“George Harrison’s Garden Sessions: Where Music and Nature Became One”

In the 1970s, after the storm of Beatlemania had faded, George Harrison found peace not in crowded arenas but in the quiet beauty of his Friar Park gardens. Friends and visitors recall that George often wandered among the flowers and trees with a guitar in hand, letting nature guide his music.

One friend described it as “songs growing out of the soil itself.” Some of George’s most iconic melodies, including early drafts of “All Things Must Pass” and “Here Comes the Sun,” are said to have been refined during these quiet sessions.

George often compared gardening to songwriting: both acts of patience, care, and trust that something beautiful would grow. His garden became a sanctuary — a place where he could step away from fame and reconnect with the spiritual and creative core of his being.

For fans, the image of George Harrison in his garden is more than nostalgia — it’s a reminder that his legacy was not only about music but about living in harmony with the world around him.

https://youtu.be/8EF4HNzHe6c

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