Authors: Ken Bielen Ben Urich
The Words and Music
of John Lennon
Ben Urish,
Ken Bielen
PRAEGER
The Words and Music
of John Lennon
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The Praeger Singer-Songwriter
Collection
The Words and Music
of John Lennon
Ben Urish and Ken Bielen
James E. Perone, Series Editor
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Urish, Ben.
The words and music of John Lennon / Ben Urish and Ken Bielen.
p. cm. — (The Praeger singer-songwriter collection, ISSN 1553–3484)
Includes bibliographical references (p. ), discography (p. ), and index.
ISBN-13: 978–0–275–99180–7 (alk. paper)
ISBN-10: 0–275–99180–6 (alk. paper)
1. Lennon, John, 1940–1980—Criticism and interpretation. I. Bielen,
Kenneth G. II. Title.
ML420.L38U75 2007
782.42166092—dc22 2007007815
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available.
Copyright © 2007 by Ben Urish and Ken Bielen
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be
reproduced, by any process or technique, without the
express written consent of the publisher.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2007007815
ISBN-13: 978–0–275–99180–7
ISBN-10: 0–275–99180–6
ISSN: 1553–3484
First published in 2007
Praeger Publishers, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881
An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
www.praeger.com
Printed in the United States of America
∞
TM
The paper used in this book complies with the
Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National
Information Standards Organization (Z39.48–1984).
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
In 1967 we were living in Springfield, Missouri, and I had just turned
nine. I was riding in the car with my mother and “Strawberry Fields
Forever” came on the radio. I was terrified. It didn’t sound like any-
thing I’d ever heard before with its odd pulsing tones and droning,
nearly monotonous vocals. It seemed nightmarish. To reassure me, my
mother started to explain what the lyrics meant and how the sounds
were supposed to approximate what was going on with the singer’s
emotions and in his mind.
It was one of the pivotal moments of my life.
I dedicate my work on this book to my mother, Sue. Mom: thanks for
helping to keep me from living with my eyes closed.
—Ben Urish
Contents
Series Foreword
xi
Acknowledgments
xiii
1. In My Life: The Early Years
1
Lyrical Influences
2
Musical Influences
2
Beatle Moonlighting
3
2. The Ballad of John and Yoko, Late 1968 to Early 1970
5
Two Virgins
5
The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus
6
Life with the Lions
7
“Give Peace a Chance”
8
Wedding Album
10
“Cold Turkey”
11
Live Peace in Toronto
13
“Instant Karma!”
15
3. Gimme Some Truth, 1970–1973
17
John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band
17
Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band
24
viii Contents
“Power to the People”
25
The Elastic Oz Band: “God Save Us”/“Do the Oz”
26
Imagine
26
“Happy Xmas (War Is Over)”
33
Fly
34
David Peel:
The Pope Smokes Dope
35
Sometime in New York City
37
Live Jam
42
The Elephant’s Memory Band:
Elephant’s Memory
43
Approximately Infinite Universe
44
4. What You Got, 1973–1975
45
Ringo Starr: “I’m the Greatest”
46
Feeling the Space
47
Mind Games
47
Collaborations I
54
Walls and Bridges
56
Collaborations II
63
Rock ’N’ Roll
65
5. Cleanup Time, 1975–1980
71
Shaved Fish
72
A Final Collaboration: Ringo Starr’s “Cookin’ (In the
Kitchen of Love)”
72
Present in Absentia
73
Double Fantasy: A Heart Play
74
6. I Don’t Wanna Face It, 1981–1988
83
Posthumous Releases, 1981–1984
83
Posthumous Releases, 1985–1988
94
7. Gone from This Place: The Continuing Legacy
105
Lennon
105
Playground Psychotics
106
Onobox
106
Lennon Legend
106
Liverpool Sound Collage
107
Covered #1
107
The Beatles Anthology
107
Contents ix
John Lennon Anthology
110
Wonsaponatime
115
Working Class Hero
(Covers Collection)
115
John Lennon’s Jukebox
115
Acoustic
116
John Lennon: The Musical
117
Working Class Hero: The Definitive Lennon
118
The U.S. vs. John Lennon
119
“Cambridge 1969”
119
Afterword
121
Discography
125
Notes
135
Annotated Bibliography
139
Index
179
Series Foreword
Although the term
singer-songwriters
might most frequently be associated
with a cadre of musicians of the early 1970s such as Paul Simon, James Tay-
lor, Carly Simon, Joni Mitchell, Cat Stevens, and Carole King, the Praeger
Singer-Songwriter Collection defines singer-songwriters more broadly, both
in terms of style and in terms of time period. The series includes volumes
on musicians who have been active from approximately the 1960s through
the present. Musicians who write and record in folk, rock, soul, hip-hop,
country, and various hybrids of these styles will be represented. Therefore,
some of the early 1970s introspective singer-songwriters named above will be
included, but not exclusively.
What do the individuals included in this series have in common? Although
some have collaborated as writers and some have not, all have written and
recorded commercially successful and/or historically important music
and
lyrics at some point in their careers.
The authors who contribute to the series also exhibit diversity. Some are
scholars who are trained primarily as musicians, while others have such areas of
specialization as American studies, history, sociology, popular culture studies,
literature, and rhetoric. The authors share a high level of scholarship, accessi-
bility in their writing, and a true insight into the work of the artists they study.
The authors are also focused on the output of their subjects and how it relates
to their subject’s biography and the society around them; however, biography
in and of itself is not a major focus of the books in this series.
Given the diversity of the musicians who are the subject of books in this
series, and given the diverse viewpoints of the authors, volumes in the series
will differ from book to book. All, however, will be organized chronologically
xii Series Foreword
according to the compositions and recorded performances of their subjects.
All of the books in the series should also serve as listeners’ guides to the music
of their subjects, making them companions to the artists’ recorded output.
James E. Perone
Series Editor
Acknowledgments
Jointly we would like to thank series editor James Perone for his support
for our project in particular and for the series overall. And we are grateful
to Acquisitions Editor Daniel Harmon for his insights, patience, and under-
standing.
Our special thanks go to Jim Cummer, formerly of Madhatter Music (mad-
hattermusic.com), for his help in getting information regarding rare Lennon
recordings clarifying Beatle rumors. And we are indebted to William L. Schurk
and the Music Library and Sound Recording Archives of Bowling Green
State University, Bowling Green, Ohio, for access to materials as well.
Ken thanks Ben Urish for dragging me into this project; Judy Bielen Smith
for sharing Beatlemania with me; Neocles and Vassiliki Leontis for friendship
and encouragement; Stan and Fran Bielen for support; Joyce Bielen McNally
for concern and the vinyl; and Mary, Kelly, Alex, and Dylan Bielen for help-
ing me to be who I am.
Ben would like to thank Shari Barbour for providing safe haven literally
and spiritually, and to my sister Georgia and niece Savannah (get it?) for
understanding why it matters. Of course, immense gratitude and respect go
to my coauthor Ken Bielen. Quite simply this book would not exist without
him.
John Lennon showed artistic talent and leaning at an early age. The double
punch of British skiffle music and American rock and roll in the mid-1950s
turned his creative impulses to performing music. The Quarry Men, a group
named after Lennon’s school and formed and led by him at age 16, devel-
oped over the next three years into The Beatles, the most significant of all
rock music combos. Key among this development was Lennon’s meeting and
forming a musical partnership with Paul McCartney. At McCartney’s sug-
gestion and with his example, the two young men began composing songs
jointly and separately.
Lennon enrolled in Liverpool Art College as The Beatles honed their skills
by performing in the Liverpool area and then in Hamburg, Germany. By late
1962, Lennon and The Beatles were on the British music charts, and within