Jump to content

Thirty Three & 1/3

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by ScudLee (talk | contribs) at 19:59, 20 December 2005 ({{Stars}}). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Template:Album infobox 2 Thirty Three & 1/3 is an album by George Harrison released in 1976. As his first release on his Dark Horse Records label, Thirty Three & 1/3's making was beset with misfortune, yet Harrison was able to prevail by delivering one of his most celebrated albums.

After satisfying his EMI Records contract with Extra Texture (Read All About It), Harrison signed immediately with Dark Horse, which was still under distribution with A&M Records. A part of their agreement was that Harrison was to deliver his new album by 25 June 1976. Unfortunately, Harrison was stricken with hepatitis and once healthy again, was only able to start recording the record in late May. Conscious of the fact that he was not going to rush his debut album on his own label, Harrison abated A&M, telling them the album would be ready when it was ready. But with Dark Horse's other artists no longer doing so well, and Harrison's star on the wane, A&M decided they wanted to offload the label and promptly sued Harrison for late delivery of Thirty Three & 1/3 in September. Within weeks, Harrison had moved both Dark Horse and himself over to Mo Ostin and Warner Bros. Records, who were more than pleased to have him, and Thirty Three & 1/3 and its lead-off single, "This Song", the upbeat and sardonic send-up of the "He's So Fine" vs. "My Sweet Lord" court case (which Harrison lost in 1976) were both released that November.

Named for the fact that he was thirty-three and a third years old during its recording (as well as being the speed at which the vinyl album would be played at), Thirty Three & 1/3 gave Harrison his strongest reviews since All Things Must Pass, including many positive and uplifitng songs. It was clear that despite his legal woes, Harrison would not let his bad luck get him down.

Unfortunately, the damage that previously-perceived mediocre albums had inflicted proved irreversible, and while Thirty Three & 1/3 actually outsold both Dark Horse and Extra Texture (Read All About It) in the US, it reached a lower peak, cresting at #11 and going gold. In the UK, it merely made it to #35. While US single "Crackerbox Palace" made the Top 20 (and "This Song" #25), no UK singles saw any chart action. In actuality, Harrison couldn't care less about his record sales at this point in time. Already a private person, he began retreating more from the music industry as the 1970's drew to a close and immersing himself into films and leisure activities. His only major promotion for Thirty Three and 1/3 was apprearing with Paul Simon as the musical guest on Saturday Night Live on 20 November and in some of the show's comedy sketches.

In 2004, Thirty Three & 1/3 was remastered and reissued both separately and as part of the deluxe box set The Dark Horse Years 1976-1992 on Dark Horse with new distribution by EMI Records, adding the bonus track "Tears Of The World", an outtake from the 1980 sessions for Somewhere in England.

Track listing

All songs by George Harrison, except where noted.

  1. "Woman Don't You Cry For Me" - 3:18
    • Originally written in 1969
  2. "Dear One" - 5:08
  3. "Beautiful Girl" - 3:39
    • Song started in 1969 and finished for Thirty Three & 1/3
  4. "This Song" - 4:13
    • Harrison's tongue-in-cheek parody of the infamous copyright infringement case against "My Sweet Lord"
  5. "See Yourself" - 2:51
    • Originally written in 1967
  6. "It's What You Value" - 5:07
  7. "True Love" (Cole Porter) - 2:45
  8. "Pure Smokey" - 3:56
  9. "Crackerbox Palace" - 3:57
  10. "Learning How To Love You" - 4:13
    • Dedicated to Herb Alpert and intended for Alpert to record