Art print featuring George Harrison's albums in order, depicted as a music map with each album as a station and artists/musicians as separate tube lines.

George Harrison Albums in Order – Complete Discography and Musicians

The story of George Harrison’s albums career after the Beatles was rich with creativity, collaboration, and innovation. Harrison collaborated with a wide array of notable musicians throughout his solo career, including his former Beatles bandmate Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, Billy Preston, and Jim Keltner.

Each of his twelve studio albums features a blend of personal songwriting and contributions from some of the world’s best musicians. This is a complete guide to George Harrison’s solo albums in order, with musician credits (to date as recorded) from each record as detailed in my unique Harrison albums in order music map.

George Harrison albums in order Music Map art print shows every album as a station, and every artist, band members, session musicians, guests, and other artists as separate tube lines connecting and reconnecting across albums.

Wonderwall Music (1968)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
Aashish Khan sarod
Big Jim Sullivan bass
Chandrashekhar Naringrekar surbahar
Colin Manley electric and acoustic guitars, banjo
Eric Clapton electric guitar
Hanuman Jadev shehnai
John Barham piano, flugelhorn, harmonium
Kanai Dutt tabla
Mahapurush Misra tabla, pakavaj, percussion
Remo Four backing group
Tony Ashton organ
Tommy Reilly harmonica

Electronic Sound (1969)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison Moog synthesizer
Bernie Krause Moog demonstrations (disputed credit)

All Things Must Pass (1970)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison vocals, guitars, dobro
Eric Clapton guitars
Bobby Whitlock keyboards, backing vocals
Carl Radle bass
Jim Gordon drums
Billy Preston organ, keyboards
Gary Wright keyboards
Klaus Voormann bass
Ringo Starr drums
Jim Price trumpet
Bobby Keys saxophone
Pete Drake pedal steel guitar
Alan White drums
Phil Collins percussion (early sessions)
Badfinger acoustic guitars, backing vocals
Ginger Baker drums (jam sessions)

Living in the Material World (1973)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison vocals, guitars
Nicky Hopkins piano
Klaus Voormann bass
Ringo Starr drums
Jim Keltner drums
Gary Wright organ
Zakir Hussain tabla
John Barham orchestration

Dark Horse (1974)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison vocals, guitars, sitar
Tom Scott saxophone, flute
Billy Preston keyboards
Willie Weeks bass
Andy Newmark drums
Jim Keltner percussion
Alvin Lee guitar
Ron Wood guitar
Emil Richards percussion

Extra Texture (Read All About It) (1975)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
Ringo Starr drums
Billy Preston electric piano (10)
Carl Radle bass (1, 6)
Dhani Harrison acoustic guitar
Gary Wright organ, electric piano, ARP synthesizer
Jesse Ed Davis guitar
Leon Russell organ, piano
Jim Keltner drums, percussion
David Foster keyboards
Tom Scott saxophones

Thirty Three & 1/3 (1976)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison vocals, guitars
Tom Scott saxophones
Willie Weeks bass
Richard Tee keyboards
Billy Preston organ
Alvin Taylor drums
Gary Wright piano
David Foster keyboards
Emil Richards percussion

George Harrison (1979)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison vocals, guitars
Eric Clapton guitar intro (“Love Comes to Everyone”)
Steve Winwood keyboards
Andy Newmark drums
Willie Weeks bass
Ray Cooper percussion
Neil Larsen keyboards

Somewhere in England (1981)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison vocals, guitars
Ringo Starr drums
Paul McCartney bass, backing vocals (“All Those Years Ago”)
Linda McCartney backing vocals
Al Kooper keyboards
Ray Cooper percussion
Herbie Flowers bass
Mike Moran keyboards

Gone Troppo (1982)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison vocals, guitars
Billy Preston keyboards
Herbie Flowers bass
Mike Moran keyboards
Ray Cooper percussion
Jon Lord synthesizer
Henry Spinetti drums
Joe Brown ukulele

Cloud Nine (1987)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison vocals, guitars
Jeff Lynne bass, guitar, backing vocals
Eric Clapton electric guitar
Elton John piano
Ringo Starr drums
Jim Keltner percussion
Ray Cooper percussion
Gary Wright keyboards
Bobby Kok cello

Brainwashed (2002)

Musicians featured on the album:

Musician Contribution
George Harrison vocals, guitars
Dhani Harrison acoustic and electric guitar, backing vocals
Jeff Lynne bass, guitar, keyboards, co-production
Jim Keltner drums
Marc Mann keyboards, orchestration


Q&A: George Harrison’s Albums & Collaborators

Q: What is George Harrison’s most famous solo album?
A: Most agree it’s All Things Must Pass (1970), his landmark triple album.

Q: Did Harrison continue working with the Beatles after the split?
A: Yes. Ringo appeared often, and Paul & Linda McCartney sang on “All Those Years Ago” (1981).

Q: Who helped complete Harrison’s final album?
A: His son Dhani Harrison and Jeff Lynne finished Brainwashed after George’s passing in 2001.

George Harrison’s solo albums tell the story of an artist who blended spirituality with collaboration. His records brought together tabla players from India, gospel-inspired organists, and rock superstars. The result is one of the richest discographies of any solo Beatle.

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ABOUT MIKE BELL - TUBE MAP DESIGNER

Mike Bell Maps is my growing collection of tube map art prints that reimagine music, film, and culture through the visual language of underground maps. Each design presents albums in order, film plots, and complex creative histories as clear, engaging tube-style timelines created for fans who value depth and detail.

David Bowie art prints: Unique music map designs perfect for fans of music, records, and the artist, available as a distinctive gift.

RESEARCH-LED DESIGN

Every artwork is built on original research and careful verification. Albums become stations. Musicians, characters, and ideas form connecting lines. This approach turns detailed information into visual storytelling, creating art prints that bring clarity and meaning to subjects people already care about.

MY STORY

My background is rooted in live sound and large-scale show design, working across music and cultural events for many years. That experience shaped how I understand collaboration, creative evolution, and structure. During lockdown, I applied that knowledge to mapping music and films, developing underground maps that balance accuracy, design, and narrative.

THE ARTWORK

Each print is produced to archival standards and designed to last. These are not novelty posters. They are considered art prints created for people who value music history, film structure, and informed design. They make thoughtful gifts for fans who want something personal, researched, and meaningful.

The Shining film plot lines and character tube map art print, showing every scene as a station and every character as a tube line.

Mike Bell Maps is where research-led tube maps become art prints, and where stories worth knowing are mapped clearly, carefully, and beautifully.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Q: What are Mike Bell’s tube map art prints?

A: My prints utilise an advanced visual language based on the logic of underground maps to organise complex histories. By moving beyond basic cartography, I transform albums into "stations" and musicians or themes into "connecting lines." This allows fans to explore hundreds of data points - from session musician credits to chronological collaborations - within a single, intuitive visual system.

Q: How do these maps differ from standard music or tube posters?

A: The primary difference is information density and quality. While standard posters are often low-resolution decorative pieces on thin paper (135-170gsm), my prints are research-led discographies printed on archival-grade, 305gsm+ heavyweight giclée paper. They are designed to be "read" like a book, rewarding deep curiosity with discoveries not found in mass-produced merchandise.

Q: How is the accuracy of the research verified?

A: Accuracy is the core of my design process. Every map is synthesised from primary sources, including official liner notes, session archives, musician interviews, and verified fan databases. By incorporating musician inputs and fact-checking against trusted archives, I ensure that each map is a historically accurate record of the subject’s career.

Q: What subjects are available in the collection?

A: The collection spans a wide range of cultural histories, including music discographies, film plots, politics, and Formula One. Each map focuses on a single narrative, presenting the whole "story" of a subject - such as the evolution of a band or the timeline of a sport- in a clear, high-density visual format.

Q: Are these prints produced sustainably?

A: Yes. I prioritise a carbon-neutral workflow by producing prints locally to the buyer to reduce the shipping footprint. I use sustainable wood frames and archival materials designed for 100+ years of colour stability, ensuring the art is a lasting investment rather than disposable décor.

Q: Why do these maps make the best gifts for music and film fans?

A: Unlike generic posters, these are bespoke cultural maps that celebrate a fan's deep knowledge. Because they are research-led and visually unique (featuring narratives not seen elsewhere), they offer a sophisticated, gallery-quality alternative for those who value the "deep dive" into their favourite artist or film.