Cheeky references to their contemporaries occasionally popped up in the work of The Beatles. The cover of Sgt. Pepperâs Lonely Hearts Club Band includes a doll wearing a fan-made sweater for The Rolling Stones, while âThe Ballad of John and Yokoâ makes a direct reference to the bandâs personal assistant, Peter Brown.
Direct shoutouts were rare, however, and more often the band opted to include little references that only the people around them would recognize. Of course, once these references were made in Beatles songs they would become widely known. How else would we have learned that Eric Clapton had a major sweet tooth if not for âSavoy Truffleâ?
ââSavoy Truffleâ on the White Album was written for Eric,â Harrison confirmed in 1977. âHeâs got this real sweet tooth and heâd just had his mouth worked on. His dentist said he was through with candy. So as a tribute I wrote, âYouâll have to have them all pulled out after the Savoy Truffleâ. The truffle was some kind of sweet, just like all the rest â cream tangerine, ginger sling â just candy, to tease Eric.â
One of the more playful moments on The White Album, along with songs like âRocky Raccoonâ and âOb-La-Di, Ob-La-Daâ, âSavoy Truffleâ saw Harrison experimenting with brassy R&B and skittering funk rhythms. He even devised a particularly metallic sound for the brass featured on the track, something that helped Harrison carve out independence from producer George Martin.
ââSavoy Truffleâ is a funny one written whilst hanging out with Eric Clapton in the sixties,â Harrison reiterated in 1979. âHe always had a toothache but he ate a lot of chocolates ⊠once he saw a box he had to eat them all. He was over at my house, and I had a box of Good News chocolates on the table and wrote the song from the names inside the lid. I got stuck with the two bridges for a while and Derek Taylor wrote some of the words in the middle â âYou know that what you eat you are.ââ
The White Album proved to be a rich time for Harrison to show what he could do as a songwriter. On the bandâs previous projects, including Sgt. Pepperâs, Magical Mystery Tour, and the initial recordings of the Yellow Submarine soundtrack, Harrison had sought a greater separation from his pop stardom. He travelled to India, took up serious sitar training with Ravi Shankar, and largely shunned the guitar as his main songwriting instrument, using keyboards to compose songs like âBlue Jay Wayâ and âItâs All Too Muchâ.
By the time The Beatles had reconvened for The White Album, Harrison had come back to the guitar and, for the first time since Revolver, was able to contribute more ideas to the rapidly-growing list of songs that were being considered for the album. Thatâs how tracks like âPiggieâ and âLong, Long, Longâ came to be included, and Harrison would have had another song on the album had the band not rejected âNot Guiltyâ after trying over 100 takes of the song.
Harrison and Clapton were close during this time, with Harrison often hanging out with Clapton and even occasionally playing hooky from board meetings to be with his friend. One of those excursions would later inspire âHere Comes the Sunâ, with Harrison writing the tune in Claptonâs garden during a particularly sunny spring day when he should have been in a meeting.
Clapton had a direct influence on the White Album sessions as well. The Beatles had been struggling through one of Harrisonâs newest songs, and Harrison himself didnât believe that his bandmates were putting forth their best effort. The new track infused Harrisonâs spiritual side with his recent return to the guitar as his primary instrument, but without the enthusiasm of his bandmates, âWhile My Guitar Gently Weepsâ was going nowhere fast.
âPaul and John were so used to just cranking out their own tunes that it was very difficult at times to get serious and record one of mine,â Harrison recalled in The Beatles Anthology book. âIt wasnât happening ⊠so I went home that night thinking âWell, thatâs a shame, because I knew the song was pretty good.â The solution came from Claptonâs appearance, which caused the rest of the band to focus and, in Harrisonâs words, âtry a little harderâ.
While The Beatles were quickly deteriorating in the late-â60s, Harrison and Clapton continued to have a strong bond. Clapton was one of the main contributors to Harrisonâs solo debut All Things Must Pass and was one of the first people called when Harrison was organizing The Concert for Bangladesh. Not even Claptonâs love for Harrisonâs wife, Pattie Boyd, could come between them, and when Harrison embarked on his final series of live performances throughout Japan in late 1991, Clapton was right by his side as a co-headliner.
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