"Ride Rajbun" | |
---|---|
Song byGeorge Harrison | |
from the album The Bunbury Tails | |
Released | 5 October 1992 |
Recorded | March 1988 FPSHOT, Oxfordshire; unknown studio, London |
Genre | Indian music,children's song |
Length | 4:59 |
Label | Polydor |
Songwriter(s) | George Harrison,David English |
Producer(s) | George Harrison |
"Ride Rajbun" is a song by English musicianGeorge Harrison. It was released in 1992 on the multi-artist charity albumThe Bunbury Tails, which was the soundtrack to the Britishanimated television series of the same name. Harrison co-wrote the song's lyrics withBunbury Tails creatorDavid English. The eponymous Rajbun was a character in the series based on English's friend and cricketerRajendrasinh Jadeja,[1][2][3] one of a team ofcricket-playing rabbits – in this case, from Bangalore in India. The composition is in the style of anursery rhyme orchildren's song, while the all-Indian instrumentation on the recording recalls some of Harrison's compositions forthe Beatles during 1966–68.
Harrison recorded "Ride Rajbun" in March 1988, between the release of his successful comeback album,Cloud Nine, and his formation ofthe Traveling Wilburys. Harrison's nine-year-old sonDhani and English accompanied him on the recording, as fellow vocalists, and Indian musician and composerRavi Shankar provided the openingsitar part. The song appeared in theBunbury Tails episode "Rajbun Story", and on the soundtrack album alongside contributions fromElton John,the Bee Gees andEric Clapton. Issued briefly in only the UK, "Ride Rajbun" remains one of Harrison's rarest releases.
Whilst playing cricket with George one day at Friar Park a couple of years ago, I told him about my Bunburys, as he had his Wilburys. I suggested that he might like to write a song for the cartoon series, which had been directed by Bob Godfrey, who was involved in [the Beatles' animated film]Yellow Submarine.[4]
Having previously been averse to mostteam sports,[5]George Harrison came to appreciatecricket while recording his 1987 comeback album,Cloud Nine, with fellow musiciansJeff Lynne andElton John, both fans of the game.[6] Author Ian Inglis suggests that Harrison's involvement inThe Bunbury Tails – a children'sanimated TV series about a group of heroic, sports-playing rabbits[4] – partly resulted from his friendship withEric Clapton,[7] another cricket fan and an occasional player for the Bunbury Cricket Club.[8] The latter was a charity-fundraising team founded in 1986 by writer and formerRSO Records executive David English,[9][10] whoseBunbury Tailscartoon books inspired the TV show.[11] According to English, he suggested to Harrison that he contribute a song to the series while they were playing cricket in the grounds ofFriar Park, Harrison's home inHenley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire. English says he likened the "Bunburys" to Harrison's idea for a semi-fictional band,the Traveling Wilburys,[4] which Harrison would soon form with Lynne,Bob Dylan,Tom Petty andRoy Orbison.[12]
Financed bythe Bee Gees,[13] production onThe Bunburys Tails began in early 1988, although it would not air on British television until 1992.[14] The series was directed byBob Godfrey, who had worked onthe Beatles' 1968 animated filmYellow Submarine.[4] Harrison's participation followed his work on various film soundtracks, particularly for releases by his companyHandMade Films, during the five years preceding his return withCloud Nine.[15][nb 1] The Bee Gees, Clapton and John were among the other artists who contributed to theBunbury Tails soundtrack.[19][20]
Harrison wrote the song "Ride Rajbun" about one of the show's characters, Rajbun,[21] a rabbit who originated from the Indian city ofBangalore.[12] In English's recollection, the night after he had made the request, Harrison called him at home in London and played the tune down the phone. The pair met the next day and co-wrote the song's lyrics.[22]
Musically, "Ride Rajbun" is in the style of what authorAlan Clayson calls "George's Indo-pop productions" for the Beatles, "Love You To" and "The Inner Light",[23] released in 1966 and 1968 respectively.[24] The lyrics take the form of a traditionalchildren's song, author Simon Leng writes, with its refrain sung inrounds, similar to "London's Burning".[25]
In a chorus that Inglis terms "nursery-rhyme-like", Harrison urges Rajbun to cycle away from his home in India and embrace his destiny:[26]
Ride Rajbun, ride Rajbun
Seek your fame and speak your fortune
Go on, Rajbun, ride your Ellie
Cross the mountains, through the valleys.
Inglis draws parallels between Rajbun's journey of discovery and that of nursery-rhyme orfolk-tale charactersPinocchio,Dick Whittington andDorothy Gale, in that he "has a 'quest' that awaits him".[26] On this journey, Harrison sings of Rajbun's adversaries,[19] one of which warns him: "You may think that you have heard the last of Katman / … I'll be watching you 'round ev'ry bend you'll take …"[27] Inglis writes that Rajbun must face his quest "without 'fears' or 'tears'" and cites the verse-one lines "Bunbury stands for freedom / Being young and having fun" as evidence of the song's "overwhelmingly positive" message.[26]
Harrison recorded "Ride Rajbun" in late March 1988,[12] at his Friar Park studio,FPSHOT, and at an unnamed studio in London.[28] The song was his first to feature onlyIndian instrumentation since "The Inner Light",[25][26] recorded in Bombay in January 1968.[29] Thesitar introduction to "Ride Rabjan" – oralap, in theIndian classical tradition[30] – was performed byRavi Shankar.[25] According to English, Harrison visited Shankar at the London hotel where the sitarist was staying and taped Shankar's intro in his hotel room.[31] Harrison otherwise played all the sitar parts on the song.[25] As with Harrison's appearance on "Friar Park", a track on Shankar's albumTana Mana (1987),[32] "Ride Rajbun" marked a rare collaboration between the two musicians in the years since theirjoint North American tour at the end of 1974.[33][nb 2]
Harrison sung the choruses with his sonDhani, and English (in the role of Katman) provided what Leng calls a "cameo vocal" part.[36] According to authorBill Harry,Ray Cooper played percussion on the track; in English's description, all the other contributors were "top Indian musicians",[31] none of whom are credited by name.[12] Besides sitar, the Indian instruments on the recording includetabla,shehnai andbansuri (flute).[28] From writing the song to the finished recording,[31] work on "Ride Rajbun" lasted for four days.[12] Harrison then left for Los Angeles,[12] a trip that resulted in the formation of the Traveling Wilburys.[37]
"Ride Rajbun" appeared in theBunbury Tails episode "Rajbun Story".[14] After the show's broadcast in 1992, on Britain'sChannel 4 network,[38]Polydor Records included the song on its soundtrack album from the series.[39] The UK-only album was released on 5 October that year,[39] on the same day that Harrison joined guitaristGary Moore on stage at London'sRoyal Albert Hall.[40] While Harrison made a number of concert appearances throughout 1992,[41] this period marked the end of his successful return to full-time music-making,[42] afterCloud Nine and two albums with the Traveling Wilburys.[43] Although he would continue to record privately as a solo artist, "Ride Rajbun" was the last new Harrison song to be commercially released until "Horse to the Water" in 2001.[44][nb 3] Proceeds from theBunbury Tails album went to the Bunbury Cricket Club for dispersal to charity.[48]
The "Rajbun Story" episode was included on thehome video of the series, although a narrator's voice renders Harrison's song almost inaudible.[49][50] With the album and video only available in the UK for a short time,[49] "Ride Rajbun" has become one of Harrison's rarest recordings.[13] The song has since appeared onbootleg compilations such asArtifacts III.[13]
Among Harrison's biographers, Elliot Huntley views "Ride Rajbun" as "another truly great 'lost' Harrison gem" alongside tracks released privately on the twoSongs by George Harrison discs, in 1988 and 1992.[51] Huntley laments the unavailability of "Ride Rajbun", since "the song is excellent, with a delightful melody, earnest vocals, and some great sitar work by Ravi Shankar".[49] Simon Leng similarly admires Shankar's "characteristically precious" alap; Leng writes that while the song "will never be regarded as a Harrison classic", it is significant within the artist's work as the first "purely Indian piece issued under his name since 'The Inner Light'".[25] Ian Inglis notes the precedents set in the 1960s by Beatle songs such as "Yellow Submarine" and "Cry Baby Cry", which had reflected the band's "fascination with the conventions of the children's nursery rhyme", and comments onThe Bunbury Tails' "eccentric combination" of rabbits and cricket.[26]