George Harrison rightly deserves his place in musical history. Being one of the Beatles was sure to elevate him up to the lofty heights of being a superstar. As the 60's drew to a close he found his feet as an excellent songwriter (Something, Here comes the sun) and continued it into the 70's with All things must pass, a monsterous 3LP set in 1970, including 'My sweet Lord'. 'Somewhere in England' comes nowhere those 'highs.' The musicians assembled read like a who's - who. the production is fine. Its just the songs. Its not as bad as 'Dark Horse' (though that title track was justifiable reason enough to buy the album) - the only redeeming feature to this album is 'All those years ago' which does Mr Harrison some justice. It starts with 'Blood from a clone' - which just about sums the album up - trying to get 'songwriting blood from a stone'. This is perhaps the least appealing song of them all so why they made it the first song on the album goodness only knows. This is for fans. For the casual listener who wants to hear him for what he was - get a 'best of.'Read full review
Amazing collection of George's intense musical talents. A must have for all of his fans. Really like the beauty of Writing's On The Wall, and of course Life Itself, and All Things Must Pass. Truly GH classics.
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