Following George’s tour of North America in late 1974,he
returned home to Friar Park in January 1975, telling Derek Taylor "When I
got off the plane and back home, I went into the garden and I was so
relieved. That was the nearest I got to a nervous breakdown. I couldn't
even go into the house."
Three months later he was back in Los Angeles to record a new album;
it was to be his last under his Apple Records contract with EMI. He was
also in LA to attend to business for his record label, Dark Horse, and
the company’s recent signings – Stairsteps, Henry McCullough, and
Attitudes.
Splinter, another Dark Horse artist, were booked into A & M’s
studios on La Brea Avenue in Los Angeles but for various reasons could
not make the session. George decided to use the time to record the album
that became, Extra Texture (Read All About It) – to give it
its full title. Among the musicians that helped to make this one of
George’s most sustained emotional statements were many old friends
including Gary Wright, Jesse Ed Davis, Klaus Voormann, Tom Scott and Jim
Horn.
Another old friend who played on almost the entire album is drummer
Jim Keltner, who had formed Attitudes with the brilliant Canadian
keyboard player David Foster. Foster himself plays piano, organ,
synthesiser on Extra Texture and contributed some string
arrangements for ‘This Guitar (Can’t Keep from Crying), ‘The Answer's at
the End’ and ‘Can't Stop Thinking About You’. Attitudes’ Paul
Stallworth shared the bass playing duties with Voormann on the LA
sessions, along with George himself.
George laid down the basic tracks for the new songs he had written,
starting on 21 April and finishing on 7 May 1975, beginning with ‘Tired
of Midnight Blue’ and ‘The Answer's at the End’. On 31 May the overdubs
began and this included George revisiting a song called ‘You’ that he
had begun recording in London during early February 1971 with Ronnie
Spector for a proposed Apple solo album that was being produced by her
husband, Phil Spector. In Los Angeles, Jim Horn came in to play the sax
solo and other instrumental parts were added. There’s also a reprise of
the song appropriately entitled, ‘A Bit More of You’ on the album.
Trumpeter, Chuck Findley, who played in George’s touring band, joined
saxophonist Tom Scott for horn overdubs on Harrison's gorgeous tribute
to Smokey Robinson, ‘Ooh Baby (You Know That I Love You)’, and ‘His Name
Is Legs (Ladies and Gentlemen)’. The Legs in the title is ‘Legs’ Larry
Smith, the drummer with the 1960s group, The Bonzo Dog Band, who were so
influential to among others, the Monty Python comedy team. The basic
track had been recorded at Friar Park the previous year during the
sessions for George’s Dark Horse album.
George’s Smokey inspired song is not a track that stands apart from the majority of the rest of the album, as you might expect. Extra Texture
is George’s ‘soul record’, one where he both bares his soul and takes a
more soulful approach to the songs than he had done on much of his solo
material to this point in his career. And while it is melancholy in
places, it is also a very beautiful record, one that stands the real
test of time.
There is arguably no song more beautiful on the record than ‘The
Answer's at the End’ that was inspired by George’s home at Friar Park.
The Victorian Gothic mansion in Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire was built
in the 1890s by Frank Crisp, a City of London solicitor and enthusiast
for microscopes, on what was the site of a 13th Century friary. Both the
house’s interior design and the gardens reflected Crisp’s love of
whimsy and eccentricity and it was above an entrance-way in a garden
wall that George found the inscription, "Scan not a friend with a
microscopic glass , You know his faults, now let his foibles pass. Life
is one long enigma, my friend. So read on, read on, the answer's at the
end.”
"Scan not a friend with a microscopic glass
You know his faults, now let his foibles pass
Life is one long mystery, my friend
So read on, read on
The answer's at the end.
Don't be so hard on the ones that you love.
It's the one's that we love we think so little of.
Don't be so hard on the ones that you need.
It's the ones that we need, we think so little of.
The speech of flowers excels the flowers of speech
But what's often in your heart is the hardest thing to reach
Life is one long mystery, my friend
So live on, live on
The answer's at the end."
It’s one thing finding such an inspirational text (one that George
apparently was mindful of during some of the difficult times as the
Beatles were breaking up) but it’s quite another to be able to put it to
such a lovely melody. It’s a track that benefits greatly from a lovely
David Foster string arrangement, but most of all from his brilliant
piano playing. George’s greatest, most overlooked recording?
‘This Guitar (Can’t Keep from Crying)’ was written by George in
response to some of the criticism he received during his 1974 North
American tour and came out as a single in December 1975 but surprisingly
for such a good song, failed to chart. Almost inevitably it is compared
with ‘While my Guitar Gently Weeps’ and it is unsurprising that it does
not come up to the standard of George’s 1968 anthem. But, imagine for a
minute that there had not been the former song? ‘This Guitar’ would be
viewed entirely differently; for it is an excellent song. It too
benefits from Foster’s piano playing and string arranging skills.
George’s slide guitar is to the fore, which in itself is something of a
rarity for Extra Texture.
Inner-sleeve picture of George,1974 by Henry Grossman |
George re-recorded ‘This Guitar (Can’t Keep from Crying)’ in1992 as a
demo for Dave Stewart, who plays electric guitar on it. Ten years later
Ringo overdubbed drums and Dhani Harrison added guitar and Kara
DioGuardi vocals for Stewart’s Platinum Weird project. It is included as a bonus track on the re-mastered album.
‘Can’t Stop Thinking About You’ is another soul song and while some
have dismissed it as ‘pop’ they are missing the point. There’s nothing
wrong with pop, and there’s nothing at all wrong with this song, which
despite its soul-like feel is still quintessential George with the
harmony chorus and backing vocals that have a hint of All Things Must Pass about it. Perhaps most surprising is this song never made it as a single release.
The other obvious single is ‘You’ and it was released two weeks ahead
of the album’s release. Despite it being picked as BBC Radio 1’s
‘Record of the week’ in the UK it could not peak higher than No.38. In
America it just made the Billboard top 20, where it stayed for 2 weeks.
‘You’ features Carl Radle and Jim Gordon and was recorded in February
1971 shortly before they began working on the second, aborted, Derek and
the Dominos album.
When Extra Texture (Read All About It) came out in America
on 22 September 1975, and two weeks later in the UK, it failed to
receive universal acclaim – in fact just the opposite. People, and
critics are people too, harboured high expectations of any George
Harrison release and as is all too often the case they base their
judgements on what has gone before, not what they are listening to at
the moment of writing their review.
Reviewers also have another issue to contend with, a lack of
familiarity. Editors need reviews churned out quickly and without the
level of listening that so much music needs. This album is no exception;
it is a grower, one that has stood the test of time far better than
many by George’s contemporaries from the middle years of that strange
decade – the 1970s. It still made #8 on the Billboard album chart and
was #16 in Britain.
If you’ve overlooked this album then you will not be disappointed when you give it a listen… and remember, once is never enough.
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