From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dark Horse is an album by George Harrison, released as the
follow-up to Living in the Material
World in 1974. Dark Horse is notable for the
well-attended, but ultimately infamous North American tour that
supported it, which would turn out to be Harrison's only set of
performances there as a solo artist.
History
1974 saw a separation from first wife Pattie Boyd, who left Harrison for friend
Eric Clapton, with
the situation later being uncomfortably parodied on Dark
Horse with a cover of "Bye Bye Love". That year also saw
Harrison planning for his future. With a new love interest, Olivia Arias,
and with the end of his Apple Records contract in sight, he
founded Dark Horse Records - initially to be
distributed through A&M Records - and spent much of the
year signing acts and guiding their development. When his Apple
contract finally expired in January 1976, Harrison would move onto
the Dark Horse label himself and switch distribution of the label
to Warner Bros. Records.
With the impending tour pencilled in for the last two months of
the year, Harrison was only able to start recording his own album -
which he was also dubbing Dark Horse - in September,
leaving him little time to complete it. Aiding Harrison were Ringo Starr, Jim Keltner, Nicky Hopkins, Billy Preston and
the aforementioned Eric Clapton. The sessions, which were held at
his home studio in Henley-on-Thames, compounded
Harrison's unfortunate development of laryngitis. When it was time to leave for
the US in mid-October to begin rehearsing for the tour - with the
album still unfinished - Harrison's voice was completely raw. Ringo
Starr confirmed this with Beatlefan Magazine when he stated that
Harrison was hoarse before he left England to complete the album
and start tour rehearsals.
After quickly recording the title track (a future US Top 20
hit), Dark Horse was quickly pressed and rushed into shops
that December. Although the music was much more uplifting than
Living in the Material
World's and featured some excellent guitar work, critics
soon began calling the album "Dark Hoarse", in reference to
Harrison's suffering vocals. With no time to let his throat heal,
he performed the entire tour in a sandpaper voice, much to the
disapproval of reviewers and fans. The negative press Harrison
received also stemmed from his unpopular decision to include an Indian music portion
to the concert, as well as performing The Beatles' "In My Life" with
philosophically-modified lyrics. After the tour's conclusion,
Harrison was so averse to touring that he would hardly ever appear
live again, save for a brief Japanese tour in
1991 at Clapton's insistence.
Surprisingly, Dark Horse failed to chart at all in the
UK, while it reached #4 in the US during a brief chart stay, going
gold.
In 1992, Dark Horse was remastered for CD release.
Track
listing
All songs by George Harrison, except where
noted.
- "Hari's On Tour (Express)" – 4:43
- "Simply Shady" – 4:38
- "So Sad" – 5:00
- A song originally recorded as "So Sad (No Love of His Own)"
by Alvin Lee & Mylon LeFevre on
their On the Road to Freedom album
from 1973 - featuring George on slide guitar
- Iain
Matthews also recorded a demo version of this song in 1974, but
it wasn't released until "Orphans & Outcasts, Vol. 1:
Collection Of Demos, 1969-1979" album in 1993
- "Bye Bye,
Love" (Felice Bryant, Boudleaux Bryant,
George Harrison) – 4:08
- A wry cover of The Everly Brothers' 1957 hit with
modified parody lyrics by Harrison, in reference to first wife Pattie Boyd's union
with friend Eric
Clapton. Rumours circulated that Clapton himself appeared on
guitar with Boyd on backing vocals, but they were
unfounded.[1]
- "Māya Love" – 4:24
- "Ding Dong, Ding Dong" – 3:40
- "Dark
Horse" – 3:54
- "Far East Man"
(George Harrison, Ronnie
Wood) – 5:52
- "It Is "He" (Jai Sri Krishna)" – 4:50
Personnel
Chart
positions
Shipments
and sales
|
|
| Country |
Provider |
Sales |
| Japan |
Oricon |
46,000+[9] |
|
References
- ^ Leng, Simon (2003). The Music of George
Harrison: While My Guitar Gently Weeps. London: Firefly
Publishing. p. 115. ISBN
0-946719-50-0.
- ^ "allmusic ((( Dark Horse >
Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums )))".
allmusic.com. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:t95e8qctbt04~T3. Retrieved October 2,
2009.
- ^ "George Harrison - Chart
trajectories on the US Billboard 200". October 2006. http://homepage1.nifty.com/tuty/after_beatles_george_albumchartaction_usa.htm/. Retrieved October 3,
2009.
- ^ "norwegiancharts.com George
Harrison - Extra Texture". VG-lista. http://norwegiancharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=George+Harrison&titel=Extra+Texture&cat=a. Retrieved October 2,
2009.
- ^ "George Harrison - Dark Horse
- austriancharts.at". http://austriancharts.at/showitem.asp?interpret=George+Harrison&titel=Dark+Horse&cat=a. Retrieved October 2,
2009.
- ^ a-ザ・ビートルズ "- Yamachan Land
(Archives of the Japanese record charts) - Albums Chart Daijiten -
The Beatles" (in Japanese). December 30, 2007. http://www7a.biglobe.ne.jp/~yamag/album/al_beatles.html
a-ザ・ビートルズ. Retrieved
September 22, 2009.
- ^ "charts.org.nz - George
Harrison - Dark Horse". Recording
Industry Association of New Zealand. http://charts.org.nz/showitem.asp?interpret=George+Harrison&titel=Dark+Horse&cat=a. Retrieved October 2,
2009.
- ^ "RIAA — Gold & Platinum —
Searchable Database". Recording
Industry Association of America. http://www.riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php?table=SEARCH_RESULTS&title=Dark%20Horse&format=ALBUM&go=Search&perPage=50. Retrieved October
3,2009.
- ^ "George Harrison Japanese
Album Chart trajectories". October 2006. http://homepage1.nifty.com/tuty/after_beatles_george_albumchartaction_japan.htm/. Retrieved October 3,
2009.
External
links