I suppose I've always thought of it as 'you' being just people- people in the world in general. Sort of George feeling so small and insigificant and can see and the lack of love in the world, but feels that as he is just a musician, all he can do is play his guitar.
Could be. I actually like the your interpretation.
But then perhaps it is also talking indirectly about the other Beatles and the state their relationships were in- and the fact that he felt pushed aside and ignored a bit by John and Paul perhaps. But then that doesn't really explain 'I don't know why nobody told you, they bought and sold you'
well, thats just my thoughts on it- I would love to know what George actually had in mind though!
I also though it was about the other 3 (or 2) but like you say some sentences dont really make sense.
To tell the truth I thought it was about prostitutes. I suspect I saw Moulin Rouge at the time... But y'know it made sense.. "you were perverted" "bought and sold"
well, thats just my thoughts on it- I would love to know what George actually had in mind though!
In I Me Mine all that George says is that he felt like writing a song and he went to his mom's house and opened the dictionary at a random place. The first word he saw was "weeping" he went to the piano and from then on the words just flowed on paper (more freely than wine, mind )
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in my opinion, one of the most beautiful songs ever written. The acoustic bootleg version and the original alike. George at his very best I never get bored of hearing it.
Precisely how I feel about this song. Each time I listen to the song, it's like hearing it for the first time. It's a very moving piece, electric and acoustic.
It isn't a secret that I think that the song is ruined on the White Album. Eric's solo kills it, really. But you will find enough fans of the song on this forum.
That's because for a long while, the White Album version was all that some of us had.
[...]Each time I listen to the song, it's like hearing it for the first time. It's a very moving piece, electric and acoustic.
"Each time ... it's like ... the first time" is a well form of describing the sensation most of us share ...
I've always said that this masterpiece is much more than Eric's guitar work (that fits with the rock mood of the released version): amazing piano riff to introduce it all, dRingo's rums are awesome and Paul's bass is so good that sounds modern nowadays ... the harmonies (spicealley in the last minute) are gorgeous and that tambourine break in the middle is sooo powerful ... and there's still much more: lyrics, wonderful sequence of minor chords and more and more ...
... and there's still much more: lyrics, wonderful sequence of minor chords and more and more ...
Yes raxo. It's interesting to read the various interpretations mentioned here. While My Guitar Gently Weeps can mean different things to different listeners at different times and at different ages. It's taken on different meanings for me since I first heard it as a teenager. That's what I meant when I said that each time I listen to this piece it's like hearing it for the first time.
"Each time ... it's like ... the first time" is a well form of describing the sensation most of us share ...
i feel exactly the same... i can't say it any better. my favourite beatle song. by far. and my favourite song of all. whenever i listen to something my friends don't like they put while my guitar gently weeps in... becaues they know exactly i can't turn it off...
george george whoops george whoops george george george
In regard to the comments about Eric Clapton, at the time of the White Album's release Cream had just broken up. Though he wasn't credited, we all knew it was Clapton doing the solo. No one else played like that at the time. We dismissed the various critics' comments that George asked Eric Clapton to play the solo because he doubted his own ability. It was a wonderful collaboration and it remains one of the finest tracks on The Beatles.
I was equally delighted to hear the acoustic version for the first time several years ago. It provided greater insight into the writer's personality and his feelings at the time.
I knew that a lot of people love it (there are more thread here showing it) but I think that not so many people had esplained so well what this masterpiece means for them. Thanks, Hello Goodbye, for those comments.
i feel exactly the same... i can't say it any better. my favourite beatle song. by far. and my favourite song of all. whenever i listen to something my friends don't like they put while my guitar gently weeps in... becaues they know exactly i can't turn it off...
LOL! Glad that it's your favourite song. It's powerful, isn't it ...
I think the song tanks personally. Its just too damn long and boring anymore for me.
I feel that the White Album is great for diverse reasons. It has a wide range of sounds, styles, textures and moods. Some songs are short, experimental and bizarre. Others are more conventional, poppy and catchy. Such is the juxtaposition of a blank canvas. The conflict of sixties morality is embodied in the desolate obscurity of the White Album; a record that projected a pure white culture now tarnished by the complexities of drugs, politics and war.
The song although indulgent, is a heavy and crooked outlook on life & love. The enslaved guitar and harrowing harmonies only help the desperate lyric. As the Mccartney backing vocals of "yeah, yeah, yeah" fade out .... the bitter song 'Happyness Is A warm Gun' begins.
Personally - I think this segment of the White Album is one of its finest moments. Two full bodied songs that aurally project the Beatles talent during 1968.