George Harrison: Living in the Material World is a return to form for director Martin Scorsese following the 2008 release of Shine a Light, his rather lacklustre concert film about The Rolling Stones. Fortunately, his depiction of the Beatle known as The Quiet One has more in common with Scorsese’s 2005 film about Bob Dylan. No Direction Home was over 200 minutes long and in two parts, but still managed to only cover Dylan’s career up to 1966. Living in the Material World is also a two-parter and is similar in length to the Dylan one, but manages to cover the whole of Harrison’s life up to his death on November 29th, 2001. A major strength of No Direction Home was its newly-recorded interviews with an extremely open and talkative Dylan. Living in the Material World makes up for the loss of its protagonist by drawing on a range of interviews with Harrison at various points in his career. It opens by chatting to two of his uncles who talk about the younger George growing up in Liverpool and also draws upon letters written by George to his parents. These are voiced by an actor and would have been more effective if he sounded like Harrison or, at least, adopted a Scouse accent. Visually, the lack of film footage from this period is nicely balanced by a simple but effective use of black & white photographs. Many of these appeared to be newly discovered and we also get to see a lot of unseen footage from his days with The Beatles
Tag Archives: George Harrison
Guitar Jamboree
Ireland has produced one or two great musicians over the years and Rory Gallagher, Gary Moore, The Edge and Jim Corr would surely be some of our most renowned guitarists. Okay, maybe not Jim. Well, you can now add the name of Dave Browne to that list. Yesterday, Dave set a new world record by playing his guitar non-stop for over 114 hours at Dublin’s Temple Bar pub (pictured). He set out at 4.00pm last Sunday with the intention of beating Argentinian Guillermo Terraza’s previous record of 100 hours of continuous play. According to the Guinness World Record rules each song had to be a published work and had to be at least two minutes long. He was allowed to take a 30-second break between each tune as well as a five-minute break every hour or a forty-minute one every eight hours. Dave went for the latter. He was due to break the record on Thursday night before it was discovered that Terraza had actually reached 113 hours on his attempt. So, Dave finished before noon yesterday morning after playing a grand total of 1,372 primarily rock and blues numbers for nearly five days. Well done, Dave, and I hope you enjoy your rest. I don’t know how many of the eight songs below that you played, but it mightn’t be a bad idea to learn a few of them. I’ve got a feeling that you haven’t heard the last of Senor Terraza
Goofy Guitar – Kenny & the Ho Daddies
Solo Guitar With Tin Foil – Brian Eno & David Byrne
Fender Stratocaster – Jonathan Richman
This Guitar Can’t Keep From Crying – George Harrison
While My Guitar Gently Weeps (Beatles cover) – The Drowners
Guitar Man (Jerry Reed cover) – The Jesus & Mary Chain
The Guitar Man (Bread cover) – Cake
Guitar Boogie Shuffle (Arthur ‘Guitar Boogie’ Smith cover) – Bert Weedon

