Crackerbox Palace

"Crackerbox Palace"

Netherlands picture sleeve
Single by George Harrison
from the album Thirty Three & 1/3
B-side "Learning How to Love You"
Released 24 January 1977
Format vinyl record 7"
Genre Rock, pop
Length 3:58
Label Dark Horse Records
Writer(s) George Harrison
Producer(s) George Harrison with Tom Scott
George Harrison singles chronology
"This Song"
(1976)
"Crackerbox Palace"
(1977)
"True Love"
(1977)
Thirty Three & 1/3 track listing

"Crackerbox Palace" is the ninth track on George Harrison's 1976 album, Thirty Three & 1/3. The song was released as the second single from the album and reached number 19 in the American pop charts.

History

The song was inspired by Harrison's meeting with a man named George Greif.[1] At the 1975 Midem Music Festival, Harrison met the man and remarked to him that he resembled the late comedian Lord Buckley (Harrison had admired Buckley for many years).[1] As chance would have it, Greif was Buckley's former manager, and he invited Harrison to come see Buckley's old Los Angeles home, which he called "Crackerbox Palace".[1] Thinking that the phrase had the makings of a song, Harrison jotted the words "Crackerbox Palace" down on a cigarette pack, and later wrote the song.[1] The song includes references to Greif ("I met a Mr. Greif") and to Lord Buckley ("know that the Lord is well and inside of you").[1]

A whimsical promotional film accompanied the single and was first shown on 20 November 1976, episode of Saturday Night Live. Directed by Monty Python's Eric Idle, the film featured Harrison, Neil Innes (as the carriage-pushing nanny/mother, a bathrobe-clad man with a duck on his head, and as a church authority),[2] future wife Olivia Arias, John Cleese and various other friends, in an array of wild costumes. The film was shot in and around the grounds of Harrison's home, Friar Park.

Personnel

Chart performance

Weekly singles charts

Chart (1977) Peak
position
Canadian RPM 100[3] 19
Canadian RPM 100 Adult Contemporary[4] 17
US Billboard Hot 100[5] 19
US Cash Box Top 100[6] 17

Year-end charts

Chart (1977) Position
Canadian RPM[7] 150

References

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