Stealing Time... Alum, Sarah Messer reads from her book of eclectic poetry "Bandit Letters," exploring experiences during various eras. Shaman Drum. 8 p.m. Free. michigandaily.com/arts ARTS MONDAY DECEMBER 3, 2001 5A GEORGE HARRISON 1943 -2001 Harrison will live on 'through back catalog Gone :0 And then there were two ... By Andy Tayloi-Fabe Daily Film Editor Ask anyone to describe George Harrison, and you will most often get an answer like "the quiet Beat- le." He didn't have the onstage presence of John, he wasn't as cute as Paul and he wasn't as goofy as Ringo. Although he was a major contributor to the Beatles' music and their unique sound, he often fell into the background, penning one or two songs per album. However, some of his songs are considered to be among the Beatles' best. After the band's breakup, Harrison jumped right into a successful solo career, truly exploring his talent and showing his musical range. The following is a list of some of George Harrison's greatest songs, both with and without the Beatles. Don't Bother Me - Harrison's first recorded song was featured on With the Beatles, has a fore- boding tone and minor key melody. It shows the unpredictability of Harrison's writing, he took a pop melody and twisted it into something darker and more raw. I'm Happy Just to Dance with You - This song from A Hard Day's Night was written by Lennon and McCartney but has Harrison on lead vocals, showcasing his superb voice and also his modest stage presence. Think for Yourself - This Rubber Soul track distinguishes itself from the rest of the album with distorted fuzz bass, chunky guitar riffs and sarcastic lyrics. The song stands out as one of the best songs on the album. If I Needed Someone - Harrison's other Rub- ber Soul song, with Byrd-ish melodies and sharp guitar work, is on the opposite end Harrison's writ- ing spectrum. This song showcases his pop sensibil- ities. Taxman - Revolver is considered to be the tran- sition album for the Beatles, moving away from the love songs and toward more political and psychedel- ic dreamlike songs. Harrison's contribution to this album is full of cynicism and dark criticism, with lines like "I'll tax the pennies on your eyes." While My Guitar Gently Weeps - Arguably one of the best Beatles songs ever recorded, this song from The Beatles (The White Album) features a mysterious combination of piano and Eric Clapton on guitar. With heart-wrenching guitar leads and evocative lyrics, this song is pure Harrison. At a point where the songs had ceased to be Beatles songs and had become John, Paul, George and Ringo songs, this song further established George's on-album personality. Something - You know it's an amazing song when you can use the word "lover" without initiat- ing a gag reflex in your listeners. This relatively slow song fits perfectly into the rising tempo of ere will come a time when the Beatles will be no more. When of the four, zero will remain. How will the world cope when the greatest band it has ever known is com- pletely gone? Will the first generation that never lived with a Beatle appreciate them? . AP Photo Abbey Road, which can be listened to as one big, meandering track. Harrison's solo career was prolific, with songs like "Cheer Down" and "Give me love (Give me peace on earth)," but his most remembered and cel- ebrated album is still the triple LP All Things Must Pass, which features amazing compositions like "What is Life" (later used on the "Goodfellas" soundtrack) and "Beware of Darkness," a bitter- sweet song that lets us inside Harrison's head. All of his efforts, both with the Fab Four and by him self, show his unique ? style and atmos- phere that he was able to inject into his work.; George Harri- son's death Thurs- day afternoon was so much more than the passing of a legend, more than the passing of the "quiet Beatle," the "spiritual Beat- le," it was the passing of a man. A man, who more than a legend, was a Beatle, father and husband. Harrison died at 1:30 p.m. in a friend's Los Ange- les home. His wife+ Luke Smith Less Than Olivia and 23-year- "None of life's strings can last/So, I must be on my way/And face another day." - From "All Things Must Pass" All Things Must Pass ' e S I '*s$2$kiis 2 2. Courtesy of Capitol Records "I've been a cool jerk/Looking for the source/I'm a dark horse." - From "Dark Horse" Dark Horse . old son Dhani were both present for his death. The Harrison s held a private cer- emony and there is no official word whether or not a public funeral will occur. Harrison 's death reminds the world that leg- ends have ends. Legends don't live forever, despite the fact that they may be deified by the masses - gods they are not. Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, are the last living links to the Beat-- les now. Eventually, they will die. Eventually we will be living in a Beatle-less world. And I look for- ward to it. I look forward to a world where an aging singer doesn't release a single based on a national tragedy. Or a world where a slightly above average drummer tarries around the country every summer with a band called the "All-Starrs." A world where only a legacy lives, and the creators of that legacy do not. That is not in any way to undermine the life of George Harrison, or eulogize him in death. Harrison's passing is undoubtedly a tragedy, the death of an icon always is, moreover, the death of a person always is. Unlike the other living ex-Beatles, Harrison was flying under pop culture's radar. In December of 1999, that changed when an intruder broke into his home on London's outskirts and stabbed him four times. Musically, Har- rison had faded out in the late-'80s with Shine. He respectfully stepped out of the limelight and made way for the youngsters. His ability to step aside was always one of his finer traits. He never overplayed and never underplayed, Harrison always knew the right notes to play and more important- ly when not to play. That, more than anything else, is what distinguishes him from Paul and Ringo, who despite their aging musicianship, continue to tour and release music. Harrison's death silences optimists who have hoped for the chance to see a "quasi-Beatles reunion" with Julian Lennon stepping in for his father. It wouldn't have been the same. It would've been little more than a feeble attempt to grope at nostalgia, if only for an escaping moment. The whispers of reunion fell silent with Harrison's death. And I breathe a heavy sigh of relief. The Beatles (and their legacy) don't deserve to be cheapened by imitation or mimicry. They should stand alone on their shelf overlooking music and what they did to it. There is a conflict manifesting itself as we look ahead towards a Beatle-less world. It involves getting to a world where the Beatles don't live in any form but through their music. When the only time Paul can touch us is through the car speakers, and the only time we can hear a message from John is in our headphones. The conflict here is death, the death of legends, the death of a band and the death of fathers, sons and husbands. Death is inherently tragic, inherently upsetting and inherently inevitable. Will the day when the final Beatle heart beats its last be sadder than when John Lennon was cruelly stolen from the world in the streets of Manhattan? I don't know, I was in diapers when Lennon was murdered and although I can't recall Lennon's death, part of me is pained by it. The part of me that thinks about family, Lennon's children and his wife, is frustrated by Lennon's death. That same part of me breaks for Harrison's wife Olivia and his son Dhani. That part of me is different than the part of me waiting for a Beatle-less world. The "Beatle-less" part of me is sure that when that world is finally upon us, the world will truly take note of the Beatles' importance. It is an importance that cannot be summed up in a series of VH1 specials. The world can finally mourn and appreciate each Beatle in his own respect, treating them as both men and members, and finally, mourn the death of the Beatles as a whole. The Beatles didn't die when Lennon was killed. Paul and Ringo are all the public can touch of the Beatles, fortunately, the Beatles can still touch us. Tunes like "A Hard Day's Night" and "When I'm Sixty-Four" will long outlive the tears we shed for the men who made up the greatest rock 'n' roll band history will ever know. -Luke Smith can be reached at lukems@umich.edu. Courtesy of EMI Daily Arts recalls memories of Harrison As great as the songs that George penned in the Beatles are, it is one of his b-sides from the All Things Must Pass sessions that struck a note with me. "I Live for You" was unearthed when Capitol records reissued All Things Must Pass as a double CD earlier this year. The track features a slide guitar that cries as simply as Harrison's voice coos "Yes, its true/I live for you." Immediately after this somewhat simple lyrical couplet, Harrison's guitar slides through a series of country-fried licks. "I Live For You" takes what Harrison per- fected on All Things Must Pass (sim- ple, candid honest pop-songs) and infuses his mastery of the instrument as an expressionist piece. It's the most moving piece of music he's recorded. - Luke Smith, Daily Music Editor As a child my parents constantly played Indian pop and traditional music on long driving trips. After coming to college I wasn't around it as much until I noticed the warm, familiar sound of the sitar and tabla in "Within Y o u _ Without You" on Sgt. Pepper's Lone- ly Hearts Club Band. Harrison rein- troduced me to Indian music and a part of my childhood. - Kiran Divvela, Daily Arts Writer "A Hard Day's Night," 1964. After the second chorus, Ringo rumbles out a staccato fill, John Lennon throws his head back and howls joy- ously and Harrison plucks out a melifluous trilling solo on his new Rickenbacker 360 12-string guitar. In these 13 seconds, Harrison almost singlehandedly invents "jangle" rock 'n' roll. We'll hear this ringing, reverb-rich sound again, of course, not only in the haunting syncopated echoes of the opening riff to "Ticket To Ride," but later, too, in the Byrds's cascading arrangements, Tom Petty's pithy harmonies, R.E.M.'s early hybrid of new wave-folk rock and even as recently as the memorable lead-in to "Airbag," on Radiohead's OK Computer. Harrison's sound takes the groan and anarchic gri- mace out of lead guitar, turns it into something ' quieter, Y".r.. :: ;; .. ing. . i t.- - Nicholas Harp, Daily Arts Writer If I had to - ' choose a favorite } Harrison song during ' his stint with the Beatles it would have to be "Think For Yourself" off of Rub- 00 her Soul. The band began maturing at this point in their career and George expressed it per- fectly in the song. While most people raved about "Nowhere Man" and "Norwegian Wood," Harrison's catchy "think For Yourself" was for me the hidden jewel of the album. Growing up I was obsessed with the children's fantasy film "Time Bandits." George Harrison was the executive producer and anyone who can convince a studio to make a movie about time traveling British midgets is a legend in my book. On top of that he provided the blissful song "Dream Away" for the closing credits. I remember fast-forwarding to the end just to listen to it when I was little. - Jeff Dickerson TV/New Media Editor He was called the quiet Beatle, but when he wasn't fusing Indian sitars with Western music in "Norwegian Wood," he was continually expand- ing his horizons and making people laugh. Many people may not know, but it was his studio that produced "Monty Python and the Life of Brian. He was a talent on par with John, Paul and Ringo; solo or with the Fab Four. - Ryan Blay, Daily Arts Writer "Something," off of Abbey Road. This song was George's baby and you can hear it in every carefully crafted note and nuance. The change in the bridge catches the casual lis- tener napping, because after being sweetly lulled and wooed, Harrison suddenly comes on strong - he comes off as a sap with backbone. But then he slides off the bridge going casually back into the relaxed comfort of the verses' languid love and one of the best solos of his career. "Savoy Truffle," off the The Beat- les (The White Album). "Lyrics? We don't need no stinking lyrics!" Yes, the words to this song are basically either Harrison reading a candy box top or bitching about stuff, but the keyboard intro is pretty sexy. George will have the bitter chocolate cordial, thank you. - Keith N. Dusenberry, Daily Arts Writer AP Photo Food for Thought Iraq Embargo In 4 1/2 years of the UN Food for Oil program, Iraq sold $26.8 billion in oil. It purchased $7 billion in food.. Most of the rest was spent on "dual-use" equipment. Gary Lillie & Assoc., Realtors www.garylillie.com I i