Showing posts with label GEORGE HARRISON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GEORGE HARRISON. Show all posts

12.05.2013

George Makes the Hall of Fame (again)

We were thrilled to learn today that The Recording Academy has announced 'All Things Must Pass' is to be inducted into the legendary GRAMMY Hall of Fame in 2014.

The GRAMMYs Hall of Fame honours both singles, and album recordings of all genres that are at least 25 years old, and which “exhibit qualitative or historical significance”. This year – the 40th anniversary of the Hall of Fame – there are to be 27 inductees, bringing the total list to 960 titles (this list is on display at The Grammy Museum at L.A. Live).

Neil Portnow (President/CEO of The Recording Academy) described these recordings as “memorable and inspiring, [they] are proudly added to our growing catalog — knowing that they have become a part of our musical, social, and cultural history.”

The newly revealed inductees will be acknowledged during the 56th annual Grammy Awards, which will air January 26, 2014, on CBS.

The Recording Academy has announced 'All Things Must Pass' is to be inducted into the legendary GRAMMY Hall of Fame in 2014. The GRAMMYs Hall of Fame honours both singles, and album recordings of all genres that are at least 25 years old, and which “exhibit qualitative or historical significance”.

5.30.2013

P-Mac: The 1964 David Frost Interview



This is three years before Beatles' manager Brian Epstein died from a drug overdose. Still, if you want to talk about underlying causes of the 1970 break-up, we can talk about Yoko Ono, touring, and whatever else you want. In this scribe's humble opinion, however, it was the passing of Mr. Epstein that played as big a role as any.

You can see in this interview how McCartney is totally comfortable with having the band's manager do all of the heavy lifting. You remove that piece from the puzzle, thus allowing the Beatles to form Apple Records and effectively manage themselves, and you've introduced an entirely different element into the inter-relationship dynamic: Making money, preserving money, and managing money. Now throw in Yoko, creative differences, and 4 individuals with unprecedented superstar status occupying space in the same band, well, then, it was only a matter of time things begin to crumble.

5.27.2013

P-Mac at Fenway: A Quick Look at an Early Set List



Paul McCartney quit the Beatles in 1970, and for years, many years, he refused to sing any Beatles song unless it was unequivocally a McCartney song. The Long and Winding Road, Yesterday, Lady Madonna, Ob-la-di, Let It Be were on the table.  Any song in which he collaborated with Lennon was off the table. Paul was going to make a name for himself that was wholly separate from the brand he created with the Fab Four. With the exception of Hey Jude, a song Lennon always claimed to be part-his, this was the rule, and P-Mac stuck to it.

Things drastically changed as the Eastern Bloc governments began to crumble. Whispers of McCartney advancing age (he was closing in on the big five-oh) combined with declining record sales helped Sir Paul realize that if he didn't do something soon, he faced an end to his career that was more quiet and obscure than the manner in which he first arrived on the music scene.

Enter the 1989 Paul McCartney World Tour, the first such tour in over a decade. P-Mac changed the rules for this tour. Instead of skimming over the Beatles songbook, McCartney waded deep into it, singing songs from Sgt. Pepper, plus 50s-inflected songs from the Early Days of the Fab Four. Word traveled quickly, and the tour was a smashing success.

4.03.2010

From Twickenham to the Rooftop



For the uninitiated, this video moves from the infamous Twickenham Sessions to the world renown and historically important final live performance on the rooftop at Apple studios. On a personal note, this song struck a cord with me when I first heard it at age 11. I quit listening to Beatles from age 18 to 38, and when I picked it up again, it was right there, at the top of my list.

Woman Teaches Self English by Listening to the Beatles

“When I hit San Francisco I knew that was my city,” said Ms. Mu Sochua, who is now 55. “I began to shine. I let my hair grow. I looked like a hippie.” She learned English, she said, by listening to the Beatles.

LINK

I need to meet this woman.

What I want to know is whether she is related to this woman?

2.13.2010

Fandom in the Extremes

IF I hadn't called my ex-husband the last time a Beatle died, I wouldn't have had to do anything. But I did track him down after George Harrison died in November 2001, which is when he learned that I was living in New York, which is when he asked me to take a letter to Strawberry Fields in Central Park and place it there with a single candle.

"How am I going to get the letter?" I asked.

"I'll e-mail it to you," he responded.

I could have taken the letter to Central Park that day; the park was within walking distance of my office. Instead, I carried it in and out of the subway for days, wondering how on earth I was actually going to do what my ex-husband had asked me to do.

It's not because he loved the Beatles that I had loved him and thought I could spend the rest of my life with him. It's not that he was a track star or that he had blue eyes or that he was handsome and sweet-looking. It's not that his parents were the only people I knew who were still married. It's not that it was hard to fall in love with the gentlest boy I had ever known.

It was because he was a special kind of different, not the kind who congregated with his friends in hallways and parking lots discussing the feeblenesses of others. That was part of why I thought I could spend the rest of my life with him, the boy who became my best friend, the boy from a family where nobody gets divorced. I even thought I could spend the rest of my life with someone who listened to the Beatles too much.

I tried to grow to love them, I honestly did, but it never really happened. In those years, the late 70's, there was plenty of other music around: Peter Frampton, the Commodores, the soundtrack to "Mahogany." But my husband didn't listen to my songs; instead, I listened to his -- every Beatles album over and over. I figured that's what true love was, when you loved someone even when he played too many Beatles records too many times.

When we heard the Beatles on the radio, I asked him why we bothered listening to them on the radio when we listened to their albums all the time. He said it was so we could hear them at the same time other people were hearing them. Even when we moved from Kansas to California in a U-haul, it was one Beatles track after the other. If it wasn't "Abbey Road," it was the White Album, and if it wasn't the White Album it was "Revolver." The volume kept going up and up every time the radio played one of his favorite Beatles songs, which were pretty much all of them.

I knew that I loved this man and wanted to spend the rest of my life with him. What I didn't know was that most things change after you marry your high school sweetheart. And for us, just about everything changed: our jobs or lack thereof, our apartments, our cars, our wall hangings, our haircuts, our arguments, our love. But my husband's love for the Beatles never changed.

A few days after George Harrison died, I said yes when a friend invited me upstate to her country house for the weekend. The guests would include a French friend we knew from the time we all lived in Paris. As we drove north to the Catskills, I said nothing about the letter tucked away in my backpack.

The last time the three of us had been together was in Paris, where our French friend still lived. He still had good looks and his sense of humor, he still talked with French seriousness, and he still called what he had H.I.V., although his legs called it AIDS. He walked as if he had no trouble putting one foot in front of the other, and when he fell, he stood up quickly, even when his legs begged him not to.

It was already another flawless weekend in the country. The first snow began to fall when the apples were still on their trees.

For 36 hours inside and outside the farmhouse, we talked about everything under stars that could actually be seen. I succeeded in keeping my Strawberry Fields dilemma to myself until we found ourselves in Black Horse Farms, a store in the town of Athens, which is where my friends found me in the candle section, which is where they asked me why I was buying a single candle.

I finally told them about my ex-husband's letter and what he had asked me to do with it. I knew both of them well, and I figured I knew what their reaction would be, but I was wrong. They wanted to go with me. And so it was arranged that the three of us would stop at Central Park on the way back to the city.

AS we drove south, we watched the sun go down. Then there was fog, then the park. When we arrived, I suggested that my friends wait in the car. But all our car doors opened as the mist was coming down. It was not quite nighttime, although the sun had set long before. Instead, there was a glow, a Central Park glow.

I was a little nervous. But there I was entering Central Park on behalf of my former family, my husband of 20 years ago, the sweet boy with whom I had planned my entire life, and there I was with two unlikely members of the unlikely family I had never thought about planning.

We continued forward, but because none of us had been there before, we didn't know what we were looking for. Finally we saw a few people, quiet souls, along with other letters and other candles that had been deposited in a place called Strawberry Fields, in the gray mosaic circle called Imagine.

The three of us walked around the circle together, wondering where the best place would be for my ex-husband's letter. Then they stepped back as I laid the letter on the circle of stones. We lighted the candle, stayed a moment or two, then turned to leave. To say we all said some kind of prayer might be an exaggeration, but there were thoughts. "My Sweet Lord" kind of thoughts.

As we left the park, above the light and the trees, we saw the same building in the same moment. The Dakota. The three of us continued walking, and the mist continued misting.

On our way home, we stopped at Times Square to buy some CD's. That night, we didn't talk as much as we listened. Other people listened with us too, and although I had listened to "Strawberry Fields" over and over before as an inexperienced lover, I must have heard it for the first time that night.

A few days later, I heard "Strawberry Fields" again on the radio. My ex-husband was right. It's better to hear something you love on the radio, because when you're listening, other people are listening too.