[ ]   [ ]   [ ]                        [ ]      [ ]   [ ]
George Harrison — I'd Have You Anytime
Album: All Things Must Pass
Avg rating:
7.6

Your rating:
Total ratings: 1065









Released: 1970
Length: 2:51
Plays (last 30 days): 0
Let me in here, I know I've been here
Let me into your heart
Let me know you, let me show you
Let me roll it to you

All I have is yours
All you see is mine
And I'm glad to hold you in my arms
I'd have you anytime

Let me say it, let me play it
Let me lay it on you
Let me know you, let me show you
Let me grow upon you

All I have is yours
All you see is mine
And I'm glad to hold you in my arms
I'd have you anytime

Let me in here, I know I've been here
Let me into your heart
Comments (114)add comment
 saamusic wrote:

This is what I listen for--a great but obscure song by a well known artist




I Agree! Completely!   
This is what I listen for--a great but obscure song by a well known artist
 beatlechick wrote:

Beautiful. Makes me sad, though. A wonderful talent and a beautiful man that is sorely missed.




nice hair too!
What a pretty gem
I'm diggin this RP Mellow Mix. Great for work! Thanks, Bill. Great idea.
ahhhhh, Sir George.  So nice to see you again!
 Skydog wrote:

yep, Harrison was a one hit wonder, also all that god hairy krishner stuff was embarassing
 

This album was the deluge of material he'd accumulated while still in the Beatles. The stuff just never made it onto their albums. I love that there are so many great musicians playing with him on this record. He was my favorite Beatle. This is probably  my favorite of his solo work, Cloud 9  is good, too. It coincided with the Traveling Wilbury work and I think demonstrates the energy in the room with yet another set of great musicians. So sad he's gone.
 kingart wrote:
It's nice but not quite up to some of his other work, most of all on this collection. 
 
Agree
From me 8 down to 7
It's nice but not quite up to some of his other work, most of all on this collection. 
Funny, I just PS'd here from a Lennon solo composition ("Crippled Inside"). from one Beatle to another. That's rare.

And yes, Harrison was no one hit wonder. In almost any other band from that period, he'd be the main songwriter.

Hannio wrote:

One hit wonder?

While my Guitar Gently Weeps
Something
Here Comes the Sun
Taxman
Within You Without You
Savoy Truffle
I Me Mine
I Want to Tell You
Love You To

That's a partial list that doesn't include his solo work.  Certainly not as prolific as McCartney/Lennon, but the quality of his music excelled.
 

 

 Skydog wrote:

yep, Harrison was a one hit wonder, also all that god hairy krishner stuff was embarassing

 
One hit wonder?

While my Guitar Gently Weeps
Something
Here Comes the Sun
Taxman
Within You Without You
Savoy Truffle
I Me Mine
I Want to Tell You
Love You To

That's a partial list that doesn't include his solo work.  Certainly not as prolific as McCartney/Lennon, but the quality of his music excelled.
 
beautiful guitar, sweet voice    imo high marks above many
Just got this album delivered.  I'm a bit scared to open it, as it is a bit godlike.
 Bat wrote:
The trouble is, at least in my opinion, in the next 30 years his work never came close to this album.  It's like he burst like a supernova and while not gone, never made much of an impression after that huge flash.

 
yep, Harrison was a one hit wonder, also all that god hairy krishner stuff was embarassing
 Bat wrote:
The trouble is, at least in my opinion, in the next 30 years his work never came close to this album.  It's like he burst like a supernova and while not gone, never made much of an impression after that huge flash.
 
Cloud 9?  Brainwashed?  C'mon.
George knew the real meaning of love!
     makes a warm smile grow ......ahh.....iconic!
Goosebumps song
 ziakut wrote:

You sound like my kind of person. Let's be friends!

 
Aw, bummer!  You forgot to say what your sign is, man!  What a drag, man, it'd have been really far out to know what signs you guys are.  Righteous!





 Bat wrote:

With the Beatles George was given his token one, maybe two songs per album.  After the breakup this album proved that he had a lot more songs that would have been fantastic for the group and they came flooding out with this triple album.  Triple!

The trouble is, at least in my opinion, in the next 30 years his work never came close to this album.  It's like he burst like a supernova and while not gone, never made much of an impression after that huge flash.

 
The last album that he did, Brainwashed in 2002, was an excellent and sadly underexposed classic.
 Stingray wrote:
Bad-Bad-Bad, my dear George!

 
If the Stinger hates it, it must be good.
An all time favorite album.  I miss you George!
 On_The_Beach wrote:

WTF?

 
WTF, indeed!
Bad-Bad-Bad, my dear George!
 MusiqueMusique wrote:
Not the sharpest tool in the shed . . .
 
WTF?
Not the sharpest tool in the shed, but what a big heart and a great soul. Hell, I miss him too.
I just now realized that this is a 10 (from 9); it's really cool!  What was I thinking before?  Maybe just having returned from 12 days in Aruba to the frozen north straightened out my mind.
 Cynaera wrote:

{#Yes}  I miss him so much...

 

We miss you, Cynaera...

love this song...
 
 Giselle62 wrote:
 kaybee wrote:

I've always felt that your favourite Beatle was a kind of personality litmus test.  All the people I knew who liked John best were blunt, rebellious and gifted but sometimes bossy and arrogant.  Paul lovers were affable, charming, often popular but tended to go along with the status quo and could be manipulative.  People who like Ringo best, I often found were easy going, gentle and good-natured.  (Oddly enough they were often homely like Ringo and had big noses too! {#Smile}   )

Those of us to whom George was the favourite were often introspective, shy, very spiritual and often overlooked.  But we were also straightforward and no nonsense: head in the clouds but feet on the ground.  At least, that's what I've noticed.



I am a large part like the people you knew who loved John, and yes, he is my favorite: (blunt, rebellious, skeptical, loving, political)
but am partly like George, too (introspective, shy, open to spirituality.)

 
You sound like my kind of person. Let's be friends!
When this album first came out, like most of the Beatle's new albums, I didn't like them at all. But time does it's thing and I think this album is one of my very favorites of all of the Beatles material, solo or group. Beware of Darkness guides me daily, even though my life is full of light. Thanks George. You gave the world great perspective.
 romeotuma wrote:

I agree...  love this song...

 
 
What an amazing performer and an even better human being-an inspiration for us all!    {#Sad}
I recently watched the DVD set of "The Beatles Anthology" and came to the conclusion that George was probably the most well-grounded of the group. His reflective comments and warm memories were a surprised, of sorts to me.

Anyway, watch the documentary if you have the chance.

RIP, George. 
 RoelantSiekman wrote:
Great work. Guess I should get the album..
 
It's been a while since I listened to it, but I have fond memories of the experience.
 RoelantSiekman wrote:
Great work. Guess I should get the album..
 
Yes you should, worth every pence!      {#Yell}
I'm supposed to be in a meeting, but I can't leave until this is over.
Great work. Guess I should get the album..
 lily34 wrote:
this one makes me swoon.
 
{#Yes}  I miss him so much...

 romeotuma wrote:

Everybody in my hotel room loves this profound and beautiful song...


 
 

M{#Cool}ine too!!!
 Bat wrote:
... in the next 30 years his work...never made much of an impression after that huge flash.
 Didn't like Cloud 9? I thought it was comparable, especially considering his virtual retirement prior to.

 tapatia1072 wrote:

It really IS a fantastic album - IMHO it is the best of all post-Beatles works by the former members of the band. I know there are plenty of people who would argue against this opinion and in favor of John's work, but personally I have always preferred George's more soulful writing and sound.

 
With the Beatles George was given his token one, maybe two songs per album.  After the breakup this album proved that he had a lot more songs that would have been fantastic for the group and they came flooding out with this triple album.  Triple!

The trouble is, at least in my opinion, in the next 30 years his work never came close to this album.  It's like he burst like a supernova and while not gone, never made much of an impression after that huge flash.

I really, really miss George.  What a soul.  {#Good-vibes}


Giselle62 wrote:
I am a large part like the people you knew who loved John, and yes, he is my favorite: (blunt, rebellious, skeptical, loving, political)
but am partly like George, too (introspective, shy, open to spirituality.)
Jorge?


 gjeeg wrote:
I am I wrong: Dylan wrote this song??
 
Are you thinking of "If Not For You" which appears a few songs later on this album?  Anyway, this one is sublime.


George by ~moonmarvel
Tikva

Harrison

Pencil


 tapatia1072 wrote:

It really IS a fantastic album - IMHO it is the best of all post-Beatles works by the former members of the band. I know there are plenty of people who would argue against this opinion and in favor of John's work, but personally I have always preferred George's more soulful writing and sound.

 

You know I was going to say that, but I thought everyone would think I was crazy.  I know many think it was mostly John and Paul, but maybe George was the real talent behind the Beatles after all.  Good call.
 kaybee wrote:

I've always felt that your favourite Beatle was a kind of personality litmus test.  All the people I knew who liked John best were blunt, rebellious and gifted but sometimes bossy and arrogant.  Paul lovers were affable, charming, often popular but tended to go along with the status quo and could be manipulative.  People who like Ringo best, I often found were easy going, gentle and good-natured.  (Oddly enough they were often homely like Ringo and had big noses too! {#Smile}   )

Those of us to whom George was the favourite were often introspective, shy, very spiritual and often overlooked.  But we were also straightforward and no nonsense: head in the clouds but feet on the ground.  At least, that's what I've noticed.



I am a large part like the people you knew who loved John, and yes, he is my favorite: (blunt, rebellious, skeptical, loving, political)
but am partly like George, too (introspective, shy, open to spirituality.)

 yodasan_magoo wrote:
Until I started listening to RP, I never realized what a fantastic album this is and what an incredible talent George was.

 
It really IS a fantastic album - IMHO it is the best of all post-Beatles works by the former members of the band. I know there are plenty of people who would argue against this opinion and in favor of John's work, but personally I have always preferred George's more soulful writing and sound.

Until I started listening to RP, I never realized what a fantastic album this is and what an incredible talent George was.

WOW!  I don't think I've heard this song since 1970. 
 kaybee wrote:

I've always felt that your favourite Beatle was a kind of personality litmus test.  All the people I knew who liked John best were blunt, rebellious and gifted but sometimes bossy and arrogant.  Paul lovers were affable, charming, often popular but tended to go along with the status quo and could be manipulative.  People who like Ringo best, I often found were easy going, gentle and good-natured.  (Oddly enough they were often homely like Ringo and had big noses too! {#Smile}   )

Those of us to whom George was the favourite were often introspective, shy, very spiritual and often overlooked.  But we were also straightforward and no nonsense: head in the clouds but feet on the ground.  At least, that's what I've noticed.
 
Cool insight. What if your fav was Pete Best or Billy Preston?
 kaybee wrote:

I've always felt that your favourite Beatle was a kind of personality litmus test.  All the people I knew who liked John best were blunt, rebellious and gifted but sometimes bossy and arrogant.  Paul lovers were affable, charming, often popular but tended to go along with the status quo and could be manipulative.  People who like Ringo best, I often found were easy going, gentle and good-natured.  (Oddly enough they were often homely like Ringo and had big noses too! {#Smile}   )

Those of us to whom George was the favourite were often introspective, shy, very spiritual and often overlooked.  But we were also straightforward and no nonsense: head in the clouds but feet on the ground.  At least, that's what I've noticed.

 
Charlie Watts is my favorite Stone and Peter Tork is my favorite Monkee along with George being my favorite Beatle.  What does that say about me?

BTW, I liked your analysis and think it rings true to a large extent to this day.

Beautiful.
this one makes me swoon.
 Pyro wrote:

IMHO, Ringo was not the hearthrob, but the butt of jokes among THIS kid's group.  All the girls swooned over Paul and thought Ringo was a "dweeb" (or whatever we called it at that age).

George didn't get the credit he deserved, probably for just putting up with the EGOS of John and Paul.  Don't misunderstand, I'm the BIGGEST Beatle fan there ever was!!

 
I've always felt that your favourite Beatle was a kind of personality litmus test.  All the people I knew who liked John best were blunt, rebellious and gifted but sometimes bossy and arrogant.  Paul lovers were affable, charming, often popular but tended to go along with the status quo and could be manipulative.  People who like Ringo best, I often found were easy going, gentle and good-natured.  (Oddly enough they were often homely like Ringo and had big noses too! {#Smile}   )

Those of us to whom George was the favourite were often introspective, shy, very spiritual and often overlooked.  But we were also straightforward and no nonsense: head in the clouds but feet on the ground.  At least, that's what I've noticed.

 lodian wrote:

The song was co-written by George and Bob....I think.
 
confirmed!

 nigelr wrote:
No wonder the Beatles moved the earth.
Three bona fide songwriting geniuses in the one band, plus of course, the affable Ringo, the hearthrob of practically every teenage girl in the world back in the early and mid sixties.
The quiet one, George, came into his own on this iconic album, this song is plain evidence of his inspired genius.
Arguably the finest album made by any of the lads in their solo careers, and a triple album to boot!

 
IMHO, Ringo was not the hearthrob, but the butt of jokes among THIS kid's group.  All the girls swooned over Paul and thought Ringo was a "dweeb" (or whatever we called it at that age).

George didn't get the credit he deserved, probably for just putting up with the EGOS of John and Paul.  Don't misunderstand, I'm the BIGGEST Beatle fan there ever was!!

 romeotuma wrote:


awesome... always feels good to hear this...
 
yep.  great album
Just got this CD after all these years, and it's great, so is this song.
 gjeeg wrote:
I am I wrong: Dylan wrote this song??
 
The song was co-written by George and Bob....I think.
Paul Simon - The Sound of Silence
Neil Finn - Turn and Run
George Harrison - I'd Have You Anytime

What a sequence! I am utterly overwhelmed.

{#Meditate}
beautiful.

and H.B. george

i absolutely love this song. i find it so incredibly romantic.
hadn't known of it until about 3-4 months ago, either. have listened to it numerous times, since.
god bless george.
Should have been made by the BEATLES but the others (John and Paul) had the bigger Personalities ! I , and i am not alone think that George had written the best beatles songs - but he had to wait till there were no Beatles anymore !
I am I wrong: Dylan wrote this song??
No wonder the Beatles moved the earth. Three bona fide songwriting geniuses in the one band, plus of course, the affable Ringo, the hearthrob of practically every teenage girl in the world back in the early and mid sixties. The quiet one, George, came into his own on this iconic album, this song is plain evidence of his inspired genius. Arguably the finest album made by any of the lads in their solo careers, and a triple album to boot!
Not a good song.
Phil Spector: Isn't it a pity.
coding_to_music wrote:
This song was quite effective in getting laid back in the day
"Let me know you," as in the Biblical sense?
highwindows wrote:
Jeez - I ought to go and buy this album!
If only for the jam material!
"let me grow upon you" - damn right, like a rash ;-| This is the fourth 2 on the trot - a pretty bad run for me and RP :(
This is such a beautiful song. It gives me goosebumps.
dharmanavy wrote:
One of the greatest albums of ALL time...He is missed so much, not just for his music but his energy as a human being...
agreed. It's amazing; technically, his voice is kind of weak, but ooooh, it just hits me at my soul.
SuperWeh wrote:
ironically enought the guitar work reminds me of clapton of all people.
To paraphrase a current pop song, your ears don't lie...... Eric Clapton and Dave Mason joined George as the credited guitarists on All Things Must Pass. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Things_Must_Pass
One of the greatest albums of ALL time...He is missed so much, not just for his music but his energy as a human being...
ironically enought the guitar work reminds me of clapton of all people.
Phenomenal Album! An amazing number of hits came off of this record. This was a box set before they had box sets and all new material. Anyone wanting to get into George Harrison should own this.
Jeez - I ought to go and buy this album!
beatlechick wrote:
Beautiful. Makes me sad, though. A wonderful talent and a beautiful man that is sorely missed.
Amen
Whoa, I heard the beginning, and all I could think of was "Jane be Jane" by Ben Folds Five. Nice...
what a fine album.
Mugro wrote:
In that "day", I was only a year old. I doubt, however, that my parents used a song like this to bring me into the world. My mother journeyed into rock & roll only about as far as the Mammas & the Pappas and the Carpenters. My dad had no use for anything past Big Bands and Swing. His favorites were Dixieland Jazz Bands and Satchmo. That being said, this is a pretty cool song. I hope that my son doesn't think that I am as completely musically irrelevant as I just described my parents.....
For me, the day was late 70's yep, to kids we are all geezers...
coding_to_music wrote:
This song was quite effective in getting laid back in the day
In that "day", I was only a year old. I doubt, however, that my parents used a song like this to bring me into the world. My mother journeyed into rock & roll only about as far as the Mammas & the Pappas and the Carpenters. My dad had no use for anything past Big Bands and Swing. His favorites were Dixieland Jazz Bands and Satchmo. That being said, this is a pretty cool song. I hope that my son doesn't think that I am as completely musically irrelevant as I just described my parents.....
Just getting to know this album now. Very nice stuff. I can see why folks have such a high regard for GH.
CTM:
This song was quite effective in getting laid back in the day
Yikes . . . switched over to my browser while working in order to give this song a low rating . . . then I saw the name. Hesitation. What an ethical problem. I will rate it honestly. It will lend credit to my high ratings for other icon types . . . it isn't an automatic!
This song is so beautiful. Such bittersweet memories it brings back.
"All Things Must Pass", but we lost George way to soon. I miss him so much! Awesome song!
Go on George!
Achingly beautiful.
*sigh* George was my favorite.... This one is soooo nice.
Beautiful. Makes me sad, though. A wonderful talent and a beautiful man that is sorely missed.
:nodhead:
Peace, George... <-o<
Hearing this song is one of the reasons I love Radio Paradise. I grew up on this album, but since I never made the jump from LP to CD, I haven't listened to this in a looooong time., Where else would I get to hear one of the beautiful lesser known George Harrison song? Thanks, RP.
The song that kicked off "All Things Must Pass." Just one of the many greats from that album, and possibly the best use of Spector's "Wall of Sound" production values ever in a rock and roll context.
Simply lovely. I miss you George.
so intoxicating
"keep it down up there!... wacky beatle"
Sweet. When this album came out I bugged my father to take me to the record store so I could get it. I gulped when I saw it was three discs but didn't regret the purchase. While updating my CD collection several years ago I started looking for the CD version, and lo and behold it was just when All Things Must Pass was being reissued. I wish I still had that poster of George that came with the original. It hung in my bedroom for a long time (along with the psychedelic poster of Dylan that came with his greatest hits album).
Dreamy flashback.
When I was in college, we'd sit around and listen to All Things Must Pass late late at night, with all the lights off, and just the music for illumination. This song takes me back...
Now I remember...
So, so, so, so lovely.