George Harrison visiting Bob Dylan in Woodstock, 1968, by Jill Krementz, my edit of original via needsomefun.
“I was with Bob and he had gone through his broken neck period and was being very quiet, and he didn’t have much confidence. That’s the feeling I got with him in Woodstock. He hardly said a word for a couple of days. Anyway, we finally got the guitars out and it loosened things up a bit.
“It was really a nice time with all his kids around, and we were just playing. It was near Thanksgiving. He sang [”I’d Have You Anytime”] and he was very nervous and shy and he said, ‘What do you think about this song?’ And I had felt strongly about Bob when I had been in India years before, the only record I took with me along with all my Indian records was Blonde On Blonde. I somehow got very close to him, you know.” ~George Harrison from I, Me, Mine
“I was with Bob and he had gone through his broken neck period and was being very quiet, and he didn’t have much confidence. That’s the feeling I got with him in Woodstock. He hardly said a word for a couple of days. Anyway, we finally got the guitars out and it loosened things up a bit.
“It was really a nice time with all his kids around, and we were just playing. It was near Thanksgiving. He sang [”I’d Have You Anytime”] and he was very nervous and shy and he said, ‘What do you think about this song?’ And I had felt strongly about Bob when I had been in India years before, the only record I took with me along with all my Indian records was Blonde On Blonde. I somehow got very close to him, you know.” ~George Harrison from I, Me, Mine
