George Harrison was the underestimated Beatle and when it came to what would turn into one of his biggest hits, the rest of the band took some convincing.
George Harrison only wrote a handful of songs while with The Beatles, but the ones he wrote were masterpieces and didn't deserve to be ruined by others.
When Mick Fleetwood re-recorded the Fleetwood Mac song 'Walk A Thin Line' for his record 'The Visitor', he enlisted help from George Harrison.
The word “vicious” isn’t one you might associate with someone widely dubbed by the press as The Quiet Beatle'.
For all George Harrison had to prove at the end of The Beatles, he felt some songs weren't worth being heard by the general ...
For as many classics as George Harrison has under his belt, he knew enough to realise when some songs weren't working out.
Entering a thorny copyright case following the release of 1970's All Things Must Pass, former Beatle George Harrison penned a ...
Despite it being his own composition, Lennon was embarrassed by and dismissive of the 'Rubber Soul' album closer, even if Harrison loved it.
The legend stopped by the VH1 studios with Ravi Shankar to chat about their new collaboration, leading to his impromptu solo ...
Devil’s Radio” turned out to be one of the high-energy highlights of Cloud Nine, the 1987 album that rocketed George Harrison back to the top of the rock and roll world. His sharp wit is ever-present ...
EXCLUSIVE: Elvis Presley's favourite Beatles songs were all penned by the same member of the Fab Four whose writing "he loved ...
‘Blue Jay Way’ is a rare early song from Harrison to be featured on the band’s album and was written primarily as the ‘All Things Must Pass’ singer waited for publicist Derek Taylor to arrive at the ...