Here - Comes The Sun Beatles

It is the universal antidepressant. It plays at the end of disaster movies ( Parent Trap ), during post-9/11 charity concerts, and at the funeral of George Harrison himself in 2001—where Eric Clapton and Paul McCartney stood together and played it one last time for their friend.

“Here Comes the Sun,” George later wrote in his autobiography, I, Me, Mine , “was written in the garden at Eric’s house. The relief of not having to go back to the Apple meeting… It was a lovely day.”

Because we need it. Desperately.

George Harrison spent much of his life in the shadow of John and Paul. He was the “quiet one,” the one who had to fight for two songs per album. But with “Here Comes the Sun,” he did something his bandmates never quite managed: he wrote a prescription.

“I’m not going back,” he told Clapton. “Let’s just go for a walk.” here comes the sun beatles

Eternal.

They strolled through the gardens of Clapton’s Surrey estate. George picked up a borrowed acoustic guitar—a Gibson J-200—and sat on a lawn chair in the weak English sunshine. The clouds parted. Just for a moment. And out came a riff so pure, so childlike, it felt like it had existed forever: dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun… It is the universal antidepressant

And it almost didn’t happen.