All Things Must Pass [30th Anniversary Edition] [Digipak] [Remaster]George Harrison
Release Date: 11/16/2004
Original Release:
1970
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 435971_CD
UPC # 724353125424
Label: Capitol/EMI Records
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Disc: 1
1.
I'd Have You Anytime
2.
My Sweet Lord
3.
Wah-Wah
4.
Isn't It a Pity?
5.
What Is Life
6.
If Not for You
7.
Behind That Locked Door
8.
Let It Down
9.
Run of the Mill
10.
I Live for You - (bonus track)
11.
Beware of Darkness - (bonus track)
12.
Let It Down - (bonus track)
13.
What Is Life - (bonus track)
14.
My Sweet Lord - (2000, bonus track)
Disc: 2
1.
Beware of Darkness
2.
Apple Scruffs
3.
Ballad of Sir Frankie Crisp (Let It Roll)
4.
Awaiting on You All
5.
All Things Must Pass
6.
I Dig Love
7.
Art of Dying
8.
Isn't It a Pity?
9.
Hear Me Lord
10.
It's Johnny's Birthday
11.
Plug Me In
12.
I Remember Jeep
13.
Thanks for the Pepperoni
14.
Out of the Blue
Performer: George Harrison
Artist: Dave Mason; Eric Clapton; Billy Preston; Ringo Starr; Badfinger Producer: George Harrison; Phil Spector Distributor: EMI Music Distribution Notes: Includes 5 bonus tracks. Personnel: George Harrison (vocals, guitar); Sam Brown (vocals); Dhani Harrison (acosutic guitar, Fender Rhodes piano, background vocals); Badfinger (guitar, percussion); Dave Mason, Eric Clapton (guitar); Pete Drake (pedal steel guitar); Bobby Keys (tenor saxophone); Jim Price (trumpet); Billy Preston, Gary Wright, Bobby Whitlock, Gary Brooker (keyboards); Carl Radle, Klaus Voorman (bass); Ringo Starr, Alan White, Jim Gordon (drums, percussion); Ray Cooper, Mal Evans (tambourine). Engineers: Ken Scott, Philip McDonald, Ken Scott. Includes liner notes by George Harrison. Digitally remastered by Jon Astley. Personnel: George Harrison (vocals, guitar); Badfinger (guitar, percussion); Dave Mason, Eric Clapton (guitar); Pete Drake (pedal steel guitar); Bobby Keys (tenor saxophone); Jim Price (trumpet); Dhani Harrison (Fender Rhodes piano, background vocals); Gary Brooker, Gary Wright, Billy Preston, Bobby Whitlock (keyboards); Klaus Voormann, Carl Radle (bass instrument); Jim Gordon , Alan White , Ringo Starr (drums, percussion); Mal Evans, Ray Cooper (tambourine). Though George Harrison's solo albums for most of the 1970s and early '80s were uneven, often slapdash affairs, 1970's ALL THINGS MUST PASS is a brilliant piece of work. Produced by Phil Spector, whose expansive, majestic arrangements and sonic flourishes suit Harrison's songs perfectly, ALL THINGS MUST PASS eclipses everything the other Beatles recorded at the time (excepting John Lennon's PLASTIC ONO BAND). This sprawling double record gives the impression of Harrison being uncorked and pouring forth all of the songs and ideas edged out by Lennon and McCartney during the Beatles years. The title and the melancholic black and white cover photo match the mood of the music, which brims with an armchair wisdom, and the weary, disillusioned air that permeated the early '70s in the counter-cultural wake. Yet the album also boasts an abiding sense of spirituality and tenacious optimism, as on the lullaby-like hit single "My Sweet Lord" and "Isn't It a Pity," a compassionate study of human suffering. "What Is Life" and "Awaiting on You All" continue these themes, but Spector's bright pop polish lends a counterweight, making the record feel light and deeply personal at once. Despite some lengthy, formless jams, as on the 11-minute-plus "Out of the Blue," ALL THINGS MUST PASS stands among the great records of the early '70s.
Rolling Stone (1/7/71, p.46) - "..an intensely personal statement and a grandiose gesture, a triumph...an album of striking honesty and force.."
Rolling Stone (10/12/00, p.94) - 4.5 stars out of 5 - "...An album that is simultaneously modest and bold...[it] has stood up well to the passing of time....a bracing air of creative liberation..."
Entertainment Weekly (1/26/01, p.103) - "...Brighter, remastered sonics....Harrison and Phil Spector's Wall of Krishna Sound is still majestically congested, and the songs are so strong that Harrison would never top them. Even the jams feel refreshing in their looseness..." - Rating: A-
Q (3/01, pp.122-3) - 5 stars out of 5 - "...Rock and religion have rarely, if ever, been so happily conjoined....it remains the single most satisfying collection of any solo Beatle, maybe sounding even fresher for being sidelined so long..."
Alternative Press (5/01, p.96) - "...His best and most accomplished work..."
Mojo (Publisher) (1/02, p.69) - Included in Mojo's "Best Reissues of 2001".
Mojo (Publisher) (3/01, pp.86-7) - "...This remains the best Beatles solo album....oozing both the goggle-eyed joy of creative emancipation and the sense of someone pushing himself to the limit..."
George Harrison was always a fluid guitarist, but his voice and his skills as a songwriter came to full flower in the post-touring years of the Beatles. He became the first from that defunct band to release a work that was justifiably hailed as a masterpiece, the epic ALL THINGS MUST PASS. With his passing in 2001, the rock world lost one of its most deeply spiritual voices, whose signature slide-guitar style and early experiments with incorporating Eastern influences into rock were enormously influential.
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