While My Guitar Gently Weeps
Song by The Beatles • Harrison
The White Album (1968) — Each track its own room. Minimal. Sprawling.
★ Marquee entry — extended editorial essay
Background
George Harrison wrote it after picking up the I Ching at his parents' house and being struck by the philosophy of meaningful coincidence. He opened a random book to find the words 'gently weeps' and built a song around them. The lyric is among Harrison's most fully-formed; the song was nevertheless dismissed by Lennon and McCartney during initial Beatles run-throughs.
What's distinctive
At 4:45 it's among the very longest tracks in the canon (≥97th percentile). One of 28 UK songs led primarily by George. One of 22 solely Harrison-credited compositions in the canon. Recorded approximately 20 of 34 into the The White Album (1968) sessions. Carries the unique tag 'clapton-uncredited' — no other UK song shares it.Opening line — "I look at you all see the love there…" (brief identification excerpt; full lyrics © Sony Music Publishing — see Genius link in References.)
Recording
George brought Eric Clapton in to play lead guitar on 6 September 1968, partly to encourage the others to take the song seriously. Clapton's playing was wobbled with an ADT for a more 'Beatles-y' sound at his suggestion, and his contribution was deliberately uncredited on the sleeve. Clapton would later say it was the only Beatles session he played on; in fact it was the first non-Beatle lead guitar to appear on a Beatles record.
| Studio | EMI Studios + Trident Studios (Soho — first Beatles 8-track sessions: 'Hey Jude' onward) |
|---|---|
| Tape machine | Studer A80 8-track (Trident), 4-track at EMI until late 1968 |
| Console | REDD/TG12345 prototype; Trident A-Range |
| Microphones | U47/U48, AKG C12, U67 introduced |
| Outboard / effects | EMI RS124, EMT 140 & 250 (Trident), Fairchild 660, ADT, tape flanging, fuzz, wah (Vox/CryBaby) |
| Guitars | Epiphone Casino, Fender Strat (Rocky), Gibson J-200 acoustic, Martin D-28, Fender Telecaster Bass |
| Amplifiers | Fender Twin Reverb, Fender Bassman, Vox UL730 |
| Producer | George Martin (with Chris Thomas covering) |
| Engineer / 2nd | Ken Scott (early), Geoff Emerick walked off — replaced • John Smith, Mike Sheady, Barry Sheffield (Trident) |
Pattern analysis
Legacy & release history
One of George's most-loved songs and routinely listed among the band's greatest. Performed at the Concert for George (2002) by Clapton with Paul on bass and Ringo on drums — the surviving Beatles plus Clapton honouring George.
Mono & stereo
- Both mono and stereo mixes were prepared; the UK mono White Album (PMC 7067/8) has many distinct edits, mixes and effects vs. the stereo (PCS 7067/8) — collectors prize the mono.
Documented alternate versions
- Anthology 3 (1996) — alternate take or demo
- Mono Masters (2009 box) — Allan Rouse / Guy Massey remaster
- White Album 50th Anniversary (2018) — Giles Martin stereo remix
Released on
- The Beatles (White Album) — LP, 22 November 1968
Cross-references
Other songs sharing themes (clapton-uncredited, george-classic, i-ching)
Other songs led by the same vocalist
Other songs from this era
clapton-uncreditedgeorge-classici-ching