4.2 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 3 March 2025
⏱️ 27 minutes
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George Harrison was a musician, singer and songwriter who became one of the most famous people in the world as one quarter of the Beatles. That alone would merit a place in the Great Lives pantheon, but his work in the decades after the band broke up indicates a man of diverse and arguably underestimated talents.
Erupting onto the pop music scene in the 1960's, the Beatles' success was swift and dizzying; and for the rather private George, sometimes dubbed ‘the quiet Beatle’, this celebrity and adulation seems to have never quite sat comfortably. Nevertheless, he became a musical icon: responsible for a captivating collection of songs, from those he wrote with the Beatles through to his solo work; collaborating with a host of international artists; popularising Indian music and instruments; and even venturing into the movie-making business. At the same time, like many others thrust into the spotlight, George appears to have struggled with balancing success and the celebrity lifestyle with a more meaningful and spiritual existence.
This tension and how it drove George Harrison as an artist is part of what attracts crime writer, occasional musician and self-professed Beatles fanatic Mark Billingham to his story, and why he's nominated him today. Also in the studio to offer her insights is Dr Holly Tessler, a senior lecturer in music industries at the University of Liverpool, where she leads their MA programme: 'Beatles, Music Industry and Heritage'.
Presented by Matthew Parris and produced for BBC Studios Audio by Lucy Taylor.
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0:00.0 | On Radio 4, the more you listen, the more you see. |
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0:05.7 | And I'm Robin Ince, and this is The Infinite Monkey Cage. |
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0:17.9 | Ice, not the fancy one. |
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0:34.5 | First on BBC Sounds. |
0:37.3 | BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts. Hello, George |
0:42.4 | Harrison was a musician, singer and songwriter who became one of the most famous guitarists, |
0:49.0 | indeed one of the most famous people in the world, as one quarter of the Beatles. The Liverpool band's success was |
0:56.5 | swift and dizzying, and for the rather private George, sometimes dubbed the Quiet Beetle, |
1:03.0 | it seems the mantle of celebrity and adulation never quite sat comfortably. But he became a |
1:09.8 | musical icon, responsible for a captivating |
1:12.8 | collection of work from the songs he wrote with the Beatles, right through to his solo work |
1:17.7 | with numerous star-studded collaborations along the way. And nominating him today is someone who I suspect |
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