Phil Harvey (manager)

Last updated

Phil Harvey
Phil Harvey (2021).png
Harvey at Today Show 's backstage in 2021
Born
Philip Christopher Harvey

(1976-08-29) 29 August 1976 (age 47)
Bristol, England
Alma mater University of Melbourne
Occupations
  • Manager
  • creative director
Years active
  • 1998–2002
  • 2006–present
SpouseYasmin Harvey
Awards Grammy Award (2004)
Musical career
OriginLondon, England
Labels
Member of Coldplay
Website coldplay.com
Signature
Phil Harvey signature.png

Philip Christopher Harvey (born 29 August 1976) is an English manager and creative director best known for his work with the rock band Coldplay. He used to set up and promote student nights at local nightclubs while studying at Trinity College, Oxford, dropping out of his course to manage the band and helping them finance Safety (1998). They signed a recording contract with Parlophone in 1999, finding global fame with the release of Parachutes (2000) and following records.

Contents

Harvey left Coldplay's line-up for four years due to the stress of handling alone an occupation that usually requires a team of people. He completed a psychology degree at the University of Melbourne during this interval, returned as a creative director and started to make cameo appearances in certain music videos. He won a Grammy Award for Record of the Year as part of Coldplay. Having sold over 100 million albums worldwide as of 2021, [lower-alpha 1] they are the most commercially successful group of the 21st century. [3]

Early life

Philip Christopher Harvey was born on 29 August 1976 in Bristol, England. [4] He studied at Sherborne School between 1990 and 1995, in the Lyon house. [5] While at the institution, Harvey met and became friends with Chris Martin. [6] He also played bass for The Rockin' Honkies, [7] a group that performed soul and R&B covers. [8] His position, however, was eventually changed to sound engineer. [7] Martin was invited to become their keyboard player around the same time. [7] After Harvey concluded secondary education, he went to Trinity College, Oxford, enrolling in Classical Studies. [9] Martin then formed Coldplay at University College London. [8]

Career

Management

While studying at Oxford, Harvey also worked at local nightclubs setting up and promoting student parties. [9] Despite considering those activities as basic, he mentioned that it helped him to vaguely understand how to hire a venue, book a musician or DJ and try to make money. [9] In 1998, Martin complained that one of the local promoters in Camden was spiteful towards Coldplay, to which Harvey suggested the band should organise a performance on their own at Dingwalls. [9] Around 400 people attended the concert and they sold the first 50 copies of Safety throughout the night. [10] The earnings allowed Harvey to pay back his father and a roommate, as they financed the extended play. [10] By this period, he already had dropped out of college to dedicate himself to management, [11] which encompassed calling A&R professionals, reading Music Week and scheduling more shows. [12]

Performances included a set for In the City, a festival of unsigned bands in Manchester. [13] Two days later, he was contacted by scout Debs Wild, who was responsible for connecting Coldplay to the music industry, as she was friends with BMG Publishing's Caroline Elleray and lawyer Gavin Maude. [12] In 1999, the band wrote "Brothers & Sisters" and recorded it under a short-term deal with Fierce Panda Records. [14] When the song was finally released, however, they had already signed with Parlophone. [15] Harvey was then overwhelmed by the success of Parachutes (2000), as the record topped the UK Albums Chart and led him to work for 16 hours a day with three phone lines: "It was only later that I discovered most international bands have huge teams and organisations supporting them not just one bloke in a shithole office". [10]

Despite Estelle Wilkinson being hired as his assistant to help, [16] he declared that the 2001 Brit Awards was his lowest point, since Coldplay had won British Group and British Album of the Year, but he was feeling exhausted. [17] Harvey announced his departure during the last recording session for A Rush of Blood to the Head (2002), a situation he described as dramatic due to his friendship with Martin and the fact he was moving to another continent. [18] His role was taken over by Wilkinson and Dave Holmes, who managed Coldplay in the United States. [17] By the end of the Twisted Logic Tour (2005–07), Holmes was holding the position alone. [19] He worked for the band until 2022 and sued them in the following year over a contractual dispute. [20] As a result, Harvey became the manager again, although with assistance from Mandi Frost and Arlene Moon. [20]

Creative direction

Well the band encourage me to say that I'm the Creative Director, which I fucking hate. It makes me sound like I run a ballet company or a marketing agency. I don't know... in the album liner notes they always list me as a band member, which is very sweet.

—Harvey, 2018 [11]

Following his years away from the United Kingdom, Harvey went back to London and started to hang out with Martin again. [19] He visited the studio occasionally to give his opinion on what the band were doing, [19] something which became a permanent role by 2006. [21] Two years later, Coldplay published an appeal to Wikipedia via their website to stress Harvey's participation in the line-up, concluding they were actually a quintet. [22] He was included as a member in the liner notes of all albums except Parachutes (2000) and X&Y (2005). [lower-alpha 2] As per Jonny Buckland, things are easier when Harvey is around because his presence gives a sense of security to his bandmates. [19]

He was encouraged to describe himself as their creative director, but showed disdain towards it: "I'm not particularly creative, but I guess I do try to give them some direction from time to time". [19] Moreover, Harvey affirmed that his role includes helping with videos, designing live performances, visiting the studio regularly, writing press releases and handling any other possible situations if necessary. [19] He has appeared as an easter egg in several music videos released by Coldplay, [24] and is known for his interactions with fans of the band on social media. [25] Some conversations led to albums and songs becoming more widely available on streaming services, including the track "Flags", from Everyday Life (2019). [25]

Personal life

Although Harvey's estimated wealth remains unknown, it was reported in January 2019 that he purchased a house in Brentwood, Los Angeles for $15.4 million, where he resides with his wife Yasmin. [26] During his years apart from Coldplay, he travelled around South America, [11] studied psychotherapy and counselling at Regent's College and graduated from the University of Melbourne with a psychology degree. [27] Harvey then volunteered at Upbeat, a Camden community project which supported musicians who had mental health issues by providing music lessons, workshops, equipment, rehearsal spaces and assistance with promotion, recording and performances. [28] He later became a ClientEarth trustee as well. [29] In 2004, Harvey won a Grammy Award for Record of the Year for his contributions to the song "Clocks". [30]

Discography

Notes

  1. The term "records" is for album and single sales combined. [1] Coldplay, however, sold 100 million copies in albums alone, while Parlophone have not disclosed the amount of records. [2]
  2. Harvey is credited for management on Parachutes (2000) and "wise words" on X&Y (2005). [23]

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Further reading