Main body Spector first heard Harrison's stockpile of unreleased songs early in 1970, when visiting his recently purchased home,
Friar Park. "It was endless!", Spector later recalled of the recital, noting the quantity and quality of Harrison's material. Harrison had accumulated songs from as far back as 1966; both "
Isn't It a Pity" and "
Art of Dying" date from that year. He co-wrote at least two songs with Dylan while in Woodstock, one of which, "
I'd Have You Anytime", appeared as the lead track on
All Things Must Pass. Harrison also wrote "
Let It Down" in late 1968. He introduced the Band-inspired "All Things Must Pass", along with "
Hear Me Lord" and "Let It Down", at the Beatles'
Get Back rehearsals, only to have them rejected by Lennon and McCartney. The tense atmosphere at Twickenham fuelled another
All Things Must Pass song, "
Wah-Wah", which Harrison wrote in the wake of his temporary departure from the band on 10 January 1969. Harrison later confirmed that the song was a "swipe" at McCartney. "
Run of the Mill" followed soon afterwards, its lyrics focusing on the failure of friendships within the Beatles amid the business problems surrounding their
Apple organisation. Harrison's musical activities outside the band during 1969 inspired other songs on the album: "
What Is Life" came to him while driving to a London session that spring for Preston's ''
That's the Way God Planned It'' album; "
Behind That Locked Door" was Harrison's message of encouragement to Dylan, written the night before the latter's comeback performance at the
Isle of Wight Festival; and Harrison began "
My Sweet Lord" as an exercise in writing a gospel song during Delaney & Bonnie's stopover in Copenhagen in December 1969. "
I Dig Love" resulted from Harrison's early experiments with
slide guitar, a technique to which Bramlett had introduced him, in order to cover for guitarist
Dave Mason's departure from the Friends line-up. Other songs on
All Things Must Pass, all written during the first half of 1970, include "
Awaiting on You All", which reflected Harrison's adoption of chanting through his involvement with the Hare Krishna movement; "
Ballad of Sir Frankie Crisp (Let It Roll)", a tribute to the original owner of Friar Park; and "
Beware of Darkness". The latter was another song influenced by Harrison's association with the Radha Krishna Temple, and was written while some of the devotees were staying with him at Friar Park. On 1 May 1970, shortly before beginning work on
All Things Must Pass, Harrison attended a Dylan session in New York, during which he acquired a new song of Dylan's, "
If Not for You". Harrison wrote "
Apple Scruffs", which was one of a number of Dylan-influenced songs on the album, towards the end of production on
All Things Must Pass, as a tribute to the
diehard fans who had kept a vigil outside the studios where he was working. According to Leng,
All Things Must Pass represents the completion of Harrison's "musical-philosophical circle", in which his 1966–68 immersion in Indian music found a Western equivalent in gospel music. While identifying
hard rock,
country and
Motown among the other genres on the album, Leng writes of the "plethora of new sounds and influences" that Harrison had absorbed through 1969 and now incorporated, including "Krishna chants, gospel ecstasy, Southern blues-rock [and] slide guitar". The melodies of "Isn't It a Pity" and "Beware of Darkness" have aspects of
Indian classical music, and on "My Sweet Lord", Harrison combined the Hindu
bhajan tradition with gospel. Rob Mitchum of
Pitchfork describes the album as "dark-tinged Krishna folk-rock".
Apple Jam On the original
LP's third disc, titled
Apple Jam, four of the five tracks – "Out of the Blue", "Plug Me In", "I Remember Jeep" and "Thanks for the Pepperoni" – are improvised
instrumentals built around minimal
chord changes, or in the case of "Out of the Blue", a single-chord
riff. The title for "I Remember Jeep" originated from the name of Clapton's dog, Jeep, and "Thanks for the Pepperoni" came from a line on a
Lenny Bruce comedy album. In a December 2000 interview with
Billboard magazine, Harrison explained: "For the jams, I didn't want to just throw [them] in the cupboard, and yet at the same time it wasn't part of the record; that's why I put it on a separate label to go in the package as a kind of bonus." The only vocal selection on
Apple Jam is "It's Johnny's Birthday", sung to the tune of
Cliff Richard's 1968 hit "
Congratulations", and recorded as a gift from Harrison to Lennon to mark the latter's 30th birthday. Like all the "free" tracks on the bonus disc, "It's Johnny's Birthday" carried a Harrison songwriting credit on the original UK release of
All Things Must Pass, while on the first US copies, the only songwriting information on the record's face labels was the standard inclusion of a performing rights organisation,
BMI. In December 1970, "Congratulations" songwriters
Bill Martin and
Phil Coulter claimed royalties, with the result that the composer's credit for Harrison's track was swiftly changed to acknowledge Martin and Coulter.
Demo tracks and outtakes Aside from the seventeen songs issued on discs one and two of the original album, Harrison recorded at least twenty other songs – either in demo form for Spector's benefit, just before recording got officially under way in late May, or as
outtakes from the sessions. In a 1992 interview, Harrison commented on the volume of material: "I didn't have many tunes on Beatles records, so doing an album like
All Things Must Pass was like going to the bathroom and letting it out." Harrison's solo performance for Spector included six compositions that, until their inclusion on the Deluxe editions of the album's
50th anniversary box set, were only available on
bootleg compilations, such as
Beware of ABKCO! The six songs are: "Window, Window", another song turned down by the Beatles in January 1969; "Everybody, Nobody", the melody of which Harrison adapted for "Ballad of Sir Frankie Crisp"; "Nowhere to Go", a second Harrison–Dylan collaboration from November 1968 (originally known as "When Everybody Comes to Town"); and "Cosmic Empire", "Mother Divine" and "Tell Me What Has Happened to You". Also from this performance were two tracks that Harrison returned to in later years. He completed "
Beautiful Girl" for inclusion on his 1976 album
Thirty Three & 1/3. "
I Don't Want to Do It", written by Dylan, was Harrison's contribution to the soundtrack for the 1985 film ''
Porky's Revenge!'' During the main sessions for
All Things Must Pass, Harrison taped or routined early versions of "
You", "
Try Some, Buy Some" and "
When Every Song Is Sung". Harrison offered these three songs to
Ronnie Spector in February 1971 for her
proposed solo album on Apple Records. After releasing his own versions of "Try Some, Buy Some" and "You", he offered "When Every Song Is Sung" (since retitled "I'll Still Love You") to former bandmate
Ringo Starr for his 1976 album ''
Ringo's Rotogravure''. "
Woman Don't You Cry for Me", written in December 1969 as his first slide-guitar composition, was another song that Harrison revisited on
Thirty Three & 1/3. Harrison included "
I Live for You" as the only all-new bonus track on the
2001 reissue of
All Things Must Pass. "Down to the River" remained unused until he reworked it as "Rocking Chair in Hawaii" for his final studio album, the posthumously released
Brainwashed (2002). Harrison recorded the following songs during the
All Things Must Pass sessions but, until their inclusion on some editions of the 50th anniversary box set, they had never received an official release: • "Dehradun" (or "Dehra Dun") – written during
the Beatles' stay in Rishikesh in early 1968, and unveiled by Harrison in a brief performance on
ukulele for the 1995 TV broadcast of
The Beatles Anthology • "Gopala Krishna" – also known as "Om Hare Om", with all-
Sanskrit lyrics, and described by Simon Leng as a "rocking companion" to "Awaiting on You All" • "Going Down to Golders Green" – a
Sun Records-era
Presley parody based on the melody of "
Baby Let's Play House". ==Contributing musicians==