Tuesday, 14 January 2014

Great Rock Albums of 1979: George Harrison- George Harrison

For the more astute, I did say that this post would be George Harrison's "Somewhere in England" album, however, as I began refreshing my knowledge in order to write this post, I discovered that that album wasn't released until 1981. The album released in 1979, was the one named after him, George Harrison. I apologise for getting my rock facts wrong on this one and I will visit the "Somewhere in England album when I get to 1981.
When I was posting my "Great Rock Albums of the 70s" chapter, I had great internal debate on whether or not I should visit the George Harrison album "331/3." I decided not to as the album was a real mellow out album although it does contain my all time favourite Harrison song, "Crackerbox Palace." "George Harrison" is a little less mellow and in no way a hard rock album. I decided to include it because of the history of that time. See, in 1979 rock music was fighting off the disco invasion and some notable rock musicians, some whose albums I've included here, were experimenting with the whole disco thing. This album wasn't disco and that was good enough for me. Furthermore and I'm going to say something that some Beatles fans may think blasphemous, musically George was my favourite Beatle. I'm not taking anything away from Lennon and McCartney, they are true geniuses, but I've always liked songs like "Here Comes the Sun," "Something" and my fave, "While My Guitar Gently Weeps."
Anyway, enough of the history lesson, (sorry once a teacher always a teacher) let's get on to the subject of this album. "George Harrison" by the person of the same name is a good soft rock album. It begins with an introductory guitar solo from the legendary Eric Clapton on the first track, "Love Comes to Everyone" and carries through the album with a feel good factor throughout. There's the top single "Blow Away" which, for those who take the singles charts seriously, made it  to number 14 in the US and 39 in the UK. The song "Faster" has a bit more of a rock feel to it, especially as it begins with motor racing sound effects.
Track Listing:
1. Love Comes to Everyone
2. Not Guilty
3. Here Comes the Moon
4. Soft Hearted Hanna
5. Blow Away
6. Faster
7. Dark Sweet Lady
8. Your Love is Forever
9. Soft Touch
10. If You Believe
George Harrison- vocals, guitars
Andy Newmark- drums
Willie Weeks- bass
Neil Larsen- keyboards, minimoog
Ray Cooper- percussion
Steve Winwood- polymoog
Emil Richards- marimba
Gayle Richards- harp
Eric Clapton- guitar intro
Gary Wright- oberheim
"George Harrison" for me was common ground for me and my then disco/plastic pop loving girlfriend at the time. Still it's a good album to "mellow out" to. One I listen to on a lazy summer day, like today and shows why I've always said that Harrison's work has always been underrated when compared to the other Beatles.
Next post: Bad Company- Desolation Angels
To buy Rock And Roll Children, go to www.strategicpublishinggroup.com/title/RockAndRollChildren.html
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