smokign the shit that made george harrison and bob dylan if not for you live at the concert for bangladesh rehearsals at madison square garden 31st of July 1971
Bob Dylan and George Harrison having some fun in the studio.
George Harrison photographed by Bill Zygmant in 1968
1970
come with me to glasgow hotel room 1966 brother.im gonna be sick ...... ha ha do you guys think they ever gayed it up together
“When Julian went to George’s concert the next day, Neil Aspinall, John, and I went to talk with Lee Eastman, Linda’s father. While there, Julian called with a message from George: “All’s forgiven, George loves you and he wants you to come to his party tonight.” We did go the party at the Hippopotamus Club, where George, John, and Paul hugged. John, Julian, and I left New York the following day to spend Christmas in West Palm Beach, Florida.
On December 29, 1974, the voluminous documents were brought down to John in Florida by one of Apple’s lawyers. “Take out your camera, Linda,” he joked to me. Then he called Harold Seider to go over some final points.
When John hung up the phone, he looked wistfully out the window. I could almost see him replaying the entire Beatles experience in his mind.
He finally picked up his pen and, in the unlikely backdrop of Disney World, at the Polynesian Village Hotel, officially ended the greatest rock ’n’ roll band in history by simply scrawling John Lennon at the bottom of the page.”
– FROM MAY PANG’S INSTAMATIC KARMA (2008)
George Harrison & Bob Dylan “If Not For You” Concert For Bangladesh rehearsal, July 31, 1971.
'Way Out' George Harrison at Chiswick Park in London, England | May 1966 © Robert Whitaker
'Way Out' shows George Harrison during a cigarette break in the Chiswick Park filming. George wears his sunglasses and appears oblivious to the crowd gathered behind him, locked out of the park, but within spitting distance of him. It was the afternoon, and children from the local school were returning home – and realised what was going on in the park. A crowd soon gathered, hoping for a glimpse of their heroes. This dramatic photograph succeeds in epitomising, in a single image, the glamour, fame and magnetism of the Beatles. "Somehow one schoolgirl got through the security net. You can imagine how thrilled she was. It was quite touching – The Beatles were so friendly towards her and behaved like perfect gentlemen", Robert recalls.
idk if you guys ever saw this but here's a clip of the first and only interview george gave in brasil
the guy in the background is basically saying ''look at this men with this dirty ass shoes, he looks poor asf, you probably don't know he's actually a fucking beatle''
"I think a good song or a good film or a good book, they don't work because they're making you feel the pain of the characters, they work because they're tricking you into feeling your own. Somehow when you relate to a character in a song or a book or a film, and that character's suddenly having a hard time or something horrible is happening to them or they die, it's pulling emotion out of you that's really just you allowing yourself to feel your own pain. There's something about that I just think is really powerful and amazing. " – Chris Cornell