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Fully 14 years before Live Aid, on 1 August, 1971, George
Harrison, his friend and mentor Ravi Shankar and a host of stars pulled
off something that had never been achieved, or even attempted before:
the two Concerts For Bangla Desh at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Picture: George and Ravi Shankar announce the Bangla Desh concerts
Harrison had been deeply moved when Shankar had brought to his
attention the plight of millions of starving refugees of the former East
Pakistan, suffering the effects of the Bhola cyclone of 1970 and the
Liberation War in the country. Five days earlier, on July 27, he had
released his single ‘Bangla Desh’ on the Apple label, bringing this
humanitarian crisis to the world’s attention as only a world-famous
former Beatle could. That same day, he and Shankar held a press
conference to announce their ambitious concert plans for just a few
days’ time.
The track, co-produced by George with Phil Spector, featured Ringo
Starr and Jim Keltner on drums and other such alumni as Billy Preston
and Leon Russell. It went to No. 10 in the UK and No. 23 in the US, and
made the top ten around much of Europe.
Picture: Badfinger play on the first day of rehearsals for the concerts, at Nola Studios in New York
On August 1,after rehearsals in New York, the concerts took place at
2.30pm and 8pm. They played to a total of 40,000 people, who were
treated to a spectacular bill with the above-mentioned players from the
single, the supergroup featured Eric Clapton,
Bob Dylan, Shankar, Hindustani musician Ali Akbar Khan, Klaus Voorman,
Bobby Whitlock, Jesse David, Carl Radle and the Apple-signed hitmakers
Badfinger.
One of many historic aspects of the shows was that they were
Harrison’s first live appearances for a paying audience since the
Beatles’ final concert at Candlestick Park, San Francisco, in 1966. The
concerts produced a live album, a three-disc set and the Apple Films
documentary of the occasion that became a cinematic release the
following year. The album entered the Billboard chart on 8 January 1972
and went to No.2 on the US chart, where it spent 6 weeks, never quite
making it to the top spot.
The fundraisers generated an estimated $250,000 for famine relief in
the country, close to $1.5 million in today’s terms. The concert was
released as a DVD in 2005, and continues (along with the album) to raise
funds for what is now called the George Harrison Fund For UNICEF.
“Harrison & Friends Dish Out Super Concert For Pakistan Aid” was
the headline for Billboard magazine’s news story in the August 14 issue.
“Almost all of the music reflected what must have been the feelings of
each musician who gave his time and tremendous efforts for free, to help
a helpless country,” wrote Bob Glassenberg.
In 2006, George’s widow Olivia attended a ceremony in which Madison
Square Garden marked the 35th anniversary of the concerts by installing a
permanent plaque in the arena’s Walk of Fame.
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