Artist's albums
Son Of Schmilsson
1972 · album
Personal Best: The Harry Nilsson Anthology
1994 · compilation
Aerial Pandemonium Ballet
1971 · album
Nilsson Schmilsson
1971 · album
The Point!
1970 · album
Nilsson Sings Newman
1970 · album
Knnillssonn
1977 · album
That's the Way It Is
1976 · album
Sandman
1976 · album
Duit On Mon Dei
1975 · album
Losst and Founnd
2019 · album
Pussy Cats
1974 · album
Nilsson Sessions 1967-1968
2013 · album
Nilsson Sessions 1968-1971
2013 · album
Nilsson Sessions 1971-1974
2013 · album
The Essential Nilsson
2013 · compilation
A Little Touch of Schmilsson in the Night
1973 · album
Pandemonium Shadow Show (Mono Version)
1967 · album
Pandemonium Shadow Show
1967 · album
Aerial Ballet
1968 · album
Aerial Ballet (Mono Version)
1968 · album
Skidoo
1968 · album
Harry
1969 · album
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Biography
Although he synthesized disparate elements of both rock and pop traditions, singer/songwriter Harry Nilsson was at heart a maverick whose allegiance belonged to neither. He's best-known for his versions of other people's songs (Fred Neil's "Everybody's Talkin'," Badfinger's "Without You," an entire album of Randy Newman songs), but he was a skilled composer and is recognized as a pop craftsman of the first order. His initial series of albums in the late '60s made him a personal favorite of the Beatles, who found a natural affinity with his knack for catchy melodies, witty lyrics, and extraordinary vocal range. Nilsson lost some of his original audience, however, with subsequent detours into pre-rock styles of pop, and did little recording over the last 15 years of his life. Harry Nilsson had been struggling to make inroads into the music business for over five years before his critically acclaimed 1967 album, Pandemonium Shadow Show. He made demos, sang commercial jingles, and shopped songs, all the while keeping his job at a Los Angeles area bank. In the mid-'60s, he wrote a few songs with Phil Spector that were recorded by the Ronettes and the Modern Folk Quartet; occasionally, he released records of his own. The Monkees recorded his "Cuddly Toy," and the Yardbirds did "Ten Little Indians" on a single in their waning days. But Nilsson didn't quit his bank job until after the release of Pandemonium Shadow Show, which gave him creative rein in the studio for the first time, and showcased his three-and-a-half-octave voice to full advantage. The album caught the attention of the Beatles (helped, no doubt, by its ingenious medley of classic Beatle tunes, "You Can't Do That"). John Lennon and Paul McCartney named him as their favorite American singer at a press conference, an extraordinary accolade for an unknown. (Nilsson was sometimes even rumored to be joining the group.) Three Dog Night took his "One" into the Top Ten in 1969, and Nilsson's second LP, Aerial Ballet, continued the ambitious pop/rock direction of his debut, marrying his slightly eccentric, bouncy (if sometimes precious) tunes to Baroque orchestral production. When one of its songs, "Everybody's Talkin'," was used as the theme for the Midnight Cowboy film, Nilsson had his first Top Ten hit. The irony was that, although Nilsson was primarily identified as a singer/songwriter, the song was actually a cover of a composition by folk-rocker Fred Neil. But Nilsson would never be content to be pigeonholed into definite categories, as demonstrated by his two 1970 albums. One was devoted entirely to covers of songs by Randy Newman (then just emerging as a performer); another was his soundtrack to an animated children's special, The Point (including the hit "Me and My Arrow"). And it was another cover (of a Badfinger album track) that gave him his biggest single, the number one smash "Without You." Yet Nilsson didn't cash in on his stardom in a conventional manner; he never performed in concert (there were occasional television appearances), preferring to craft his artistry in the studio. "Without You" appeared on 1971's Nilsson Schmilsson, which included a couple of other hits, the faux-tropical "Coconut" and the surprisingly gritty "Jump Into the Fire," which rates as his hardest-rocking cut. During the first half of the '70s, he continued to broaden his range from the well-crafted, peppy, sensitive tunes that had dotted his early releases, cutting some tougher, more sour work. He lost some of his constituency, however, with 1973's A Little Touch of Schmilsson in the Night, a collection of pre-rock pop standards with an orchestra conducted by arranger Gordon Jenkins (most noted for his work with Frank Sinatra). His affection for the music wasn't entirely surprising, as there had always been a strong Tin Pan Alley flavor to much of his writing, but it wasn't exactly in step with the times. Much of Nilsson's notoriety stems from a period in the mid-'70s when he was a drinking buddy of John Lennon's in Los Angeles (where Lennon was living during a separation from Yoko Ono). The drunken pair were thrown out of L.A.'s Troubadour club in a well-publicized incident, following which Lennon offered to produce Nilsson's next album. The timing was not opportune; Nilsson lost his voice during the sessions, rupturing one of his vocal cords, keeping it a secret out of fear that Lennon would abandon the project. Released as Pussy Cats, it was his last album to make the Top 100. During the same period, he also embarked on a project with another L.A.-based ex-Beatle, Ringo Starr, acting and writing music for the little-seen Son of Dracula film. The upper register of Nilsson's voice, which was ultimately his greatest asset, had been permanently (though not irredeemably) damaged. After a few rather unsuccessful late-'70s album, Nilsson withdrew from the studio into family life and other business ventures, spending much of his energies campaigning for gun control after Lennon was shot in 1980. In failing health in the '90s, he was diagnosed with diabetes. He suffered a massive heart attack and died in early 1994, just after finishing the vocal tracks for a new album. A year after his death, MusicMasters released the tribute album For the Love of Harry: Everybody Sings Nilsson, which featured contributions from Ringo Starr, Brian Wilson, Stevie Nicks, and Aimee Mann. That same year, a career overview called Personal Best also hit the stores. BMG's U.K. division Camden launched a Nilsson reissue project in the early 2000s that offered two-fers of all of his albums through Knnillssonn. Director John Scheinfeld showed his Nilsson documentary Who Is Harry Nilsson (And Why Is Everybody Talkin' About Him)? in 2006 at the Mods & Rockers Film Festival in Los Angeles. Over the next few years, he made edits to the film and it finally received a limited theatrical and full home video release in 2010. In 2013, Sony Music released The RCA Albums Collection, a comprehensive box set produced by Andrew Sandoval and Rob Santos that featured all 14 of Nilsson's RCA albums, along with three discs of rarities. Also that year, Flash Harry made its CD debut in an expanded form. The Popeye soundtrack received a deluxe reissue in 2017. Nilsson's final recordings were polished by Mark Hudson for a 2019 release as the album Losst & Founnd. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi