To hear Olivia tell it, it wasn’t unusual for George to stroll through their house spouting words at random — a process that
could cause an outsider to wonder whether the ex-Beatle had suddenly
started speaking in tongues.
“George would throw out words one
after another,” she said in an interview this week. “He knew he’d find
the word. He was good at that. Sometimes he was quiet and just thought
about it, sometimes he just kept writing down words that began with ‘S’
until he got the right one. … It didn’t matter what they were — he knew
he would get to something.”
In fact, that method is exactly what helped him get to “Something”
— and “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” “Here Comes the Sun,” “Give Me
Love, Give Me Peace on Earth,” “My Sweet Lord,” “Awaiting on You All,”
“Brainwashed” and so many other songs he wrote in the Beatles and as a
solo artist.
Olivia Harrison had good reason to recall that
detail this week. She’s been deep in her husband’s writing for months,
culling scraps of paper, notebook entries, scribbles on hotel
stationery, napkins and other bits of writing surfaces for the new
“extended edition” of Harrison’s 1980 quasi-autobiography, “I ME MINE.”
It arrives in conjunction with a massive box set — a hefty 18 pounds’
worth —t hat gathers newly remastered vinyl pressings of his solo
albums. Additionally, the Austrian Pro-Ject audio company has created a
limited-edition George Harrison turntable that retails for about $540
in the U.S.
“GEORGE HARRISON —THE VINYL COLLECTION”
spans Harrison’s two pre-Beatles breakup efforts — “Wonderwall Music,”
the soundtrack from a film that went unreleased in 1969, as well as his
Moog-synthesizer exploration, “Electronic Sound,” the same year —
through his 1970 blockbuster three-disc set “All Things Must Pass” and
on up to his final studio collection, “Brainwashed,” released in 2002
after his death at 58 from cancer a year earlier.
Olivia said the impetus behind the updated edition of “I Me Mine” was simply because of the fact that the original version had gone
out of print.
“At first we thought of doing a digital version,” she said, “but then I said, ‘No, we need to do it right.’”
The
original 399-page book wasn’t so much a formal autobiography as an
annotated scrapbook, culling 48 photos and numerous reproductions of
many original sheets along with fully printed lyrics to 83 Beatles and
solo songs.
This image of George on Maui, Hawaii,is among photos included in an extended new edition of his "I Me Mine" book. |
It was the first celebrity-driven book for Genesis Publications, the
British literary publisher that had assembled collector’s editions of
journals from the HMS Bounty and other esoteric historical volumes. The
new edition of “I ME MINE” is the 100th book Genesis has published.
The
re-release, which will be feted with a public pop-up store event Sunday
at artist Shepard Fairey’s Subliminal Projects space in Echo Park, has
grown to 632 pages with 52 photos and lyrics for 141 songs. Fairey’s
portrait of George is featured on the cover.
“The book is mainly lyrics and text,” Olivia said, “so I didn’t think it was fair to add a lot more photos.”
Instead,
she focused on gathering more lyrics for songs he never released, such
as “Mother Divine” — “It’s a lovely sentiment,” she said, “and something
he did sing over the years, maybe as a mantra” — and a light-hearted
toast to his former band mate, “Hey Ringo.”
Sample lyric: “Hey Ringo, there’s one thing that I’ve not said/I’ll play my guitar with you till I drop dead.”
Her
goal was to spotlight the songs George released after the original
book came out. “Several albums came out after that book was made in
1980, which was pretty early on. I really started looking for songs
recorded after that.”
The original text remains as it was, a
virtual conversation between Harrison and old Liverpool pal and longtime
Beatles publicist Derek Taylor. Harrison’s narrative covers his
childhood in the hardscrabble seaport, the heady days of Beatlemania and
life after the breakup.
George and Olivia’s only child together,
singer-songwriter-guitarist Dhani Harrison, has been closely involved
with production of the box set, Olivia said, overseeing the design of
the box itself. It features a lenticular cover that toggles between
photos of his father with and without mustache.
Although initially
pigeonholed as “the quiet Beatle,” George quickly replaced that image
with one as the spiritual Beatle, being an early devotee of Indian
mysticism and music, which exposed him to philosophical ideas and
crosscultural sounds.
“When I work with young players today, I
always use George as an example,” said drummer Jim Keltner, one of the
world’s foremost studio musicians who worked with Harrison, Starr and
John Lennon after the Beatles dissolved.
“When somebody writes a
song and plays it for you as the band, or just to the drummer when you
start to record,” he said, “my feeling is it should be so strong already
without the band, that you know that once you put the band on
it you’ve really got something.
“George was like that every time he would play a song for you,” he said. “That’s the amazing thing about him.”
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