1968-1973 The formation of The Beatles'
EMI-affiliated
Apple Records in 1968 allowed Harrison to work closely with up-and-coming artists he signed to the label, including
Jackie Lomax,
Billy Preston and Ali Akbar Khan. Following
the Beatles' break-up in 1970, Harrison continued to produce music as well as maintain his solo career, adding establish artists such as
Ravi Shankar and
Ronnie Spector to Apple's roster. By 1973, Apple Records was winding down as
John Lennon and
Ringo Starr severed their ties with Beatles manager
Allen Klein. Harrison sought a new avenue for his extracurricular projects. He was producing an "East-meets-West" album by Shankar and the debut by a duo from
South Shields,
Splinter. Harrison and Starr considered buying Apple in 1973 and running it themselves, In late 1973, Harrison began recording his fifth studio album,
Dark Horse. 1974-2001 In early 1974, he began a dialogue with
David Geffen, head of
Asylum Records in Los Angeles, about setting up his own independent label. Harrison also consulted
Leon Russell, co-founder of
Shelter Records. Harrison eventually partnered with
A&M Records, the label owned and operated by
Herb Alpert and
Jerry Moss, for worldwide distribution. Later that year, George Harrison launched Dark Horse Records, based in Los Angeles. The first singles Dark Horse Records released were Ravi Shankar’s “
I Am Missing You” which was produced and arranged by Harrison and Splinter’s “
Costafine Town,” which went top 10 in Australia and South Africa and made the UK top twenty. Splinter’s album
The Place I Love was produced by Harrison.
Attitudes,
Stairsteps and
Keni Burke were among the other artists who recorded for Dark Horse. While Harrison owned the label, as a solo artist, he wasn't able to be signed to Dark Horse Records until January 27, 1976. All of his subsequent recordings were released through the label, starting with that year's
Thirty Three & 1/3 and ending with
Live in Japan in 1992.
2002-2018 After a ten-year period of inactivity, the label returned in 2002 with the posthumous release of Harrison's final studio album,
Brainwashed, was produced by Harrison, his son Dhani Harrison and
Jeff Lynne. It featured musicians like drummers
Jim Keltner and
Ray Cooper, pianists
Jools Holland and John Lord, keyboardists Mike Moran and Marc Mann, harpist Jane Lister, guitarist Joe Brown and bassist/tuba player
Herbie Flowers. Harrison's back catalog on the label was remastered and reissued as the
Dark Horse Years 1976–1992 box set in 2004. Dark Horse Records issued the Shankar–Harrison compilation box set
Collaborations in 2010, distributed by Rhino Entertainment.
2019-present Dark Horse Records was revived in 2020 under the guidance of Dhani Harrison and David Zonshine. They subsequently signed a distribution deal with
BMG Rights Management. Its inaugural releases included an Attitudes compilation, reissues of Shankar’s
In Concert 1972, Shankar’s 1997
Chants of India and the single “For Real–For Tom,” honoring the late Tom Petty, featuring Harrison,
Jakob Dylan, Amos Lee, Lukas Nelson, Micah Nelson and Willie Nelson. Dark Horse re-released out of print albums from the label’s 1974-1977 back catalog, its Indian label imprint, HariSongs, and Leon Russell's catalog. Since its relaunch, Dark Horse Records has released work from Yusuf / Cat Stevens, Billy Idol, Steve Perry, Benmont Tench (Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers), Huun-Huur-Tu, Nina Simone, Jon Lord (
Deep Purple/
Whitesnake) Robin Nolan, the 101ers and
Traveling Wilburys. In March 2021, the record label released
Assembly, a new remastered collection of Joe Strummer's solo work. Part of the publishing deal for Strummer’s catalog included the three
Mescaleros albums, his scores, hundreds of his songs, and the final Clash album,
Cut The Crap. In February 2023, Harrison’s twelve solo albums and publishing became part of Dark Horse Records, in partnership with BMG. Harrison’s solo studio albums were released in
Dolby Atmos on Apple Music. Dark Horse released the Steve Perry &
Willie Nelson duet of the
Journey song "
Faithfully," with profits going to
Farm Aid in May 2025. The label’s release of Billy’s Idol’s 2025 album,
Dream Into It made the Top 10 on the
Billboard Album Sales Chart, a first for Idol. It was one of the highest charting non-George Harrison releases in Dark Horse Records’ history, reaching #2 on the Germany Top 100. Also that year,
Finn Wolfhard directed the music video of Harrison’s 1973 hit "
Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth).” In 2025, Dark Horse Records released two of Billy Preston’s remastered albums that George Harrison produced,
That’s The Way God Planned It and co-produced
Encouraging Words. Sometimes referred to as the fifth Beatle, Preston died in 2006. The George Harrison-produced
The Radha Krsna Temple album was reissued in 2025. Originally released in 1971, it had been out of print since 2010. It features the singles “
Hare Krishna Mantra,” and “Govinda.”
Traveling Wilburys, which consisted of George Harrison, Bob Dylan
, Roy Orbison, Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, and Jim Keltner won the 32nd Grammy Award in the Best Rock Performance By a Duo or Group With Vocal Award for its album
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 in 1990. The band followed the record up with
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3. Both records were released digitally in 2026. ==Distribution==