| Title
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Track Time
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1.Introduction - (featuring Ravi Shankar)
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-- |
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2.Bangla Dhun - (featuring Ravi Shankar)
|
-- |
|
3.Wah-Wah - (previously unreleased)
|
-- |
|
4.My Sweet Lord - (previously unreleased)
|
-- |
|
5.Awaiting On You All
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-- |
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6.That's The Way God Planned It - (featuring Billy Preston)
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-- |
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7.It Don't Come Easy - (featuring Ringo Starr)
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-- |
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8.Beware Of Darkness
|
-- |
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9.Band Introductions
|
-- |
|
10.While My Guitar Gently Weeps - (previously unreleased, featuring Eric Clapton)
|
-- |
|
1.Jumpin' Jack Flash / Youngblood - (featuring Leon Russell)
|
-- |
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2.Here Comes The Sun
|
-- |
|
3.Hard Rain's Gonna Fall, A - (featuring Bob Dylan)
|
-- |
|
4.It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry - (featuring Bob Dylan)
|
-- |
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5.Blowin' In The Wind - (featuring Bob Dylan)
|
-- |
|
6.Mr. Tambourine Man - (featuring Bob Dylan)
|
-- |
|
7.Just Like A Woman - (featuring Bob Dylan)
|
-- |
|
8.Something
|
-- |
|
9.Bangladesh
|
-- |
Editorial Notes
Hands down, this epochal concert at New York's Madison Square
Garden -- first issued on three LPs in a handsome orange-colored
box -- was the crowning event of George Harrison's public life, a
gesture of great goodwill that captured the moment in history and,
not incidentally, produced some rousing music as a permanent
legacy. Having been moved by his friend Ravi Shankar's appeal to
help the homeless Bengali refugees of the 1971 India-Pakistan war,
Harrison leaped into action, organizing on short notice what became
a bellwether for the spectacular rock & roll benefits of the
1980s and beyond. The large, almost unwieldy band was loaded with
rock luminaries -- including Beatles alumnus Ringo Starr, Eric
Clapton, Badfinger, and two who became stars as a result of their
electric performances here, Leon Russell (the medley of "Jumpin'
Jack Flash" and "Young Blood") and Billy Preston ("That's the Way
God Planned It"). Yet Harrison is in confident command, running
through highlights from his recent triumphant All Things Must Pass
album in fine voice, secure enough to revisit his Beatles legacy
from Abbey Road and the White Album. Though overlooked at the time
by impatient rock fans eager to hear the hits, Shankar's opening
raga, "Bangla Dhun," is a masterwork on its own terms; the sitar
virtuoso is in dazzling form even by his standards and, in
retrospect, Shankar, Ali Akbar Khan, and Alla Rakha amount to an
Indian supergroup themselves. The high point of the concert is the
surprise appearance of Bob Dylan -- at this reclusive time in his
life, every Dylan sighting made headlines -- and he read the tea
leaves perfectly by performing five of his most powerful,
meaningful songs from the '60s. Controversy swirled when the record
was released; then-manager Alan Klein imposed a no-discount policy
on this expensive set and there were questions as to whether all of
the intended receipts reached the refugees. Also, in a deal to
allow Dylan's participation, the set was released by Capitol on LP
while Dylan's label, Columbia, handled the tape versions. Yet, in
hindsight, the avarice pales beside the concert's magnanimous
intentions, at a time when rock musicians truly thought they could
help save the world. [The Concert for Bangladesh was reissued as a
deluxe edition in 2005. It was packaged in a small, CD-sized box
bearing different artwork (a photograph of George from the concert)
and containing an expanded booklet, good remastered sound, and a
bonus track of Dylan performing "Love Minus Zero/No Limit" tacked
onto the end.] ~ Richard S. Ginell
Format: Compact Disc
Released Date: November 1, 2005
Genre: Country Rock
Style: Rock & Pop
Number of Discs: 2
Stereo/Mono: Stereo
Studio/Mixed/Live: Live
Originally Released: 2005
Label Name: Capitol
UPC: 094633588028