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It’s all too much

Skewed views on The Quiet One from voluminous author.

By George!: Harrison in Plymouth, Devon, during the filming of Magical Mystery Tour, September 12, 1967.
Getty

George Harrison: The Reluctant Beatle

★★★

SIMON & SCHUSTER. £25

NOW 80, Philip Norman has been writing about The Beatles for nigh on six decades. Famously the author of bestselling 1981 band bio, Shout!: The Beatles In Their Generation (which was so pro-John and anti-Paul that Macca labelled it “Shite!”), he has since delivered weighty individual life stories of Lennon and McCartney, and now, turns to Harrison.

Sometimes, it’s hard to fathom exactly why he keeps returning to the subject, since he seems deeply ambivalent about the Fabs. Much like the recanting in his McCartney book, here he’s forced to messily reverse out of the culde-sac that was his nasty 2001 Sunday Times Harrison obituary, in which he painted the second Beatle to die as “a serial philanderer” and “miserable git”. (Norman here acknowledges that the piece was “unremittingly negative, in places crudely insulting.”)

And so to this 500-plus pager, angled towards highlighting the contradictions in Harrison’s personality: eg, being someone “who, paradoxically, became more moody and uptight after he learned to meditate”. More than 300 of those pages retell The Beatles’ story, though curiously with no real attempt to view the tale from the guitarist’s perspective, which might have been the most obvious tack. Certain insights are however forthcoming: the clean lines and precision of Harrison’s playing are linked to his schooldays interest in architecture; The Beatles sardined into one room at the Bambi Kino in Hamburg in 1960 were essentially living like people-trafficked illegal immigrants.

Occasionally, Norman’s Beatles-era assessments are baffling (he dismisses The White Album’s hypnotically dreamy Long, Long, Long as “bland”), but the narrative properly gets going post-split when Harrison retreats to his Henley pile, Friar Park, resurfacing for the Concert For Bangladesh or the ill-fated ’74 Dark Horse (or press-nicknamed “Dark Hoarse”) US tour during which he was suffering from laryngitis.

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