All Things Must Pass [30th Anniversary Edition] George Harrison

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CD - Remastered / Digi-Pak

  • Release Date: 10/09/2001
  • Original Release: 1970
  • 2 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 1,531
  • Label: CAPITOL
  • UPC: 724353125424

Listener Rating: (20 ratings)

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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

When anyone -- even the original artist -- starts to tinker with a work that most devotees would consider iconic, it's bound to make a lot of folks uneasy. Thankfully, most of the alterations that George Harrison -- who's become more outspoken lately about his status as the "forgotten Beatle" -- made to All Things Must Pass, his most ambitious solo work, are actually improvements. Unlike the majority of remastered reissues, there's a palpable difference in sound quality on this 30th anniversary release, thanks to an added crispness that accentuates Phil Spector's lush production (which Harrison somewhat bizarrely criticizes in his liner notes). The packaging, which incorporates futuristically redrawn renditions of the original sleeves as well as a nicely designed mini-box, also shows Harrison taking a fresh look at his work, as does a revamped, languorous rerecording of "My Sweet Lord." The set also boasts several other bonus tracks from the original sessions, including the country-tinged diamond-in-the-rough "I Live for You" and a stripped-down version of the hit "What Is Life." Taken as a whole -- the preferred method of consumption, if you have a couple of hours to kill -- All Things Must Pass makes you wonder why people glossed over Harrison's work all those years ago. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Beatles' Classicsby Anonymous

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September 20, 2009: It's hard to beat George Harrison. This CD takes you back in time!

The Bar was Set with this Solo Beatle LP, Never Surpassed.by Anonymous

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August 08, 2008: Funny how time has shaped the Beatles legacy. Up until &amp quot Abbey Road&amp quot George was the guitar player called upon by his two song writing superiors named John and Paul to color their music, make it sparkle. And for years that was the status quo. Quietly, at first, George branched out. In 1967 he turned his cohorts and the world onto World Beats, long before it was fashionable. George was always looking to something greater than himself and the Beatles. George found God, but he also found a sound on his guitar, a slide guitar that came to eclipse any of his fellow Beatles music. &amp quot All Things Must Pass&amp quot was the beginning of that legacy. Most reviews have this as his greatest album, but I think it was the first of three albums, the other two are &amp quot Cloud Nine&amp quot and &amp quot Brainwashed&amp quot . Only Pauls &amp quot Band on the Run and John's &amp quot Imagine&amp quot stand up to those Harrison albums. Not to mention the Traveling Wilburys first album. That would have been some tour!! We lost someone that shaped our world, and not just musically, to cancer at the young age of 58. George this world is better having known you and worse since you've gone.


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