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George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light

Тема: Джордж Харрисон - Wonderwall Music (1968)

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George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:17:36
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Индия (январь 1968)

Ашиш Хан — сарод
Махапуруш Мишра — табла и пакавадж
Шарад Джадев — шехнай
Хануман Джадев — шехнай
Шамбу Дас — ситар
Индрил Бхаттачарья — ситар
Шанкар Гхош — табла
Чандра Шекхар — сурбахар
Шивкумар Шарма — сантур
С. Р. Кенкаре — флейта
Винаяк Вора — тхар-шехнай
Риджрам Десад — фисгармония и табла-таранг

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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:18:28   
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Bombay, January 1968Bombay, January 1968

It was fantastic really. The studio is on top of the offices ... [and] if you listen closely to some of the Indian tracks on the LP you can hear taxis going by ... I mixed everything as we did it there, and that was nice enough because you get spoiled working on eight and sixteen tracks.
– Harrison in 1992, recalling the primitive recording facilities at HMV Studios in Bombay



Harrison recorded the rest of the Indian selections between 9 and 13 January at HMV Studios in Bombay. In contrast to the multitrack recording carried out at Abbey Road, the music was captured on a two-track tape machine, which replaced the studio's usual mono equipment. Harrison recalled that EMI India's managing director, Bhaskar Menon, personally delivered this machine, a STEEDS stereo recorder, by train from Calcutta. The Bombay studio's soundproofing was similarly inadequate, resulting in traffic noise from the street below appearing on pieces such as "In the Park".

On 10 January, Reuters and BBC News filmed Harrison working with three of the Indian musicians at HMV. A brief portion of this footage was broadcast in Britain on 11 January. In Menon's recollection, following each day's recording session, Harrison returned to his rooms at the Taj Mahal Hotel and studiously documented his observations on the sounds and nuances of the various Indian instruments. Menon described the process as "a kind of immersion for him into the folk music of India".

According to author Alan Clayson, the Indian players were "fascinated" to be following Western rules of harmony for the first time. The musicians were recruited by Shambhu Das, who ran Shankar's Kinnara School of Music in Bombay, and Vijay Dubey, the head of A&R for HMV Records in India. The shehnai players were Sharad Kumar and Hanuman Jadev, while the tar shehnaist was Vinayak Vora. Shambhu Das and Indranil Bhattacharya were the sitarists, and Chandrashekhar Naringrekar played surbahar (a low-register version of the sitar). The tablist was Shankar Ghosh, although the original album credits listed him on sitar.

Rijram Desad, a multi-instrumentalist whose past work included film scores and ballets with vocalists such as Lata Mangeshkar, played Indian harmonium and tabla tarang. Shivkumar Sharma contributed on santoor, and the bansuri (bamboo flute) was played by S.R. Kenkare. Hariprasad Chaurasia also contributed on bansuri, but only after the soundtrack pieces had been completed, and the efficient progress of the sessions allowed Harrison to record some other compositions.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:19:43   
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George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:37:18   
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С актерами, снимавшимися в фильме: Майклом Йорком и Ритой ТашингэмС актерами, снимавшимися в фильме: Майклом Йорком и Ритой Ташингэм

Michael York
Rita Tushingham
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:39:32   
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https://www.udiscovermusic.com/behind-the-albums/george-harrison-wonderwall-music/https://www.udiscovermusic.com/behind-the-albums/george-harrison-wonderwall-music/

The studio was Abbey Road, and the recording of Wonderwall Music began on 22 November 1967, with some additional sessions at De Lane Lea Studios, also in London. In January 1968 George went to Bombay and recorded the remainder of the Indian music at HMV Studios. The Indian studio was somewhat primitive, compared to London, and on some tracks, including ’In the Park’, you can faintly hear traffic noise from the street below.

Wonderwall Inner
While he was in Bombay, George also recorded the backing track to ‘The Inner Light’, which became the B-side of The Beatles’ single, ‘Lady Madonna’. Returning to England for final overdubbing, everything for the soundtrack album was completed by 15 February, when George and John Lennon, along with their wives went to India for a transcendental meditation course with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.

Besides the Indian musicians and John Barham, the principal Western musicians on the soundtrack were a Liverpool band named the Remo Four that was also managed by Brian Epstein. The quartet was guitarist, Colin Manley, Tony Ashton on keyboards, Phillip Rogers on bass and drummer, Roy Dyke; Manley was a classmate of Paul McCartney at school. Ashton and Dyke would later join forces with guitarist Kim Gardner, who had been in The Creation and then The Birds with Ronnie Wood, to form Ashton, Gardner and Dyke. Later still in 1977, Ashton joined with Ian Paice and Jon Lord after the breakup of Deep Purple, to form Paice Ashton Lord.

Both Ringo Starr and Eric Clapton play on ‘Ski-ing’, while Peter Tork of the Monkees, plays the banjo. Eric Clapton, who plays the fuzzy blues guitar riff on the track was still in Cream and his involvement with the project was his first with George – although there would, of course, be many more. Harmonica player, Tommy Reilly, best known for playing theme tune to BBC television’s Dixon of Dock Green, made up the contingent of Western musicians.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:41:18   
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WONDERWALL MUSICWONDERWALL MUSIC
by Matt Hurwitz

Just as The Beatles were putting the finishing touches on their film, “Magical Mystery Tour,” for broadcast at the end of 1967, George Harrison was beginning his own new project – creating the music score for “Wonderwall,” a movie by indie director and friend, Joe Massot.

“’Wonderwall’ was a kind of 60s hippie movie,” George said. “Joe Massot came to me and asked if I would do the music to his film. I told him, ‘I don’t do music to films,’ and he said, ‘Well, whatever you give me, I’ll have it.’”
The film was about a lonely professor (Jack MacGowran) in a cheap apartment who spends his time watching through a hole in the wall the goings-on in the unit next door, inhabited by a young photographer and his model girlfriend (Jane Birkin), with whom he develops an obsession. Plentiful with the psychedelia of its day, there was ample opportunity for George to fill it with whatever musical whimsy he chose. “He was free to do absolutely whatever he liked,” says friend and arranger John Barham.

What George liked, as fans had been discovering, was Indian music. “Indian music was big at the time in London,” recalls drummer Roy Dyke, whose band, The Remo Four, provided the backing for the western-themed pieces on the soundtrack. “Everybody was wearing Indian clothes. And George was really into Indian sounds and wanted to turn a lot of people onto it.” Adds George, “I thought, ‘I’ll give them an Indian music anthology, and, who knows, maybe a few hippies will get turned on to Indian music.”

As any film composer would do, the first step George took was what would today be called a “spotting session.” Visiting Massot and editor Rusty Coppelman at Twickenham Studios, he watched a rough cut of the film several times, taking detailed notes about the story and scenes and deciding the type of music appropriate for each.

He eventually compiled a list of about an hour’s worth of music cues, with precise timings required for each. George then spent much of November and early December recording rough outlines of musical ideas and themes, recording a few titles (whose names would change), “India” and “Swordfencing,” at Abbey Road on November 22 and 23. [For those keeping their Beatle calendar, “Hello Goodbye” was released the following day.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:42:54   
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While in prep, George made a few important contacts. Among the first was John Barham, who met George in 1966 while working as an assistant to Ravi Shankar. “Ravi took me down to George’s house in Esher, where he had asked Ravi to play a recital for a small gathering,” Barham recalls. “A few months before recording began on Wonderwall, he asked me if I wanted to do some arranging, and so of course I agreed,” beginning a relationship that would span years.While in prep, George made a few important contacts. Among the first was John Barham, who met George in 1966 while working as an assistant to Ravi Shankar. “Ravi took me down to George’s house in Esher, where he had asked Ravi to play a recital for a small gathering,” Barham recalls. “A few months before recording began on Wonderwall, he asked me if I wanted to do some arranging, and so of course I agreed,” beginning a relationship that would span years.

The first true sessions for the film/album took place at De Lane Lea Studios in London on December 21. Those recordings featured just two players – sarod master Aashish Khan and his longtime tabla player, Mahapurush Misra, who were experiencing their first winter together on tour in England. George had met Khan the year before in Varanasi, India, shortly after George began studying with Ravi, and the two became good friends. “I was in England with my father,” the late sarod player Ali Akbhar Khan, “and George came to my hotel and asked if I would be interested in playing for his movie, Wonderwall. So the next day he took me to the studio, and I recorded with Mahapurush.”

The sarod is somewhat like a sitar, though without frets, held in the lap while playing. Its 25 strings are plucked, like a lute, with a pick made of coconut shell, while the player uses both a well-tuned ear and a fingernail on the other hand, used like a slide, to find notes.

Khan and Misra played together on two tracks, Misra playing alone on “Tabla and Pakavaj,” the latter a double-ended drum laid sideways and played with both hands.

For “Love Scene,” where Prof. Collins watches as the girl and her boyfriend. . . do the obvious, Barham recalls, “George said, ‘Oh, we need romantic music here.’ I knew a raga which had been created by Aashish’s grandfather, Allauddin Khan, called ‘Mauj-Khamaj,’ which I always thought was very romantic. So I suggested that to Aashish.”

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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:43:29   
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Khan recorded several passes, and then George asked him to do something commonplace in his own pop recording, though unusual for an Indian musician – double-track himself. “He said, ‘Why don’t you play something along with it?’” the musician remembers. “At first I was very confused, but then I started listening and found some spaces in between and started filling them, and he liked it very much.”Khan recorded several passes, and then George asked him to do something commonplace in his own pop recording, though unusual for an Indian musician – double-track himself. “He said, ‘Why don’t you play something along with it?’” the musician remembers. “At first I was very confused, but then I started listening and found some spaces in between and started filling them, and he liked it very much.”

The other piece, “Gat Kirwani,” used over a modeling sequence, is based on another raag, “Raga Kirwani,” made popular around that time by Allaudin Khan and Shankar, which George requested Khan play.

The following day, George did the first of a number of sessions with a group he had known from Liverpool, The Remo Four – Tony Ashton (keyboards), Colin Manley (guitar), Phil Rogers (bass) and Roy Dyke (drums). The quartet, recording at Abbey Road, and played on nearly all of the western music tracks, typically by themselves, with only occasional overdubs added by George or Barham. The group – also NEMS artists, like The Beatles – had just returned from a stay at the Star Club in Hamburg, the legendary Beatles haunt, and were looking for their next gig, so George asked their help.

The process was straightforward in coming up with the unique music for the cues. “We would sit in a circle and listen to George explaining what he wanted, sometimes on a guitar,” Dyke recalls. “Then we’d jam a little bit, come up with something, and he’d say, ‘Yeah, I like that,’ and we’d record. It was all improvised, nothing written down, all very quick. And it was such a warm atmosphere.” The group recorded on this date with engineer Pete Bown, as well as in late January with Ken Scott recording.

Ashton handled nearly all of Wonderwall’s keyboards, including a Mellotron, still a fairly new instrument at the time, and heard throughout the album. “George had all kinds of instruments there,” Dyke says. “Tony was a good keyboard player, particularly organ. When I met him in 1962, the groups were beginning to change from all guitar to guitar and keyboard. He was a solid musician.”

On “Red Lady Too,” the second (thus “Too”) of two cues where Collins observes the girl bathed in red light, Ashton plays a melodic tack piano, joined on the recording by Barham on a piano bass. [The other “Red Lady” cue, seen first in the film, as well as at the end, where Collins finds the girl on her red bed, after attempting a suicide by overdose, received a new title, “Wonderwall is Here,” prior to release. Also, as seen in the Side 2 LP master tape box in the CD booklet, “On the Bed” appears to have been confused with its original title, “Piano and Trumpet,” with the running order intending to have been changed, though that never occurred. “Glass Box,” which plays over an argument between the girl and her boyfriend, replaced “Waterworks Dream,” which follows that sequence in the movie. “Vocal, Flute and Organ,” heard as the film closes, was given a somewhat less on-the-nose title, “Singing Om.”]

On the jovial and quirky “Drilling a Home,” as Collins mangles his flat with various tools, Ashton puts the Mellotron through its paces, providing the banjo, drums and even a cheesy trumpet. [The Monkees’ Peter Tork is known to have played banjo on one cue, though not this one.] The celli, organs and flute on “Greasy Legs,” heard as the girl dances with a female friend, are similarly provided by the Mellotron, which makes use of tape strips inside with samples of various instruments (It is most familiar to Beatles fans for the “flute” heard at the beginning of “Strawberry Fields Forever”).

“Dream Scene” combines a concoction of Indian music and voice (which George borrowed from Abbey Road’s library collection) and other instruments. John Barham actually recorded his first contribution on this track – a flugelhorn. “There was a flugelhorn of Paul McCartney’s lying around the studio,” he recounts. “I just happened to mention to George I had been a trumpet player six years prior. So he said, ‘Would you want to do something?’ So I warmed up for about an hour in another studio and then overdubbed it.” He did so again on “On the Bed,” which features a piano from George himself, who also played a sitar-like guitar part, based on a theme Barham had created a few days earlier.

“Dream Scene,” as well as “Cowboy Music,” feature a chromatic harmonica played by studio veteran Tommy Reilly, who was in his 60s at the time. For the latter track (heard as the boyfriend sits atop a rocking horse while making a date with another woman), Harrison asked the Remos for a “classic Hollywood western theme,” complete with authentic-sounding horse clops, made by Dyke with a pair of wood blocks.

A couple of players featured on no other track dropped in just after New Year’s, on January 2 and 3, to record the psychedelic rocker, “Ski-ing.” “That’s Eric Clapton and Ringo,” Barham says of the two, sometimes credited herewith as “Eddie Clayton” and “Richie Snares.” Clapton double-tracked himself, to fill out the band. [As seen in the original Side 1 LP master in the George Harrison: The Apple Years box set book, “Ski-ing” and ‘Gat Kirwani” were originally to appear as a single track]

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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:44:52   
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For the Indian music recordings, George decided to go where Indian musicians were plentiful – Bombay. EMI/HMV had six recording studios in India, but EMI Bombay was considered the country’s recording hub, due to the presence of the film industry there. Recording took place from January 9 thru 14, each day from 11am to 8 or 10pm, engineered by a team of three staff engineers, including J.P. Sen and another by the name of Matgaonkar.For the Indian music recordings, George decided to go where Indian musicians were plentiful – Bombay. EMI/HMV had six recording studios in India, but EMI Bombay was considered the country’s recording hub, due to the presence of the film industry there. Recording took place from January 9 thru 14, each day from 11am to 8 or 10pm, engineered by a team of three staff engineers, including J.P. Sen and another by the name of Matgaonkar.

The studio, located in an insurance office building near the Indira Docks where the label also kept its record stock, featured a large mono EMI BTR2 tape machine in Studio 1, where George was to work. “Mr. Bhaskar Menon brought a two-track machine all the way from Calcutta on the train for me,” George recalled, “because all they had in Bombay at the time was a mono machine, the same kind we used in Abbey Road to do the ‘Paperback writer writer’ echo.” Some recordings were indeed made in mono, with others in stereo.

Harrison contacted sitar player Shambhu Das, a disciple of Ravi Shankar’s whom George met during his first visit to India for lessons. “George called me directly from London and asked me to help with these recordings,” Das says. He then gave Das a list of instruments he intended to use. It was then up to HMV Bombay’s head of A & R, Vijay Dubey, to find musicians to play them.

“George had a serious musician’s ear for recognizing a number of major Indian instruments, largely as a result of his education by Ravi Shankar,” notes Menon, then chairman of EMI India, and later head of Capitol in the U.S., and himself a protégé of George Martin.

The process in India differed slightly from that in London. After breakfast, George would arrive at the studio, where he was then treated to sample playing of whichever musicians Dubey had brought for the day. “In the evening, George would return to the Taj Mahal, where we were staying, and spend his time making notes about the instrument he had heard and the sounds they were capable of making,” Menon recalls. “He was an incredibly hard worker and took this very seriously. It was a kind of immersion for him into the folk music of India.”

The next day, Harrison would meet with the musicians, again sometimes with a guitar, sometimes simply humming tunes, to convey the musical concepts he sought from them. “Most of them didn’t speak a word of English, so he had to depend on his ‘HMV friends,’” Menon says. “But mostly it was just musicians communicating, which was marvelous to watch. They would play a little bit of something, he would say, ‘No, no, no – like this,’ and then they would record.”

Recalls Das, “George would convey to me what mood he needed, and the musicians improvised, and then he okayed for the recording.”

One of the first instruments George became enamored of was the shehnai, an oboe-like double-reed instrument historically used to herald the arrival of both bridegrooms and Maharajas. “They would play atop a stage on top of the gate to the palace, helping create a big entrance,” Aashish Khan explains. The instrument is featured prominently on Wonderwall, played by Sharad Kumar and Hanuman Jadev, greeting the listener on the opening track, “Microbes” (originally titled Darbari-Kanada, after a Hindu raga on which it is loosely based).

Another oft-featured instrument is the taar-shehnai, played with a bow, like a western string instrument, played by Vinayek Vora. “It is actually an esraj,” Khan explains, “but with a gramophone-like horn hooked onto the first string to give it a nasal sound,” much like the shehnai itself. It is heard on several pieces here, most notably making the “crying” sounds on. . . “Crying.”
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.05.19 12:46:51   
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Other string instruments included the sitar (played by Das and Indril Bhattacharya), and the surbahar, which is like a sitar, but pitched lower, played by one of its masters, Chandrashekhar Naringrekar.
The beautiful dulcimer-like santoor, its 116 strings played with walnut sticks, was performed by Shivkumar Sharma. It is most visible on “In the Park,” alongside the tabla tarang, a set of seven tuned tablas, played by Rijram Desad, who can also be heard playing the harmonium.

George made good use of his time, wrapping up early enough to make additional recordings of other ragas for possible Beatle use – two of which appear as bonus tracks on the CD reissue, “Almost Shankara” and another, which would become “The Inner Light.” Recorded on January 12 over four takes (with a fifth the following day), the recording features (along with likely players): a harmonium (Desad), taar-shehnai (Vora), sitar (Das), a dholak (a two-headed drum, like the pakavaj) (Desad or Ghosh), flute (S.R. Kenkare, Hari Prasad Chaurasia), and a bul-bul tarang (player unknown, but perhaps Das or Bhattacharya). The latter is the song’s signature plucked string instrument, played by depressing keys, like on a table harp, and picking strings with the other. Again, as Bhaskar Menon described, one can clearly hear George communicating with the musicians as only musicians do, gently guiding them with his ideas.

Upon his return to the UK, George went back to Abbey Road for additional recording with The Remo Four and Ken Scott, taking place on January 17, 22, 26, 30 and 31. On the 22nd, George produced five takes of a song of the band’s called “In the First Place,” with Tony Ashton singing. The track lay unknown until 1998, when Joe Massot created a new director’s cut of the film, asking George for access to additional session material, including the song (Massot used the song over the opening titles in his new cut of the film). With the completion of those recordings, the soundtrack was complete – the album was mixed by Harrison and Scott on February 1 and 2.

For the front cover, George contacted Bob Gill, a popular designer in London. “I came to The Beatles’ office on Savile Row, and the four of them told me how important this project was, because it was the first album on their new label, Apple,” Gill recalls. “They explained what the movie was about, so I thought it would be fun to erect a barrier, a brick wall, which divided the sleeve in half. Then I put a boring man in a gray suit and bowler hat on one side, and on the other a typical Indian miniature,” with tempting ladies bathing in a pond. Gill’s original design featured a solid brick wall, from which George then requested a single brick removed, to reflect the professor’s own predicament.

For the back cover, George produced a favorite photo recently taken by one of The Beatles’ oldest friends, Astrid Kirchherr (then Astrid Kemp). The back cover was laid out with the photo and credits by an up-and-coming Alan Aldridge, then one of Gill’s students, but the design was later relegated to placement as an album insert, in favor of a powerful agency photo of the Berlin Wall.

Wonderwall Music by George Harrison was released on November 1 in the UK (December 2 in the U.S.), making it the first album released on the Apple label, as well as the first true solo album by a Beatle. For George Harrison, it was just the beginning.

Matt Hurwitz
http://www.georgeharrison.com/albums/wonderwall-music/...ceDvdIZcJnr0qm6LFI3Xp00zHoSz6b5ks
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: mister Postman   Дата: 26.05.19 07:17:20   
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2adh:

>Индия (январь 1968)
>Ашиш Хан — сарод
>Махапуруш Мишра — табла и пакавадж
>Шарад Джадев — шехнай
>Хануман Джадев — шехнай
>Шамбу Дас — ситар
>Индрил Бхаттачарья — ситар
>Шанкар Гхош — табла
>Чандра Шекхар — сурбахар
>Шивкумар Шарма — сантур
>С. Р. Кенкаре — флейта
>Винаяк Вора — тхар-шехнай
>Риджрам Десад — фисгармония и табла-таранг
>George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India (10.01.1968)
>(Filmed 11.01.1968)
Получается Джордж в этой песне только пел, ни на чем не играл?! А я был уверен, что соло во вступлении это его рук дело...
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 15:19:01   
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2mister Postman:

Скорее всего партия ситара оказалась в данном случае сложнее, чем мог сыграть Джордж. Сыграло свою роль и то, что он выступал главным образом продюсером записи, предлагая приглашенным индусам больше импровизировать. Как и родилось сопровождение номера.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 18:08:58   
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На репетиции Джордж играл на такой вот штуке (есть кадры, где на ней же пробует играть Маккартни), но похоже исключительно в целях аккомпанемента для своего голоса. В окончательном варианте этот инструмент не значится. На репетиции Джордж играл на такой вот штуке (есть кадры, где на ней же пробует играть Маккартни), но похоже исключительно в целях аккомпанемента для своего голоса. В окончательном варианте этот инструмент не значится.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 18:11:31   
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Музыкантов для сессии собирал Шамбу Дас - Shambhu Das. Отношения с ним Джордж поддерживал всю жизнь. К тому же он был учителем Джорджа игре на ситаре. Музыкантов для сессии собирал Шамбу Дас - Shambhu Das. Отношения с ним Джордж поддерживал всю жизнь. К тому же он был учителем Джорджа игре на ситаре.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 18:12:06   
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George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 18:12:59   
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Shambhu Das and George Harrison during the Wonderwall sessions.Shambhu Das and George Harrison during the Wonderwall sessions.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 18:13:58   
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George and Shambhu Das in 1966 • Shambhu was one of @ragaravishankar's sitar students and became George's tutor on sitar. Later, Shambhu contributed to the 'Wonderwall Music' sessions in Mumbai, helping George recruit musicians from Ravi Shankar's Kinnara School of MusicGeorge and Shambhu Das in 1966 • Shambhu was one of @ragaravishankar's sitar students and became George's tutor on sitar. Later, Shambhu contributed to the 'Wonderwall Music' sessions in Mumbai, helping George recruit musicians from Ravi Shankar's Kinnara School of Music
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 18:17:20   
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Sessions for Wonderwall in Bombay's EMI studio. Shambhu Das is holding the stopwatch.Sessions for Wonderwall in Bombay's EMI studio. Shambhu Das is holding the stopwatch.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 18:27:37   
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Единственное живое исполнение за всю историю песни:

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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 18:39:39   
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Paul McCartney himself had a high opinion of the song shortly after its release, describing it as “an unusual composition and one of the most commercial that George has ever written...Forget the Indian music and listen to the melody. Don't you think it's a beautiful melody? It's really lovely.”
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: Vadim Mochegonsk   Дата: 26.05.19 19:51:18   
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2adh:

>Paul McCartney himself had a high opinion of
>the song shortly after its release, describing
>it as “an unusual composition and one of the most
>commercial that George has ever written...Forget
>the Indian music and listen to the melody. Don't
>you think it's a beautiful melody? It's really lovely.”

Это он про какую?
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 21:27:34   
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In early January 1968 Harrison travelled to Bombay to record some of the score to the movie Wonderwall using local musicians. The Wonderwall recordings were completed on 12 January, and on 13 January Harrison recorded some additional tracks for possible later use. The instrumental track for "The Inner Light" was one of these, and was recorded in five takes on a two-track recorder at EMI's Bombay studio; the final take was the one used for the released song. The specific musicians on this track were Aashish Khan (sarod), Mahapurush Misra (pakhavaj), Hanuman Jadev (shehnai), Hariprasad Chaurasia (bansuri), and Rijram Desad (harmonium). Harrison did not play on the instrumental track.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 21:28:37   
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Recording: Wonderwall Music by George HarrisonRecording: Wonderwall Music by George Harrison
EMI Recording Studio, Bombay, India
Producer: George Harrison
Engineers: JP Sen, SN Gupta

George Harrison had flown to India on 7 January 1968 to record the soundtrack for the film Wonderwall. The second session took place on this day.

The sessions began on 9 January in Bombay (Mumbai), and the soundtrack was mostly complete by 12 January.

On this day Harrison invited camera crews in to film proceedings. Reuters filmed around 45 seconds of colour footage, and BBC News shot slightly less. In the silent footage the musicians are believed to have been working on the track Fantasy Sequins.

The musicians included Ashish Khan (sarod), ahapurush Misra (tabla and pakavaj), Sharad Jadev and Hanuman Jadev (shanhais), Shambu-Das, Indril Bhattacharya and Shankar Ghosh (sitar), Chandra Shakher (sur-bahar), Shiv Kumar Sharmar (santorr), SR Kenkare and Hari Prasad Chaurasia (flute), Vinayak Vohra (taar shehnai) and Rijram Desad (dholak, harmonium and tabla-tarang).

The Bombay sessions took place at EMI Recording Studios, based at the Universal Insurance Building, Sir Pherozeshah Mehta Rd, Fort, Bombay 400001.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 26.05.19 21:33:11   
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.08.19 11:15:58   
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This extremely rare concert presents a true icon of Indian music. Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia is acknowledged worldwide as the absolute master of the North Indian bamboo flute or bansuri. He studied under such names as Pandit Bholanath and the legendary Annapurna Devi, to become one of the most respected soloists in the world. He has worked with the legends of Indian classical music, as well as collaborated with the likes of George Harrison, Jean-Pierre Rampal, and Yehudi Menuhin. His album Making Music, with John McLaughlin, Jan Garbarek and Zakir Hussain, is described by critics as “one of the most inspiring ever-recorded albums of East-West fusion”.

Chaurasia uses the dynamic contrasts of his breath to create intriguing rhythms that take the bamboo flute to new expressive heights. Accompanied by noted flautist Jean-Christophe Bonnafous and tabla maestro Pandit Subhankar Banerjee, Pandit Chaurasia will present a span of compositions, from the lighthearted to the deeply spiritual, effortlessly combining Indian and European musical influences. This is the undisputed master of the bansuri, breathing eight decades of life experience into the instrument that has been his inseparable companion.
https://www.indiansummerfest.ca/event/hariprasad-chaurasia-concert/

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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.08.19 11:17:02   
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In January 1968, The Beatles’ George Harrison recorded “The Inner Light” in five takes on a two-track recorder at EMI’s Bombay studio with the following musicians: Aashish Khan (sarod), Mahapurush Misra (pakhavaj), Hanuman Jadev (shehnai), Hariprasad Chaurasia (bansuri), and Rijram Desad (harmonium). The final take was released as the B side of the Lady Madonna single on Apple Records.
In January 1968, The Beatles’ George Harrison recorded “The Inner Light” in five takes on a two-track recorder at EMI’s Bombay studio with the following musicians: Aashish Khan (sarod), Mahapurush Misra (pakhavaj), Hanuman Jadev (shehnai), Hariprasad Chaurasia (bansuri), and Rijram Desad (harmonium). The final take was released as the B side of the "Lady Madonna" single on Apple Records.

https://www.nsnews.com/entertainment/dossier/george-harrison-the-inner-light-track-of-t...
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.08.19 11:19:29   
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Бансури - индийская бамбуковая флейта. Бансури - индийская бамбуковая флейта.
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Re: George - EMI Studio, Bombay, India, запись саундтрэка Wonderwall Music, The Inner Light
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.08.19 11:22:18   
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With Hari Prasad Chaurasia. Image source: hariprasachaurasia.comWith Hari Prasad Chaurasia. Image source: hariprasachaurasia.com
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