• George On Rod Stewart and Others

    From Bruce@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 10 19:13:47 2023
    Rock Stars Behaving Badly

    The great George Harrison once said of birthday boy Rod Stewart, had a brain that was as “small as a marble.” This and more revelations!
    Writer Hannah Wigandt has the story:

    George Harrison wasn’t afraid to reveal which of his contemporaries he disliked, but he was ruthless in his assessment of Rod Stewart. The former Beatle said Stewart had a brain that was as “small as a marble.”
    He wasn’t the only Beatle with opinions about the “Maggie May” singer. During a 1976 interview with India Today, George spoke about the contemporary artists he liked at the time. He said pop music fell flat.
    “My favourites are Smokey Robinson (I’ve written two songs about him) and Stevie Wonder,” George said. “Otherwise, George Benson and, of course, anything Dylan does is worth a listen.”

    George’s list of artists he disliked in 1976 was longer than his list of artists he liked. Elton John didn’t impress him and Stewart had no brains either.
    “Well, Elton John’s music is something I’ve never thought much of,” George said. “It all sounds the same, though I think he’s written a good song once (many years ago, of course). His music is made to a formula: throw in lyrics, throw in four
    chords, shake well, and there it is, the new Elton John super-hit!
    “Rod Stewart’s music has improved since Tom Dowd’s producing him, but the guy himself, he’s got a brain that’s as small as a marble. And David Bowie ought to make up his mind what sex he is, and then decide what kind of music he wants to play.
    Eric Clapton’s O.K. though.”

    No pop music impressed George, so Stewart shouldn’t take it personally.
    While the former Beatle’s words might seem harsh, George didn’t just dislike Stewart. He had a hard time with all pop music artists. Some fans might not categorize Stewart as pop, but George certainly would’ve. George enjoyed old-fashioned rock ‘
    n’ roll from Carl Perkins, his buddies Tom Petty and Bob Dylan, and more.

    The bottom line is that pop music made George feel “uptight.”
    In 1975, George told David Herman of WNEW-FM (per George Harrison on George Harrison: Interviews and Encounters) that very few people impressed him musically. The only person who wowed him was the sitar legend Ravi Shankar, his musical and spiritual guru.

    “In music, well, it breaks down into … I mean there’s people who have a sort of a more worldly consciousness, and that’s why I’ve always been with Ravi Shankar because he’s bringing, particularly in the west, something obscure and creating an
    audience,” George said.

    However, popular music had the opposite effect on George.
    “It’s a whole other train of thought that comes from the music,” George continued. “In simpler terms, there’s people, I like people who just convey in their music some sort of sincerity. I’m a big fan of Smokey Robinson just because musically
    he is so sweet, he makes you feel nice, he makes me feel good, whereas a lot of music I listen to, which is popular music, just makes me uptight.

    “Even if I’m not really listening too close to it, it’s just the sound of it and the whole thing, and the repetition, the boring sort of repetition of how it’s played…”

    George wasn’t the only Beatle who had an opinion about Stewart. In his 1980 interview with Playboy’s David Sheff, John Lennon claimed Stewart copied his Beatle song “Don’t Let Me Down.”

    “By the way,” John said, “Rod Stewart turned that into ‘[Georgie] don’t go-o-o.’ That’s one the publishers never noticed… Why didn’t he just sing ‘Don’t Let Me Down’? The same reason I don’t sing other people’s stuff: because
    you don’t get paid.”

    There were many artists that George didn’t like, but the former Beatle was entitled to his opinion. It’s a wonder what Stewart thinks of George.

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  • From RJKellog@yahoo.com@21:1/5 to Bruce on Wed Jan 11 10:38:21 2023
    On Tuesday, January 10, 2023 at 10:13:49 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
    Rock Stars Behaving Badly

    The great George Harrison once said of birthday boy Rod Stewart, had a brain that was as “small as a marble.” This and more revelations!
    Writer Hannah Wigandt has the story:

    George Harrison wasn’t afraid to reveal which of his contemporaries he disliked, but he was ruthless in his assessment of Rod Stewart. The former Beatle said Stewart had a brain that was as “small as a marble.”
    He wasn’t the only Beatle with opinions about the “Maggie May” singer. During a 1976 interview with India Today, George spoke about the contemporary artists he liked at the time. He said pop music fell flat.
    “My favourites are Smokey Robinson (I’ve written two songs about him) and Stevie Wonder,” George said. “Otherwise, George Benson and, of course, anything Dylan does is worth a listen.”

    George’s list of artists he disliked in 1976 was longer than his list of artists he liked. Elton John didn’t impress him and Stewart had no brains either.
    “Well, Elton John’s music is something I’ve never thought much of,” George said. “It all sounds the same, though I think he’s written a good song once (many years ago, of course). His music is made to a formula: throw in lyrics, throw in
    four chords, shake well, and there it is, the new Elton John super-hit!
    “Rod Stewart’s music has improved since Tom Dowd’s producing him, but the guy himself, he’s got a brain that’s as small as a marble. And David Bowie ought to make up his mind what sex he is, and then decide what kind of music he wants to play.
    Eric Clapton’s O.K. though.”

    No pop music impressed George, so Stewart shouldn’t take it personally. While the former Beatle’s words might seem harsh, George didn’t just dislike Stewart. He had a hard time with all pop music artists. Some fans might not categorize Stewart as pop, but George certainly would’ve. George enjoyed old-fashioned rock
    n’ roll from Carl Perkins, his buddies Tom Petty and Bob Dylan, and more.

    The bottom line is that pop music made George feel “uptight.”
    In 1975, George told David Herman of WNEW-FM (per George Harrison on George Harrison: Interviews and Encounters) that very few people impressed him musically. The only person who wowed him was the sitar legend Ravi Shankar, his musical and spiritual
    guru.

    “In music, well, it breaks down into … I mean there’s people who have a sort of a more worldly consciousness, and that’s why I’ve always been with Ravi Shankar because he’s bringing, particularly in the west, something obscure and creating
    an audience,” George said.

    However, popular music had the opposite effect on George.
    “It’s a whole other train of thought that comes from the music,” George continued. “In simpler terms, there’s people, I like people who just convey in their music some sort of sincerity. I’m a big fan of Smokey Robinson just because
    musically he is so sweet, he makes you feel nice, he makes me feel good, whereas a lot of music I listen to, which is popular music, just makes me uptight.

    “Even if I’m not really listening too close to it, it’s just the sound of it and the whole thing, and the repetition, the boring sort of repetition of how it’s played…”

    George wasn’t the only Beatle who had an opinion about Stewart. In his 1980 interview with Playboy’s David Sheff, John Lennon claimed Stewart copied his Beatle song “Don’t Let Me Down.”

    “By the way,” John said, “Rod Stewart turned that into ‘[Georgie] don’t go-o-o.’ That’s one the publishers never noticed… Why didn’t he just sing ‘Don’t Let Me Down’? The same reason I don’t sing other people’s stuff:
    because you don’t get paid.”

    There were many artists that George didn’t like, but the former Beatle was entitled to his opinion. It’s a wonder what Stewart thinks of George.

    I assume he meant David Bowie needed to make up his mind as to sexual PREFEREMCE...


    I wonder specifically what so impressed George about Dylan.

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  • From geoff@21:1/5 to Bruce on Thu Jan 12 09:17:29 2023
    On 11/01/2023 4:13 pm, Bruce wrote:
    Rock Stars Behaving Badly

    The great George Harrison once said of birthday boy Rod Stewart, had a brain that was as “small as a marble.” This and more revelations!
    Writer Hannah Wigandt has the story:

    George Harrison wasn’t afraid to reveal which of his contemporaries he disliked, but he was ruthless in his assessment of Rod Stewart. The former Beatle said Stewart had a brain that was as “small as a marble.”
    He wasn’t the only Beatle with opinions about the “Maggie May” singer. During a 1976 interview with India Today, George spoke about the contemporary artists he liked at the time. He said pop music fell flat.
    “My favourites are Smokey Robinson (I’ve written two songs about him) and Stevie Wonder,” George said. “Otherwise, George Benson and, of course, anything Dylan does is worth a listen.”

    George’s list of artists he disliked in 1976 was longer than his list of artists he liked. Elton John didn’t impress him and Stewart had no brains either.
    “Well, Elton John’s music is something I’ve never thought much of,” George said. “It all sounds the same, though I think he’s written a good song once (many years ago, of course). His music is made to a........

    George certainly did have an 'introverted' period, to put it politely.

    geoff

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  • From Bruce@21:1/5 to RJKe...@yahoo.com on Wed Jan 11 14:45:16 2023
    On Wednesday, January 11, 2023 at 1:38:23 PM UTC-5, RJKe...@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Tuesday, January 10, 2023 at 10:13:49 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
    Rock Stars Behaving Badly

    The great George Harrison once said of birthday boy Rod Stewart, had a brain that was as “small as a marble.” This and more revelations!
    Writer Hannah Wigandt has the story:

    George Harrison wasn’t afraid to reveal which of his contemporaries he disliked, but he was ruthless in his assessment of Rod Stewart. The former Beatle said Stewart had a brain that was as “small as a marble.”
    He wasn’t the only Beatle with opinions about the “Maggie May” singer.
    During a 1976 interview with India Today, George spoke about the contemporary artists he liked at the time. He said pop music fell flat.
    “My favourites are Smokey Robinson (I’ve written two songs about him) and Stevie Wonder,” George said. “Otherwise, George Benson and, of course, anything Dylan does is worth a listen.”

    George’s list of artists he disliked in 1976 was longer than his list of artists he liked. Elton John didn’t impress him and Stewart had no brains either.
    “Well, Elton John’s music is something I’ve never thought much of,” George said. “It all sounds the same, though I think he’s written a good song once (many years ago, of course). His music is made to a formula: throw in lyrics, throw in
    four chords, shake well, and there it is, the new Elton John super-hit!
    “Rod Stewart’s music has improved since Tom Dowd’s producing him, but the guy himself, he’s got a brain that’s as small as a marble. And David Bowie ought to make up his mind what sex he is, and then decide what kind of music he wants to
    play. Eric Clapton’s O.K. though.”

    No pop music impressed George, so Stewart shouldn’t take it personally. While the former Beatle’s words might seem harsh, George didn’t just dislike Stewart. He had a hard time with all pop music artists. Some fans might not categorize Stewart as pop, but George certainly would’ve. George enjoyed old-fashioned rock
    ‘n’ roll from Carl Perkins, his buddies Tom Petty and Bob Dylan, and more.

    The bottom line is that pop music made George feel “uptight.”
    In 1975, George told David Herman of WNEW-FM (per George Harrison on George Harrison: Interviews and Encounters) that very few people impressed him musically. The only person who wowed him was the sitar legend Ravi Shankar, his musical and spiritual
    guru.

    “In music, well, it breaks down into … I mean there’s people who have a sort of a more worldly consciousness, and that’s why I’ve always been with Ravi Shankar because he’s bringing, particularly in the west, something obscure and
    creating an audience,” George said.

    However, popular music had the opposite effect on George.
    “It’s a whole other train of thought that comes from the music,” George continued. “In simpler terms, there’s people, I like people who just convey in their music some sort of sincerity. I’m a big fan of Smokey Robinson just because
    musically he is so sweet, he makes you feel nice, he makes me feel good, whereas a lot of music I listen to, which is popular music, just makes me uptight.

    “Even if I’m not really listening too close to it, it’s just the sound of it and the whole thing, and the repetition, the boring sort of repetition of how it’s played…”

    George wasn’t the only Beatle who had an opinion about Stewart. In his 1980 interview with Playboy’s David Sheff, John Lennon claimed Stewart copied his Beatle song “Don’t Let Me Down.”

    “By the way,” John said, “Rod Stewart turned that into ‘[Georgie] don’t go-o-o.’ That’s one the publishers never noticed… Why didn’t he just sing ‘Don’t Let Me Down’? The same reason I don’t sing other people’s stuff:
    because you don’t get paid.”

    There were many artists that George didn’t like, but the former Beatle was entitled to his opinion. It’s a wonder what Stewart thinks of George.
    I assume he meant David Bowie needed to make up his mind as to sexual PREFEREMCE...

    No, he was commenting on Bowie's makeup and hairstyles and clothes that gave him an androgynous appearance.

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  • From super70s@21:1/5 to Bruce on Thu Jan 12 07:53:53 2023
    In article <20497f1e-3f9b-4291-afbb-b3cc9104bd01n@googlegroups.com>,
    Bruce <SavoyBG@aol.com> wrote:

    There were many artists that George didn't like, but the former Beatle was entitled to his opinion. It's a wonder what Stewart thinks of George.

    I doubt Stewart cares too much what Harrison or Lennon thought of him,
    he's often said he prefers the Stones over the Beatles.

    As for ripping off "Don't Let Me Down," he's known for "borrowing" from
    other musicians. I always thought "Hot Legs" was a not so subtle rewrite
    of Bruce Springsteen's "Tenth Avenue Freeze Out."

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