinny English boy, no different from other kids his age. But George had a guitar. His first guitar, which his mother had bought for him after he recovered from a severe flu, cost £3, a huge economic effort for the family after WWII. He was obsessed with R’n’R, especially with Elvis, and he tried to practice and learn as much as he could.
George met Paul McCartney at the school bus and the latter introduced him to John Lennon, as they needed a good guitarist for The Quarrymen, the germ of The Beatles. Despite the skepticism and reluctance shown by John for George to join the band, as he was the youngest, he demonstrated his value as the lead guitarist beyond any expectation. He even turned out to be more skilled than John himself. So the seed of the Beatles had been already planted.
A few years later, in the wake of their monumental success, the different personalities in the band were perfectly distinguished. They were like the four corners of a square. They didn't interfere with each other, but the four of them worked as a whole. John Lennon liked to attract attention; he was outgoing and a bit cantankerous. Paul McCartney was kind of a romantic and egocentric Casanova. Ringo Starr was charismatic and fun to be with. And George Harrison was a mysterious, introverted man with an exceptional taste in music.
George didn’t have the magnetic and powerful personality of Paul and John (or their baffling egos) nor was he as extroverted and friendly as Ringo. But he had a fascinating and intense character and naturally accepted his condition as the underdog of the band. Lennon and McCartney held the reins (of the band) as they were the most talented and prolific while Harrison was the overshadowed one. The writing talent of the Paul-John duet eclipsed George's, who wasn’t that bad anyway. He only wanted to play good songs which Paul and John gave him.
Some people called Harrison the “quiet Beatle”, although, as Tom Petty said, “he never stopped talking”, and that was part of his appeal. What made him really different is that he didn’t enjoy fame and fortune as much as the others. George started then to feel an indescribable attraction for both Indian culture and its spirituality, whose influence changed him forever. George visited India many times, thus establishing a friendship with Ravi Shankar, who taught him to play the sitar. This mystical way of living wasn’t compatible with George’s life in the material world, not for long at least.
Little by little, George began discovering his hidden talent and started to improve his songwriting skills, while borrowing Indian sounds and concepts from oriental philosophy in his songs. But it wasn’t that easy to include them in an album when Paul and John penned one hit after another. Nevertheless, those compositions became better and better, as good as the others, or even stood out on their own.
The Fab Four finally split up in 1970 but none of them regretted the decision. The overwhelming pressure and growing tension within the band were simply too much to put up with. George once said that he sought for success, not fame. He started then a quiet life away from stardom, but not away from music, since in 1971 he published his first solo album, “All things must pass”, featuring all the songs never recorded with the band. It was praised all over the world, and “My sweet lord”, the jewel of the album, is considered a masterpiece.
George Harrison passed away in 2001 because of a lung cancer. But he died a great artist shining in his own right; he wasn’t just an ex-Beatle anymore. He was, in fact, not just one of the Beatles but their actual soul, the best musician, the true innovator and, quite sadly, frequently underestimated. People used to say that he was the Beatle who had changed the most and that’s because that’s just what life meant to him: change. However, there’s something that will never change: the eternal sunshine of his sincere smile.
I can’t finish without recommending a wonderful documentary directed by Martin Scorsese, “Living in the material World”, which portrays the life of George Harrison both as a Beatle and as an ordinary yet passionate man. It was premiered in 2011 on the tenth anniversary of George’s death. If you like The Beatles as much as I do, you can’t miss it!!
Thanks a lot, dear Sara! I mean, this post came totally unexpected, which makes it even more pleasing.
And then they were only two. First it had been John who was shot to death. Then, when George died of cancer, I felt so devastated. I had always deemed him the biggest musical talent within the greatest band that ever was. It is true that he often had this kind of aloof, rather mysterious personality punctuated by his love of Hinduism. But he was indeed a great human being and his beautiful songs will stay with us forever.
Like Sara, I cannot but wholeheartedly recommend Scorsese's (a staunch Beatle fan himself) extraordinary film "Living in the Material World", which, luckily enough, is available in its entirety on YouTube (in original version, subtitled in Spanish)