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}} "This Guitar (Can't Keep from Crying)" is a song by English musician George Harrison, released on his 1975 studio album ''Extra Texture (Read All About It)''. Harrison wrote the song as a sequel to his popular Beatles composition "While My Guitar Gently Weeps", in response to the personal criticism he had received during and after his 1974 North American tour with Ravi Shankar, particularly from ''Rolling Stone'' magazine. "This Guitar" was issued as a single in December 1975 – the final release for Apple Records in its original incarnation – but it failed to chart in either the United States or Britain. The song follows in a tradition established by singers such as Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, of attributing emotions and actions to a musical instrument. The lyrics also serve as an example of a dialogue that was commonplace during the 1970s between songwriters and music critics. Contributing to Harrison's sense of injustice in "This Guitar", he and his tour musicians believed that detractors had ignored the successful aspects of the 1974 shows – which blended rock, jazz, funk and Indian classical music – and had focused instead on his failure to pay due respect to the legacy of the Beatles. ''Rolling Stone''s scathing assessment of Harrison's tour and accompanying album, ''Dark Horse'', represented an about-face by the publication, previously one of his most vocal supporters, and led to Harrison's continued resentment towards the magazine over subsequent decades. Harrison recorded "This Guitar (Can't Keep from Crying)" in Los Angeles during April and May 1975, a period marked by his post-tour despondency. The recording features guitar solos played by Harrison and American musician Jesse Ed Davis. The song serves as a rare guitar-oriented selection on the keyboard-heavy ''Extra Texture'' album, although David Foster, Gary Wright and Harrison all contributed keyboard parts to the track. "This Guitar" has traditionally received a mixed reception from reviewers, partly due to the inevitable comparisons with "While My Guitar Gently Weeps". Harrison re-recorded the song in 1992 with former Eurythmic Dave Stewart, who used it to promote his Platinum Weird project in 2006. This version appears as a bonus track on the 2014 ''Apple Years 1968–75'' reissue of ''Extra Texture''. ==Background== George Harrison's stated aim for his North American tour with Indian musician Ravi Shankar, which took place from 2 November to 20 December 1974,〔Madinger & Easter, pp. 445–46.〕 was to offer concert-goers "another kind of experience" from the typical mid-1970s rock show.〔Clayson, p. 339.〕 With its blending of Western rock, funk and jazz genres with Indian classical music,〔Leng, pp. 170, 174.〕 author Robert Rodriguez describes the result as a musical form "() one day would be called 'world music'".〔Rodriguez, p. 60.〕 Of the critical reception given to the Harrison–Shankar venture, tour-wide, Rodriguez writes of the "genuine highlights that went mostly unreported", since: "Smaller press outlets without axes to grind tended to review the shows the best, whereas rock establishment coverage, such as ''Rolling Stone''s, tended to spin the tour as something close to an unmitigated disaster ..."〔Rodriguez, p. 59.〕 Along with Harrison and band leader Tom Scott, tour musicians Jim Horn, Jim Keltner and Andy Newmark have each challenged the reliability of these negative reports,〔Lavezzoli, p. 205.〕〔Olivia Harrison, p. 316.〕 Horn declaring the Harrison–Shankar tour "one of the best I've been on".〔Leng, pp. 168, 170.〕 Concert-goers likewise questioned their accuracy;〔Clayson, p. 338.〕〔Greene, p. 215.〕 according to author Nicholas Schaffner, Beatles fanzine ''Strawberry Fields Forever'' had been "deluged with letters protesting the nasty reviews".〔Schaffner, p. 178.〕 Harrison biographer Simon Leng describes this phenomenon as "one of the stranger episodes in rock music" and writes: "While the majority of reviews were positive, in some cases ecstatic, the 'given' view of the tour comes from the ''Rolling Stone'' articles."〔Leng, p. 174.〕 Chief among these was a feature by Ben Fong-Torres, titled "Lumbering in the Material World",〔Rodriguez, p. 46.〕〔The Editors of ''Rolling Stone'', p. 150.〕 covering the opening, West Coast portion of the tour.〔〔Ben Fong-Torres, "George Harrison: Harrison in the Haight", ''San Francisco Chronicle'', 2 December 2001; available at (Rock's Backpages ) (''subscription required''; retrieved 16 May 2013).〕 Feng-Torres condemned Harrison for refusing to pander to critics' and the public's nostalgia for the Beatles,〔Clayson, pp. 336, 338.〕〔("Hari's On Tour (Depressed)" ), Contra Band Music, 17 October 2012 (retrieved 4 May 2013).〕 and for the perilous state of his singing voice, after Harrison had contracted laryngitis while rushing to complete his new album during the tour rehearsals.〔 In addition to Scott airing his objections to Fong-Torres' article for focusing excessively on the uneven opening concert at Vancouver's Pacific Coliseum,〔Michael Gross, "George Harrison: How ''Dark Horse'' Whipped Up a Winning Tour", ''CIrcus Raves'', March 1975; available at (Rock's Backpages ) (''subscription required''; retrieved 4 May 2013).〕 Harrison complained that ''Rolling Stone'' had deliberately "edited everything positive out" about the shows, which Fong-Torres later told him had been the case.〔 Leng writes that "Testimony" on the Harrison–Shankar tour, and a "savagely personal" attack on Harrison, came with the magazine's review for his delayed ''Dark Horse'' album.〔Leng, pp. 174, 176, 177.〕 Under the heading "Transcendental mediocrity",〔Greene, p. 293.〕 ''Rolling Stone'' critic Jim Miller wrote of the "disastrous album" appearing "in the wake of his disastrous tour"〔Jim Miller, "George Harrison: Dark Horse (LP Review)", ''Rolling Stone'', 13 February 1975, p. 180.〕 – completing what Harrison biographer Elliot Huntley describes as the magazine's "''volte-face''" on an artist it had traditionally supported.〔Huntley, p. 112.〕 Harrison never completely forgave ''Rolling Stone'' for its treatment of the so-called "Dark Horse Tour".〔〔The Editors of ''Rolling Stone'', pp. 108, 111.〕 While members of his 1974 tour group, including future wife Olivia Arias,〔Olivia Harrison interview, in ''George Harrison: Living in the Material World'' DVD, 2011 (directed by Martin Scorsese; produced by Olivia Harrison, Nigel Sinclair & Martin Scorsese).〕 have spoken of Harrison's defiant attitude towards the negative reviews,〔〔Greene, pp. 217–18.〕 Leng suggests that he "reacted to them as personal attacks".〔Leng, p. 175.〕 During a holiday in Hawaii with Arias over Christmas that year, Harrison wrote "This Guitar (Can't Keep from Crying)",〔Badman, p. 144.〕〔Dave Thompson, "The Music of George Harrison: An album-by-album guide", ''Goldmine'', 25 January 2002, p. 17.〕 a song that, he told ''Musician'' magazine in 1987, "came about because the press and critics tried to nail me on the 1974–5 tour, () got really nasty".〔〔White, p. 65.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「This Guitar (Can't Keep from Crying)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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