Live In Japan

George Harrison

Dark Horse, 1992

http://www.georgeharrison.com

REVIEW BY: David Bowling

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED: 02/24/2018

After the negative experiences of his 1974 Dark Horse tour, George Harrison did not go on the road for over 15 years. It took a call from old friend Eric Clapton to entice him to perform live again. He and Clapton shared the stage for a series of successful performances during December of 1991. Following the tour, he became involved with The Beatles Anthology project. As such, these were the final live performances of his lifetime, and the resultant album, my_heart_sings_the_harmony_web_ad_alt_250 Live In Japan, was the last release before his death.

Harrison was accompanied by Eric Clapton and his touring band. Guitarist Andy Fairweather-Low, bassist Nathan East, keyboardist Greg Phillinganes, pianist Chuck Leavell, drummer Steve Ferrone, and percussionist Ray Cooper are typical of the excellent hands Clapton assembled to support himself in concert. Of course, having Harrison and Clapton sharing lead guitar duties is a treat.

Harrison’s set, as represented on this album, is a fine retrospective of his career. He reaches back to some Beatles obscurities and well-known performances, plus a nice selection of his solo work.

“I Want To Tell You” from Revolver and “Old Brown Shoe,” which was originally the B-side to “The Ballad Of John and Yoko” single, were inspired choices, as they resurrect some lost gems in a live setting. I could have done without the lyrical updates to “Taxman,” but the dual guitars by Clapton and Harrison on “If I Needed Someone” is excellent.

The guitar work on “Something” veers a little from the original, but his takes of the White Album composition “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” and Abbey Road’s “Here Comes The Sun” are classic.

Most of his well-known solo hits are present in this lineup. “My Sweet Lord,” a jazzy version of “All Those Years Ago,” “Isn’t It A Pity,” and a rocking “What Is Life” all find Harrison at his post-Beatles best.

The album comes to a fitting conclusion with “Roll Over Beethoven,” which was a Beatles staple during their live shows.

George Harrison could not have chosen a more fitting live album to present his legacy. It remains a fine representation of his music and talent.

Rating: B+

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