All 141 George Harrison Solo Songs Ranked Worst to Best
George Harrison s music, much like the former Beatles star himself, tended toward both the uplifting and the downbeat. Often in one song.
He relished taking the fight to liars, thieves, the unprincipled, politicians, record-label execs and other such scoundrels. But he also celebrated the light that surrounds it all and never stopped searching for the most personal kind of inner peace.
That s why he was initially attracted to Phil Spector – a producer who couldn t fathom a record without a cast of thousands – but also a Beatles-loving imitator in Jeff Lynne. They represented both of Harrison s musical impulses, as his essential dichotomies played out on vinyl.
All 141 George Harrison Solo Songs Ranked Worst to Best
George Harrison s music, much like the former Beatles star himself, tended toward both the uplifting and the downbeat. Often in one song.
He relished taking the fight to liars, thieves, the unprincipled, politicians, record-label execs and other such scoundrels. But he also celebrated the light that surrounds it all and never stopped searching for the most personal kind of inner peace.
That s why he was initially attracted to Phil Spector – a producer who couldn t fathom a record without a cast of thousands – but also a Beatles-loving imitator in Jeff Lynne. They represented both of Harrison s musical impulses, as his essential dichotomies played out on vinyl.
All 141 George Harrison Solo Songs Ranked Worst to Best q1077.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from q1077.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Print
At least since Orange County coffee klatches and erstwhile Southern strategists swept Ronald Reagan into the White House, consuming political news in this country has meant confronting the seemingly inexorable rise of one “interest group” in particular: evangelical Christians.
Even before the press corps descended on diner counters from Sandy Hook, Ky., to Racine, Wis., in their quest to understand the appeal of Donald Trump, reporters fanned out to Farmingville, N.Y., and Colorado Springs, Colo., in search of the rank-and-file behind such figures as Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson and President George W. Bush. PBS and U.S. News & World Report polled “America’s evangelicals.” HBO’s “Game Change” attracted criticism for focusing on the blind-item salaciousness of Sarah Palin’s disastrous vice presidential campaign rather than analysis of her appeal to evangelicals. And cable news networks hired movement figures as regular contributors: “A Guide to Christian Am