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| Artist: | George Harrison |
| Title: | George Harrison All Things Must Pass 3 LP 180 Gram Remastered Limited |
| Label: | |
| Released: | 24/02/2017 |
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Please note this release date may be subject to change and also stock arrival can be subject to delays, in particular if this is an overseas release. |
|
| Format: | 3LP |
| Barcode: | 602557090406 |
| SKU: | WU-602557090406 |
| Condition: | BRAND NEW & SEALED |
| The items we sell are brand new and unused official releases supplied to us by record companies, unless stated otherwise in the listing. Generally all items are sealed (this will be stated in the listing title). Occasionally we may open an LP to confirm any colour variant. We sometimes sell used items, this will be shown in the listing. | |
| Genre: | Pop Rock , Pop Rock |
| A1 | I'd Have You Anytime | |
| A2 | My Sweet Lord | |
| A3 | Wah-Wah | |
| A4 | Isn't It A Pity (Version One) | |
| B1 | What Is Life | |
| B2 | If Not For You | |
| B3 | Behind That Locked Door | |
| B4 | Let It Down | |
| B5 | Run Of The Mill | |
| C1 | Beware Of Darkness | |
| C2 | Apple Scruffs | |
| C3 | Ballad Of Sir Frankie Crisp (Let It Roll) | |
| C4 | Awaiting On You All | |
| C5 | All Things Must Pass | |
| D1 | I Dig Love | |
| D2 | Art Of Dying | |
| D3 | Isn't It A Pity (Version Two) | |
| D4 | Hear Me Lord | |
| Apple Jam | ||
| E1 | Out Of The Blue | |
| E2 | It's Johnny's Birthday | |
| E3 | Plug Me In | |
| F1 | I Remember Jeep | |
| F2 | Thanks For The Pepperoni |
| format | vinyl,Box Set | Box Set vinyl CD
| Despatched In | 2-4 weeks |
| Forthcoming | No |
| Recently In Stock | No |
| Forthcoming | No |
What an amazing package
By: Trevor White on 22 March 2022This item was expensive but worth every cent. Beautifully produced and packaged. The vinyl pressings are excellent with very little noise or rumble and the audio quality is just fantastic. Well worth it if you have ever followed George Harrison.
(5)
Recent box sets purchase
By: Michael Grinbergs on 17 January 2022Excellent service & delivery. Highly recommended.
(5)
A must have
By: Austin Wenke on 19 January 2021This is a special, timeless album and it sounds fantastic. Great service again from Discrepancy.
(5)
ALL THINGS MUST PASS
5 September 2018ALL THINGS MUST PASS In 1970, the year the Beatles finally separated, all four members produced solo albums. Whose came first? Sounds like something from Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, doesn’t it? So, was it: A. John Lennon B. Paul McCartney C. George Harrison D. Ringo Starr If you answered Ringo, upload your smug smile immediately. The humble drummer was the first out of the solo gates with Sentimental Journey, an album of mushy standards from his mother’s playlist of favourites, in March ‘70. Paul followed soon after with the self-titled McCartney. Then—astoundingly—Ringo produced a second album (Beaucoups of Blues). George was third in late November and John released John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band (the one with the couple sitting under a tree) in December 1970. So much for the facts. Which of these, you might well ask, holds up the best nearly fifty years later? For this music lover, the answer is clear. The quiet Beatle’s All Things Must Pass takes the gong. George’s frustration with getting his songs onto Beatle albums is well documented. This resulted in the backlog of outstanding music that cascaded onto All Things Must Pass, filling four sides with such variety and quality that picking highlights is a challenge. The singles were the dreamily spiritual “My Sweet Lord” and invigorating “What is Life”, but the delights don’t end there... A plaintive plea for heart-opening in “Behind That Locked Door” The riffing anger of “Wah-Wah” Joy and rapture in “Awaiting on you All” Some existential pondering in “Art of Dying” There’s plenty more, almost all of it top shelf. But All Things Must Pass is a three record set and we’ve only mentioned two discs. The final LP is called Apple Jam and is distinguished from the well-produced song-sides by having a different label: a jar of, er, apple jam. The contents are different too, being exactly what the label suggests… a compote of instrumental jams that many listeners only play a couple of times before hiding it under the giant poster of a very hairy George (beautifully re-produced, as is the whole box, in the 2016 re-issue). Although there is some uncertainty around who played on which tracks, it is known that three of the four the jams included Eric Clapton (who played on the album proper as well), Bobby Whitlock, Jim Gordon, Carl Radle and Bobby Keys. All but the last of these were in the process of forming Derek and the Dominos. But that’s another story. All Things Must Pass boasts a big sound and songs both powerful and plaintive. George Harrison never bettered his first studio release. Some would argue none of his former band mates did either. © Bruce Jenkins 2018
(5)
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