SlagA
Wednesday 22nd July 2009 1:59am [Edited]
Blackwood
5,335 posts
This is a bit long and not really interesting. And more than likley complete cobblers. Apols.
Something struck me today, listening through some of the early stuff. I've always had a problem with the early songs in regards George's solos. Quite a few (well, more than a few) are ropey, drift in timing, and never seem to hit a climax but rather peter out before the singing returns. I'd describe them as plinky-plonky. He tends to play single notes with distinct breaks between each note rather than much use of holding or sliding into a note. He does slide notes but often between chords within a solo.
I'm ignoring the Albums here. I went through Past Masters 1 + 2 to check out some solos and realised nearly every non-album pre-65 'Beatle penned' track on a single or EP fails to have a real solo. I call Your Name (64) has an example of a rare (non-album) solo but of the type I mention above. Quite plinky-plonky and robotic (but not in the good sense of bang on time).
The songs they covered (Long Tall Sally / Slow Down/ Matchbox etc) have solos done to a far higher standard but perhaps George is being pretty faithful to the original version's guitar. Although I can't confirm as I've heard few of the versions the Beatles were emulating. But even then he manages to buck the trend with Bad Boy featuring uninspired ropey segments.
The I Feel Fine / Day Tripper / We can work it out / Paperback Writer era of singles, he's either absent in any solo or a solo is very compressed. In Day Tripper, the solo is a trebly punched up version of the main guitar riff with a tiny lead squeezed into the last few bars. Similar with I Feel Fine but in reverse, a few bars of an alternative riff that returns to the original for a repeat to bring in the vocals. She's a Woman is the first of a sequence of Beatle penned songs to start to feature more traditional guitar leads but (like I Call Your Name) it's recorded in 64. I'm Down (65?) is an improvement.
I tried going through an early album too. On With The Beatles there's a decent solo in All My Loving but it's short, more chordal than single notes, and sounds like a vocal transcribed to guitar. On his own song, Don't Bother Me, the solo (which I'd assume was his own work) is very uninspiring and typically Harrison of the era, few held notes. Roll Over Beethoven has good sections but the intro is barely passable and drops time plus the centre lead is buggered up as he prepares for the verse. Saying that, Til There was You features a brilliant Nylon Guitar lead, with all the elements of a great ballad solo, just to make me look like a dick. I even suspected it wasn't him playing the studio version, but he repeats the version live on the Ed Sullivan show.
I'm wondering why the difference between the albums and the destined-for-singles tracks - was it the amount of time they could dedicate to an album track being longer than a single B-side or EP filler?
However, the riffs in I Feel Fine / Day Tripper / We can work it out / Paperback Writer are, without argument, stunning - although I have a suspicion he's playing something Lennon or McCartney would've originated while writing the song. It seems that when he was working within a structure or imitating he was more than competent but when it came to creating an idea from scratch he took a long time to mature.
But when he did mature, he was awesome.