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You (George Harrison song)

"You" is a song by English musician George Harrison, released as the opening track of his 1975 album Extra Texture (Read All About It). It was also the album's lead single, becoming a top 20 hit in America and reaching number 9 in Canada. A 45-second instrumental portion of the song, titled "A Bit More of You", appears on Extra Texture also, opening side two of the original LP format. Harrison wrote "You" in 1970 as a song for Ronnie Spector, formerly of the Ronettes, and wife of Harrison's All Things Must Pass co-producer Phil Spector. The composition reflects Harrison's admiration for 1960s American soul/R&B, particularly Motown.

"You"
UK picture sleeve
Single by George Harrison
from the album Extra Texture (Read All About It)
B-side"World of Stone"
Released12 September 1975
GenrePop, soul
Length3:44
LabelApple
Songwriter(s)George Harrison
Producer(s)George Harrison
George Harrison singles chronology
Alternative cover
US picture sleeve
"A Bit More of You"
Song by George Harrison
from the album Extra Texture (Read All About It)
Released22 September 1975
GenrePop, soul
Length0:45
LabelApple
Songwriter(s)George Harrison
Producer(s)George Harrison

In February 1971, Ronnie Spector recorded "You" in London for a proposed solo album on the Beatles' Apple record label, but the recording remained unissued. Four years later, Harrison returned to this backing track while making his final album for Apple Records, in Los Angeles. The released recording features the 1971 contributions from Leon Russell, Jim Gordon and others, with further instrumentation and vocals overdubbed in 1975, notably a series of saxophone solos by Jim Horn. On release, the song was well received by the majority of music critics, who viewed it as a return to form for Harrison after his disappointing 1974 North American tour and the accompanying Dark Horse album. Dave Marsh of Rolling Stone hailed it as Harrison's best work since his 1970–71 hit song "My Sweet Lord"; author Ian Inglis describes "You" as "a near-perfect pop song".[1]

Capitol Records included "You" as one of just six Harrison solo hits, alongside compositions of his performed with the Beatles, on the 1976 compilation The Best of George Harrison. For the first time since the debut CD release of Extra Texture in the early 1990s, "You" was remastered, along with its parent album, as part of Harrison's 2014 Apple Years reissues.

Background and composition

George Harrison's admiration for American soul/R&B acts dated back to the early 1960s, to singles by Doris Troy, Marvin Gaye, Mary Wells and others.[2] A similar influence on him and his fellow Beatles was that era's girl group sound, as reflected in the band's choice of cover versions during 1962–63.[3] In 1969, while producing Billy Preston's debut album on Apple Records,[4] Harrison worked with Doris Troy in London and signed her to the label as a recording artist, songwriter and producer.[5] Another of his favourite female vocalists was Ronnie Spector[6] – formerly known as Veronica Bennett,[7] lead singer of girl group the Ronettes until 1967, and latterly married to American producer Phil Spector.[8] After co-producing Harrison's All Things Must Pass triple album in 1970, following the break-up of the Beatles,[9] Spector was granted an unofficial role as head of A&R for Apple Records,[10] and had previously insisted that his wife record for the label.[11] That year, Harrison wrote the soul-inspired "You" as what he later termed "a Ronettes sort of song", specifically for Ronnie Spector.[12]

The main lyrics – "I ... love ... you" and "You ... love ... me", in verses one and two, respectively[13] – make it one of Harrison's simplest compositions.[14][15] Author Ian Inglis comments that Harrison's lyrics here recall the Beatles' use of personal pronouns in songs such as "Love Me Do", "From Me to You" and "She Loves You" to effectively "include the listener in the song's narrative".[1]

A deviation from these lines occurs only with the repeated bridges:[16]

And when I'm holding you, what a feeling
Seems so good to be true
That I'm telling you all that I must be dreaming.

Harrison musical biographer Simon Leng notes the importance of soul music in Harrison's solo career during the 1970s and views "You" as a song that most obviously demonstrates the influence of Motown on its composer.[17][nb 1] Inglis suggests that Harrison's former Beatles bandmate Paul McCartney adopted part of the melody of "You" for his 1976 hit single with Wings, "Silly Love Songs".[1]

Recording

1971 basic track

According to Leng, Harrison taped demos of "You" during the lengthy recording sessions for All Things Must Pass.[19] The sessions for a proposed Ronnie Spector solo album[20] began at London's Abbey Road Studios on 2 February 1971,[21] with Harrison and Phil Spector again co-producing[11] and Phil McDonald as recording engineer.[22]

 
Ronnie Spector, pictured in 1971

Since the Ronettes' break-up in early 1967, Ronnie Spector had worked only sporadically,[23] and she later claimed to have been a virtual prisoner in her husband's 23-room Los Angeles mansion during this period.[24][25] She flew in from California for the sessions,[26] which featured three musicians who had been part of the so-called "blue-eyed soul school" of the late 1960s, via their association with Delaney & Bonnie:[27] multi-instrumentalist Leon Russell on piano, Jim Gordon on drums, and Carl Radle on bass.[28][nb 2] In addition to Harrison, who supplied guitar, another participant was Gary Wright, on keyboards, reprising his role on All Things Must Pass.[33] For two days,[34] this group of musicians taped the basic tracks for "You" and five other songs written or co-written by Harrison, with Ronnie Spector recording guide vocals only.[28] The sessions then "broke down", according to authors Chip Madinger and Mark Easter, due to "Phil's health issues", which had similarly interrupted the recording of All Things Must Pass in 1970.[35]

Despite the fact that "You" was tailor-made for his wife, Phil Spector opted not to issue the song as her comeback single;[12] he had likewise held back recordings by the Ronettes and the Crystals,[36] another act signed to his label, Philles Records, in the 1960s.[37] With the solo-album plan abruptly abandoned,[12][20] another Harrison original from the sessions, "Try Some, Buy Some", was completed and selected for release as a Ronnie Spector single on Apple.[9][38] A minor hit in America only, that song's disappointing commercial reception led to the cancellation of a second single, which was to be "You".[39][40][nb 3]

1975 overdubs

Four years after the Abbey Road sessions, Harrison revisited "You" while completing his final album for Apple Records, the soul-influenced Extra Texture (Read All About It),[43] at A&M Studios in Los Angeles.[44][45] His standing with music critics had recently plummeted following a North American tour with Ravi Shankar in November–December 1974 and his accompanying album, Dark Horse.[46][47] These two projects had been marred by Harrison's laryngitis-ravaged singing voice;[48][49] in addition, a number of concert reviewers had condemned Harrison for refusing to indulge the public's nostalgia for the Beatles, and for his on-stage spiritual pronouncements.[50][51][nb 4] Looking to rehabilitate himself with critics and his audience in early 1975,[55] Harrison had what author Robert Rodriguez describes as "at least one ace in the commercial hole ... the Motown-esque 'You'".[56]

Harrison recorded his own lead vocal onto the 1971 basic track, as he had done earlier with "Try Some, Buy Some", for Living in the Material World (1973).[57][58] On 31 May 1975, further overdubs were carried out on "You", comprising a second drum part, by Jim Keltner; tenor sax solos from Jim Horn; and ambient keyboards, played by David Foster.[59] Harrison said that Horn's saxophone playing on the track was "one of the nicest rock-n-roll sounds I've heard in years".[60] The overdubs added to the song's radio-friendly qualities, particularly through the use of ARP String Synthesizer,[61] but Madinger and Easter note that Keltner's drum part, which is higher in the mix than Gordon's and was played in half-time, produces an effect whereby the song's tempo appears to be slower than on the 1971 recording.[41] With a significant amount of post-production work having been carried out in Los Angeles,[28] Spector did not receive a co-producer's credit for "You" as he had for Harrison's version of "Try Some, Buy Some".[62]

In September 1975 Harrison told BBC Radio 1's Paul Gambaccini that it was "such a good backing track" originally, yet he had forgotten about its existence until coming across the tape years later.[63][64] In a 1987 interview, Harrison acknowledged the difficulty he had in singing the song in so high a key;[65] "it was recorded in Ronnie's register," he explains in his 1980 autobiography, "a bit high for me."[12] Although Ronnie Spector's name did not appear in the album credits,[66] snippets of her 1971 guide vocal remain on Harrison's released recording.[14][67] Spector's voice can be heard intermittently from the two-minute mark onwards,[41] with her signature "woh oh-oh oh-oh"s audible during the song's playout.[68]

Release

An upbeat pop song in a similar vein to Harrison's 1971 hit "What Is Life",[45] "You" was the most obvious choice for a single off Extra Texture.[14] It was released in advance of the album, backed by "World of Stone", on 12 September 1975 in Britain (as Apple R 6007) and three days later in the United States (as Apple 1884).[69][70] The picture sleeve in Britain featured a photo of a smiling Harrison taken on stage by 1974 tour photographer Henry Grossman; the US picture sleeve incorporated Roy Kohara's humorous design for the album, showing blue lettering on a vivid orange background.[71] In another example of the upbeat mood that was otherwise lacking in the musical content of Extra Texture,[72][73] the single's face labels showed the familiar Apple Records logo as an apple core, a pun on the demise of the company.[74]

In the UK, where Harrison had undertaken promotional activities for the first time for Extra Texture,[75][76] "You" was Radio 1's Record of the Week,[77] guaranteeing it substantial airplay.[14] The song peaked no higher than Harrison's previous hit there, "Ding Dong, Ding Dong", at number 38, however.[78][nb 5] As with his Dark Horse singles, "You" performed better in America,[80] where it held the number 20 position for two weeks on the Billboard Hot 100.[45][81] On the US charts compiled by Cash Box and Record World, the single peaked at number 19 and number 39, respectively.[45]

The song served as both the opener for Extra Texture as well as, in the form of a 45-second instrumental portion titled "A Bit More of You", the first track on side two of the original LP.[82][83] Harrison biographer Dale Allison dismisses this reprise with the words "It's filler",[84] while Leng suggests its purpose was to "fashion a soul mood" for the song that follows, the pop-soul ballad "Can't Stop Thinking About You".[85] The full version of "You" appears on the 1976 compilation The Best of George Harrison as one of only six selections from Harrison's solo career up to the end of 1975.[86][nb 6] Having last been remastered for the 1991–92 CD release of Extra Texture,[90] the song was remastered for inclusion on Harrison's Apple Years 1968–75 reissues, released in September 2014.[91][92]

Critical reception

Contemporary reviews

After the so-called "Dark Hoarse" debacle in 1974,[93] and with his singing voice now healed, music critics viewed "You" as a return to form for Harrison.[94] The tone of the song suggested that, in the words of Robert Rodriguez, "the irritable, gravel-voiced mystic on tour the previous year had been but an illusion"[95] – an impression that was supported by the lightheartedness evident in the parent album's artwork and Harrison's self-deprecating "Ohnothimagen" producer's moniker.[96][nb 7]

Dave Marsh of Rolling Stone wrote of the song: "'You,' the single which preceded Extra Texture ... is not only the best thing he has done since 1971's 'My Sweet Lord,' but also promised some of the prestige and credibility he lost with last year's sourvoiced album (Dark Horse) and fizzled tour."[98] In the NME, Neil Spencer opined: "'You' seems at least to proclaim a return to energy. It has the kind of semi-Spector production that was spread all over All Things Must Pass. It bounds along OK, Harrison's double-tracked vocals gasp convincingly, and it deserves to be the hit that it will be."[99][100]

Reviewing for Melody Maker, Ray Coleman highlighted Harrison's vocal and the musical contributions from Horn and Russell, and said: "It's a dead cert disco smash, his finest single since 'My Sweet Lord'." Coleman added that the lyrics were "deceptively simple" since, as with Harrison's 1969 composition "Something", "they say a lot by saying a little."[60] Billboard called "You" a "catchy cut highlighted by his strongest singing in some time", saying that it had an effective hook and sounded like it could have fitted on All Things Must Pass.[101] Cash Box said the song had a "wall-of-sound approach a la 'What Is Love' (the Bangladesh concert sound)" and predicted high sales for the single, but added, "we're still looking for the next change from Harrison the musician."[102] Writing later in the 1970s, in their book The Beatles: An Illustrated Record, Roy Carr and Tony Tyler dismissed "You" with the words: "Doleful, lacklustre, [with] would-be singalongs which quite fail to arouse."[103]

Retrospective assessment and legacy

In his review of Harrison's 1987 album Cloud Nine, for Creem magazine, Bill Holdship included the song among the "scattered brilliant moments" of Harrison's career post-All Things Must Pass, saying: "'You' from the Extra Texture LP sounds like punk (depends on your definition) pop as Phil Spector might've done it, and remains a killer to this day. And when I saw Harrison perform in 1974, he put on a far better show than the one I would later see Wings do."[104] Writing in the posthumous Rolling Stone Press tribute, Harrison, in 2002, Mikal Gilmore similarly identified "You" as a highlight of the artist's work in the mid to late 1970s.[105] In the same publication, Greg Kot deemed it "a terrific single", adding: "Its roaring Wall of Sound arrangement suits Harrison well, right down to its closing quote of the Ronettes' 'Be My Baby'."[68] In a January 2002 review of Harrison's solo releases, for Goldmine magazine, Dave Thompson described the song as "magnificent".[106]

AllMusic's Lindsay Planer admires it as a "propulsive and rocking love song ... backed by one of Harrison's most liberated and driving melodies"; Planer also notes the "nonstop powerhouse instrumental track", driven by Gordon and Keltner's "double-barreled percussive assault".[107] Richard Ginell, also writing for AllMusic, calls the song an "instantly winning" single and album-opener, and rates it among the best tracks of Harrison's solo career.[108]

Among reviewers of Harrison's 2014 Apple Years reissues, New Zealand Herald critic Graham Reid describes "You" as a "remarkably upbeat rocker",[109] while Walter Tunis of the Lexington Herald-Leader considers Extra Texture to be "a delight", from the opening, "brightly orchestrated pop of You" through to the closing track, "His Name Is Legs".[110] Conversely, Paul Trynka of Classic Rock says that the song "sounds dull today, with its dated sessioneer funk", whereas "it's the confessional songs [on Extra Texture] that have worn well."[111]

Simon Leng views it as "a great pop record", adding: "'You' has the same surging spirit as [Motown classics] "Dancing in the Street" and "Heat Wave" and, as the lyrics are full of boy-meets-girl triteness, the groove is what carries it."[19] Ian Inglis identifies the song's strengths as its lyrical simplicity, a "soaring, galloping melody ... [that] encapsulates the joy of reciprocated love and the liberation of rock 'n' roll at its most exuberant", and the quality of the musicianship on the recording, particularly Jim Horn's contribution. Inglis concludes: "Even the slight unease [Harrison] has in striving to maintain some of the higher notes cannot detract from what is, quite simply, a near-perfect pop song."[1]

Two years after Harrison's death from cancer in November 2001,[112] American singer-songwriter Lisa Mychols covered "You" for the multi-artist compilation He Was Fab: A Loving Tribute to George Harrison[113] – a reading that Lindsay Planer describes as "affective" and a highlight of the album.[107] At the New York Celebrates George Harrison Concert on 26 February 2011, in honour of what would have been Harrison's 68th birthday, New York band the 253 Boys performed "You" in a medley with his Cloud Nine track "This Is Love".[114]

Personnel

* denotes May–June 1975 overdubs

Chart positions

Chart (1975) Peak
position
Canadian RPM 100 Singles[115] 9
Japanese Oricon Singles Chart[116] 66
New Zealand Singles Chart[117] 35
Swedish Topplistan Singles[118] 19
UK Singles Chart[78] 38
US Billboard Hot 100[119] 20
US Cash Box Top 100[120] 19
US Record World Singles Chart[121] 39
West German Media Control Singles Chart[122] 43

Notes

  1. ^ Other examples of what Leng terms "Harrison's Motown tributes" include "What Is Life" and "Don't Let Me Wait Too Long".[18]
  2. ^ Before then, Russell and Gordon were members of the Wrecking Crew, a pool of LA-based musicians who regularly contributed to Phil Spector's classic 1960s recordings,[29] as well as to those by the Beach Boys, the Byrds and other acts.[30] Following their work together in Delaney & Bonnie, Gordon and Radle provided the rhythm section for Derek & the Dominos,[31] whose brief existence ended three months after these sessions in February 1971.[32]
  3. ^ Two instrumental versions of "You" from the February 1971 sessions, one of which is the basic track to which Harrison returned in 1975,[41] are available unofficially on the bootleg compilation The Harri-Spector Show.[42]
  4. ^ Adding to the high expectations surrounding these concerts, the Harrison–Shankar tour was the first North American tour by an ex-Beatle[52] and the first there by a former member of the band since 1966.[53] Beatles biographer Peter Doggett compares the shock caused by Harrison's apparent disdain for the band's legacy to that created by John Lennon's statement "I don't believe in Beatles", in the lyrics to his 1970 song "God".[54]
  5. ^ On the national chart compiled by Melody Maker, the magazine listed the single at number 29.[79]
  6. ^ Following the expiration of the individual Beatles' recording contracts with the Apple label's distributors, EMI and Capitol Records, in January 1976,[87] these record companies were free to combine Beatles and post-Beatles work on the same album.[88] The Best of George Harrison was the only example of such a compilation.[89]
  7. ^ Originally intended as the title of Harrison's 1975 studio album,[63] "Ohnothimagen" was a deliberate misspelling of "Oh, not him again", and served as both a send-up of Harrison's serious image[96] and an acknowledgement of his critical unpopularity at the time.[97]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Inglis, p. 50.
  2. ^ Clayson, pp. 170–71.
  3. ^ MadDonald, pp. 65–66, 79, 81.
  4. ^ Andy Davis' liner notes, Doris Troy CD booklet (Apple/EMI, 2010; produced by Doris Troy & George Harrison).
  5. ^ Leng, pp. 60–61.
  6. ^ Kevin Howlett's liner notes, Living in the Material World CD booklet (EMI Records, 2006; produced by Dhani Harrison & Olivia Harrison), p. 7.
  7. ^ Clayson, p. 100.
  8. ^ Leng, p. 105.
  9. ^ a b Rodriguez, p. 41.
  10. ^ Williams, p. 159.
  11. ^ a b Spizer, p. 342.
  12. ^ a b c d Harrison, p. 218.
  13. ^ Harrison, p. 219.
  14. ^ a b c d Clayson, p. 349.
  15. ^ Huntley, p. 123.
  16. ^ Harrison, pp 217, 219.
  17. ^ Leng, pp. 70–71, 180.
  18. ^ Leng, pp. 88, 129, 180.
  19. ^ a b Leng, p. 180.
  20. ^ a b Huntley, p. 65.
  21. ^ Badman, p. 25.
  22. ^ Madinger & Easter, pp. 434, 452.
  23. ^ Spector, pp. 183–84.
  24. ^ Romanowski & George-Warren, pp. 850, 934.
  25. ^ Cameron Matthews, , Spinner, 2 August 2011 (archived version retrieved 30 October 2013).
  26. ^ Huntley, p. 64.
  27. ^ Clayson, p. 274.
  28. ^ a b c Madinger & Easter, p. 434.
  29. ^ Williams, pp. 64–66, 190.
  30. ^ Kent Hartman, "The Wrecking Crew", American Heritage, February/March 2007 (vol. 58, no. 1).
  31. ^ Romanowski & George-Warren, p. 183.
  32. ^ Phil Sutcliffe, "Derek and the Dominos: The Story of Layla", Mojo, May 2011; available at Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  33. ^ Huntley, pp. 52, 64.
  34. ^ Badman, pp. 25–26.
  35. ^ Madinger & Easter, pp. 427, 434.
  36. ^ Spector, pp. 55, 113, 114.
  37. ^ Bruce Eder, "The Crystals: Biography", AllMusic (retrieved 27 March 2013).
  38. ^ Phil Symes, "Ronnie Tries it Solo", Disc and Music Echo, 8 May 1971; available at Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  39. ^ Schaffner, p. 160.
  40. ^ Clayson, p. 281.
  41. ^ a b c Madinger & Easter, p. 452.
  42. ^ "George Harrison – The Harri-Spector Show", Bootleg Zone (retrieved 15 April 2013).
  43. ^ Leng, pp. 178, 186.
  44. ^ Madinger & Easter, pp. 451–52.
  45. ^ a b c d Spizer, p. 271.
  46. ^ Rodriguez, p. 64.
  47. ^ The Editors of Rolling Stone, pp. 44, 46.
  48. ^ Lavezzoli, pp. 195–96.
  49. ^ Madinger & Easter, pp. 442–43.
  50. ^ Schaffner, pp. 177–78.
  51. ^ Tillery, pp. 114–15.
  52. ^ Clayson, p. 328.
  53. ^ The Editors of Rolling Stone, p. 126.
  54. ^ Doggett, pp. 224–26.
  55. ^ Woffinden, p. 86.
  56. ^ Rodriguez, pp. 248, 280.
  57. ^ Leng, pp. 133–34, 180.
  58. ^ Kevin Howlett's liner notes, Extra Texture (Read All About It) CD booklet (Apple Records, 2014; produced by George Harrison), p. 4.
  59. ^ Spizer, p. 275.
  60. ^ a b Ray Coleman, "Extra Texture: Back to the Sixties!", Melody Maker, 6 September 1975, p. 30.
  61. ^ Rodriguez, p. 248.
  62. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, pp. 125, 369.
  63. ^ a b George Harrison interview, Rockweek, "George Harrison introduces Extra Texture and explains 'You'" on YouTube (retrieved 1 July 2012).
  64. ^ Badman, p. 165.
  65. ^ Timothy White, "George Harrison: Reconsidered", Musician, November 1987, p. 53.
  66. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 376.
  67. ^ Leng, p. 180fn.
  68. ^ a b The Editors of Rolling Stone, p. 188.
  69. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 369.
  70. ^ Madinger & Easter, pp. 632, 633.
  71. ^ Spizer, pp. 271, 272.
  72. ^ Rodriguez, p. 184.
  73. ^ Doggett, p. 238.
  74. ^ Spizer, pp. 271, 275.
  75. ^ Ray Coleman, "Dark Horse", Melody Maker, 6 September 1975, p. 28.
  76. ^ Hunt, p. 101.
  77. ^ Badman, p. 169.
  78. ^ a b "Artist: George Harrison", Official Charts Company (retrieved 11 April 2014).
  79. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 385.
  80. ^ Huntley, pp. 122, 123.
  81. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 355.
  82. ^ Huntley, p. 125.
  83. ^ Spizer, pp. 273, 274.
  84. ^ Allison, p. 137.
  85. ^ Leng, p. 184.
  86. ^ Inglis, p. 65.
  87. ^ Badman, p. 175.
  88. ^ Schaffner, p. 188.
  89. ^ Rodriguez, pp 124–26.
  90. ^ Badman, p. 473.
  91. ^ Joe Marchese, "Give Me Love: George Harrison’s 'Apple Years' Are Collected On New Box Set", The Second Disc, 2 September 2014 (retrieved 27 September 2014).
  92. ^ Hal Horowitz, "George Harrison: The Apple Years, 1968–75", American Songwriter, 23 September 2014 (retrieved 28 September 2014).
  93. ^ Woffinden, pp. 83–85.
  94. ^ Huntley, p. 122.
  95. ^ Rodriguez, pp. 184, 248.
  96. ^ a b Madinger & Easter, p. 451.
  97. ^ Leng, p. 185.
  98. ^ Dave Marsh, "George Harrison Extra Texture" 20 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Rolling Stone, 20 November 1975, p. 75 (retrieved 19 July 2016).
  99. ^ Neil Spencer, "George Harrison: Extra Texture (Apple)", NME, 20 September 1975, p. 23.
  100. ^ Hunt, p. 103.
  101. ^ "Top Single Picks", Billboard, 20 September 1975, p. 60 (retrieved 18 July 2020).
  102. ^ "Cash Box Singles Reviews", Cash Box, 20 September 1975, p. 30 (retrieved 2 February 2022).
  103. ^ Carr & Tyler, pp. 116–17.
  104. ^ Bill Holdship, "George Harrison: Cloud Nine", Creem, March 1988; available at Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  105. ^ The Editors of Rolling Stone, p. 46.
  106. ^ Dave Thompson, "The Music of George Harrison: An album-by-album guide", Goldmine, 25 January 2002, p. 17.
  107. ^ a b Lindsay Planer, "George Harrison 'You'", AllMusic (retrieved 16 April 2013).
  108. ^ Richard S. Ginell, "George Harrison Extra Texture", AllMusic (retrieved 16 April 2013).
  109. ^ Graham Reid, "George Harrison Revisited, Part One (2014): The dark horse bolting out of the gate", Elsewhere, 24 October 2014 (retrieved 4 December 2014).
  110. ^ Walter Tunis, "Critic's Pick: George Harrison, 'The Apple Years 1968–75'", kentucky.com, 14 October 2014 (retrieved 4 December 2014).
  111. ^ Paul Trynka, "George Harrison: The Apple Years 1968–75", Classic Rock, November 2014, p. 105 (retrieved 29 November 2014).
  112. ^ Tillery, pp. 147–48.
  113. ^ Tim Sendra, "Various Artists He Was Fab: A Loving Tribute to George Harrison", AllMusic (retrieved 16 April 2013).
  114. ^ Music and Fine Arts: "FPC's New York Celebrates George Harrison Concert – A Night Of Love And Bliss", Flower Power Creative, February 2011 (retrieved 16 April 2013).
  115. ^ "George Harrison (Song artist 225)", Tsort pages (retrieved 27 December 2012).
  116. ^ "George Harrison: Chart Action (Japan)" 23 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine, homepage1.nifty.com (retrieved 28 December 2012).
  117. ^ "George Harrison – You", charts.org.nz (retrieved 16 April 2013).
  118. ^ "George Harrison – You", swedishcharts.com (retrieved 16 April 2013).
  119. ^ "Billboard Hot 100 (for week ending November 8, 1975)", Billboard, 8 November 1975, p. 60.
  120. ^ "Cash Box Top 100 Singles", Cash Box, 8 November 1975, p. 4.
  121. ^ "The Singles Chart", Record World, 1 November 1975, p. 29.
  122. ^ , charts.de (retrieved 3 January 2013).

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  • Bruce Spizer, The Beatles Solo on Apple Records, 498 Productions (New Orleans, LA, 2005; ISBN 0-9662649-5-9).
  • Gary Tillery, Working Class Mystic: A Spiritual Biography of George Harrison, Quest Books (Wheaton, IL, 2011; ISBN 978-0-8356-0900-5).
  • Richard Williams, Phil Spector: Out of His Head, Omnibus Press (London, 2003; ISBN 978-0-7119-9864-3).
  • Bob Woffinden, The Beatles Apart, Proteus (London, 1981; ISBN 0-906071-89-5).

george, harrison, song, song, english, musician, george, harrison, released, opening, track, 1975, album, extra, texture, read, about, also, album, lead, single, becoming, america, reaching, number, canada, second, instrumental, portion, song, titled, more, ap. You is a song by English musician George Harrison released as the opening track of his 1975 album Extra Texture Read All About It It was also the album s lead single becoming a top 20 hit in America and reaching number 9 in Canada A 45 second instrumental portion of the song titled A Bit More of You appears on Extra Texture also opening side two of the original LP format Harrison wrote You in 1970 as a song for Ronnie Spector formerly of the Ronettes and wife of Harrison s All Things Must Pass co producer Phil Spector The composition reflects Harrison s admiration for 1960s American soul R amp B particularly Motown You UK picture sleeveSingle by George Harrisonfrom the album Extra Texture Read All About It B side World of Stone Released12 September 1975GenrePop soulLength3 44LabelAppleSongwriter s George HarrisonProducer s George HarrisonGeorge Harrison singles chronology Ding Dong Ding Dong 1974 You 1975 This Guitar Can t Keep from Crying 1975 Alternative coverUS picture sleeve A Bit More of You Song by George Harrisonfrom the album Extra Texture Read All About It Released22 September 1975GenrePop soulLength0 45LabelAppleSongwriter s George HarrisonProducer s George HarrisonIn February 1971 Ronnie Spector recorded You in London for a proposed solo album on the Beatles Apple record label but the recording remained unissued Four years later Harrison returned to this backing track while making his final album for Apple Records in Los Angeles The released recording features the 1971 contributions from Leon Russell Jim Gordon and others with further instrumentation and vocals overdubbed in 1975 notably a series of saxophone solos by Jim Horn On release the song was well received by the majority of music critics who viewed it as a return to form for Harrison after his disappointing 1974 North American tour and the accompanying Dark Horse album Dave Marsh of Rolling Stone hailed it as Harrison s best work since his 1970 71 hit song My Sweet Lord author Ian Inglis describes You as a near perfect pop song 1 Capitol Records included You as one of just six Harrison solo hits alongside compositions of his performed with the Beatles on the 1976 compilation The Best of George Harrison For the first time since the debut CD release of Extra Texture in the early 1990s You was remastered along with its parent album as part of Harrison s 2014 Apple Years reissues Contents 1 Background and composition 2 Recording 2 1 1971 basic track 2 2 1975 overdubs 3 Release 4 Critical reception 4 1 Contemporary reviews 4 2 Retrospective assessment and legacy 5 Personnel 6 Chart positions 7 Notes 8 References 9 SourcesBackground and composition EditGeorge Harrison s admiration for American soul R amp B acts dated back to the early 1960s to singles by Doris Troy Marvin Gaye Mary Wells and others 2 A similar influence on him and his fellow Beatles was that era s girl group sound as reflected in the band s choice of cover versions during 1962 63 3 In 1969 while producing Billy Preston s debut album on Apple Records 4 Harrison worked with Doris Troy in London and signed her to the label as a recording artist songwriter and producer 5 Another of his favourite female vocalists was Ronnie Spector 6 formerly known as Veronica Bennett 7 lead singer of girl group the Ronettes until 1967 and latterly married to American producer Phil Spector 8 After co producing Harrison s All Things Must Pass triple album in 1970 following the break up of the Beatles 9 Spector was granted an unofficial role as head of A amp R for Apple Records 10 and had previously insisted that his wife record for the label 11 That year Harrison wrote the soul inspired You as what he later termed a Ronettes sort of song specifically for Ronnie Spector 12 The main lyrics I love you and You love me in verses one and two respectively 13 make it one of Harrison s simplest compositions 14 15 Author Ian Inglis comments that Harrison s lyrics here recall the Beatles use of personal pronouns in songs such as Love Me Do From Me to You and She Loves You to effectively include the listener in the song s narrative 1 A deviation from these lines occurs only with the repeated bridges 16 And when I m holding you what a feeling Seems so good to be true That I m telling you all that I must be dreaming Harrison musical biographer Simon Leng notes the importance of soul music in Harrison s solo career during the 1970s and views You as a song that most obviously demonstrates the influence of Motown on its composer 17 nb 1 Inglis suggests that Harrison s former Beatles bandmate Paul McCartney adopted part of the melody of You for his 1976 hit single with Wings Silly Love Songs 1 Recording Edit1971 basic track Edit According to Leng Harrison taped demos of You during the lengthy recording sessions for All Things Must Pass 19 The sessions for a proposed Ronnie Spector solo album 20 began at London s Abbey Road Studios on 2 February 1971 21 with Harrison and Phil Spector again co producing 11 and Phil McDonald as recording engineer 22 Ronnie Spector pictured in 1971 Since the Ronettes break up in early 1967 Ronnie Spector had worked only sporadically 23 and she later claimed to have been a virtual prisoner in her husband s 23 room Los Angeles mansion during this period 24 25 She flew in from California for the sessions 26 which featured three musicians who had been part of the so called blue eyed soul school of the late 1960s via their association with Delaney amp Bonnie 27 multi instrumentalist Leon Russell on piano Jim Gordon on drums and Carl Radle on bass 28 nb 2 In addition to Harrison who supplied guitar another participant was Gary Wright on keyboards reprising his role on All Things Must Pass 33 For two days 34 this group of musicians taped the basic tracks for You and five other songs written or co written by Harrison with Ronnie Spector recording guide vocals only 28 The sessions then broke down according to authors Chip Madinger and Mark Easter due to Phil s health issues which had similarly interrupted the recording of All Things Must Pass in 1970 35 Despite the fact that You was tailor made for his wife Phil Spector opted not to issue the song as her comeback single 12 he had likewise held back recordings by the Ronettes and the Crystals 36 another act signed to his label Philles Records in the 1960s 37 With the solo album plan abruptly abandoned 12 20 another Harrison original from the sessions Try Some Buy Some was completed and selected for release as a Ronnie Spector single on Apple 9 38 A minor hit in America only that song s disappointing commercial reception led to the cancellation of a second single which was to be You 39 40 nb 3 1975 overdubs Edit Four years after the Abbey Road sessions Harrison revisited You while completing his final album for Apple Records the soul influenced Extra Texture Read All About It 43 at A amp M Studios in Los Angeles 44 45 His standing with music critics had recently plummeted following a North American tour with Ravi Shankar in November December 1974 and his accompanying album Dark Horse 46 47 These two projects had been marred by Harrison s laryngitis ravaged singing voice 48 49 in addition a number of concert reviewers had condemned Harrison for refusing to indulge the public s nostalgia for the Beatles and for his on stage spiritual pronouncements 50 51 nb 4 Looking to rehabilitate himself with critics and his audience in early 1975 55 Harrison had what author Robert Rodriguez describes as at least one ace in the commercial hole the Motown esque You 56 Harrison recorded his own lead vocal onto the 1971 basic track as he had done earlier with Try Some Buy Some for Living in the Material World 1973 57 58 On 31 May 1975 further overdubs were carried out on You comprising a second drum part by Jim Keltner tenor sax solos from Jim Horn and ambient keyboards played by David Foster 59 Harrison said that Horn s saxophone playing on the track was one of the nicest rock n roll sounds I ve heard in years 60 The overdubs added to the song s radio friendly qualities particularly through the use of ARP String Synthesizer 61 but Madinger and Easter note that Keltner s drum part which is higher in the mix than Gordon s and was played in half time produces an effect whereby the song s tempo appears to be slower than on the 1971 recording 41 With a significant amount of post production work having been carried out in Los Angeles 28 Spector did not receive a co producer s credit for You as he had for Harrison s version of Try Some Buy Some 62 In September 1975 Harrison told BBC Radio 1 s Paul Gambaccini that it was such a good backing track originally yet he had forgotten about its existence until coming across the tape years later 63 64 In a 1987 interview Harrison acknowledged the difficulty he had in singing the song in so high a key 65 it was recorded in Ronnie s register he explains in his 1980 autobiography a bit high for me 12 Although Ronnie Spector s name did not appear in the album credits 66 snippets of her 1971 guide vocal remain on Harrison s released recording 14 67 Spector s voice can be heard intermittently from the two minute mark onwards 41 with her signature woh oh oh oh oh s audible during the song s playout 68 Release EditAn upbeat pop song in a similar vein to Harrison s 1971 hit What Is Life 45 You was the most obvious choice for a single off Extra Texture 14 It was released in advance of the album backed by World of Stone on 12 September 1975 in Britain as Apple R 6007 and three days later in the United States as Apple 1884 69 70 The picture sleeve in Britain featured a photo of a smiling Harrison taken on stage by 1974 tour photographer Henry Grossman the US picture sleeve incorporated Roy Kohara s humorous design for the album showing blue lettering on a vivid orange background 71 In another example of the upbeat mood that was otherwise lacking in the musical content of Extra Texture 72 73 the single s face labels showed the familiar Apple Records logo as an apple core a pun on the demise of the company 74 In the UK where Harrison had undertaken promotional activities for the first time for Extra Texture 75 76 You was Radio 1 s Record of the Week 77 guaranteeing it substantial airplay 14 The song peaked no higher than Harrison s previous hit there Ding Dong Ding Dong at number 38 however 78 nb 5 As with his Dark Horse singles You performed better in America 80 where it held the number 20 position for two weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 45 81 On the US charts compiled by Cash Box and Record World the single peaked at number 19 and number 39 respectively 45 The song served as both the opener for Extra Texture as well as in the form of a 45 second instrumental portion titled A Bit More of You the first track on side two of the original LP 82 83 Harrison biographer Dale Allison dismisses this reprise with the words It s filler 84 while Leng suggests its purpose was to fashion a soul mood for the song that follows the pop soul ballad Can t Stop Thinking About You 85 The full version of You appears on the 1976 compilation The Best of George Harrison as one of only six selections from Harrison s solo career up to the end of 1975 86 nb 6 Having last been remastered for the 1991 92 CD release of Extra Texture 90 the song was remastered for inclusion on Harrison s Apple Years 1968 75 reissues released in September 2014 91 92 Critical reception EditContemporary reviews Edit After the so called Dark Hoarse debacle in 1974 93 and with his singing voice now healed music critics viewed You as a return to form for Harrison 94 The tone of the song suggested that in the words of Robert Rodriguez the irritable gravel voiced mystic on tour the previous year had been but an illusion 95 an impression that was supported by the lightheartedness evident in the parent album s artwork and Harrison s self deprecating Ohnothimagen producer s moniker 96 nb 7 Dave Marsh of Rolling Stone wrote of the song You the single which preceded Extra Texture is not only the best thing he has done since 1971 s My Sweet Lord but also promised some of the prestige and credibility he lost with last year s sourvoiced album Dark Horse and fizzled tour 98 In the NME Neil Spencer opined You seems at least to proclaim a return to energy It has the kind of semi Spector production that was spread all over All Things Must Pass It bounds along OK Harrison s double tracked vocals gasp convincingly and it deserves to be the hit that it will be 99 100 Reviewing for Melody Maker Ray Coleman highlighted Harrison s vocal and the musical contributions from Horn and Russell and said It s a dead cert disco smash his finest single since My Sweet Lord Coleman added that the lyrics were deceptively simple since as with Harrison s 1969 composition Something they say a lot by saying a little 60 Billboard called You a catchy cut highlighted by his strongest singing in some time saying that it had an effective hook and sounded like it could have fitted on All Things Must Pass 101 Cash Box said the song had a wall of sound approach a la What Is Love the Bangladesh concert sound and predicted high sales for the single but added we re still looking for the next change from Harrison the musician 102 Writing later in the 1970s in their book The Beatles An Illustrated Record Roy Carr and Tony Tyler dismissed You with the words Doleful lacklustre with would be singalongs which quite fail to arouse 103 Retrospective assessment and legacy Edit In his review of Harrison s 1987 album Cloud Nine for Creem magazine Bill Holdship included the song among the scattered brilliant moments of Harrison s career post All Things Must Pass saying You from the Extra Texture LP sounds like punk depends on your definition pop as Phil Spector might ve done it and remains a killer to this day And when I saw Harrison perform in 1974 he put on a far better show than the one I would later see Wings do 104 Writing in the posthumous Rolling Stone Press tribute Harrison in 2002 Mikal Gilmore similarly identified You as a highlight of the artist s work in the mid to late 1970s 105 In the same publication Greg Kot deemed it a terrific single adding Its roaring Wall of Sound arrangement suits Harrison well right down to its closing quote of the Ronettes Be My Baby 68 In a January 2002 review of Harrison s solo releases for Goldmine magazine Dave Thompson described the song as magnificent 106 AllMusic s Lindsay Planer admires it as a propulsive and rocking love song backed by one of Harrison s most liberated and driving melodies Planer also notes the nonstop powerhouse instrumental track driven by Gordon and Keltner s double barreled percussive assault 107 Richard Ginell also writing for AllMusic calls the song an instantly winning single and album opener and rates it among the best tracks of Harrison s solo career 108 Among reviewers of Harrison s 2014 Apple Years reissues New Zealand Herald critic Graham Reid describes You as a remarkably upbeat rocker 109 while Walter Tunis of the Lexington Herald Leader considers Extra Texture to be a delight from the opening brightly orchestrated pop of You through to the closing track His Name Is Legs 110 Conversely Paul Trynka of Classic Rock says that the song sounds dull today with its dated sessioneer funk whereas it s the confessional songs on Extra Texture that have worn well 111 Simon Leng views it as a great pop record adding You has the same surging spirit as Motown classics Dancing in the Street and Heat Wave and as the lyrics are full of boy meets girl triteness the groove is what carries it 19 Ian Inglis identifies the song s strengths as its lyrical simplicity a soaring galloping melody that encapsulates the joy of reciprocated love and the liberation of rock n roll at its most exuberant and the quality of the musicianship on the recording particularly Jim Horn s contribution Inglis concludes Even the slight unease Harrison has in striving to maintain some of the higher notes cannot detract from what is quite simply a near perfect pop song 1 Two years after Harrison s death from cancer in November 2001 112 American singer songwriter Lisa Mychols covered You for the multi artist compilation He Was Fab A Loving Tribute to George Harrison 113 a reading that Lindsay Planer describes as affective and a highlight of the album 107 At the New York Celebrates George Harrison Concert on 26 February 2011 in honour of what would have been Harrison s 68th birthday New York band the 253 Boys performed You in a medley with his Cloud Nine track This Is Love 114 Personnel EditGeorge Harrison vocals electric guitar acoustic guitar backing vocals Ronnie Spector vocals Jim Horn saxophone Leon Russell piano Gary Wright electric piano David Foster organ string synthesizer Carl Radle bass Jim Gordon drums tambourine Jim Keltner drums denotes May June 1975 overdubsChart positions EditChart 1975 PeakpositionCanadian RPM 100 Singles 115 9Japanese Oricon Singles Chart 116 66New Zealand Singles Chart 117 35Swedish Topplistan Singles 118 19UK Singles Chart 78 38US Billboard Hot 100 119 20US Cash Box Top 100 120 19US Record World Singles Chart 121 39West German Media Control Singles Chart 122 43Notes Edit Other examples of what Leng terms Harrison s Motown tributes include What Is Life and Don t Let Me Wait Too Long 18 Before then Russell and Gordon were members of the Wrecking Crew a pool of LA based musicians who regularly contributed to Phil Spector s classic 1960s recordings 29 as well as to those by the Beach Boys the Byrds and other acts 30 Following their work together in Delaney amp Bonnie Gordon and Radle provided the rhythm section for Derek amp the Dominos 31 whose brief existence ended three months after these sessions in February 1971 32 Two instrumental versions of You from the February 1971 sessions one of which is the basic track to which Harrison returned in 1975 41 are available unofficially on the bootleg compilation The Harri Spector Show 42 Adding to the high expectations surrounding these concerts the Harrison Shankar tour was the first North American tour by an ex Beatle 52 and the first there by a former member of the band since 1966 53 Beatles biographer Peter Doggett compares the shock caused by Harrison s apparent disdain for the band s legacy to that created by John Lennon s statement I don t believe in Beatles in the lyrics to his 1970 song God 54 On the national chart compiled by Melody Maker the magazine listed the single at number 29 79 Following the expiration of the individual Beatles recording contracts with the Apple label s distributors EMI and Capitol Records in January 1976 87 these record companies were free to combine Beatles and post Beatles work on the same album 88 The Best of George Harrison was the only example of such a compilation 89 Originally intended as the title of Harrison s 1975 studio album 63 Ohnothimagen was a deliberate misspelling of Oh not him again and served as both a send up of Harrison s serious image 96 and an acknowledgement of his critical unpopularity at the time 97 References Edit a b c d Inglis p 50 Clayson pp 170 71 MadDonald pp 65 66 79 81 Andy Davis liner notes Doris Troy CD booklet Apple EMI 2010 produced by Doris Troy amp George Harrison Leng pp 60 61 Kevin Howlett s liner notes Living in the Material World CD booklet EMI Records 2006 produced by Dhani Harrison amp Olivia Harrison p 7 Clayson p 100 Leng p 105 a b Rodriguez p 41 Williams p 159 a b Spizer p 342 a b c d Harrison p 218 Harrison p 219 a b c d Clayson p 349 Huntley p 123 Harrison pp 217 219 Leng pp 70 71 180 Leng pp 88 129 180 a b Leng p 180 a b Huntley p 65 Badman p 25 Madinger amp Easter pp 434 452 Spector pp 183 84 Romanowski amp George Warren pp 850 934 Cameron Matthews Ronnie Spector Remembers Amy Winehouse Reveals She Went to Rehab to Escape from Phil Spector Spinner 2 August 2011 archived version retrieved 30 October 2013 Huntley p 64 Clayson p 274 a b c Madinger amp Easter p 434 Williams pp 64 66 190 Kent Hartman The Wrecking Crew American Heritage February March 2007 vol 58 no 1 Romanowski amp George Warren p 183 Phil Sutcliffe Derek and the Dominos The Story of Layla Mojo May 2011 available at Rock s Backpages subscription required Huntley pp 52 64 Badman pp 25 26 Madinger amp Easter pp 427 434 Spector pp 55 113 114 Bruce Eder The Crystals Biography AllMusic retrieved 27 March 2013 Phil Symes Ronnie Tries it Solo Disc and Music Echo 8 May 1971 available at Rock s Backpages subscription required Schaffner p 160 Clayson p 281 a b c Madinger amp Easter p 452 George Harrison The Harri Spector Show Bootleg Zone retrieved 15 April 2013 Leng pp 178 186 Madinger amp Easter pp 451 52 a b c d Spizer p 271 Rodriguez p 64 The Editors of Rolling Stone pp 44 46 Lavezzoli pp 195 96 Madinger amp Easter pp 442 43 Schaffner pp 177 78 Tillery pp 114 15 Clayson p 328 The Editors of Rolling Stone p 126 Doggett pp 224 26 Woffinden p 86 Rodriguez pp 248 280 Leng pp 133 34 180 Kevin Howlett s liner notes Extra Texture Read All About It CD booklet Apple Records 2014 produced by George Harrison p 4 Spizer p 275 a b Ray Coleman Extra Texture Back to the Sixties Melody Maker 6 September 1975 p 30 Rodriguez p 248 Castleman amp Podrazik pp 125 369 a b George Harrison interview Rockweek George Harrison introduces Extra Texture and explains You on YouTube retrieved 1 July 2012 Badman p 165 Timothy White George Harrison Reconsidered Musician November 1987 p 53 Castleman amp Podrazik p 376 Leng p 180fn a b The Editors of Rolling Stone p 188 Castleman amp Podrazik p 369 Madinger amp Easter pp 632 633 Spizer pp 271 272 Rodriguez p 184 Doggett p 238 Spizer pp 271 275 Ray Coleman Dark Horse Melody Maker 6 September 1975 p 28 Hunt p 101 Badman p 169 a b Artist George Harrison Official Charts Company retrieved 11 April 2014 Castleman amp Podrazik p 385 Huntley pp 122 123 Castleman amp Podrazik p 355 Huntley p 125 Spizer pp 273 274 Allison p 137 Leng p 184 Inglis p 65 Badman p 175 Schaffner p 188 Rodriguez pp 124 26 Badman p 473 Joe Marchese Give Me Love George Harrison s Apple Years Are Collected On New Box Set The Second Disc 2 September 2014 retrieved 27 September 2014 Hal Horowitz George Harrison The Apple Years 1968 75 American Songwriter 23 September 2014 retrieved 28 September 2014 Woffinden pp 83 85 Huntley p 122 Rodriguez pp 184 248 a b Madinger amp Easter p 451 Leng p 185 Dave Marsh George Harrison Extra Texture Archived 20 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Rolling Stone 20 November 1975 p 75 retrieved 19 July 2016 Neil Spencer George Harrison Extra Texture Apple NME 20 September 1975 p 23 Hunt p 103 Top Single Picks Billboard 20 September 1975 p 60 retrieved 18 July 2020 Cash Box Singles Reviews Cash Box 20 September 1975 p 30 retrieved 2 February 2022 Carr amp Tyler pp 116 17 Bill Holdship George Harrison Cloud Nine Creem March 1988 available at Rock s Backpages subscription required The Editors of Rolling Stone p 46 Dave Thompson The Music of George Harrison An album by album guide Goldmine 25 January 2002 p 17 a b Lindsay Planer George Harrison You AllMusic retrieved 16 April 2013 Richard S Ginell George Harrison Extra Texture AllMusic retrieved 16 April 2013 Graham Reid George Harrison Revisited Part One 2014 The dark horse bolting out of the gate Elsewhere 24 October 2014 retrieved 4 December 2014 Walter Tunis Critic s Pick George Harrison The Apple Years 1968 75 kentucky com 14 October 2014 retrieved 4 December 2014 Paul Trynka George Harrison The Apple Years 1968 75 Classic Rock November 2014 p 105 retrieved 29 November 2014 Tillery pp 147 48 Tim Sendra Various Artists He Was Fab A Loving Tribute to George Harrison AllMusic retrieved 16 April 2013 Music and Fine Arts FPC s New York Celebrates George Harrison Concert A Night Of Love And Bliss Flower Power Creative February 2011 retrieved 16 April 2013 George Harrison Song artist 225 Tsort pages retrieved 27 December 2012 George Harrison Chart Action Japan Archived 23 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine homepage1 nifty com retrieved 28 December 2012 George Harrison You charts org nz retrieved 16 April 2013 George Harrison You swedishcharts com retrieved 16 April 2013 Billboard Hot 100 for week ending November 8 1975 Billboard 8 November 1975 p 60 Cash Box Top 100 Singles Cash Box 8 November 1975 p 4 The Singles Chart Record World 1 November 1975 p 29 Single George Harrison You charts de retrieved 3 January 2013 Sources EditDale C Allison Jr The Love There That s Sleeping The Art and Spirituality of George Harrison Continuum New York NY 2006 ISBN 978 0 8264 1917 0 Keith Badman The Beatles Diary Volume 2 After the Break Up 1970 2001 Omnibus Press London 2001 ISBN 0 7119 8307 0 Roy Carr amp Tony Tyler The Beatles An Illustrated Record Trewin Copplestone Publishing London 1978 ISBN 0 450 04170 0 Harry Castleman amp Walter J Podrazik All Together Now The First Complete Beatles Discography 1961 1975 Ballantine Books New York NY 1976 ISBN 0 345 25680 8 Alan Clayson George Harrison Sanctuary London 2003 ISBN 1 86074 489 3 Peter Doggett You Never Give Me Your Money The Beatles After the Breakup It Books New York NY 2011 ISBN 978 0 06 177418 8 The Editors of Rolling Stone Harrison Rolling Stone Press Simon amp Schuster New York NY 2002 ISBN 0 7432 3581 9 George Harrison I Me Mine Chronicle Books San Francisco CA 2002 ISBN 0 8118 3793 9 Chris Hunt ed NME Originals Beatles The Solo Years 1970 1980 IPC Ignite London 2005 Elliot J Huntley Mystical One George Harrison After the Break up of the Beatles Guernica Editions Toronto ON 2006 ISBN 1 55071 197 0 Ian Inglis The Words and Music of George Harrison Praeger Santa Barbara CA 2010 ISBN 978 0 313 37532 3 Peter Lavezzoli The Dawn of Indian Music in the West Continuum New York NY 2006 ISBN 0 8264 2819 3 Simon Leng While My Guitar Gently Weeps The Music of George Harrison Hal Leonard Milwaukee WI 2006 ISBN 1 4234 0609 5 Ian MacDonald Revolution in the Head The Beatles Records and the Sixties Pimlico London 1998 ISBN 0 7126 6697 4 Chip Madinger amp Mark Easter Eight Arms to Hold You The Solo Beatles Compendium 44 1 Productions Chesterfield MO 2000 ISBN 0 615 11724 4 Robert Rodriguez Fab Four FAQ 2 0 The Beatles Solo Years 1970 1980 Backbeat Books Milwaukee WI 2010 ISBN 978 1 4165 9093 4 Patricia Romanowski amp Holly George Warren eds The New Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock amp Roll Fireside Rolling Stone Press New York NY 1995 ISBN 0 684 81044 1 Nicholas Schaffner The Beatles Forever McGraw Hill New York NY 1978 ISBN 0 07 055087 5 Ronnie Spector with Vince Waldron Be My Baby How I Survived Mascara Miniskirts and Madness Or My Life as a Fabulous Ronette New American Library New York NY 2004 ISBN 0 451 41153 6 Bruce Spizer The Beatles Solo on Apple Records 498 Productions New Orleans LA 2005 ISBN 0 9662649 5 9 Gary Tillery Working Class Mystic A Spiritual Biography of George Harrison Quest Books Wheaton IL 2011 ISBN 978 0 8356 0900 5 Richard Williams Phil Spector Out of His Head Omnibus Press London 2003 ISBN 978 0 7119 9864 3 Bob Woffinden The Beatles Apart Proteus London 1981 ISBN 0 906071 89 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title You George Harrison song amp oldid 1129134058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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