Dhani Harrison, recently sparked conversation
regarding his father’s guitar playing while rehearsing his song “Let It
Down.”
The discussion began when one of Harrison’s band members overheard
him playing his father’s solo, telling him he was playing the notes
wrong.
Harrison said he was “doing my own
solo, not the one in the song, and he couldn’t take it.” In a playful
manner, Harrison decided to go back and figure out what was missing.
George’s guitar playing, within both the Beatles and his solo career,
are nigh impossible to recreate. Dhani said because of this, in his
early life, he tried not to learn his father’s songs.
Today, Dhani has moved past this defiance. Currently, his efforts to preserve and protect his father’s legacy are widely known.
If one ever hopes to encapsulate the guitar playing George once presented, your second-best window to his talents lives within
Dhani.
“My father said to me, ‘I play the notes you never hear,’” Dhani
said. George focused on touch and control, being sure he would not blow a
solo due to hitting off notes or buzzing strings.
George’s lead guitar was never actually “leading,” in a sense. It was
usually paired perfectly with background harmonies or a distant
orchestra. His solos exhibited qualities of both lead and foreground
tunes simultaneously.
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