‘My Sweet Lord’, George Harrison’s signature song, was his debut single and biggest chart hit, which reached number one in a number of countries.
Harrison began writing the song while touring in Europe with Delaney & Bonnie in December 1969. His primary inspiration was Edwin Hawkins’ funk and gospel arrangement of the 18th century hymn ‘Oh Happy Day’, which was an international chart hit in 1969.
I remember Eric [Clapton] and Delaney & Bonnie were doing interviews with somebody in either Copenhagen or Gothenburg, somewhere in Sweden and I was so thrilled with ‘Oh Happy Day’ by The Edwin Hawkins Singers. It really just knocked me out, the idea of that song and I just felt a great feeling of the Lord. So I thought, ‘I’ll write another ‘Oh Happy Day’,’ which became ‘My Sweet Lord’.
Religious songs had been increasingly prevalent in the pop charts in the early 1970s. Norman Greenbaum’s ‘Spirit In The Sky’ and Pacific Gas & Electric’s ‘Are You Ready’ had been hit singles, and the musical Jesus Christ Superstar was a box office smash.
Harrison took such sentiments a step further, creating a naked plea to God in which he presented himself as a vulnerable, willing and passionate disciple. In four minutes the song led from a simple two-chord acoustic introduction through to a key change coinciding with the entrance of drums and bass guitar, and ended in a rapturous climax in which listeners were left in no doubt as to Harrison’s devotion.
The success of ‘My Sweet Lord’ was in part due to its lyrical simplicity. Harrison’s lead vocals consisted of just 22 different words which any English speaker could understand and sing along to.
The song wedded Harrison’s interest in Hindusim and Krishna mantras to gospel joyousness. The backing vocals in ‘My Sweet Lord’ evolved from the Hebrew word ‘Hallelujah’, common in Christian and Jewish religions, through to Sanskrit prayer and incantations for Krishna.
I did the voices singing ‘Hallelujah’ first and then the change to ‘Hare Krishna’ so that people would be chanting the Maha Mantra – before they knew what was going on!
Hidden among the backing vocals towards the end of the song was the entire text of Vedic Sanskrit prayer.
Gururbrahmaa Guru visnuh, Gururdevo Mahesvarah
Gurussaakshaat Param Brahma
Tasmai Shri Gurave Namhah
The prayer translates as: “The teacher is Brahma, the teacher is Visnu, the teacher is the Lord Mahesvarah. Verily the teacher is the supreme Brahman, to that respected teacher I bow down.” Harrison would have delighted in masquerading such an elaborate message of devotion amid the otherwise simple incantations.
The backing vocals were irreverently credited to the “George O’Hara-Smith Singers”, who were Harrison and Phil Spector, joined by Eric Clapton, keyboard player Bobby Whitlock and two others identified by Harrison as “Cyril” and “Betty”. The singers repeatedly overdubbed the backing vocals, creating a choral effect in keeping with the song’s subject.
Billy Preston’s recording
At the time ‘My Sweet Lord’ was written, Harrison was still a member of The Beatles with no serious plans for a solo career. He therefore donated the song to Billy Preston for his fifth album Encouraging Words, released by Apple in 1970.
Preston’s version was recorded at London’s Olympic Studios in January 1970. Harrison co-produced the session, and the recording featured The Edwin Hawkins Singers on backing vocals.
A single was issued in Europe to coincide with the September release of Encouraging Words, and became a minor hit. It was released in the US once Harrison’s recording became a hit later that year, but peaked at number 90 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Five months after the Olympic session, Harrison enlisted Preston to perform on his own version of the song.
I have read differently about the “George O’Hara-Smith Singers” in other sources. This was just a pseudonym for George Harrison singing along, via overdub. Most of the vocals and backup vocals for the ATMP sessions took place in late August and September 1970 (At this time, Eric Clapton and Bobby Whitlock were in America on tour with Derek & The Dominoes). George was having a bit of studio fun by himself doing a lot of overdubbing.
“Cyril and Betty” were mentioned in the liner notes of the ATMP remaster (released in 2001) and was probably just a joke. I don’t think Cyril and Betty actually existed.
January of 1970 the 4 BEATLES HAD SEVERAL CHESTNUTS IN THE BAGtowards a new album. What might have been
Maybe I’m amazed
My sweet lord
Instant karma
Back sear of my car
Junk
It don’t come easy
Isolation
Working class hero
Hear me lord
That would be something
Love
I found out
All things must pass
Mother
Cold turkey and Art of dying as a single
Alan White (not Andy, although that would have been cool) played drums on MSL
@archie – as a matter of fact, it is Andy, not Alan, White who claimed to have drummed on this track in an interview in Uncut magazine. But most other sources I’ve found say it’s Ringo and Jim Gordon.
Bobby Whitlock plays harmonium
The fact that Alan Klein became involved for money as well as revenge surprised no-one and as Harrison later said ” it just proved that Paul ( McCartney ) was right about him all along “
I’m convinced there are some errors in the list of contributions on the track. For a start, George played acoustic guitar also (he added the slide guitars much later). As he says: “I spent a lot of time with the OTHER rhythm guitar players to get them all to play exactly the same rhythm so it just sounded perfectly in synch.”
Also, I’m surprised to see Alan White’s recollection being taken as gospel. He’s given the very same story about If Not for You (and I think it is that track he’s thinking of, which fits with Simon Leng and Bruce Spizer’s song credits), and he’s also sworn blind that Lennon played rhythm guitar on one of the ATMP songs (which would’ve been impossible, because John was in LA with Arthur Janov when the basic tracks were recorded!). Anyway, White keeps changing his mind about which songs he played on; from what I read, most Beatles biographers ignore what he says. Besides, George named the drummers as Ringo and Jim Gordon – how can White’s version overrule that?
Peter Frampton added more acoustic guitar, with George again, towards the end of production. Someone also added those lovely zithers – George once again, I guess (they sound like the autoharp(s) he plays on Ravi’s I Am Missing You).
I agree with Barry Smith about the backing vocalists. “Cyril” and “Betty” were just examples of George joking in his 2001 credits, along with the credit for Phil Collins on Art of Dying; ditto for George saying something about how working with Spector helped him “realise the full potential of the Hare Krishna Mantra”. (I didn’t get that last joke until I read a couple of authors pointing it out.)
Whitlock may have been one of the singers, although I always get an uncomfortable feeling he’s a little too ready to credit himself for all and everything. But I don’t where the idea came from that he *and* Clapton sang on this song – Whitlock doesn’t say that, and Bruce Spizer only mentions them as singing on “some of the songs”, but not necessarily My Sweet Lord. (Whitlock and Clapton sing on All Things Must Pass, Let It Down and Awaiting on You All.)
I agree with you and I myself noticed the omission of George’s acoustic guitar credit.
I found a second-hand copy of the 45 “My Sweet Lord” from the late Bev Benson amongst a pile of records that she gave me when I was 11 1/2 years old. I remember when I first played the 45 on my record-player, I found that I rather liked the song.