Dhani Harrison
spoke with NPR's Eric Westervelt about how his relationship with his
father grew into a relationship with music — and why it's sometimes hard
when your loved one belongs to everyone.
Eric Westervelt: Back in 2002, you mounted a different tribute in London — the Concert for George, which featured Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty and many others. The stars who played George Fest feel more like your peers.
Eric Westervelt: Back in 2002, you mounted a different tribute in London — the Concert for George, which featured Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty and many others. The stars who played George Fest feel more like your peers.
Dhani
Harrison: We never really got to do a tribute concert in America, per
se, and we wanted to do a small club show — something where we could
really get inside the songs and not have to be so rigid with sticking to
the plan of how the original recordings were done. It's sort of the
anti-Concert for George: a lot of deep tracks and a lot of young artists
who've got really great takes on the songs themselves.
Do
the different interpretations of your dad's music ever help you find
any new insights into his work? Is there ever a moment when a song sort
of reveals itself as something different than what you'd considered?
You know, I specifically liked Black Rebel Motorcycle Club's
version of "The Art of Dying." I didn't realize that was like grunge
until I saw BRMC play it; I was like, "Oh. This is a shoegazey grunge
song!" They unlocked that song for me. Or, a thing that was really great
was having female vocalists.
Yeah, I really liked
Norah Jones' take on "Something." You reserved a few songs for yourself,
including "Savoy Truffle." What do you like about that song?
Apparently, it was all about a box of chocolates! Good News was the [brand], so: "Coffee, dessert, yes, you know it's good news."
It's basically just my dad rattling off the names in there. Someone
actually made us savoy truffles in a really nice box, which I've got
sitting on my desk in my office.
I imagine, as the
child of a famous musician who is also his own musician, your
relationship to your dad's music could be complicated — but you seem to
have embraced his musical legacy. What has that journey to his music
been like for you?
I guess I got lucky, because I got George Harrison! You know, it's
good music, and I'm honored to be a part of his legacy. And also, we
made so much music together, and spent so much time in the studio at my
house in Friar Park, in Henley where I grew up. The studio was directly
below my bedroom, so my floor has rattled my whole life. I would always
go downstairs and just see what was going on. I remember the Traveling
Wilburys there. So, I was very comfortable in the studio, and I kind of
grew up learning how to produce and play. For me, it was facilitated
very much by my dad, and we were best friends, so spending a lot of time
in the studio with him was natural.
We were finishing a record
together [when he died]. After he passed away, I got to work with Jeff
Lynne, and I ended up finishing it with Jeff and kind of taking the role
of my dad on, because there was no artist there to answer questions.
That kind of left me in Los Angeles, and left me in a studio thinking,
"Well, that was the most fun thing that I could be doing." So I kind of
just carried on from there, making my own records and composing for film
and TV. It just seemed like a logical step for me.
How
great to grow up in an ecosystem where music is naturally part of your
everyday life. You come down for tea, and maybe Jeff Lynne or Eric
Clapton is in the kitchen.
And also, it offers you a
different perspective on life to have these people around the house. It
made going to school easier, because you wouldn't take yourself so
seriously. You'd come home and Bob Dylan would be there or something.
The
media image of your dad is of the spiritual, quiet Beatle who loved
gardening, but we know it's more nuanced and complicated than that. He
also loved absurdity, and he helped fund the Monty Python movie Life of Brian. How do you keep his spirit alive for yourself while having to, in effect, share his legacy with the rest of the world?
That
is an interesting thing, actually. There's times when you feel like
this person's getting taken away from you. Maybe you see them on an
Apple billboard or something and you think, "Oh. He belongs to
everyone." You know, you've just got to be quiet and go in the garden
and meditate, and then you remember lots of other stuff that's personal
and deeper.
But, yeah, when we released the Martin Scorsese documentary,
there was a lot of press around that, and a lot of clips that people
had edited together in their own way to make a little George Harrison
compilation. That kind of weighs on your heart a little bit, and makes
you feel disconnected. You just feel like everyone else. And it's a hard
thing to understand unless you've had a parent who's passed away and
who's been in the public eye. Sometimes you don't want to share them.
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