There was a time, long ago, when the all important single
release had two sides, and the b-side, while probably deemed less
important by record company executives, was important both to the
artist, and to the album from which they were very often taken. During George’s
solo career there were some very fine b-sides, along with some little
gems – the ‘non-album, available on a single only songs’. We’ve picked
fifteen of George’s finest, and in some cases rarest, b-sides and
compiled them on a playlist for your enjoyment.
As just about everyone knows, when George’s debut single, ‘My Sweet
Lord’ was released around the world, it was issued as a double A side
with ‘Isn’t It A Pity’, although not in the UK. Public demand in Britain
led to a belated UK release for ‘My Sweet Lord’, on 15 January 1971,
where the single was backed by ‘What Is Life’, a song that Apple soon
released almost everywhere else as the follow-up to ‘My Sweet Lord.’ As
the b-side of ‘What Is Life’, another track from All Things Must Pass
was used, this being George’s tribute to those loyalist of loyal Beatle
fans, the ‘Apple Scruffs’.
In 1971 releases settled into a more universal pattern and for the
b-side of ‘Bangla Desh’, George used a non-album track, the deeply
affecting, ‘Deep Blue’ a song inspired by George’s visits to his mother
in hospital when she was suffering from terminal cancer. The follow up
to ‘Bangla Desh’ was ‘Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth) and this
also had a non-album b-side, the witty, ‘Miss O’Dell’. The lady in
question was a former Apple employee, who later become linked with a
number of bands including Derek & the Dominoes and The Rolling
Stones, as a ‘fixer’ and ‘facilitator’.
In 1974 George’s single ‘Dark Horse’, which was also the title track
of his new album, had as its US b-side ‘I Don’t Care Anymore’, another
non-album b-side; in the UK however the b-side was ‘Hari’s on Tour’, the
opening track of the album. On the next single from Dark Horse, ‘Ding
Dong, Ding Dong’, the b-sides were reversed.
For the b-side of the beautiful, ‘You’ from Extra Texture, ‘World of
Stone’ from the same album was chosen. Unusually ‘Maya Love’ from Dark
Horse was picked as the b-side of ‘This Guitar (Can’t Keep from
Crying)’, the next single taken from Extra Texture.
The lead single from Thirty Three & 1/3 in 1976 was ‘This Song’
and another track off the album, the gorgeous, ‘Learning How To Love
You’, was chosen as the b-side. George’s UK single, ‘It’s What You
Value’ features the opening track ‘Woman Don’t You Cry For Me’ from
Thirty Three & 1/3 as its b-side.
‘Blow Away’ was a single from George’s eponymous 1979 album and in
the UK ‘Soft Touch’ became the b-side, while in the US ‘Soft-Hearted
Hana’ was chosen; both tracks taken from the same album.
The phenomenally successful, ‘All Those Years Ago’ from Somewhere in
England features another of George’s finest b-sides, the evocative,
‘Writings On The Wall’. George’s second single from his Gone Troppo
album was his cover of ‘I Really Love You’, a song originally by the
Stereos dating from 1961. The b-side was another track from the album,
‘Circles’, a song George wrote in India in 1968 while he and the Beatles
were studying Transcendental Meditation with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.
From 1987’s Cloud Nine came, ‘When We Was Fab’ and on the b-side is
‘Zig Zag’, a song written by George and Jeff Lynne that was written for
the film Shanghai Surprise, but not included on the original album
In January 2002, two months after George’s passing, came the
posthumous re-release of the ‘My Sweet Lord’ single – a three-song
charity CD that included the original 1970–71 hit, along with the
sensitive and beautiful acoustic run-through of ‘Let It Down’ It is a
beautiful way to end this look back at George’s b-sides.
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