George Harrison wrote "Life Itself" and the other songs for his album
Somewhere in England between mid 1979 and the early part of 1980. Harrison's songwriting at this time contrasted in tone with the light-heartedness of his two previous albums,
Thirty Three & 1/3 (1976) and
George Harrison (1979). Both of these works had continued to present a softening in the artist's spiritual vision since 1974, the year in which he had publicly espoused a hard-line
Hindu religiosity in his North American concerts with
Ravi Shankar and in devotional songs such as "
It Is 'He' (Jai Sri Krishna)". While promoting his self-titled 1979 album, Harrison said that he was no longer interested in promoting so obvious a religious message as he had in his biggest hit, "
My Sweet Lord". Later in 1979, the content of his
HandMade Films comedy ''
Monty Python's Life of Brian'' attracted controversy from
Christian religious groups, a point to which Harrison later responded: "All it made fun of was people's stupidity in the story [of Jesus Christ] ... Actually it was upholding Him and knocking all the idiotic stuff that goes on around religion ..." Songs such as "Life Itself", "
Writing's on the Wall" and "
Sat Singing" nevertheless reflected his return to more spiritually focused songwriting, recalling the themes of Harrison's albums
All Things Must Pass (1970) and
Living in the Material World (1973). a song written by
Bob Dylan later in 1980, midway through his
born-again Christian period. According to Leng, the two compositions address a similar issue in their statements of faith, but whereas Dylan sings of "hanging in the balance of the reality of man", Harrison has "arrived at his destination" and is "making an offering" to his deity. theologian
Dale Allison describes "Life Itself" as Harrison's "love song to God". Allison also notes that, as a progression from Harrison's more Hindu-focused exhortations up to 1974, the song's strong "theological assertions" reflect his recognition of Christ, a perspective that Harrison increasingly explored in subsequent decades. The song is a slow ballad in the
key of C. and the essence of all "We taste, touch and feel". Harrison also lists some of the names by which the deity is popularly referred: Christ,
Vishnu,
Buddha,
Jehovah and "Our Lord". He finds further common ground in all faiths by saying that God, as "the One", is
Govindam,
Bismillah and "Creator of All". Regardless of the characterisations adopted by specific religions, the song depicts love as the essential quality in Harrison's vision of a deity. ==Recording==