Guitar Player

The Concert for Bangladesh

In the summer of 1971, George Harrison corralled a who’s who of his musical friends to answer the call for humanitari­an aid to Bangladesh. Two of his closest companions nearly left him hanging.

- BY NIKKI O’NEILL

FIFTY YEARS AGO, Bangladesh was in the midst of a humanitari­an crisis. Millions of refugees in what was formerly East Pakistan were fleeing genocidal massacres and rape in the Bangladesh War of Independen­ce, as well as lingering devastatio­n from the 1970 Bhola cyclone, the deadliest tropical cyclone ever recorded, that left at least half a million dead in its wake. The people were starving, but their plight was largely unknown in the West. Ravi Shankar knew he had to do something to bring attention and aid to the country. The famed Indian sitarist reached out to his friend George Harrison and asked him to do what only a famous former Beatle could do: Bring musicians and fans together to help end the disaster.

What Harrison and Shankar achieved was a massive benefit concert that was the first of its kind. Held 50 years ago this summer, on August 1, the Concert for Bangladesh gathered rock and roll’s royalty in New York City for a pair of shows to raise money for — and awareness of — the humanitari­an crisis unfolding halfway around the globe. In a matter of weeks, Harrison managed to secure participat­ion from such luminaries as his fellow former Beatle Ringo Starr, keyboardis­t Billy Preston, pianist and guitarist Leon Russell, bassist and longtime Beatle friend Klaus Voormann, studio guitar ace Jesse Ed Davis, Zappa collaborat­or Don Preston, the up-andcoming band Badfinger and a number of other musicians and singers. Together with Shankar and his fellow musicians, they performed a pair of sold-out concerts at Madison Square Garden, including a 2:30 p.m. matinee and 8:00 p.m. show.

The concerts drew 40,000 people and raised $250,000 for UNICEF, while the 1971 triple live album and 1972 documentar­y of the show eventually raised millions more. Even before the concert took place, Harrison had released his single “Bangla Desh” on the Beatles’ Apple label. The track, which detailed the plight of the Bangladesh­i people, was put into heavy rotation in the lead-up to the shows, bringing the single to number 23 on the Billboard charts.

Harrison’s achievemen­t would prove nothing short of a miracle. No rock and roll musician had attempted anything like it before, and no template existed for a show of this size and with guests of such stature. The Concert for Bangladesh would cement the notion of a moral imperative for rock and rollers to do their part for those in need, as it laid the groundwork for the charity concerts that followed in the 1980s and beyond, including Live Aid and Farm Aid.

Yet in the days before the show, Harrison was filled with doubt and insecurity. He hadn’t performed in front of a large crowd since the Beatles’ final tour, in 1966. But those wild shows were scripted affairs

lasting roughly 30 minutes, with the band’s performanc­e entirely secondary to the sight of the four mop tops shaking their bodies onstage. Concerts had grown up in the intervenin­g years and become listening experience­s. And this particular­ly lengthy two-show stint — from the planning to the staging to the musicians, many of whom were flying in from the U.K., India and various parts of the U.S. — was all on Harrison’s shoulders. Many performers, like Leon Russell, had canceled other appearance­s, at great expense, to participat­e. As Harrison noted, “Nobody’s getting paid.” He was so focused on the concert’s purpose that he seemed to forget its sheer star power, and openly fretted that nobody would care enough to buy tickets.

Remarkably, among all his friends in the show, Harrison would be kept waiting, wondering and worrying over the attendance of two who were his closest: Eric Clapton and Bob Dylan. At the time, Clapton was deep into the throes of heroin addiction and uncertain of his ability to perform. Dylan, meanwhile, was a recluse, having given his last live performanc­e in 1969, at the Isle of Wight.

But Harrison was among the best-connected people in rock at the time. As the August 1 concert date approached and Clapton increasing­ly looked like a no-show, he turned for help to another friend: Peter Frampton. Harrison had known the guitarist, then in Humble Pie, for a couple of years. Frampton tracked guitars on singer Doris Troy’s self-titled album, produced by Harrison for the Beatles’ Apple Records, and he played acoustic guitar on All Things Must Pass, Harrison’s third solo record. As it happened, Frampton and Humble Pie were touring in the U.S. that summer and spending time in New York City, where they were mixing their 1971 live breakthrou­gh, Performanc­e: Rockin’ the Fillmore, recorded the previous May 28 and 29.

“On the weekends, we’d fly off to perform, opening the bill for many different artists, and on weekdays we’d be at Electric Lady Studios in New York with Eddie Kramer, mixing the Rockin’ the Fillmore album,” Frampton recalls to Guitar Player. “I knew I was going to see George’s shows, and I asked if he needed me to play guitar, but they were overbooked with guitarists. So I wished him all the best with the show and told him I’d come see it.”

Unexpected­ly, Frampton found himself invited to dine with Harrison and his wife, Patti, while they were in Manhattan. “Afterwards, we went back to the Pierre [Hotel], and he invited me up to their suite,” Frampton explains. “There were two electrics sitting by the window, and maybe one or two little amps. George asked if I wanted to play some guitar,

“I ASKED GEORGE AND TERRY, ‘YOU MEAN YOU WANTED ME TO PLAY?’ THE LAST THING I WANTED TO BE WAS A STAND-IN FOR ERIC CLAPTON” — PETER FRAMPTON

and I said, ‘Yeah, sure,’ trying to keep my excitement under control.

“And without a word, he just started running through the songs they were going to do. My mind started going 14,000 miles an hour. I couldn’t understand why we were doing this if the guitar positions for the concert were filled. We must’ve played six to 10 songs, and he was checking me out to see if I was up to speed, which, of course, I was. How can you not be when it comes to the Beatles’ songs?”

In the days afterward, Frampton flew south to play a couple of shows with Humble Pie. Back in New York City, the behind-the-scenes drama escalated as the August 1 concert date arrived. Frampton returned on the day of the show. “I’d missed the first one, but I planned to go to the second, and so I picked up my tickets and backstage pass,” he says. “I watched the entire show, and at the end, I made my way to the side of the stage. Terry Doran [Harrison’s personal assistant] saw me, and his eyes got really big. He said, ‘Where have you been?’ I said, ‘What do you mean? I’ve been on the road.’ And he said, ‘Yeah, but we had no way of getting hold of you!’

Confused, Frampton explained that no one had asked for his number, adding that Harrison knew he would see him following the show. “And Terry says, ‘Well, George wants to speak to you!’

“So as he takes me backstage, he pulls me right into Bob Dylan, who gives me the ‘I could slice your head off with the back of my hand’ kind of look.”

Meeting up with Harrison, Frampton says he learned that Clapton had been bedridden while in New York City and unable to make any rehearsals. “This was during his heavy drug phase,” Frampton says. “Whether he had some or was trying to give them up, I don’t know. But when he wasn’t able to rehearse, they tried to get hold of me, because they wanted me there — just in case.

“I asked George and Terry, ‘You mean you wanted me to play?’ And they said, ‘Yeah.’”

In the end, a cameraman from the film crew provided Clapton with methadone, making him well enough to perform both shows. “I’m glad that Eric was able to play somehow, since a lot of people would’ve been very disappoint­ed if he didn’t, especially George,” Frampton says. “The last thing I wanted to be was a stand-in for Eric Clapton. I would’ve done it if George had gotten hold of me and the situation was more dire. But I’ll never know how dire it actually was.”

According to Joey Molland, it was a closer call than Frampton knew. At the time, Molland was a member of the Welsh rock group Badfinger, one of Apple Records’ most prominent signings, thanks to their early hit “Come and Get It,” written and produced by Paul McCartney. The group had performed on Harrison’s All Things Must Pass, and Harrison had taken over producing the group for their 1971 album, Straight Up, in late May 1971. But as he found himself sidelined by the Bangladesh benefit, the sessions stalled and he invited the group to perform at the concerts. Molland, bassist Tom Evans and guitarist Pete Ham performed on acoustic guitars, while Badfinger drummer Mike Gibbins played percussion. In addition, Ham assisted Harrison on his captivatin­g performanc­e of “Here Comes the Sun.”

“We went to New York 10 days before the concerts,” Molland explains. “George had arranged for rhythm section rehearsals at the Steinway store in downtown Manhattan, where they had a big room upstairs. It was a lot of fun, going over the intros, outros and the sequencing of events within songs. I think we rehearsed Monday through Friday, and on the Saturday we went to the Garden to do a couple of hours of dress rehearsal.”

Molland confirms Clapton had been a no-show. But while Frampton believes the guitarist was already in New York City, Molland contends he was still in England. “I believe George sent a car for Clapton, and each day he stayed in his house,” he says. “I wasn’t privy to what was happening to him, and I don’t like to speculate, but he was going through something. But on Friday night, two nights before the show, he got on the plane in London, was in New York Saturday morning and was at the rehearsal in the afternoon. He had his parts together. I didn’t see him screw up, but mind you, I was really concerned about my own guitar parts.”

The dress rehearsal was the first time the members of the main band played together, though second drummer Jim Keltner had yet to show up. “Otherwise, the whole band was there, including Ringo Starr, Leon Russell, the Hollywood Horns and Jim Horn, and the backup singers with Don Nix,” Molland says.

Given that Clapton played a Fender Stratocast­er on All Things Must Pass the previous year, Molland expected him to show up with one or two. “But yes, Eric Clapton showed up, and he was playing a Gibson Byrdland, one of those beautiful, blonde Chuck Berry guitars, which we thought was a bit odd,” he says. “But everybody was enjoying it.”

Just as the dress rehearsal wrapped up, Bob Dylan made his appearance, much to everyone’s surprise. “There had been rumors that ‘someone’ might come up, and we thought it’d be John [Lennon],” Molland explains. “But we had finished the rehearsal and were sitting in the auditorium, waiting for our cars, when Bob Dylan walked onstage with his harmonica stand and a small acoustic guitar, and started singing his songs for about 40 minutes. George, Ringo and Leon ran down to the stage, and they played a few songs all together before they put together that part of the set for the show. It was great to see them working through vocal harmonies.”

Reportedly, Dylan was still harboring doubts about performing at such a large event, much to Harrison’s frustratio­n. ”Look, it’s not my scene, either,” Harrison told him. “At least you’ve played on your own in front of a crowd before. I’ve never done that.” Even after the dress rehearsal, Dylan remained noncommitt­al, giving Harrison one more thing to worry about. “I’m sure George was nervous,” Molland says. “He hadn’t played in front of an audience for a few years, and he had never played these songs live. Plus, the whole event was on his shoulders. He wasn’t sure if anybody was going to come.” But of course they did. Fans descended on Madison Square Garden to buy up tickets, and the two shows quickly sold out.

Given the number of guitarists in the show, it’s difficult to track every guitar used over the two

“IT WAS GREAT TO SEE DON PRESTON WITH HIS GIBSON ’58 EXPLORER. IT ALWAYS ASTOUNDED ME HOW GOOD THEY SOUND” — JOEY MOLLAND

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 ??  ?? RIGHT: George Harrison and Bob Dylan perform during Dylan’s set.
Peter Frampton was tapped to play the show but was never informed.
RIGHT: George Harrison and Bob Dylan perform during Dylan’s set. Peter Frampton was tapped to play the show but was never informed.
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 ??  ?? Clapton switched to his “Brownie” Strat in the second set, after starting with his Gibson Byrdland (see page 49).
Clapton switched to his “Brownie” Strat in the second set, after starting with his Gibson Byrdland (see page 49).
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 ??  ?? RIGHT: Badfinger in the studio. (from left) Tom Evans, Joey Molland, Mike Gibbins and Pete Ham
Madison Square Garden was sold out for both shows.
RIGHT: Badfinger in the studio. (from left) Tom Evans, Joey Molland, Mike Gibbins and Pete Ham Madison Square Garden was sold out for both shows.
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 ??  ?? A view of the stage showing nearly all the performers during the main set.
A view of the stage showing nearly all the performers during the main set.
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