‘No Time Or Space’ is the second and final track on George Harrison’s second solo album Electronic Sound.

In October 1968 Harrison travelled to Los Angeles to produce sessions for Jackie Lomax’s album Is This What You Want?. While there he was introduced to Krause, who on 11 November added Moog parts to the songs ‘Is This What You Want?’, ‘I Fall Inside Your Eyes’, ‘Baby You’re A Lover’, ‘How Can You Say Goodbye’, and ‘Little Yellow Pills’.

Harrison was intrigued by the synth’s sounds, and after the session asked Krause to give him a demonstration of its capabilities. Krause remained in the studio into the early hours of 12 November.

The demo was recorded by Harrison without Krause’s knowledge.

We did the [Lomax] session, it was very normal, and we finished in the wee hours of the next morning. Harrison asked me to stick around and show him some more things on the synthesizer. Paul [Beaver] and I were just preparing some new material for our second Warner Brothers album, and I was showing Harrison some of the patches and ways in which we were thinking of doing our work. What I didn’t realise, because it was late and I was tired and I wasn’t paying attention, was that he had asked the engineer to record the session that I was demonstrating. I didn’t think anything of it at the time.
Bernie Krause
Behind The Locked Door, Graeme Thomson

Upon his return to England, Harrison called Krause asking to buy a Moog of his own.

There was a kind of urgency in his voice. I said he’d have to get in line with Moog like everybody else, we were just representatives, we didn’t have any control over the factory. I asked him for the folks at Apple to write a cheque for the deposit. He said, ‘I want one right away,’ and I said, ‘You’re not going to get one right away, you’ll have to do what everyone else does.’ He got in a huff but then said okay, he’d do that.
Bernie Krause
Behind The Locked Door, Graeme Thomson

The Moog IIIp arrived in London in early February 1969, and was initially installed at Kinfauns, Harrison’s bungalow in Esher. Krause was summoned to help the Beatle learn to use it.

The Moog synthesizer was set up on a table. Understand, he had just got it delivered that afternoon. It had just arrived. He said, ‘I want to play you something.’ After supplying the requisite amount of smoke he put on this tape. Now, one thing I have is a really good memory for sound, and I remembered what we had done back in California in November – and here it was on that tape! Harrison says to me, ‘Well, I’m putting it out as an album. If it makes a couple of quid I’ll send it to you.’ I said, ‘Not without my permission you’re not, that’s Paul and I’d stuff.’ And then he said, ‘Trust me, I’m a Beatle.’ Trust me, I’m a Beatle! I said, ‘Yeah? Call me a cab, I’m going home, and don’t use my stuff.’ He said, ‘When Ravi Shankar comes to my house he’s humble,’ and something else about Jimi Hendrix. Then he asked me to patch him a bagpipe sound. Perhaps he was more conscientious about his behaviour at other times. Maybe it depended on how much you genuflected.
Bernie Krause
Behind The Locked Door, Graeme Thomson

Krause demanded that his name be taken off the record, claiming that the recording was made without his knowledge or consent, and was issued without due acknowledgement. His name had originally featured on the cover of Electronic Sound, but was painted over at Krause’s insistence. The album did, however, carry the words “Assisted by Bernie Krause”.

I wrote to Apple and said, ‘Take my name off it, I don’t want to be on it.’ I wasn’t litigious, I just let it go, but it was my stuff. It’s an incredible story, but it’s incredible too about [him plagiarising] ‘My Sweet Lord’ – and Randy Newman has stories too. I had no control over any of it. I didn’t know it was being recorded, I didn’t want it out, and I felt very badly that he had to do that. I guess spirituality comes to different people in different ways. An expression of his seemed to be, ‘Trust me, I’m a Beatle’.
Bernie Krause
Behind The Locked Door, Graeme Thomson

Previous song: ‘Under The Mersey Wall’
Next album: All Things Must Pass
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