Somewhere in England is the ninth studio album by the English musician George Harrison, released on 1 June 1981 by Dark Horse Records.
Harrison's original cover art, featuring his profile against a map of Great Britain, was also vetoed by Warner Bros.
They recorded two Harrison originals – "Wrack My Brain" and "All Those Years Ago" – plus a cover version of Paul Weston's "You Belong to Me" for Starr's eighth studio album Can't Fight Lightning (later released as Stop and Smell the Roses).
With Starr's pre-recorded drum track in place, Harrison invited Paul and Linda McCartney, and their Wings bandmate Denny Laine, to record backing vocals in early 1981.
To make room for the new songs, Harrison elected to drop four tracks from the original line-up: "Tears of the World", "Sat Singing", "Lay His Head" and "Flying Hour".
The reissue included the original mix of "Unconsciousness Rules" and, as a bonus track, Harrison's demo of "Save the World", recorded in early 1980.
An alternative mix of "Tears of the World" from that submitted in 1980 was included as a bonus track on the Dark Horse Years reissue of Harrison's seventh studio album Thirty Three & 1/3 (1976).
With a running time of 4:35, this slower version begins with a studio count-in, is longer, lacks and adds guitar riffs, fades slightly at the end, and plays at the correct speed.