GEORGE HARRISON DIED

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Just heard George Harrison (one of the Beatles) died. Such sad news.

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001

Answers

Yep, heard it first thing and am a little depressed. I have photos from the very early 70s and in the background is a huge poster of George (balanced by a similar one of Janis). One of my favorites.

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001

Times of India

George Harrison, the quiet Beatle, is no more

LOS ANGELES: George Harrison, the Beatles' quiet lead guitarist and spiritual explorer who added both rock 'n roll flash and a touch of the mystic to the band's timeless magic, has died. He was 58.

Harrison died at 1:30 p.m. (2130 GMT) on Thursday at a friend's Los Angeles home following a battle with cancer, longtime friend Gavin De Becker said late on Thursday.

"He died with one thought in mind - love one another," De Becker said. He added that Harrison's wife, Olivia Harrison, and son Dhani, 24, were with him when he died.

With Harrison's death, there remain two surviving Beatles, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr. John Lennon was shot to death by a deranged fan in 1980.

Harrison's family issued a statement saying: "He left this world as he lived in it, conscious of God, fearless of death, and at peace, surrounded by family and friends. He often said, 'Everything else can wait but the search for God cannot wait, and love one another'."

It wasn't immediately known if there would be a public funeral for Harrison. A private ceremony had already taken place, De Becker said.

In 1998, when Harrison disclosed that he had been treated for throat cancer, Harrison said: "It reminds you that anything can happen." The following year, he survived an attack by an intruder who stabbed him several times. In July 2001, he released a statement asking fans not to worry about reports that he was still battling cancer.

The Beatles were four distinct personalities joined as a singular force in the rebellious 1960s, influencing everything from hair styles to music. Whether dropping acid, proclaiming All You Need is Love or sending up the squares in the film A Hard Day's Night" the Beatles inspired millions.

Harrison's guitar work, modeled on Chuck Berry and Carl Perkins among others, was essential.

He often blended with the band's joyous sound, but also rocked out wildly on Long Tall Sally and turned slow and dreamy on Something. His jangly 12-string Rickenbacker, featured in A Hard Day's Night, was a major influence on the American band the Byrds.

Although his songwriting was overshadowed by the great Lennon-McCartney team, Harrison did contribute such classics as Here Comes the Sun and Something, which Frank Sinatra covered. Harrison also taught the young Lennon how to play the guitar.

He was known as the "quiet" Beatle and his public image was summed up in the first song he wrote for them, Don't Bother Me, which appeared on the group's second album.

But Harrison also had a wry sense of humour that helped shape the Beatles' irreverent charm, memorably fitting in alongside Lennon's cutting wit and Starr's cartoonish appeal.

At their first recording session under George Martin, the producer reportedly asked the young musicians to tell him if they didn't like anything. Harrison's response: "Well, first of all, I don't like your tie." Asked by a reporter what he called the Beatles' famous moptop hairstyle, he quipped, "Arthur."

He was even funny about his own mortality. As reports of his failing health proliferated, Harrison recorded a new song - Horse to the Water - and credited it to "RIP Ltd 2001."

He always preferred being a musician to being a star, and he soon soured on Beatlemania - the screaming girls, the hair-tearing mobs, the wild chases from limos to gigs and back to limos. Like Lennon, his memories of the Beatles were often tempered by what he felt was lost in all the madness.

"There was never anything, in any of the Beatle experiences really, that good: even the best thrill soon got tiring," Harrison wrote in his 1979 book, I, Me, Mine. "There was never any doubt. The Beatles were doomed. Your own space, man, it's so important. That's why we were doomed, because we didn't have any. We were like monkeys in a zoo."

Still, in a 1992 interview with The Daily Telegraph, Harrison confided: "We had the time of our lives: We laughed for years."

After the Beatles broke up in 1970, Harrison had sporadic success. He organised the concert for Bangladesh in New York City, produced films that included Monty Python's Life of Brian, and teamed with old friends, including Bob Dylan and Roy Orbison, as "The Traveling Wilburys."

George Harrison was born on February 25, 1943, in Liverpool, one of four children of Harold and Louise Harrison. His father, a former ship's steward, became a bus conductor soon after his marriage.

Harrison was 13 when he bought his first guitar and befriended Paul McCartney at their school. McCartney introduced him to Lennon, who had founded a band called the Quarry Men - Harrison was allowed to play if one of the regulars didn't show up.

"When I joined, he didn't really know how to play the guitar; he had a little guitar with three strings on it that looked like a banjo," Harrison recalled of Lennon during testimony in a 1998 court case against the owner of a bootleg Beatles' recording.

"I put the six strings on and showed him all the chords - it was actually me who got him playing the guitar. He didn't object to that, being taught by someone who was the baby of the group. John and I had a very good relationship from very early on," he had said.

Harrison evolved as both musician and songwriter. He became interested in the sitar while making the 1965 film Help! and introduced it to a generation of Western listeners on Norwegian Wood, a song by Lennon from the Rubber Soul album. He also began contributing more of his own material.

Among his compositions were I Need You for the soundtrack of Help; If I Needed Someone on Rubber Soul; Taxman and Love You To on Revolver; Within You, Without You on Sgt Pepper; and While My Guitar Gently Weeps on the White Album.

In 1966, he married model Patti Boyd, who had a bit part in A Hard Day's Night. (They divorced in 1977, and she married Harrison's friend, the guitarist Eric Clapton, who wrote the anguished song Layla about her. Harrison attended the wedding.)

More than any of the Beatles, Harrison craved a little quiet. He found it in India. Late in 1966, after the Beatles had ceased touring, George and Patti went to India, where Harrison studied the sitar with Ravi Shankar. He maintained a lifelong affiliation with that part of the world.

In 1967, Harrison introduced the other Beatles to the teaching of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, and all four took up transcendental meditation. Harrison was the only one who remained a follower - the others dropped out, with Lennon mocking the Maharishi in the song Sexy Sadie.

By the late '60s, Harrison was clearly worn out from being a Beatle and openly bickered with McCartney, arguing with him on camera during the filming of Let It Be.

As the Beatles grew apart, Harrison collaborated with Clapton on the song Badge, performed with Lennon's Plastic Ono Band and produced his most acclaimed solo work, the triple album All Things Must Pass.

The sheer volume of material on that 1970 release confirmed the feelings of Harrison fans that he was being stifled in the Beatles.

But one of those songs, the hit My Sweet Lord, later drew Harrison into a lawsuit: The copyright owner of He's So Fine, written by Lonnie Mack and recorded by The Chiffons, won a claim that Harrison had stolen the music.

Another Harrison project also led to legal problems. Moved by the starvation caused by the war between Bangladesh and Pakistan, Harrison in 1971 staged two benefit concerts at Madison Square Garden and recruited such performers as Starr, Shankar, Clapton and Dylan.

Anticipating such later superstar benefits as Live Aid and Farm Aid, the Bangladesh concerts were also a cautionary tale about counterculture bookkeeping. Although millions were raised and the three-record concert release won a Grammy for album of the year, allegations emerged over mishandling of funds and the money long stayed in escrow.

Despite the occasional hit single, including the Lennon tribute song All Those Years Ago, Harrison's solo career did not live up to initial expectations. Reviewing a greatest hits compilation, Village Voice critic Robert Christgau likened him to a "borderline hitter they can pitch around after the sluggers (Lennon and McCartney) are traded away."

Harrison's family life was steadier. He married Olivia Arias in 1978, a month after Dhani was born.

The next year, Harrison founded Handmade Films to produce Monty Python's Life of Brian. He sold the company for $8.5 million in 1994.

Fame continued to haunt him. In 1999, he was stabbed several times by a man who broke into his home west of London. The man, who thought the Beatles were witches and believed himself on a divine mission to kill Harrison, was acquitted by reason of insanity.

But fame also continued to enrich Harrison. The following year, he saw a compilation of Beatles No 1 singles, 1, sell millions of copies and re-establish the band's status around the world.

"The thing that pleases me the most about it is that young people like it," he said in an interview with The Associated Press. "It's given kids from 6 to 16 an alternate view of music to what's been available for the past 20 years."

"I think the popular music has gone truly weird," he said, adding "it's either cutesy-wutesy or it's hard, nasty stuff. It's good that this has life again with the youth."

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001


While I am sure others are as well... You will be missed.

While my guitar gently weeps

I look at you all see the love there that's sleeping While my guitar gently weeps I look at the floor and I see it needs sweeping Still my guitar gently weeps I don't know why nobody told you how to unfold your love I don't know how someone controlled you They bought and sold you.

I look at the world and I notice it's turning While my guitar gently weeps With every mistake we must surely be learning Still my guitar gently weeps I don't know how you were diverted You were perverted too I don't know how you were inverted No one alerted you.

I look at you all see the love there that's sleeping While my guitar gently weeps Look at you all . . . Still my guitar gently weeps.

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001


sorry about the formatting of the Lyrics above.

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001

He was too young to die.

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001


As Lucianne says, this news is irretrievably aging. Very, very sad, there must have been a lot of music left in him. Was going to reformat the lyrics. apoc, but decided it reads well enough as is. So many good songs. They don't write 'em like they used ta.

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001

I heard excerpts on the radio today, of interviews he'd given. I thought he came across as extremely intelligent and well-spoken.

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001

NRO Stephen Moore

“I Heard the News Today” George Harrison, R.I.P..

Stephen Moore is president of the Club for Growth. November 30, 2001 1:00 p.m. bout six months ago I bought my kids (eight and ten years old) the new Beatles CD "1" — which, of course, is the best-selling CD in a decade.

The kids were somewhat puzzled and disappointed by the gift and asked who the Beatles were. I said they were the hottest band back when I was growing up. They asked if the Beatles were bigger and better than the Backstreet Boys, and I said absolutely not, but you listen to the CD and tell me what you think. Big mistake.

They are now both unremitting Fab Four fanatics. I come home and they've got the CD player revved up to full-volume blasting "I Wanna Hold Your Hand," "Can't Buy Me Love," ""Hey Jude," or some other Fab Four hit. They're favorite is "Yellow Submarine," which if I hear one more time, I will smash that CD player into 1,000 pieces. But the great joy of kids is they allow you to relive your youth and I come home and I hear that music and I think , damn, I had forgotten how good a song "Day Tripper" is.

Justin was asked to write a poem in his fourth-grade class and he had writers block so he plagiaristically wrote:

Dear Sir or Madam will you read my book, it took me years to write, will you take a look….

He got busted. Justin didn't understand that EVERYONE, including his teacher knows the words to "Paperback Writer." But it was impressive that he could recite every word to the song.

Justin and Will represent the third generation of kids who think that the Beatles music is the best thing they've ever heard. For the Beatles to be the number-one band in America today, is the equivalent of the kids in the 1960s listening to the music of the 1920s on their record players. My prediction is that my great great great grandchildren will be listening to the Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and that in 2050 the best-selling album will be Abbey Road.

It's cliché to say that Lennon and McCartney wrote the soundtrack of the '60s. The truth is that they've written the soundtrack for every subsequent decade. They were quite simply history's greatest entertainers. Any arguments?

This morning it was painful to tell the kids at breakfast that George Harrison was dead. Will was adorable, he said, "But dad, I thought Paul was the one who was dead." And Justin thought about it and said: "Now I guess there can never be a reunion." That made me incredibly sad. I remember when I was in college and heard the news that John Lennon (my favorite Beatle) was dead and I felt the world had been raped. I wore black for a week.

Conservatives should forever appreciate George Harrison for a lot of reasons. Not the least of these is that he wrote our anti-tax anthem "Taxman." It goes like this:

Let me tell you how it will be, here's one for you 19 for me. If 5% appears too small, be thankful I don't take it all. Cause I'm the taxman, and you're working for no one, but me.

That was written when Britain had a 95% top tax rate (thus "one for you, 19 for me). George was one of the first supply siders.

George's "Concert for Bangladesh" in Madison Square Garden — a terrific soundtrack, by the way — was really the first rock charity concert and raised several million dollars for the starving people in that heart-breaking war-torn country. His song My Sweet Lord, for which he was unfairly sued for plagiarizing the tune of the Chiffon's "He's So Fine," is one of the great religious rock songs ever.

John and George are dead. They're in rock'n'roll heaven. And you know they've got a helluva band.

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001


And sometimes, in the quiet of your heart, if you listen....you can faintly hear them!!!

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001

Back in the day when my daughter was young enough that all of her contemporaries were going ga-ga over some lame teeny-bopper group whose name blissfully escapes me at the moment, she was somewhat of an outcast. . .she would spend her allowance on Beatles posters and tapes. She still has in her possession the bulk of my own Beatles vinyl collection. (I want those back, Kate!) When obliged to turn in a book report for class, she'd go to the library and get a book on The Beatles. To this day, she's still as big a fan as ever, at age 'almost' 24.

-- Anonymous, November 30, 2001


Brooke, that's what hit me also, feeling very old now.

Git, I have some of their old records and a commerative box with stuff of theirs in it...Sgt. Peppers.... If your talking about Janis Joplin, shes a favorite of mine also...was thrilled when I found an old record of hers a few years back.

-- Anonymous, December 01, 2001


I'd forgotten he was a Wilbury (along with Orbison and Dylan). Who was the fourth one, I know there were four)?

-- Anonymous, December 01, 2001

Tom Petty was also a member of the TW's.

-- Anonymous, December 01, 2001

pagesix.com

SECRET SERVICE

By BRIDGET HARRISON and ADAM MILLER

The final photo of a deathly ill but brave and dignified George Harrison emerged today just hours after the Beatle's ashes were flown to India to be scattered over a holy river near his favorite spiritual retreat.

In his quest to guard his family's privacy, the 58-year-old guitarist giant agreed to a secret plan to have his body cremated before the world even learned of his death, London's News of The World reported today.

The youngest Beatle was cremated in a private Hare Krishna ceremony just nine hours after he succumbed to cancer Thursday afternoon at a family friend's secluded Beverly Hills home, surrounded by wife Olivia and 24-year-old son Dhani.

During the funeral service, rose petals were sprinkled over Harrison's plain wood coffin, and the essence of sandalwood filled the air.

There were no hymns, and a Hare Krishna priest read from the Bhagavad-Gita, a collection of sacred Hindu verses.

By the time his death was made public, a Lear jet carrying Olivia, Dhani, as well as Harrison's ashes was already en route to India.

"It was a classic operation to spoil any unwelcome attention," a source told the tabloid.

The ashes of the longtime Hare Krishna devotee will be scattered in the holy Yamana River, 40 miles from the Taj Mahal.

Kripa Moya Das of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness said Harrison sought refuge spiritually along the river.

"He would stay there for days at a time," said Moya Das.

"It was a place where he could worship with a peace of mind. George wanted to keep his death a private matter, just like his life."

The last photo of a cancer-ravaged Harrison, his body frail and hair thinned, was taken in Switzerland in October, when the superstar was penning his first song in a decade just before he came to the United States for more treatment.

Harrison and Jools Holland recorded the song, "Horse to the Water," on which the former Beatle alluded to his own illness with lyrics such as "a friend of mine in so much misery."

Meanwhile, Fab Four fans yesterday continued to converge on Central Park's Strawberry Fields to mourn and sing the praises of Harrison.

At the site, dedicated to the memory of slain bandmate John Lennon, weeping mourners placed more flowers, notes, lit candles and Beatles keepsakes on the "Imagine" circle.

Rita Sottice flew in from Dallas with son Joseph to pay her respects.

"I needed to be surrounded by other people who understand what a great loss this is," said Sottice.

"I was crushed when John died, but this is almost worse. I can't believe half of the Beatles are gone."

Gregg Rocker, 40, of Brooklyn said Harrison was "my favorite Beatle by far."

"He was the spiritual one," Rocker said of the "Quiet Beatle."

"In my mind, he did the best work post-Beatles and he financed Time Bandits, which I think was the best movie of all time."

Harrison was working on a new album until just days before his death. Only four days before he died, he played tracks from the unfinished disc, "Portrait of a Leg End" - a pun on his celebrity - to family and friends who visited him at a Los Angeles hospital, The Sunday Times of London reported today.

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