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Showing posts with label John Lennon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Lennon. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 05, 2020

Commentary: Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band (Apple Records, December 11, 1970)

Recorded during Lennon’s sessions for his John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band album, Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band consists of seven tracks, composed and sung by Ono, with backing by Lennon (guitar), Klaus Voorman (bass), and Ringo Starr (drums). Often mistakenly or perhaps purposefully derided as mere jamming in between takes for Lennon songs, each track in reality is a distinct entity, with a unique instrumental and vocal approach, within the context of the Voorman/Starr “backbeat” and Lennon’s avant-garde guitar. The 4/4 straight ahead rock’n roll of “Why” gives way to the bluesy “Why Not”, followed by the Side One closer, the reggae-based “Greenfield Morning I Pushed An Empty Baby Carriage All Over The City.”

Ono’s abstract, atonal vocalizing finds a more “traditional” (in the artistic context of the times) setting on “AOS, where she is backed by free jazz soprano sax virtuoso Ornette Coleman, bassist Charlie Haden, and drummer Ed Blackwell. Recorded live one and a half years before the rest of the album’s tracks, AOS is consistent with the sensibilities of free jazz, is proof of the considerable artistic credentials Yoko brought to the Lennon/Ono partnership.

“Touch Me”, released as the U.S. B-Side to Lennon’s “Power To The People” in February 1971, evokes the album’s opening track, while the album’s closer, “Paper Shoes” merges an opening sound collage with mesmerizing free form backing from Lennon, Starr, and Voorman.

While Two Virgins, Life With The Lions, and Wedding Album were largely conceptual in approach, eschewing traditional musical instrumentation and “song” construction, Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band attempts to combine traditional rock instrumentation with the duo’s previous conceptual approach, although it must be noted that YO/POB is credited to Ono as primary artist, and not to Lennon/Ono. This is significant, as throughout their work together, they were very purposeful in identifying their collaborative work. This is indeed Yoko’s first solo album, just as Lennon’s “Plastic Ono Band” was his.

Below are scans of the excellent 1997 Rykodisc CD reissue:







Wednesday, January 08, 2020

Cambridge 1969 In Pictures

Great pics and clippings documenting this Lennon/Ono performance from 1969, as posted on the "Beatles and Solo Photos and Videos Forum"

Friday, December 20, 2019

The Day a Beatle Took a Back Seat: John Lennon, Yoko Ono, and Cambridge, 1969


This post is not about Yoko Ono’s effect on The Beatles, nor is it an attempt to “justify” her work with John Lennon by pointing out its artistic merit. Those topics have been covered elsewhere. Rather, this post concerns what it meant the day Lennon showed up unannounced, as Ono’s sideman, to perform at Lady Mitchell Hall at Cambridge University.


That day in March 1969, Ono was the headliner. Scheduled to play before an audience of academics, and other members of the artistic “elite,” she and Lennon improvised for close to 27 minutes, Lennon adding  feedback guitar to Ono’s vocal experimentation to create the piece we now know as “Cambridge 1969,” the first track on the duo’s second album, Unfinished Music No.2: Life With The Lions


By the time of their appearance at Cambridge, Lennon & Ono’s artistic relationship was well established. They had performed together at the Rolling Stones’ Rock ‘N Roll Circus the previous December, and had released their first joint album, Unfinished Music No. 1: Two Virgins, in November 1968. Still, according to Barry Miles (2016) in his excellent book The Zapple Diaries, his appearance at Cambridge came as a surprise to those in attendance.


Why surprising? The most obvious answer is that Lennon, the leader of the world’s preeminent rock group, had not performed live since August 1966, save his appearance on the Stones’ television special the preceding December. Therefore, seeing Lennon on stage in any context was unusual.

A more telling explanation is that his appearance as a backing musician for an artistically obscure (except for her work with Lennon) female artist was completely unexpected because, although the individual Beatles had begun to pursue projects outside the band by the time of Cambridge performance,  none had done so with a permanent partner outside the group, much less a female partner. 


Notwithstanding second wave feminism and the concurrent “women’s lib” movement, western society in the late 1960s, including Britain, was a bulwark of patriarchy. Male dominance was also evident in the arts, including rock ‘n roll. So when John took up his guitar, and turned his back to the audience, facing his amplifier to generate his accompaniment to Ono on that winter day, he was making at least two statements which challenged social norms. 

First, he was publicly embracing the validity of non-traditional music. To those familiar with the history of so-called “serious” 20th century music, not much about the Lennon/Ono performance of that day was groundbreaking, at least not sonically. From Arnold Schoenberg’s twelve-tone system, to John Cage’s “chance music,” by 1969 much work had been done which challenged the very notion of what music "was." That said, for a rock star to perform work in this genre in public was to risk much, and to face at best bewilderment from their traditional audience. Still, Lennon persevered. 

More significant, perhaps, was that he undertook this artistic experimentation in partnership with a woman. In fact, Ono took center stage that day. While some will certainly argue that she served as a buffer against the potential backlash he might face for his musical adventure, Lennon’s tacit recognition of her as an equal artistic partner challenged prevailing societal beliefs about gender, including those of the macho world of Rock ‘n Roll. 


Did it make a difference? Establishing historical cause and effect is a difficult task, and that is not the point of this post anyway. What is important is recognizing that, in taking his first steps outside the protective artistic cocoon of The Beatles, Lennon confronted society on two cultural fronts. Musically, he asked his audience to look beyond pop music and consider other sounds as musically valid. Further, he said, through his actions, that he had a new partner, and that the fact that she was female had no impact on his choice to work with her artistically.


So why did John Lennon show up at Cambridge in 1969? Was he there to make a bold statement about gender equality? Was he there to establish his credentials as an experimental musician? We will never know all his motivations. What we are fairly certain of, however, is that he did not speak to the audience that day, and that he did not direct the musical proceedings. He just made music.


Wasn’t that enough?

Saturday, December 14, 2019

Grapefruit Records?: Secretly Canadian Rewrites History With Yoko Ono Reissues

As a part of its Yoko Ono reissue project, Secretly Canadian Records has reissued John Lennon and Yoko Ono's Wedding Album, 50 years after its original release in 1969. Touted on their website as a "faithful recreation," the reissue includes the remastered (white) vinyl, as well as reproductions of all original inserts in a boxed set edition. 

While the reissuing of Ono's albums originally released between 1968 and 1985 (including three  with John Lennon) is a valuable contribution to the preservation of her artistic work,  Secretly Canadian has not quite lived up to its stated purpose, "to painstakingly recreate the original vinyl packaging" in the Lennon/Ono series. In fact, SC has replaced the original Apple Records label with a "grapefruit" label (see below). While some might see this as a minor point, the substitution is at best inconsistent with SC's avowed commitment to authenticity.

While not always the case (albums are commonly reissued on different labels, of course), in this instance it is impossible, and historically disingenuous, to attempt to separate the artist and record from the label, at least as far as Ono's Apple albums are concerned. Apple, at the time, carried with it an implied association with The Beatles. In Ono's case, her artistic association with and marriage to John Lennon elevated her professional profile and facilitated her access to worldwide distribution of her work on a major label. This is not to say that her work did not merit such attention and support. It did, and it is gratifying that she has subsequently received the credit she deserves. However, when a reissue aspires to be the "definitive edition" of a work, the altering of a fundamental part of the original album is a significant misstep.