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Dream Away (George Harrison song)

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"Dream Away"
Picture sleeve for the 1983 Japanese single
Song by George Harrison
from the album Gone Troppo
Released5 November 1982 (1982-11-05)
Genre
Length4:32
LabelDark Horse
Songwriter(s)George Harrison
Producer(s)
Gone Troppo track listing
10 tracks
Side one
  1. "Wake Up My Love"
  2. "That's the Way It Goes"
  3. "I Really Love You"
  4. "Greece"
  5. "Gone Troppo"
Side two
  1. "Mystical One"
  2. "Unknown Delight"
  3. "Baby Don't Run Away"
  4. "Dream Away"
  5. "Circles"

"Dream Away" is a song by English rock musician George Harrison from his tenth studio album Gone Troppo (1982). The song was featured over the end credits of Harrison's 1981 HandMade Films production Time Bandits, which was director Terry Gilliam's first successful film outside of his work with Monty Python.[1] Aside from the film's orchestral score, it was the only song featured in Time Bandits and was written specifically for the film. "Dream Away" was also issued as a single in Japan in February 1983.

Background

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"Dream Away" was to originally appear on a planned Time Bandits soundtrack album. When that failed to materialise and Harrison was finalising the tracks for his Gone Troppo album, he decided to include "Dream Away".

In the 2011 documentary George Harrison: Living in the Material World, directed by Martin Scorsese, Gilliam recalled that late in the production of Time Bandits he came to see the song's lyrics as "notes" from Harrison on the things he liked and disliked about the film and on how Gilliam was "too arrogant and not listening!" Gilliam added: "And I thought it was the most brilliant, subtle, clever thing a man could ever do, to write a song. He's writing about things that he felt strongly about and yet he's too polite and decent and, I think, respectful of other artists, whatever form that takes, to interfere."[2]

Release and reception

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Although Gone Troppo was a commercial failure, "Dream Away" became a popular tune. People magazine's reviewer paired it with "Wake Up My Love" as the album's two "lovelies" and commented that "Because of his forays into the mystical, Harrison's penchant for whimsy often gets overlooked. But here the zany side gets no short shrift."[3]

Writing in Goldmine magazine shortly after Harrison's death in November 2001, Dave Thompson said that while Gone Troppo was a far from essential album by the artist, "Dream Away" was a track that "stand[s] alongside any number of Harrison's minor classics".[4] In 2010, AOL Radio listeners voted "Dream Away" at number 8 on the station's list of the "10 Best George Harrison Songs".[5]

Personnel

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References

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  1. ^ IMDb, 2010.
  2. ^ Harrison, Olivia (2011). George Harrison: Living in the Material World. New York, NY: Abrams. p. 326. ISBN 978-1-4197-0220-4.
  3. ^ "Picks and Pans Review: Gone Troppo". People. 24 January 1983. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  4. ^ Thompson, Dave (25 January 2002). "The Music of George Harrison: An album-by-album guide". Goldmine. p. 53.
  5. ^ Dickinson, Boonsri (3 April 2010). "10 Best George Harrison Songs". AOL. Archived from the original on 5 April 2010. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
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