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What Is Life

"What Is Life" is a song by English rock musician George Harrison from his 1970 triple album All Things Must Pass. In many countries, it was issued as the second single from the album, in February 1971, becoming a top-ten hit in the United States, Canada and elsewhere, and topping singles charts in Australia and Switzerland. In the United Kingdom, "What Is Life" appeared as the B-side to "My Sweet Lord", which was the best-selling single there of 1971. Harrison's backing musicians on the song include Eric Clapton and the entire Delaney & Bonnie and Friends band, with whom he had toured during the final months of the Beatles. Harrison co-produced the recording with Phil Spector, whose Wall of Sound production also employed a prominent string arrangement by John Barham and multiple acoustic rhythm guitars, played by Harrison's fellow Apple Records signings Badfinger.

"What Is Life"
US picture sleeve
Single by George Harrison
from the album All Things Must Pass
A-side"My Sweet Lord" (UK)
B-side"Apple Scruffs" (except UK)
Released15 February 1971 (US)
GenreRock, soul
Length4:22
LabelApple
Songwriter(s)George Harrison
Producer(s)George Harrison, Phil Spector
George Harrison singles chronology
"My Sweet Lord" / "Isn't It a Pity"
(1970)
"What Is Life"
(1971)
"Bangla Desh"
(1971)
Music video
"What Is Life" (Official Music Video) on YouTube

An uptempo soul tune, "What Is Life" is one of several Harrison love songs that appear to be directed at both a woman and a deity. Harrison wrote the song in 1969 and originally intended it as a track for his friend and Apple protégé Billy Preston to record. Built around a descending guitar riff, it is one of Harrison's most popular compositions and was a regular inclusion in his live performances. Rolling Stone magazine has variously described it as a "classic"[1] and an "exultant song of surrender".[2]

"What Is Life" has appeared in the soundtrack for feature films such as Goodfellas (1990), Patch Adams (1998), Big Daddy (1999), Away We Go (2009), This Is 40 (2012) and Instant Family (2018). Harrison's original recording was included on the compilations The Best of George Harrison and Let It Roll, and live versions appear on his album Live in Japan (1992) and in Martin Scorsese's 2011 documentary George Harrison: Living in the Material World. In 1972, Olivia Newton-John had a UK hit with her version of the song. Ronnie Aldrich, the Ventures and Shawn Mullins are among the other artists who have covered the track.

Background edit

Even before his temporary departure from the Beatles in January 1969 (documented in the song "Wah-Wah"),[3] their Apple Records label was an "emancipating force" for Harrison from the creative restrictions imposed on him within the band, according to his musical biographer, Simon Leng.[4] In his article on All Things Must Pass for Mojo magazine, John Harris has written of Harrison's journey as a solo artist beginning in November 1968 – when he spent time in Woodstock with Bob Dylan and the Band – and incorporating a series of other collaborations through the following eighteen months, including various Apple projects and a support role on Delaney & Bonnie and Friends' brief European tour.[5] One of these projects, carried out intermittently from April to July 1969,[6] was his production of That's the Way God Planned It, an album by Billy Preston, whom Harrison had met during the Beatles' Hamburg years and had recently been recruited to guest on the band's troubled Get Back sessions.[7][8] It was while driving up to a Preston session in London from his home in Esher, Surrey, that Harrison came up with the song "What Is Life".[9]

In his autobiography, I, Me, Mine, Harrison describes it as having been written "very quickly" and recalls that he thought it would be a perfect, "catchy pop song" for Preston to record.[10][11] He adds that he changed his mind once he arrived at Olympic Studios and found Preston working on more typical material – or "playing his funky stuff".[10][9] Rather than attempt it with the Beatles during the band's concurrent Abbey Road sessions, Harrison stockpiled "What Is Life" with his many other unused songs from the period, including "All Things Must Pass", "Let It Down", "I'd Have You Anytime" and "Run of the Mill".[12] He revisited it a year later, after completing work on Preston's second Apple album, Encouraging Words.[13]

Composition edit

Harrison biographer Simon Leng describes "What Is Life" as "Motown-spiced" and a comparatively rare example of its composer's willingness to embrace the role of "entertainer" in his songwriting.[14] The song is defined by Harrison's descending guitar riff,[2][15] which also serves as the motif for the chorus.[16] Author Alan Clayson describes "What Is Life" as a seemingly "lovey-dovey pop song" that "craftily renewed the simplistic tonic-to-dominant riff cliché".[17]

The lyrics have a universal quality, being both simple and uplifting.[16][18] Their meaning has caused some debate among biographers and music critics, as to whether "What Is Life" should be viewed as a straightforward love song – perhaps a "lovingly crafted paean" to Harrison's wife Pattie Boyd, in Clayson's description[19] – or a devotional song like many of Harrison's compositions.[16][20] Ian Inglis writes that the song title suggests a "philosophical debate about the meaning of life", yet its rendering as "what is my life" in the choruses "reshapes [the meaning] completely".[18]

Theologian Dale Allison finds no religious content in "What Is Life" but comments that the "failure of words to express feelings" implied in the opening line ("What I feel, I can't say") is a recurring theme in Harrison's spiritual songs.[21][nb 1] Joshua Greene, another religious academic, identifies the song as part of its parent album's "intimately detailed account of a spiritual journey": where "Awaiting on You All" shows Harrison "convinced of his union with God", "What Is Life" reveals him to be "uncertain that he deserved such divine favor".[23] According to musicologist Thomas MacFarlane, the ambiguity in the lyrics suggests a connection between spiritual and physical love.[15]

The second verse repeats what Inglis refers to as the "somewhat confusing promise" from Harrison (in lines 3 and 4) should his love be "rejected":[18]

What I know, I can do
If I give my love out to everyone like you
But if it's not love that you need
Then I'll try my best to make everything succeed.

Recording edit

By May 1970, having recently collaborated with "genuine R&B heavy-weights" such as Doris Troy and Preston, as well as participating in the "blue-eyed soul"[24] Delaney & Bonnie European tour, along with Eric Clapton, the previous December, Harrison was well placed to record "What Is Life", Leng observes.[25] With Phil Spector as co-producer and all the Friends team on hand, the song was among the first tracks taped for Harrison's debut post-Beatles solo album;[26] recording took place at Abbey Road Studios in London, during late May or early June.[26][27] The same core of musicians – Bobby Whitlock, Carl Radle, Jim Gordon, Bobby Keys and Jim Price – would similarly elevate other All Things Must Pass tracks such as "Awaiting on You All", "Art of Dying" and "Hear Me Lord".[28] According to Keys, he and Price overdubbed their horns parts at a later session at Abbey Road.[29][nb 2]

The track opens with Harrison playing the fuzztone guitar riff,[31] which is then joined by Radle's bass and "churning" rhythm guitar from Clapton, before Gordon's drums bring the full band in.[9][32] During the verses, Gordon moves to a square, Motown-style beat – or "rock-steady Northern soul backbeat" in Leng's words[25] – before returning to the "galloping rhythm" of the more open, "knockout" choruses.[2] The song is driven equally by Badfinger drummer Mike Gibbins' powerful tambourine work.[17]

On "What Is Life", Spector provided what music critic David Fricke terms "echo-drenched theater", in the form of reverb-heavy brass, soaring strings (arranged by John Barham) and "a choir of multitracked Harrisons".[2] Barham stayed at Harrison's new home, Friar Park in Henley-on-Thames,[33] and created the scores for "What Is Life" and other songs from melodies that Harrison sang or played to him on piano or guitar.[34] Barham says that, for inspiration, Harrison also played him Spector productions such as Checkmates, Ltd.'s "Proud Mary".[35][nb 3] In his autobiography, Every Night's a Saturday Night, Keys recalls that Harrison and Price worked out the horn arrangement together at the overdubbing session.[36] In MacFarlane's description, the strings provide a complementary countermelody to the guitar riff, while the horns' combination of "uptown soul and mariachi" heightens and expands the track's musical colour.[37]

After recording the album's backing tracks with Spector, Harrison carried out most of the overdubbing without him, working at Trident Studios with former Beatles engineer Ken Scott.[38][39] The song's vocals and strings, along with a brief slide-guitar commentary from Harrison over the final verse,[16] were overdubbed at Trident.[40] Dated 19 August, Spector's written comments on Harrison's early mix of the song had suggested a "proper background voice" was still needed.[41] Harrison performed all the chorus vocals himself[15] and credited them to "the George O'Hara-Smith Singers".[42] Spector was impressed with Harrison's dedication in the studio, saying, "He was a great harmoniser ... he could do all the [vocal] parts himself" and rating Harrison "one of the most commercial musicians and songwriters and quintessential players I've ever known in my entire career".[43]

Release and reception edit

 
Tom Wilkes's original poster design for All Things Must Pass. Part of the top portion was instead used for the US picture sleeve for the "What Is Life" single.

"What Is Life" was released in late November 1970 as the first track on side two of All Things Must Pass, in its original, triple LP format.[44][45] Along with "My Sweet Lord" and "Isn't It a Pity", the song had already been identified as a potential hit single by Allan Steckler, manager of Apple's US operation.[45] Backed by "Apple Scruffs", "What Is Life" was issued as a single in America on 15 February 1971 (as Apple 1828), just as the "My Sweet Lord" / "Isn't It a Pity" double A-side was slipping out of the top ten.[46][47] Billboard magazine's reviewer described "What Is Life" and "Apple Scruffs" as "intriguing rhythm follows-ups" to the first single, which were "sure to repeat that success" and "should prove big juke box items".[48] Record World called it "perhaps the most commercial cut" from All Things Must Pass.[49]

While describing the initial impact of All Things Must Pass, author Robert Rodriguez includes the song as an illustration of how the depth of Harrison's talents had been "hidden in plain sight" behind John Lennon and Paul McCartney during the Beatles' career.[50] The album introduced Harrison as an overtly spiritual songwriter who sought to connect with his audience on a "higher level" compared with the populist approach of McCartney or the confrontationalism adopted by Lennon. Rodriguez concludes: "That the Quiet Beatle was capable of such range – from the joyful 'What Is Life' to the meditative 'Isn't It a Pity' to the steamrolling 'Art of Dying' to the playful 'I Dig Love' – was truly revelatory."[50]

The front of the single's US picture sleeve consisted of a photo of Harrison playing guitar inside the central tower of Friar Park.[51] The tower's sole, octagonal-shaped room was an area that Harrison had adopted as his personal temple and meditation space.[52] This picture was taken by photographer Barry Feinstein, whose Camouflage Productions partner, Tom Wilkes, originally used it as part of an elaborate poster intended as an insert in the album package. The poster featured a painting of the Hindu deity Krishna watching a group of naked maidens beside a bathing pond.[53] Harrison apparently felt uncomfortable with the symbolism in Wilkes's design – the Friar Park tower image filled the top half of the poster, floating among clouds above the Krishna scene – so Wilkes abandoned the concept and instead used a darkened photo of Harrison inside the house as the album poster.[54][nb 4] In Denmark, the picture sleeve consisted of four shots of Harrison, again with guitar,[56] taken on stage during the Delaney & Bonnie tour.[57]

As with the parent album, the single was a commercial and critical success.[58] "What Is Life" peaked at number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100[59] and number 7 on Cash Box's Top 100 chart,[60] making Harrison the first ex-Beatle to have two top-ten hits in the United States.[61][62] The single climbed to number 1 in Switzerland[63] and on Australia's Go-Set National Top 60,[64] and reached the top three elsewhere in Europe and in Canada.[65] In Britain, where Harrison had resisted issuing a single from All Things Must Pass until midway through January,[66] "What Is Life" appeared as the B-side of "My Sweet Lord".[67] The record became the top-selling single of 1971 in that country.[68]

Retrospective assessments and legacy edit

"What Is Life" is one of Harrison's most commercial and popular songs[69] – a "spiritual guitar quest" that "became [a] classic", according to Rolling Stone magazine.[1] In their Solo Beatles Compendium, authors Chip Madinger and Mark Easter refer to it as an "intensely catchy track" and view its pairing with "My Sweet Lord" in the UK as perhaps the strongest of all of Harrison's singles.[26] Writing in 1981, NME critic Bob Woffinden grouped "What Is Life" with "My Sweet Lord", "Isn't It a Pity" and "Awaiting on You All" as "all excellent songs".[70]

Reviewing the 2001 reissue of All Things Must Pass, for Rolling Stone, James Hunter wrote of how the album's music "exults in breezy rhythms", among which "the colorful revolutions of 'What Is Life' ... [move] like a Ferris wheel".[71] The following year, in Rolling Stone Press's Harrison tribute book, David Fricke included "What Is Life" among his selection of "essential Harrison performances" (just three of which date from the ex-Beatle's solo years) and described the track as an "exultant song of surrender", abetted by Harrison's "pumping fuzz guitar" and the song's "singalong magnetism".[72] AllMusic's Richie Unterberger similarly praises "What Is Life" for its "anthemic" qualities, "particularly snazzy horn lines", and a guitar riff that is "one more entry in the catalog of George Harrison's book of arresting, low, descending guitar lines".[16]

Writing in the book 1,000 Recordings to Hear Before You Die, author Tom Moon refers to "the upbeat single 'What Is Life'" as an example of how Harrison "grabs what he needs from his old band – that insinuating hook sense – and uses it to frame an utterly comfortable metaphysical discourse".[73] Simon Leng credits Harrison's "innate ability to write very fine pop-rock songs" and deems the result "as innovative an exercise in rock-soul as the Temptations' 'Cloud Nine'".[25] Ian Inglis is less enthusiastic, acknowledging that Barham's orchestration and the other musicians give the track "undoubted excitement and energy", but lamenting that the song offers "little overall coherence between words and music".[18] In Thomas MacFarlane's view, "What Is Life" is a "remarkable pop song" that "takes the tone and attitude of Phil Spector's Wall of Sound and channels it through the prism of the late-period Beatles".[74]

Writing for Q magazine in 2002, John Harris said the "widescreen sound" of All Things Must Pass tracks such as "What Is Life" was a forerunner to recordings by ELO and Oasis.[75] PopMatters' Jason Korenkiewicz describes the song as a "jangle pop masterpiece and blueprint for the Britpop movement", adding that "Harrison's musical legacy has contributed greatly to the exuberance of Britpop in the '90s."[76] The track is said to be a favourite of Foo Fighters singer Dave Grohl,[2] who titled his 1995 song "Oh, George" in tribute to Harrison.[77] Guitarist Steve Lukather also named it as a favourite, adding of All Things Must Pass: "there is a LOT of deep soul music in those grooves."[78]

Michael Galluci of Ultimate Classic Rock placed "What Is Life" second (behind "My Sweet Lord") in his list titled "Top 10 George Harrison Songs". Galluci wrote of the track having "a giant pop hook as its guide" as well as "the catchiest chorus Harrison ever penned".[31] In 2009, Matt Melis of Consequence of Sound listed it sixth among his "Top Ten Songs by Ex-Beatles", writing: "it's arguable that Harrison's All Things Must Pass is the best solo album put out by a Beatle. 'What is Life' … with its riff-driven bounce, soaring harmonies on the choruses, and perfectly placed sax and trumpet, [is] probably Harrison's catchiest pop song."[79] In the 2005 publication NME Originals: Beatles – The Solo Years 1970–1980, Adrian Thrills rated it first among Harrison's "ten solo gems", adding: "One of Harrison's greatest guitar riffs – brilliant pop."[80] "What Is Life" topped a similar list in Paste magazine, where Madison Desler writes: "Another ambiguous love song that could be directed at a woman or a higher power, 'What Is Life' explodes jubilantly, a rare moment of pure celebration for Harrison." She also describes the track as "an onion of pop gold that reveals different parts of itself the more you listen to it" and "a staple of pop culture" due to the song's popularity in film soundtracks.[81]

In a 2010 poll to find the "10 Best George Harrison Songs", AOL Radio listeners voted "What Is Life" third,[82] behind "My Sweet Lord" and "Blow Away".[83] In a Rolling Stone readers' poll, titled "10 Greatest Solo Beatle Songs", the song placed fourth, with the editor commenting: "The track is deceptively simple, and more layers become apparent the more often you play it."[84] "What Is Life" has featured in Bruce Pollock's book The 7,500 Most Important Songs of 1944–2000,[citation needed] Treble website's "The Top 200 Songs of the 1970s" (ranked at number 101)[citation needed] and Dave Thompson's 1000 Songs That Rock Your World (at number 247).[citation needed]

Subsequent releases and appearances in films edit

"What Is Life" was included on the 1976 compilation The Best of George Harrison, as the closing track,[85] and 2009's Let It Roll: Songs by George Harrison.[86] The song has also appeared in several popular feature films: Martin Scorsese's Goodfellas (1990),[87] during the "May 11, 1980" sequence; Tom Shadyac's Patch Adams (1998); Sam Mendes' Away We Go (2009); Judd Apatow's This Is 40 (2012),[84] for which it was also used in advance promotion;[88] and Instant Family (2018), directed by Sean Anders.[89] According to Andy Greene of Rolling Stone: "Today, many people know it merely as a song from all those soundtracks ... It's almost as ubiquitous as 'Let My Love Open the Door' or 'Solsbury Hill'."[84]

A portion of "What Is Life" plays in Scorsese's 2011 documentary George Harrison: Living in the Material World,[90] between "Here Comes the Sun" and the Radha Krishna Temple's "Hare Krishna Mantra".[91] It accompanies a sequence of 1969 photos of Harrison with, variously, Preston, Jackie Lomax, the Plastic Ono Band, Clapton and Ravi Shankar, and follows archive footage showing him discussing the restrictions he felt within the Beatles and how the band "had to implode".[92] In his film review for Entertainment Weekly, Owen Gleiberman recalled of the song:

I will never forget the tingle I felt while standing, when I was around 11, at a jukebox in a diner in early-'70s Ann Arbor, dropping a coin into the machine to play a song that was still new to me: "What Is Life". That descending guitar line crackled out of the speaker like a sassy, jagged lightning bolt. The drums were as thunderous as Led Zeppelin's, only it was romantic thunder, and Harrison's yearning vocals rode atop Phil Spector's now-electrified wall of sound like a jubilant cry of triumph: He had broken free! Free of the Beatles, of the '60s, of the material world ... It was one of the most ecstatic things I'd ever heard, and ever would hear. It was the spirit of love speaking through George Harrison, as it would speak through him throughout that album.[93]

An alternative studio version of "What Is Life" was one of the five bonus tracks included on the 2001 remaster of All Things Must Pass.[94][95] This version is a rough mix of the original backing track with different orchestration – in this case, piccolo trumpet and oboe.[96][97] In the accompanying booklet, Harrison writes that this orchestral arrangement was discarded because he "didn't like the feel".[98] Speaking to Billboard editor-in-chief Timothy White in December 2000, Harrison explained the reason for the lack of a guide vocal on this version: "I'm playing the fuzz guitar part that goes all through the song. So all I could do on the [initial] take was to give the band the cue line – the first line of each verse – and then go back to playing that riff. So that rough mix without the vocal – I'd forgot all about it …"[99][nb 5]

Music video edit

Coinciding with the release of the Apple Years 1968–75 box set in September 2014, Harrison's widow and son, Olivia and Dhani Harrison, held an online competition in which filmmakers were invited to create a video clip for "What Is Life". The winner would receive a $5000 cash prize and have their entry become the official video for the track, appearing on the George Harrison YouTube channel and other media platforms.[101] In November, Olivia and Dhani selected Brandon Moore of Oakland, California, as the winner.[102] Moore's video comprises dance interpretations by Emma Rubinowitz and Esteban Hernandez of the San Francisco Ballet, filmed in the streets and woods of the San Francisco Presidio.[103]

Live performance edit

A live version of the song, recorded with Eric Clapton and his band in December 1991,[104] is available on Harrison's 1992 album Live in Japan album.[105] The performance was recorded at Tokyo Dome on 17 December,[106] during the final show of the tour.[107]

Part of a concert performance of "What Is Life" from Harrison's 1974 North American tour with Ravi Shankar appears in Scorsese's George Harrison: Living in the Material World.[108][109] This was the first US tour by a former Beatle but the concerts were highly controversial and proved damaging to Harrison's artistic standing.[110][nb 6] Rock publications such as Rolling Stone ensured that the tour gained a reputation as a disastrous venture,[114][115] although bootleg recordings from the shows partly refute this.[116][117] Simon Leng writes of a Fort Worth performance of "What Is Life" that was "greeted with a reception that matched anything the New York audience at the [August 1971] Bangla Desh concerts expressed".[118]

Cover versions edit

"What Is Life"
 
Picture sleeve for the West German release
Single by Olivia Newton-John
from the album Olivia
B-side"I'm a Small and Lonely Light"
Released1972
Length3:21
LabelPye International
Songwriter(s)George Harrison
Producer(s)Bruce Welch, John Farrar
Olivia Newton-John singles chronology
"Banks of the Ohio"
(1971)
"What Is Life"
(1972)
"Just a Little Too Much"
(1972)

Olivia Newton-John edit

British-Australian pop singer Olivia Newton-John included "What Is Life", along with a version of Harrison's All Things Must Pass track "Behind That Locked Door", on her 1972 album Olivia.[119] The song was arranged and produced by Bruce Welch of the Shadows and John Farrar,[119] who was Newton-John's regular producer and collaborator during the 1970s.[120]

Released as a single in some countries, this version reached the UK top 20 in March 1972,[17][121] peaking at number 16.[122][nb 7] The song's chart run coincided with Newton-John touring the UK with French balladeer Sacha Distel before beginning a season of solo concerts at London's Prince of Wales Theatre.[125] "What Is Life" subsequently appeared on her compilation albums Back to Basics: The Essential Collection 1971–1992 (1992)[126] and The Definitive Collection (2002).[127]

Other artists edit

"What Is Life" was one of the songs that middle-of-the-road artists rushed to record as a result of All Things Must Pass' popularity.[17][128] In 1971, British easy listening pianist Ronnie Aldrich covered it (as well as "My Sweet Lord") on his album Love Story, giving the track what AllMusic reviewer Al Campbell views as a regrettable "Muzak arrangement".[129] That same year, the Ventures included an instrumental version on their New Testament album,[130] recorded when the band had progressed from their surf rock roots to embrace fuzz-tone and other heavier guitar sounds.[131] Music critic Bruce Eder cites the track as an example of the album's "loud, jagged guitar" music and of Ventures guitarist Gerry McGee "crossing swords musically" with contemporaries such as Harrison, Clapton and Jimmy Page through the band's choice of covers.[132]

Shawn Mullins recorded "What Is Life" for the soundtrack of the 1999 film Big Daddy.[133][134] Released as a single, it peaked at number 62 on the UK Singles Chart.[135] In 2004, Christian rock singer Neal Morse included a recording on the special-edition version of his album One, with Phil Keaggy as a guest vocalist.[136] The track later appeared on Morse's 2006 album with Mike Portnoy and Randy George, Cover to Cover, which also includes covers of "Day After Day", which Harrison produced for Badfinger in 1971,[137] and the Clapton–Harrison composition "Badge".[138][nb 8]

"What Is Life" was performed by "Weird Al" Yankovic at the George Fest tribute concert in Los Angeles on 28 September 2014.[140] The recording was included on the George Fest live album and concert DVD package in 2016.[141]

Personnel edit

The following musicians are believed to have played on "What Is Life":[9][32]

Chart performance edit

George Harrison version edit

Olivia Newton-John version edit

Chart (1972) Peak
position
Irish Singles Chart[160] 18
UK Singles Chart[122] 16
US Billboard Easy Listening[161] 34

Notes edit

  1. ^ Allison locates this theme to "I Want to Tell You" from the Beatles era, and then in songs such as "That Is All", "Learning How to Love You", "Mystical One" and "Pisces Fish".[22]
  2. ^ Keys adds that it was only when they started working on Harrison's album that he and Price realised they were not going to join the other Friends personnel in Clapton's new band, Derek and the Dominos.[30]
  3. ^ Barham adds: "We were very impressed – I'd never heard a sound like that before, and that was the kind George wanted."[35]
  4. ^ According to music historian and memorabilia collector Jeff Gold, the painting remained virtually unknown until the 2005 publication of Spizer's book on Apple Records, and Wilkes's creation of limited-edition prints to raise funds for the World Peace organisation.[55]
  5. ^ This instrumental version also appeared as a bonus track on the 2014 Apple Years 1968–75 reissue of All Things Must Pass.[100]
  6. ^ Harrison was widely criticised for his laryngitis-ravaged vocals, his spiritual pronouncements and on-stage demeanour, and his choosing to afford considerable stage-time to Shankar's Indian classical ensemble.[111][112][113]
  7. ^ Her debut single, a US hit in late 1971, was a cover of the Dylan song "If Not for You",[123] based on the Harrison arrangement from All Things Must Pass rather than Dylan's own reading.[17][124]
  8. ^ Morse's former band, Spock's Beard, used Harrison's "Beware of Darkness", also from All Things Must Pass, as the title track of their 1996 debut album Beware of Darkness.[139]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "500 Greatest Albums of All Time: George Harrison, 'All Things Must Pass'", rollingstone.com (retrieved 5 June 2014).
  2. ^ a b c d e The Editors of Rolling Stone, p. 201.
  3. ^ Rodriguez, p. 379.
  4. ^ Leng, pp. 55, 85.
  5. ^ John Harris, "A Quiet Storm", Mojo, July 2001, pp. 68–73.
  6. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 80.
  7. ^ Jim Irvin, "Close to the Edge", Mojo, December 2003, p. 82.
  8. ^ Andy Davis (liner notes), Billy Preston Encouraging Words CD, Apple Records, 2010 (produced by George Harrison & Billy Preston).
  9. ^ a b c d Spizer, p. 222.
  10. ^ a b George Harrison, p. 162.
  11. ^ Womack, p. 981.
  12. ^ The Editors of Rolling Stone, p. 187.
  13. ^ Madinger & Easter, p. 426.
  14. ^ Leng, pp. 87–88.
  15. ^ a b c MacFarlane, p. 76.
  16. ^ a b c d e Richie Unterberger, "George Harrison 'What Is Life'", AllMusic (retrieved 22 February 2012).
  17. ^ a b c d e Clayson, p. 296.
  18. ^ a b c d Inglis, p. 26.
  19. ^ Clayson, p. 298.
  20. ^ Allison, p. 158.
  21. ^ Allison, pp. 124, 158.
  22. ^ Allison, p. 124.
  23. ^ Greene, p. 181.
  24. ^ Clayson, p. 274.
  25. ^ a b c Leng, p. 88.
  26. ^ a b c Madinger & Easter, p. 429.
  27. ^ Badman, p. 10.
  28. ^ Leng, pp. 95–96, 97–98, 99.
  29. ^ Keys, pp. 102–03.
  30. ^ Keys, pp. 101–03.
  31. ^ a b Michael Gallucci, "Top 10 George Harrison Songs", Ultimate Classic Rock (retrieved 28 March 2014).
  32. ^ a b Leng, p. 87.
  33. ^ Ingham, p. 127.
  34. ^ Leng, p. 78.
  35. ^ a b Mat Snow, "George Harrison: Quiet Storm", Mojo, November 2014, p. 70.
  36. ^ Keys, p. 103.
  37. ^ MacFarlane, pp. 75–76.
  38. ^ Madinger & Easter, p. 427.
  39. ^ Todd L. Burns (host), "Ken Scott: Red Bull Music Academy Lecture (New York)", redbullmusicacademy.com, 2013 (retrieved 14 November 2020).
  40. ^ Madinger & Easter, pp. 427, 429.
  41. ^ "Phil Spector's Gentle Production Notes to George Harrison During the Recording of All Things Must Pass", Open Culture, 3 January 2014 (retrieved 2 December 2020).
  42. ^ Spizer, pp. 212, 222.
  43. ^ Olivia Harrison, p. 282.
  44. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 94.
  45. ^ a b Spizer, p. 220.
  46. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, pp. 99, 352.
  47. ^ Badman, p. 26.
  48. ^ "Spotlight Singles", Billboard, 20 February 1971, p. 62 (retrieved 13 October 2013).
  49. ^ "Picks of the Week" (PDF). Record World. 20 February 1971. p. 1. Retrieved 22 April 2023.
  50. ^ a b Rodriguez, p. 147.
  51. ^ Spizer, pp. 226, 231.
  52. ^ Tillery, p. 90.
  53. ^ Spizer, p. 226.
  54. ^ Spizer, pp. 221, 226–28.
  55. ^ Jeff Gold, "George Harrison – Original Painting for All Things Must Pass Poster (The Beatles)", Recordmecca (retrieved 15 December 2020).
  56. ^ Schaffner, p. 142.
  57. ^ Doggett, p. 36.
  58. ^ Frontani, pp. 157–58.
  59. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 352.
  60. ^ Spizer, p. 231.
  61. ^ Rodriguez, p. 48.
  62. ^ Jillian Mapes, "George Harrison's 10 Biggest Billboard Hits", billboard.com, 29 November 2011 (retrieved 4 June 2014).
  63. ^ a b "George Harrison – What Is Life", hitparade.ch (retrieved 14 April 2014).
  64. ^ a b "Go-Set Australian charts – 8 May 1971" 27 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine, poparchives.com.au (retrieved 13 April 2014).
  65. ^ "George Harrison (Song artist 225)", Tsort pages (retrieved 16 October 2012).
  66. ^ Badman, pp. 22, 59.
  67. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 99.
  68. ^ Dan Lane, "The biggest selling singles of every year revealed! (1952–2011)", Official Charts Company, 18 November 2012 (retrieved 3 June 2014).
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Sources edit

  • Dale C. Allison Jr., The Love There That's Sleeping: The Art and Spirituality of George Harrison, Continuum (New York, NY, 2006; ISBN 978-0-8264-1917-0).
  • Keith Badman, The Beatles Diary Volume 2: After the Break-Up 1970–2001, Omnibus Press (London, 2001; ISBN 0-7119-8307-0).
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  • Alan Clayson, George Harrison, Sanctuary (London, 2003; ISBN 1-86074-489-3).
  • The Editors of Rolling Stone, Harrison, Rolling Stone Press/Simon & Schuster (New York, NY, 2002; ISBN 0-7432-3581-9).
  • Peter Doggett, "George Harrison: The Apple Years 1968–1975", Record Collector, April 2001, pp. 34–40.
  • Michael Frontani, "The Solo Years", in Kenneth Womack (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Beatles, Cambridge University Press (Cambridge, UK, 2009; ISBN 978-1-139-82806-2), pp. 153–82.
  • George Harrison: Living in the Material World DVD, Village Roadshow, 2011 (directed by Martin Scorsese; produced by Olivia Harrison, Nigel Sinclair & Martin Scorsese).
  • Joshua M. Greene, Here Comes the Sun: The Spiritual and Musical Journey of George Harrison, John Wiley & Sons (Hoboken, NJ, 2006; ISBN 978-0-470-12780-3).
  • George Harrison, I Me Mine, Chronicle Books (San Francisco, CA, 2002; ISBN 0-8118-3793-9).
  • Olivia Harrison, George Harrison: Living in the Material World, Abrams (New York, NY, 2011; ISBN 978-1-4197-0220-4).
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  • Chris Ingham, The Rough Guide to the Beatles, Rough Guides/Penguin (London, 2006; 2nd edn; ISBN 978-1-84836-525-4).
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  • Bobby Keys with Bill Ditenhafer, Every Night's a Saturday Night: The Rock 'n' Roll Life of Legendary Sax Man Bobby Keys, Counterpoint (Berkeley, CA, 2012; ISBN 978-1-58243-783-5).
  • Simon Leng, While My Guitar Gently Weeps: The Music of George Harrison, Hal Leonard (Milwaukee, WI, 2006; ISBN 1-4234-0609-5).
  • Thomas MacFarlane, The Music of George Harrison, Routledge (Abingdon, UK, 2019; ISBN 978-1-138-59910-9).
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  • Robert Rodriguez, Fab Four FAQ 2.0: The Beatles' Solo Years, 1970–1980, Backbeat Books (Milwaukee, WI, 2010; ISBN 978-1-4165-9093-4).
  • Patricia Romanowski & Holly George-Warren (eds), The New Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll, Fireside/Rolling Stone Press (New York, NY, 1995; ISBN 0-684-81044-1).
  • Nicholas Schaffner, The Beatles Forever, McGraw-Hill (New York, NY, 1978; ISBN 0-07-055087-5).
  • Bruce Spizer, The Beatles Solo on Apple Records, 498 Productions (New Orleans, LA, 2005; ISBN 0-9662649-5-9).
  • Gary Tillery, Working Class Mystic: A Spiritual Biography of George Harrison, Quest Books (Wheaton, IL, 2011; ISBN 978-0-8356-0900-5).
  • Bobby Whitlock with Marc Roberty, Bobby Whitlock: A Rock 'n' Roll Autobiography, McFarland (Jefferson, NC, 2010; ISBN 978-0-7864-6190-5).
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  • Kenneth Womack, The Beatles Encyclopedia: Everything Fab Four, ABC-CLIO (Santa Barbara, CA, 2014; ISBN 978-0-313-39171-2).

External links edit

  • Lyrics of this song
  • George Harrison – What Is Life on YouTube

what, life, this, article, about, george, harrison, song, other, uses, disambiguation, song, english, rock, musician, george, harrison, from, 1970, triple, album, things, must, pass, many, countries, issued, second, single, from, album, february, 1971, becomin. This article is about the George Harrison song For other uses see What Is Life disambiguation What Is Life is a song by English rock musician George Harrison from his 1970 triple album All Things Must Pass In many countries it was issued as the second single from the album in February 1971 becoming a top ten hit in the United States Canada and elsewhere and topping singles charts in Australia and Switzerland In the United Kingdom What Is Life appeared as the B side to My Sweet Lord which was the best selling single there of 1971 Harrison s backing musicians on the song include Eric Clapton and the entire Delaney amp Bonnie and Friends band with whom he had toured during the final months of the Beatles Harrison co produced the recording with Phil Spector whose Wall of Sound production also employed a prominent string arrangement by John Barham and multiple acoustic rhythm guitars played by Harrison s fellow Apple Records signings Badfinger What Is Life US picture sleeveSingle by George Harrisonfrom the album All Things Must PassA side My Sweet Lord UK B side Apple Scruffs except UK Released15 February 1971 US GenreRock soulLength4 22LabelAppleSongwriter s George HarrisonProducer s George Harrison Phil SpectorGeorge Harrison singles chronology My Sweet Lord Isn t It a Pity 1970 What Is Life 1971 Bangla Desh 1971 Music video What Is Life Official Music Video on YouTube An uptempo soul tune What Is Life is one of several Harrison love songs that appear to be directed at both a woman and a deity Harrison wrote the song in 1969 and originally intended it as a track for his friend and Apple protege Billy Preston to record Built around a descending guitar riff it is one of Harrison s most popular compositions and was a regular inclusion in his live performances Rolling Stone magazine has variously described it as a classic 1 and an exultant song of surrender 2 What Is Life has appeared in the soundtrack for feature films such as Goodfellas 1990 Patch Adams 1998 Big Daddy 1999 Away We Go 2009 This Is 40 2012 and Instant Family 2018 Harrison s original recording was included on the compilations The Best of George Harrison and Let It Roll and live versions appear on his album Live in Japan 1992 and in Martin Scorsese s 2011 documentary George Harrison Living in the Material World In 1972 Olivia Newton John had a UK hit with her version of the song Ronnie Aldrich the Ventures and Shawn Mullins are among the other artists who have covered the track Contents 1 Background 2 Composition 3 Recording 4 Release and reception 5 Retrospective assessments and legacy 6 Subsequent releases and appearances in films 6 1 Music video 7 Live performance 8 Cover versions 8 1 Olivia Newton John 8 2 Other artists 9 Personnel 10 Chart performance 10 1 George Harrison version 10 2 Olivia Newton John version 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 14 External linksBackground editEven before his temporary departure from the Beatles in January 1969 documented in the song Wah Wah 3 their Apple Records label was an emancipating force for Harrison from the creative restrictions imposed on him within the band according to his musical biographer Simon Leng 4 In his article on All Things Must Pass for Mojo magazine John Harris has written of Harrison s journey as a solo artist beginning in November 1968 when he spent time in Woodstock with Bob Dylan and the Band and incorporating a series of other collaborations through the following eighteen months including various Apple projects and a support role on Delaney amp Bonnie and Friends brief European tour 5 One of these projects carried out intermittently from April to July 1969 6 was his production of That s the Way God Planned It an album by Billy Preston whom Harrison had met during the Beatles Hamburg years and had recently been recruited to guest on the band s troubled Get Back sessions 7 8 It was while driving up to a Preston session in London from his home in Esher Surrey that Harrison came up with the song What Is Life 9 In his autobiography I Me Mine Harrison describes it as having been written very quickly and recalls that he thought it would be a perfect catchy pop song for Preston to record 10 11 He adds that he changed his mind once he arrived at Olympic Studios and found Preston working on more typical material or playing his funky stuff 10 9 Rather than attempt it with the Beatles during the band s concurrent Abbey Road sessions Harrison stockpiled What Is Life with his many other unused songs from the period including All Things Must Pass Let It Down I d Have You Anytime and Run of the Mill 12 He revisited it a year later after completing work on Preston s second Apple album Encouraging Words 13 Composition editHarrison biographer Simon Leng describes What Is Life as Motown spiced and a comparatively rare example of its composer s willingness to embrace the role of entertainer in his songwriting 14 The song is defined by Harrison s descending guitar riff 2 15 which also serves as the motif for the chorus 16 Author Alan Clayson describes What Is Life as a seemingly lovey dovey pop song that craftily renewed the simplistic tonic to dominant riff cliche 17 The lyrics have a universal quality being both simple and uplifting 16 18 Their meaning has caused some debate among biographers and music critics as to whether What Is Life should be viewed as a straightforward love song perhaps a lovingly crafted paean to Harrison s wife Pattie Boyd in Clayson s description 19 or a devotional song like many of Harrison s compositions 16 20 Ian Inglis writes that the song title suggests a philosophical debate about the meaning of life yet its rendering as what is my life in the choruses reshapes the meaning completely 18 Theologian Dale Allison finds no religious content in What Is Life but comments that the failure of words to express feelings implied in the opening line What I feel I can t say is a recurring theme in Harrison s spiritual songs 21 nb 1 Joshua Greene another religious academic identifies the song as part of its parent album s intimately detailed account of a spiritual journey where Awaiting on You All shows Harrison convinced of his union with God What Is Life reveals him to be uncertain that he deserved such divine favor 23 According to musicologist Thomas MacFarlane the ambiguity in the lyrics suggests a connection between spiritual and physical love 15 The second verse repeats what Inglis refers to as the somewhat confusing promise from Harrison in lines 3 and 4 should his love be rejected 18 What I know I can do If I give my love out to everyone like you But if it s not love that you need Then I ll try my best to make everything succeed Recording editBy May 1970 having recently collaborated with genuine R amp B heavy weights such as Doris Troy and Preston as well as participating in the blue eyed soul 24 Delaney amp Bonnie European tour along with Eric Clapton the previous December Harrison was well placed to record What Is Life Leng observes 25 With Phil Spector as co producer and all the Friends team on hand the song was among the first tracks taped for Harrison s debut post Beatles solo album 26 recording took place at Abbey Road Studios in London during late May or early June 26 27 The same core of musicians Bobby Whitlock Carl Radle Jim Gordon Bobby Keys and Jim Price would similarly elevate other All Things Must Pass tracks such as Awaiting on You All Art of Dying and Hear Me Lord 28 According to Keys he and Price overdubbed their horns parts at a later session at Abbey Road 29 nb 2 The track opens with Harrison playing the fuzztone guitar riff 31 which is then joined by Radle s bass and churning rhythm guitar from Clapton before Gordon s drums bring the full band in 9 32 During the verses Gordon moves to a square Motown style beat or rock steady Northern soul backbeat in Leng s words 25 before returning to the galloping rhythm of the more open knockout choruses 2 The song is driven equally by Badfinger drummer Mike Gibbins powerful tambourine work 17 On What Is Life Spector provided what music critic David Fricke terms echo drenched theater in the form of reverb heavy brass soaring strings arranged by John Barham and a choir of multitracked Harrisons 2 Barham stayed at Harrison s new home Friar Park in Henley on Thames 33 and created the scores for What Is Life and other songs from melodies that Harrison sang or played to him on piano or guitar 34 Barham says that for inspiration Harrison also played him Spector productions such as Checkmates Ltd s Proud Mary 35 nb 3 In his autobiography Every Night s a Saturday Night Keys recalls that Harrison and Price worked out the horn arrangement together at the overdubbing session 36 In MacFarlane s description the strings provide a complementary countermelody to the guitar riff while the horns combination of uptown soul and mariachi heightens and expands the track s musical colour 37 After recording the album s backing tracks with Spector Harrison carried out most of the overdubbing without him working at Trident Studios with former Beatles engineer Ken Scott 38 39 The song s vocals and strings along with a brief slide guitar commentary from Harrison over the final verse 16 were overdubbed at Trident 40 Dated 19 August Spector s written comments on Harrison s early mix of the song had suggested a proper background voice was still needed 41 Harrison performed all the chorus vocals himself 15 and credited them to the George O Hara Smith Singers 42 Spector was impressed with Harrison s dedication in the studio saying He was a great harmoniser he could do all the vocal parts himself and rating Harrison one of the most commercial musicians and songwriters and quintessential players I ve ever known in my entire career 43 Release and reception edit nbsp Tom Wilkes s original poster design for All Things Must Pass Part of the top portion was instead used for the US picture sleeve for the What Is Life single What Is Life was released in late November 1970 as the first track on side two of All Things Must Pass in its original triple LP format 44 45 Along with My Sweet Lord and Isn t It a Pity the song had already been identified as a potential hit single by Allan Steckler manager of Apple s US operation 45 Backed by Apple Scruffs What Is Life was issued as a single in America on 15 February 1971 as Apple 1828 just as the My Sweet Lord Isn t It a Pity double A side was slipping out of the top ten 46 47 Billboard magazine s reviewer described What Is Life and Apple Scruffs as intriguing rhythm follows ups to the first single which were sure to repeat that success and should prove big juke box items 48 Record World called it perhaps the most commercial cut from All Things Must Pass 49 While describing the initial impact of All Things Must Pass author Robert Rodriguez includes the song as an illustration of how the depth of Harrison s talents had been hidden in plain sight behind John Lennon and Paul McCartney during the Beatles career 50 The album introduced Harrison as an overtly spiritual songwriter who sought to connect with his audience on a higher level compared with the populist approach of McCartney or the confrontationalism adopted by Lennon Rodriguez concludes That the Quiet Beatle was capable of such range from the joyful What Is Life to the meditative Isn t It a Pity to the steamrolling Art of Dying to the playful I Dig Love was truly revelatory 50 The front of the single s US picture sleeve consisted of a photo of Harrison playing guitar inside the central tower of Friar Park 51 The tower s sole octagonal shaped room was an area that Harrison had adopted as his personal temple and meditation space 52 This picture was taken by photographer Barry Feinstein whose Camouflage Productions partner Tom Wilkes originally used it as part of an elaborate poster intended as an insert in the album package The poster featured a painting of the Hindu deity Krishna watching a group of naked maidens beside a bathing pond 53 Harrison apparently felt uncomfortable with the symbolism in Wilkes s design the Friar Park tower image filled the top half of the poster floating among clouds above the Krishna scene so Wilkes abandoned the concept and instead used a darkened photo of Harrison inside the house as the album poster 54 nb 4 In Denmark the picture sleeve consisted of four shots of Harrison again with guitar 56 taken on stage during the Delaney amp Bonnie tour 57 As with the parent album the single was a commercial and critical success 58 What Is Life peaked at number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 59 and number 7 on Cash Box s Top 100 chart 60 making Harrison the first ex Beatle to have two top ten hits in the United States 61 62 The single climbed to number 1 in Switzerland 63 and on Australia s Go Set National Top 60 64 and reached the top three elsewhere in Europe and in Canada 65 In Britain where Harrison had resisted issuing a single from All Things Must Pass until midway through January 66 What Is Life appeared as the B side of My Sweet Lord 67 The record became the top selling single of 1971 in that country 68 Retrospective assessments and legacy edit What Is Life is one of Harrison s most commercial and popular songs 69 a spiritual guitar quest that became a classic according to Rolling Stone magazine 1 In their Solo Beatles Compendium authors Chip Madinger and Mark Easter refer to it as an intensely catchy track and view its pairing with My Sweet Lord in the UK as perhaps the strongest of all of Harrison s singles 26 Writing in 1981 NME critic Bob Woffinden grouped What Is Life with My Sweet Lord Isn t It a Pity and Awaiting on You All as all excellent songs 70 Reviewing the 2001 reissue of All Things Must Pass for Rolling Stone James Hunter wrote of how the album s music exults in breezy rhythms among which the colorful revolutions of What Is Life move like a Ferris wheel 71 The following year in Rolling Stone Press s Harrison tribute book David Fricke included What Is Life among his selection of essential Harrison performances just three of which date from the ex Beatle s solo years and described the track as an exultant song of surrender abetted by Harrison s pumping fuzz guitar and the song s singalong magnetism 72 AllMusic s Richie Unterberger similarly praises What Is Life for its anthemic qualities particularly snazzy horn lines and a guitar riff that is one more entry in the catalog of George Harrison s book of arresting low descending guitar lines 16 Writing in the book 1 000 Recordings to Hear Before You Die author Tom Moon refers to the upbeat single What Is Life as an example of how Harrison grabs what he needs from his old band that insinuating hook sense and uses it to frame an utterly comfortable metaphysical discourse 73 Simon Leng credits Harrison s innate ability to write very fine pop rock songs and deems the result as innovative an exercise in rock soul as the Temptations Cloud Nine 25 Ian Inglis is less enthusiastic acknowledging that Barham s orchestration and the other musicians give the track undoubted excitement and energy but lamenting that the song offers little overall coherence between words and music 18 In Thomas MacFarlane s view What Is Life is a remarkable pop song that takes the tone and attitude of Phil Spector s Wall of Sound and channels it through the prism of the late period Beatles 74 Writing for Q magazine in 2002 John Harris said the widescreen sound of All Things Must Pass tracks such as What Is Life was a forerunner to recordings by ELO and Oasis 75 PopMatters Jason Korenkiewicz describes the song as a jangle pop masterpiece and blueprint for the Britpop movement adding that Harrison s musical legacy has contributed greatly to the exuberance of Britpop in the 90s 76 The track is said to be a favourite of Foo Fighters singer Dave Grohl 2 who titled his 1995 song Oh George in tribute to Harrison 77 Guitarist Steve Lukather also named it as a favourite adding of All Things Must Pass there is a LOT of deep soul music in those grooves 78 Michael Galluci of Ultimate Classic Rock placed What Is Life second behind My Sweet Lord in his list titled Top 10 George Harrison Songs Galluci wrote of the track having a giant pop hook as its guide as well as the catchiest chorus Harrison ever penned 31 In 2009 Matt Melis of Consequence of Sound listed it sixth among his Top Ten Songs by Ex Beatles writing it s arguable that Harrison s All Things Must Pass is the best solo album put out by a Beatle What is Life with its riff driven bounce soaring harmonies on the choruses and perfectly placed sax and trumpet is probably Harrison s catchiest pop song 79 In the 2005 publication NME Originals Beatles The Solo Years 1970 1980 Adrian Thrills rated it first among Harrison s ten solo gems adding One of Harrison s greatest guitar riffs brilliant pop 80 What Is Life topped a similar list in Paste magazine where Madison Desler writes Another ambiguous love song that could be directed at a woman or a higher power What Is Life explodes jubilantly a rare moment of pure celebration for Harrison She also describes the track as an onion of pop gold that reveals different parts of itself the more you listen to it and a staple of pop culture due to the song s popularity in film soundtracks 81 In a 2010 poll to find the 10 Best George Harrison Songs AOL Radio listeners voted What Is Life third 82 behind My Sweet Lord and Blow Away 83 In a Rolling Stone readers poll titled 10 Greatest Solo Beatle Songs the song placed fourth with the editor commenting The track is deceptively simple and more layers become apparent the more often you play it 84 What Is Life has featured in Bruce Pollock s book The 7 500 Most Important Songs of 1944 2000 citation needed Treble website s The Top 200 Songs of the 1970s ranked at number 101 citation needed and Dave Thompson s 1000 Songs That Rock Your World at number 247 citation needed Subsequent releases and appearances in films edit What Is Life was included on the 1976 compilation The Best of George Harrison as the closing track 85 and 2009 s Let It Roll Songs by George Harrison 86 The song has also appeared in several popular feature films Martin Scorsese s Goodfellas 1990 87 during the May 11 1980 sequence Tom Shadyac s Patch Adams 1998 Sam Mendes Away We Go 2009 Judd Apatow s This Is 40 2012 84 for which it was also used in advance promotion 88 and Instant Family 2018 directed by Sean Anders 89 According to Andy Greene of Rolling Stone Today many people know it merely as a song from all those soundtracks It s almost as ubiquitous as Let My Love Open the Door or Solsbury Hill 84 A portion of What Is Life plays in Scorsese s 2011 documentary George Harrison Living in the Material World 90 between Here Comes the Sun and the Radha Krishna Temple s Hare Krishna Mantra 91 It accompanies a sequence of 1969 photos of Harrison with variously Preston Jackie Lomax the Plastic Ono Band Clapton and Ravi Shankar and follows archive footage showing him discussing the restrictions he felt within the Beatles and how the band had to implode 92 In his film review for Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman recalled of the song I will never forget the tingle I felt while standing when I was around 11 at a jukebox in a diner in early 70s Ann Arbor dropping a coin into the machine to play a song that was still new to me What Is Life That descending guitar line crackled out of the speaker like a sassy jagged lightning bolt The drums were as thunderous as Led Zeppelin s only it was romantic thunder and Harrison s yearning vocals rode atop Phil Spector s now electrified wall of sound like a jubilant cry of triumph He had broken free Free of the Beatles of the 60s of the material world It was one of the most ecstatic things I d ever heard and ever would hear It was the spirit of love speaking through George Harrison as it would speak through him throughout that album 93 An alternative studio version of What Is Life was one of the five bonus tracks included on the 2001 remaster of All Things Must Pass 94 95 This version is a rough mix of the original backing track with different orchestration in this case piccolo trumpet and oboe 96 97 In the accompanying booklet Harrison writes that this orchestral arrangement was discarded because he didn t like the feel 98 Speaking to Billboard editor in chief Timothy White in December 2000 Harrison explained the reason for the lack of a guide vocal on this version I m playing the fuzz guitar part that goes all through the song So all I could do on the initial take was to give the band the cue line the first line of each verse and then go back to playing that riff So that rough mix without the vocal I d forgot all about it 99 nb 5 Music video edit Coinciding with the release of the Apple Years 1968 75 box set in September 2014 Harrison s widow and son Olivia and Dhani Harrison held an online competition in which filmmakers were invited to create a video clip for What Is Life The winner would receive a 5000 cash prize and have their entry become the official video for the track appearing on the George Harrison YouTube channel and other media platforms 101 In November Olivia and Dhani selected Brandon Moore of Oakland California as the winner 102 Moore s video comprises dance interpretations by Emma Rubinowitz and Esteban Hernandez of the San Francisco Ballet filmed in the streets and woods of the San Francisco Presidio 103 Live performance editA live version of the song recorded with Eric Clapton and his band in December 1991 104 is available on Harrison s 1992 album Live in Japan album 105 The performance was recorded at Tokyo Dome on 17 December 106 during the final show of the tour 107 Part of a concert performance of What Is Life from Harrison s 1974 North American tour with Ravi Shankar appears in Scorsese s George Harrison Living in the Material World 108 109 This was the first US tour by a former Beatle but the concerts were highly controversial and proved damaging to Harrison s artistic standing 110 nb 6 Rock publications such as Rolling Stone ensured that the tour gained a reputation as a disastrous venture 114 115 although bootleg recordings from the shows partly refute this 116 117 Simon Leng writes of a Fort Worth performance of What Is Life that was greeted with a reception that matched anything the New York audience at the August 1971 Bangla Desh concerts expressed 118 Cover versions edit What Is Life nbsp Picture sleeve for the West German releaseSingle by Olivia Newton Johnfrom the album OliviaB side I m a Small and Lonely Light Released1972Length3 21LabelPye InternationalSongwriter s George HarrisonProducer s Bruce Welch John FarrarOlivia Newton John singles chronology Banks of the Ohio 1971 What Is Life 1972 Just a Little Too Much 1972 Olivia Newton John edit British Australian pop singer Olivia Newton John included What Is Life along with a version of Harrison s All Things Must Pass track Behind That Locked Door on her 1972 album Olivia 119 The song was arranged and produced by Bruce Welch of the Shadows and John Farrar 119 who was Newton John s regular producer and collaborator during the 1970s 120 Released as a single in some countries this version reached the UK top 20 in March 1972 17 121 peaking at number 16 122 nb 7 The song s chart run coincided with Newton John touring the UK with French balladeer Sacha Distel before beginning a season of solo concerts at London s Prince of Wales Theatre 125 What Is Life subsequently appeared on her compilation albums Back to Basics The Essential Collection 1971 1992 1992 126 and The Definitive Collection 2002 127 Other artists edit What Is Life was one of the songs that middle of the road artists rushed to record as a result of All Things Must Pass popularity 17 128 In 1971 British easy listening pianist Ronnie Aldrich covered it as well as My Sweet Lord on his album Love Story giving the track what AllMusic reviewer Al Campbell views as a regrettable Muzak arrangement 129 That same year the Ventures included an instrumental version on their New Testament album 130 recorded when the band had progressed from their surf rock roots to embrace fuzz tone and other heavier guitar sounds 131 Music critic Bruce Eder cites the track as an example of the album s loud jagged guitar music and of Ventures guitarist Gerry McGee crossing swords musically with contemporaries such as Harrison Clapton and Jimmy Page through the band s choice of covers 132 Shawn Mullins recorded What Is Life for the soundtrack of the 1999 film Big Daddy 133 134 Released as a single it peaked at number 62 on the UK Singles Chart 135 In 2004 Christian rock singer Neal Morse included a recording on the special edition version of his album One with Phil Keaggy as a guest vocalist 136 The track later appeared on Morse s 2006 album with Mike Portnoy and Randy George Cover to Cover which also includes covers of Day After Day which Harrison produced for Badfinger in 1971 137 and the Clapton Harrison composition Badge 138 nb 8 What Is Life was performed by Weird Al Yankovic at the George Fest tribute concert in Los Angeles on 28 September 2014 140 The recording was included on the George Fest live album and concert DVD package in 2016 141 Personnel editThe following musicians are believed to have played on What Is Life 9 32 George Harrison vocals lead guitar acoustic guitar slide guitar backing vocals Eric Clapton guitar Bobby Whitlock organ 142 Carl Radle bass Jim Gordon drums Jim Price trumpet horn arrangement Bobby Keys saxophone Pete Ham acoustic guitar Tom Evans acoustic guitar Joey Molland acoustic guitar Mike Gibbins tambourine John Barham string arrangementChart performance editGeorge Harrison version edit Weekly charts Chart 1971 Peakposition Australian Go Set National Top 60 64 1 Austrian Singles Chart 143 5 Belgian Ultratop Singles 144 5 Canadian RPM 100 Singles 145 3 Dutch MegaChart Singles 146 2 Italian Discografia Internazionale Chart 147 9 Japanese Oricon Singles Chart 148 19 New Zealand Listener Chart 149 2 Norwegian VG lista Singles 150 7 South African Springbok Singles Chart 151 4 Swiss Singles Chart 63 1 US Billboard Hot 100 152 10 US Billboard Easy Listening 153 31 US Cash Box Top 100 154 7 US Record World Singles Chart 155 10 West German Media Control Singles 156 3 Year end charts Chart 1971 Position Canadian RPM Singles Chart 157 41 Dutch Singles Chart 158 45 US Cash Box 159 48 Olivia Newton John version edit Chart 1972 Peakposition Irish Singles Chart 160 18 UK Singles Chart 122 16 US Billboard Easy Listening 161 34Notes edit Allison locates this theme to I Want to Tell You from the Beatles era and then in songs such as That Is All Learning How to Love You Mystical One and Pisces Fish 22 Keys adds that it was only when they started working on Harrison s album that he and Price realised they were not going to join the other Friends personnel in Clapton s new band Derek and the Dominos 30 Barham adds We were very impressed I d never heard a sound like that before and that was the kind George wanted 35 According to music historian and memorabilia collector Jeff Gold the painting remained virtually unknown until the 2005 publication of Spizer s book on Apple Records and Wilkes s creation of limited edition prints to raise funds for the World Peace organisation 55 This instrumental version also appeared as a bonus track on the 2014 Apple Years 1968 75 reissue of All Things Must Pass 100 Harrison was widely criticised for his laryngitis ravaged vocals his spiritual pronouncements and on stage demeanour and his choosing to afford considerable stage time to Shankar s Indian classical ensemble 111 112 113 Her debut single a US hit in late 1971 was a cover of the Dylan song If Not for You 123 based on the Harrison arrangement from All Things Must Pass rather than Dylan s own reading 17 124 Morse s former band Spock s Beard used Harrison s Beware of Darkness also from All Things Must Pass as the title track of their 1996 debut album Beware of Darkness 139 References edit a b 500 Greatest Albums of All Time George Harrison All Things Must Pass rollingstone com retrieved 5 June 2014 a b c d e The Editors of Rolling Stone p 201 Rodriguez p 379 Leng pp 55 85 John Harris A Quiet Storm Mojo July 2001 pp 68 73 Castleman amp Podrazik p 80 Jim Irvin Close to the Edge Mojo December 2003 p 82 Andy Davis liner notes Billy Preston Encouraging Words CD Apple Records 2010 produced by George Harrison amp Billy Preston a b c d Spizer p 222 a b George Harrison p 162 Womack p 981 The Editors of Rolling Stone p 187 Madinger amp Easter p 426 Leng pp 87 88 a b c MacFarlane p 76 a b c d e Richie Unterberger George Harrison What Is Life AllMusic retrieved 22 February 2012 a b c d e Clayson p 296 a b c d Inglis p 26 Clayson p 298 Allison p 158 Allison pp 124 158 Allison p 124 Greene p 181 Clayson p 274 a b c Leng p 88 a b c Madinger amp Easter p 429 Badman p 10 Leng pp 95 96 97 98 99 Keys pp 102 03 Keys pp 101 03 a b Michael Gallucci Top 10 George Harrison Songs Ultimate Classic Rock retrieved 28 March 2014 a b Leng p 87 Ingham p 127 Leng p 78 a b Mat Snow George Harrison Quiet Storm Mojo November 2014 p 70 Keys p 103 MacFarlane pp 75 76 Madinger amp Easter p 427 Todd L Burns host Ken Scott Red Bull Music Academy Lecture New York redbullmusicacademy com 2013 retrieved 14 November 2020 Madinger amp Easter pp 427 429 Phil Spector s Gentle Production Notes to George Harrison During the Recording of All Things Must Pass Open Culture 3 January 2014 retrieved 2 December 2020 Spizer pp 212 222 Olivia Harrison p 282 Castleman amp Podrazik p 94 a b Spizer p 220 Castleman amp Podrazik pp 99 352 Badman p 26 Spotlight Singles Billboard 20 February 1971 p 62 retrieved 13 October 2013 Picks of the Week PDF Record World 20 February 1971 p 1 Retrieved 22 April 2023 a b Rodriguez p 147 Spizer pp 226 231 Tillery p 90 Spizer p 226 Spizer pp 221 226 28 Jeff Gold George Harrison Original Painting for All Things Must Pass Poster The Beatles Recordmecca retrieved 15 December 2020 Schaffner p 142 Doggett p 36 Frontani pp 157 58 Castleman amp Podrazik p 352 Spizer p 231 Rodriguez p 48 Jillian Mapes George Harrison s 10 Biggest Billboard Hits billboard com 29 November 2011 retrieved 4 June 2014 a b George Harrison What Is Life hitparade ch retrieved 14 April 2014 a b Go Set Australian charts 8 May 1971 Archived 27 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine poparchives com au retrieved 13 April 2014 George Harrison Song artist 225 Tsort pages retrieved 16 October 2012 Badman pp 22 59 Castleman amp Podrazik p 99 Dan Lane The biggest selling singles of every year revealed 1952 2011 Official Charts Company 18 November 2012 retrieved 3 June 2014 Allison p 132 Woffinden p 38 James Hunter George Harrison All Things Must Pass 30th Anniversary reissue Rolling Stone 29 March 2001 quoted in The Super Seventies Classic 500 George Harrison All Things Must Pass retrieved 19 October 2012 The Editors of Rolling Stone pp 196 201 Moon p 345 MacFarlane p 75 John Harris What Did George Harrison Ever Do for Us Q January 2002 pp 34 35 Jason Korenkiewicz Review The Dark Horse Years 1976 1992 PopMatters 3 May 2004 archived version retrieved 25 October 2020 Jack Whatley The Foo Fighters song Dave Grohl wrote in tribute to his favourite Beatle Far Out 28 August 2020 retrieved 11 December 2020 Harvey Kubernik George Harrison All Things Must Pass 50th Anniversary Music Connection 10 November 2020 retrieved 12 November 2020 Matt Melis List Em Carefully Top Ten Songs by Ex Beatles Consequence of Sound 8 April 2009 archived version retrieved 11 December 2020 Chris Hunt ed NME Originals Beatles The Solo Years 1970 1980 IPC Ignite London 2005 p 23 Madison Desler The 20 Best George Harrison Songs Paste 12 April 2017 retrieved 11 December 2020 Womack p 982 Boonsri Dickinson 10 Best George Harrison Songs AOL Radio 3 April 2010 archived version retrieved 5 April 2021 a b c Andy Greene 4 George Harrison What Is Life rollingstone com 5 June 2013 retrieved 30 May 2015 Womack p 148 Inglis pp 65 128 Matt Zoller Seitz George Harrison s Inner Light Salon website Salon 5 October 2011 retrieved 12 December 2020 This Is 40 Official Trailer 2 2012 YouTube August 2012 retrieved 16 October 2012 Pat Padua Mark Wahlberg and Rose Byrne s Instant Family A slow cooker is more like it The Washington Post 14 November 2018 retrieved 13 December 2020 Nick Newman NYFF Review George Harrison Living in the Material World The Film Stage 5 October 2011 retrieved 12 December 2020 Part 2 George Harrison Living in the Material World BBC Online April 2013 retrieved 12 December 2020 George Harrison Living in the Material World Disc 2 event occurs between 13 48 and 14 50 Owen Gleiberman George Harrison Living in the Material World doesn t always penetrate the quiet Beatle but Martin Scorsese s two part HBO documentary is a fab nostalgia trip Entertainment Weekly 5 October 2011 retrieved 11 December 2020 Huntley p 307 Ingham p 132 Leng p 284 MacFarlane p 158 George Harrison s liner notes booklet accompanying All Things Must Pass reissue Gnome Records 2001 produced by George Harrison amp Phil Spector p 11 Timothy White George Harrison All Things in Good Time billboard com 8 January 2001 retrieved 3 June 2014 Joe Marchese Give Me Love George Harrison s Apple Years Are Collected On New Box Set The Second Disc 2 September 2014 retrieved 26 September 2014 Steve Marinucci Olivia amp Dhani Harrison to choose winner of What Is Life music video contest axs com 15 September 2014 retrieved 21 May 2017 Genero tv What is Life Winner Announced georgeharrison com 28 November 2014 retrieved 8 April 2019 Lori Dorn Dancers in Yellow Frolic Around the Woods in the Official Video for George Harrison s What Is Life Laughing Squid 19 June 2018 retrieved 8 April 2019 Inglis pp 107 08 Ingham p 135 Madinger amp Easter pp 483 484 Badman pp 471 473 George Harrison Living in the Material World Disc 2 event occurs between 50 51 and 51 49 Noel Murray TV Reviews George Harrison Living in the Material World The A V Club 5 October 2011 retrieved 12 December 2020 The Editors of Rolling Stone p 44 Woffinden pp 83 84 Schaffner pp 177 78 Ingham p 128 Leng p 174 Rodriguez p 59 Doggett p 39 Nick DeRiso 40 Years Ago George Harrison Begins Ill Fated 1974 North American Tour Ultimate Classic Rock 2 November 2014 retrieved 8 June 2015 Leng p 172 a b Sleeve credits Olivia Newton John Olivia LP Pye International Records 1972 produced by Bruce Welch amp John Farrar Romanowski amp George Warren pp 709 887 Huntley p 56 a b Artist Olivia Newton John Official Charts Company retrieved 16 December 2020 Romanowski amp George Warren p 709 Joe Viglione Olivia Newton John If Not for You AllMusic retrieved 4 June 2014 Olivia Tours with Sacha in UK Record Mirror 11 March 1972 p 3 Sleeve credits Olivia Newton John Back to Basics The Essential Collection 1971 1992 CD Mercury Records 1992 Heather Phares Olivia Newton John Definitive Collection AllMusic retrieved 13 June 2014 Ingham p 126 Al Campbell Ronnie Aldridge Love Story The Way We Were AllMusic retrieved 16 September 2012 Billboard Review Panel Album Reviews Billboard 5 June 1971 p 37 Romanowski amp George Warren p 1046 Bruce Eder The Ventures New Testament AllMusic retrieved 16 December 2020 Eric Aiese Mullins Moves Forward Artist Releases 1st New Columbia Album Billboard 28 October 2000 p 19 retrieved 14 December 2020 Stephen Thomas Erlewine Original Soundtrack Big Daddy AllMusic retrieved 16 October 2012 Artist Shawn Mullins Official Charts Company retrieved 16 December 2020 David C Coleman By Grace Alone A Conversation with Progressive Rock s Neal Morse Jesus Wired 1 September 2020 retrieved 14 December 2020 Nick DeRiso New Tribute Project from Morse Portnoy George to Include King Crimson Steely Dan the Police Elvis Costello Something Else 3 May 2012 retrieved 14 December 2020 Prato Greg Neal Morse Mike Portnoy Randy George Cover to Cover AllMusic Retrieved 14 December 2020 Thom Jurek Spock s Beard Beware of Darkness AllMusic retrieved 17 December 2020 Bailey Pennick LIVE Dhani Harrison and Friends Come Together to Celebrate George Harrison for Jameson s George Fest 9 28 14 Flood Magazine 30 September 2014 retrieved 16 May 2020 Megan Volpert Various Artists George Fest PopMatters 29 March 2016 retrieved 16 May 2020 Whitlock p 80 George Harrison What Is Life austriancharts at retrieved 14 April 2014 George Harrison What Is Life ultratop be retrieved 14 April 2014 RPM 100 Singles 17 April 1971 Library and Archives Canada retrieved 14 April 2014 George Harrison What Is Life dutchcharts nl retrieved 14 April 2014 Hits of the World Billboard 22 May 1971 p 49 retrieved 13 December 2020 George Harrison Chart Action Japan Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine homepage1 nifty com retrieved 11 April 2014 Search What Is Life Flavour of New Zealand Steve Kohler 2007 retrieved 14 April 2014 George Harrison What Is Life norwegiancharts com retrieved 14 April 2014 SA Charts 1969 1989 Songs W Z South African Rock Lists 2000 retrieved 14 April 2014 George Harrison gt Charts amp Awards gt Billboard Singles AllMusic archived version retrieved 12 December 2020 Whitburn Joel 1993 Top Adult Contemporary 1961 1993 Record Research p 106 Cash Box Top 100 4 10 71 Frank Mitchell ed The Singles Chart Record World 27 March 1971 p 31 Single George Harrison What Is Life charts de retrieved 14 April 2014 RPM 100 Top Singles of 71 Library and Archives Canada retrieved 3 June 2014 Dutch charts jaaroverzichten 1971 in Dutch dutchcharts nl retrieved 3 June 2014 Cash Box YE Pop Singles 1971 Search by Artist gt Olivia Newton John irishcharts ie retrieved 14 June 2014 Whitburn Joel 1993 Top Adult Contemporary 1961 1993 Record Research p 175 Sources editDale C Allison Jr The Love There That s Sleeping The Art and Spirituality of George Harrison Continuum New York NY 2006 ISBN 978 0 8264 1917 0 Keith Badman The Beatles Diary Volume 2 After the Break Up 1970 2001 Omnibus Press London 2001 ISBN 0 7119 8307 0 Harry Castleman amp Walter J Podrazik All Together Now The First Complete Beatles Discography 1961 1975 Ballantine Books New York NY 1976 ISBN 0 345 25680 8 Alan Clayson George Harrison Sanctuary London 2003 ISBN 1 86074 489 3 The Editors of Rolling Stone Harrison Rolling Stone Press Simon amp Schuster New York NY 2002 ISBN 0 7432 3581 9 Peter Doggett George Harrison The Apple Years 1968 1975 Record Collector April 2001 pp 34 40 Michael Frontani The Solo Years in Kenneth Womack ed The Cambridge Companion to the Beatles Cambridge University Press Cambridge UK 2009 ISBN 978 1 139 82806 2 pp 153 82 George Harrison Living in the Material World DVD Village Roadshow 2011 directed by Martin Scorsese produced by Olivia Harrison Nigel Sinclair amp Martin Scorsese Joshua M Greene Here Comes the Sun The Spiritual and Musical Journey of George Harrison John Wiley amp Sons Hoboken NJ 2006 ISBN 978 0 470 12780 3 George Harrison I Me Mine Chronicle Books San Francisco CA 2002 ISBN 0 8118 3793 9 Olivia Harrison George Harrison Living in the Material World Abrams New York NY 2011 ISBN 978 1 4197 0220 4 Elliot J Huntley Mystical One George Harrison After the Break up of the Beatles Guernica Editions Toronto ON 2006 ISBN 1 55071 197 0 Chris Ingham The Rough Guide to the Beatles Rough Guides Penguin London 2006 2nd edn ISBN 978 1 84836 525 4 Ian Inglis The Words and Music of George Harrison Praeger Santa Barbara CA 2010 ISBN 978 0 313 37532 3 Bobby Keys with Bill Ditenhafer Every Night s a Saturday Night The Rock n Roll Life of Legendary Sax Man Bobby Keys Counterpoint Berkeley CA 2012 ISBN 978 1 58243 783 5 Simon Leng While My Guitar Gently Weeps The Music of George Harrison Hal Leonard Milwaukee WI 2006 ISBN 1 4234 0609 5 Thomas MacFarlane The Music of George Harrison Routledge Abingdon UK 2019 ISBN 978 1 138 59910 9 Chip Madinger amp Mark Easter Eight Arms to Hold You The Solo Beatles Compendium 44 1 Productions Chesterfield MO 2000 ISBN 0 615 11724 4 Tom Moon 1 000 Recordings to Hear Before You Die Workman Publishing New York NY 2008 ISBN 978 0 7611 5385 6 Robert Rodriguez Fab Four FAQ 2 0 The Beatles Solo Years 1970 1980 Backbeat Books Milwaukee WI 2010 ISBN 978 1 4165 9093 4 Patricia Romanowski amp Holly George Warren eds The New Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock amp Roll Fireside Rolling Stone Press New York NY 1995 ISBN 0 684 81044 1 Nicholas Schaffner The Beatles Forever McGraw Hill New York NY 1978 ISBN 0 07 055087 5 Bruce Spizer The Beatles Solo on Apple Records 498 Productions New Orleans LA 2005 ISBN 0 9662649 5 9 Gary Tillery Working Class Mystic A Spiritual Biography of George Harrison Quest Books Wheaton IL 2011 ISBN 978 0 8356 0900 5 Bobby Whitlock with Marc Roberty Bobby Whitlock A Rock n Roll Autobiography McFarland Jefferson NC 2010 ISBN 978 0 7864 6190 5 Bob Woffinden The Beatles Apart Proteus London 1981 ISBN 0 906071 89 5 Kenneth Womack The Beatles Encyclopedia Everything Fab Four ABC CLIO Santa Barbara CA 2014 ISBN 978 0 313 39171 2 External links editLyrics of this song George Harrison What Is Life on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title What Is Life amp oldid 1217111841, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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