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George Harrison became entranced by Indian music in the mid-1960s. Technically, George first heard Indian music in utero. His mother used to play the radio station, Radio India, ...
George Harrison preferred Indian music to any other form of music, even rock ‘n’ roll. Of course, George had a profound experience hearing Elvis Presley and Fats Domino for the first time.
In 1967, George Harrison answered questions for the BBC Radio program Scene And Heard. There, he commented on his close connection with Indian culture and what drew him to this country, in ...
George Harrison only took one album with him during his first trip to India in 1966. The six-week trip changed his life forever, but that one album kept him tethered to the Western world.
A former Apple employee and friend claimed that George Harrison thought he was Indian in a past life. The former Beatle fell in love with the country’s culture in the mid-1960s.
George Harrison’s Life Was Transformed By India, Says Olivia Harrison. In an interview with THR, Olivia Harrison explains why "George Harrison: Living in the Material World" comes "full circle ...
George Harrison first started playing slide guitar in 1969. In the mid-1960s, George met sitar legend Ravi Shankar and immediately began receiving lessons from him. Indian music took hold of ...
George Harrison said there was an interesting contradiction within ‘Wonderwall Music’ George had a lot to say about one of the Indian instruments he used on Wonderwall Music.. “And there’s ...
John Barham wrote the orchestral and choral arrangements for two of George Harrison’s most celebrated albums: 1970’s All Things Must Pass and 1973’s Living in the Material World. Barham, who ...
George Harrison asked an Indian astrologer for the perfect date to hold the Concert for Bangladesh in 1971. by Hannah Wigandt. Published on August 17, 2022. 3 min read.