Music career Aside from the Beatles, Lennon was influenced by
David Bowie,
Keith Jarrett,
Steely Dan, and
AC/DC. Lennon made his musical debut at age 11 on his father's album
Walls and Bridges playing drums on "
Ya-Ya", later saying, "Dad, had I known you were going to put it on the album, I would've played much better!" In the sleeve notes in the album the song is credited to Julian Lennon "starring on drums" with "dad on piano". Lennon enjoyed immediate success with his debut album,
Valotte, released in 1984. Produced by
Phil Ramone, it spawned two top 10 hits, (the title track and "
Too Late for Goodbyes") and earned Lennon a nomination for the
Grammy Award for Best New Artist in 1986. Music videos for the two hits were made by film director
Sam Peckinpah and producer
Martin Lewis. After the album's release, Paul McCartney sent Lennon a telegram wishing him good luck. Lennon's second album, 1986's
The Secret Value of Daydreaming, was panned by critics but reached number 32 on the
Billboard 200 chart and produced the single "
Stick Around", which was Lennon's first number-one single on the US
Album Rock Tracks chart. He recorded the song "Because", previously recorded by
the Dave Clark Five, in the UK for Clark's 1986 musical
Time. On 1 April 1987, Julian Lennon appeared as the Baker in
Mike Batt's musical
The Hunting of the Snark (based on
Lewis Carroll's poem). The
all-star lineup included
Roger Daltrey,
Justin Hayward and
Billy Connolly, with
John Hurt as the narrator. The performance, a musical benefit at London's
Royal Albert Hall in aid of the deaf, was attended by the
Duchess of York. In October the same year he performed with
Chuck Berry. Although Lennon never achieved the same level of success in the US as he had enjoyed with
Valotte, his 1989 single "
Now You're in Heaven" peaked at number five in Australia and gave him his second number one hit on the Album Rock Tracks chart in the US. In 1991,
George Harrison sent some ideas for Lennon's album
Help Yourself, although he did not play or receive any credits. The single "
Saltwater" reached number six in the UK and topped the Australian singles charts for four weeks. During this time, Lennon contributed a cover of
the Rolling Stones' "
Ruby Tuesday" to the soundtrack of the television series
The Wonder Years. Lennon left the music business for several years in the 1990s to focus on philanthropy after his encounter with elders from the
Mirning people of Australia. After he began his performing career, there was occasionally unfounded media speculation that Lennon would undertake performances with McCartney, Harrison and
Ringo Starr. In the
Beatles Anthology series in 1995, the three surviving Beatles confirmed there was never an idea of having Julian sit in for his father as part of a Beatles reunion, with McCartney saying, "Why would we want to subject him to all of this?" In May 1998, Lennon released the album
Photograph Smile on his own record label. Music critic
Stephen Thomas Erlewine praised the album as "well-crafted and melodic", and concluded by saying that it was "the kind of music that would receive greater praise if it weren't made by the son of a Beatle". In 2002, he recorded a version of "
When I'm Sixty-Four", from the Beatles' ''
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'' album, for an
Allstate Insurance commercial. In 2009, Lennon created a new partnership with Meagher and Birch called theRevolution, LLC. Through this company, Lennon released a tribute song and EP, "Lucy", honouring the memory of Lucy Vodden (
née O'Donnell), the little girl who inspired the song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds", with 50 per cent of the proceeds going to fund
Lupus research. In October 2011, Lennon released the album
Everything Changes. In 2012 he worked with music film director
Dick Carruthers on the feature-length video documentary
Through the Picture Window, which followed Lennon's journey in the making of
Everything Changes and includes interviews with
Steven Tyler,
Bono,
Gregory Darling,
Mark Spiro and Paul Buchanan from
The Blue Nile.
Through the Picture Window was also released as an app in all formats with bespoke videos for all 14 tracks from the album. On September 9, 2022, Lennon's album
Jude was released on
BMG. It included the singles "Freedom" and "Every Little Moment".
Goldmine wrote about the release, "With his new album, the first in 11 years, Julian advances his body of work that has always simultaneously explored personal and global themes, but for the first time in his life, he's embracing his inner status as someone's son...[an] introspective masterwork from a diversely talented artist." Lennon said about his album title, "Calling it
Jude was very coming of age for me in that regard because it was very much facing up to who I am...The content came from over three decades of songwriting. The themes and issues mostly being the same, generally about the wars within and the wars without."
Film Lennon's first tour as a solo musician, in early 1985, was documented as part of the film
Stand by Me: A Portrait of Julian Lennon – a film profile started by
Sam Peckinpah, but completed by
Martin Lewis after Peckinpah's death. Lennon has appeared in several other films including
The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus (released 1996, originally filmed in 1968),
Cannes Man (1996),
Imagine: John Lennon (1988), ''
Chuck Berry:
Hail! Hail! Rock 'n' Roll (1987) and a cameo in Leaving Las Vegas (1995) as a bartender. Julian provided the voice for the title role in the animated film David Copperfield (1993). He was also the voice of the main character Toby the Teapot in the animated special The Real Story of I'm a Little Teapot'' (1990). Lennon is also the producer of the documentary,
Whaledreamers, about an
Indigenous Australian tribe and the peoples' special connection with whales. It also touches on many environmental issues. This film received several awards and was shown at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival. In 2018, Lennon was an executive producer of
Women of the White Buffalo, a documentary film released in 2022 that focused on several
Lakota women from
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in
South Dakota, and their work to preserve their way of life in the face of colonialism. In 2020, Lennon was an executive producer of
Kiss the Ground, an award-winning documentary film about regenerative agriculture, narrated by Woody Harrelson.
Photography After photographing his half-brother Sean's music tour in 2007, Lennon took up a serious interest in
photography. On 17 September 2010, Lennon opened an exhibition of 35 photographs called "Timeless: The Photography of Julian Lennon" with help from long-time friend and fellow photographer
Timothy White. Originally scheduled to run from 17 September to 10 October, the Morrison Hotel Gallery extended it a week to end 17 October. The photographs include shots of his brother Sean and U2 frontman
Bono. Lennon's "Horizon" series was featured at the Emmanuel Fremin Gallery, NYC, 12 March 2015, to 2 May 2015. Lennon's "Cycle" exhibit was featured at the Leica Gallery in Los Angeles, in the fall of 2016. Lennon uses the social media app
Instagram to share his photography. In 2021, Lennon became the first fine-arts photographer featured at the new gallery in Aston Martin Residences Miami. In 2023, Lennon showed a series of photographs in an exhibition titled
ATMOSPHERIA at William Turner Gallery in
Santa Monica, California. In 2024, Lennon released a book of his photographs entitled Life's Fragile Moments. It was published by the German publishing house,
teNeues.
Books Shortly after the death of his father, Lennon began collecting Beatles memorabilia. In 2010, he published a book describing his collection, entitled:
Beatles Memorabilia: The Julian Lennon Collection. In 2017, Lennon began a
New York Times Bestselling trilogy,
Touch the Earth,
Heal the Earth and
Love the Earth, which he completed in 2019. On 9 November 2021, Lennon published a graphic novel for middle-grade children,
The Morning Tribe, with co-author Bart Davis. == Philanthropy ==