Memories of John Lennon

Memories of John Lennon

by Yoko Ono
Memories of John Lennon

Memories of John Lennon

by Yoko Ono

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Overview

“A wonderful book for fans of Lennon. . . . Highly recommended.” —Library Journal

John Lennon . . . as much a part of our world today as he ever was

He touched many lives in his brief forty years, and continues to move and inspire millions more to this day. Now, invited by Yoko Ono, friends, family, and fans from all walks of life—including some of the great artists of our day—reminisce about Lennon as a visionary and friend, musician and performer, husband and father, activist and jokester.

In their own words and drawings, poems and photos, Lennon's life from his childhood through the Beatles years to the happiness and tragedy of his final days become stunningly vivid.

Intimate glimpses gathered from musicians who knew John, such as Pete Townshend, Sir Elton John, Billy Preston, and Joan Baez; friends and relatives such as producer David Geffen, publicist Elliot Mintz, and cousin Mike Cadwallader; and artists who followed him such as Bono, Alicia Keys, Steve Earle, Jello Biafra, and Carlos Santana.

And, for the first time, renowned photographer Annie Liebovitz presents every frame of the historic last session with John and Yoko.

Memories of John Lennon is a rich and deeply felt appreciation of a truly great man.

“Heartfelt . . . poignant reminders of why Lennon was so widely mourned and is missed to this day.” —Booklist

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780061870804
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 12/15/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Yoko Ono is a musician and multimediaartist. She lives in New York City.

Read an Excerpt

Memories of John Lennon


By Yoko Ono

HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.

Copyright © 2005 Yoko Ono
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0060594551

Chapter One

Jane Alexander

When I first heard "Imagine," and the soft, gentle voice of John singing, I was quite overwhelmed. The song seemed to encapsulate all we in the 1960s dreamed of: a world with no violence, no racism, no war, no assassinations -- a world possible through envisioning it to be so. I still believe it, and every time I hear the song, it enforces my belief. We can have peace, harmony, beauty and love if we make that our constant vision for the future, if we imagine it and live it ourselves every day. That was John's gift to us, all through his remarkable song.

Lennonism
Tariq Ali

Our first direct contact in 1969 was formal. I was editing the Black Dwarf, a radical politico-cultural magazine. We had published "An Open Letter to John Lennon" -- a savage review of the Beatles' album Revolution by John Hoyland, our music/popular culture critic. John Lennon had been busted by the cops. The Black Dwarf used the occasion to discuss the lyrics of the Revolution album seriously. Hoyland wrote:

Above all: perhaps now you'll see what it is you're (we're) up against. Not nasty people, not even neurosis or spiritual undernourishment. What we're confronted with is a repressive, vicious, authoritarian system. A system which is inhuman and immoral, because it deprives 99 percent of humanity of the right to live their lives their own way. A system which will screw you if you step out of line and behave just a tiny bit differently from the way those in power want.

Such a system -- such a society -- is so racked by contradiction and tension and unhappiness that all relationships within it are poisoned. You know this. You know, from your own experience, how little control over their lives working-class people are permitted to have. . . . How can love and kindness between human-beings grow in such a society? It can't. Don't you see that now? The system has got to be changed before people can live the full, loving lives that you have said you want.

Now do you see what was wrong with your record Revolution? That record was no more revolutionary than Mrs. Dale's Diary. In order to change the world we've got to understand what's wrong with the world. And then, destroy it. Ruthlessly. . . . There is no such thing as a polite revolution.

The tone of the letter was undoubtedly patronizing, and we thought he would ignore it. But a week later he sent a reply to John Hoyland with a covering note hoping I would publish it. We did:

Who do you think you are? What do you think you know? I'm not only up against the establishment but you, too, it seems. I know what I'm up against -- narrow minds -- rich/poor. All your relationships may be poisoned -- it depends how you look at it. What kind of system do you propose and who would run it?

I don't remember saying Revolution was revolutionary -- fuck Mrs. Dale. Listen to all three versions (Revolution 1, 2 and 9) then try again, dear John. . . .

You're obviously on a destruction kick. I'll tell you what's wrong with the world -- people, so do you want to destroy them? Ruthlessly? Until we change your/our heads -- there's no chance. Tell me of one successful revolution. Who fucked up Communism . . . ? Sick Heads and nothing else. Do you think all the enemy wear capitalist badges so that you can shoot them? It's a bit naive, John. You seem to think it's just a class war. . . . Look man, I was/am not against you. Instead of splitting hairs about the Beatles and the Stones -- think a little bigger -- look at the world we're living in and ask yourself: why? And then -- come and join us.

Love,
John Lennon

PS -- You smash it -- I'll build around it.

As these extracts suggest, it was a spirited exchange.

After that there was a long silence. And, as was also common in those days, there was soon a split in the Black Dwarf. How strange it seems now and how stupid and destructive, but that's the way we were. The Leninists left to set up Red Mole and moved from swinging Soho to proletarian Pentonville Road, a seedy zone near Kings Cross station in London.

One day John rang and we talked. He suggested a meeting and a week later he and Yoko showed up at my bed-sit in North London with a delicious Japanese take-away as supper. We discussed the state of the world, including the state of the student movement in Japan. John's views had sharpened considerably since the letters in the Black Dwarf. He told me that, like Mick Jagger, he had wanted to march on the big anti-Vietnam war demos but the Beatles' manager, Brian Epstein, had forbidden any such outing. Epstein was fearful that the group might be denied visas to the States, which would be a commercial disaster. John always regretted having obeyed his manager, but that was in the past. The biggest and best influence in his life was now Yoko Ono. I was in no doubt that Yoko had radicalized him further on the artistic and the political front. She had also been accused of breaking up the Beatles and we laughed a great deal at the suggestion. He was angered by the racist gibes against Yoko in the tabloid press. I suggested they should be taken as compliments. It would be awful if the creeps who attacked her decided to turn their coats. Before they left, I suggested an interview with both of them and he agreed, wondering aloud whether it would be appropriate since "Red Mole was very serious and interviewing me might lower the tone." He wasn't joking, but I assured him that an interview would be enormously helpful for our little newspaper. I asked if I could bring my colleague Robin Blackburn -- more attuned to popular culture than myself -- to which he readily agreed.

Continues...


Excerpted from Memories of John Lennon by Yoko Ono Copyright © 2005 by Yoko Ono. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Yoko Ono Lennon: My Memory of JohnIX
Jane Alexander1
Tariq Ali3
Terri Augello7
Joan Baez9
Harry Benson13
Chuck Berry17
Jello Biafra19
Cilla Black25
Bono27
James Brown29
Peter Brown31
Mike Cadwallader33
Ray Charles37
Jackie DeShannon39
Steve Earle41
Bill Eppridge45
John Fogerty47
Peter Gabriel49
David Geffen51
Julie Gold55
Bob Gomel63
Harry Goodwin65
Bob Gruen71
Ronnie Hawkins85
Tom Hayden89
Jim Henke99
Dennis Hopper103
Sir Mick Jagger105
Garland Jeffreys109
Sir Elton John113
Larry Kane115
Alicia Keys117
Astrid Kirchherr119
Billy J. Kramer123
Christine Lavin125
Annie Leibovitz129
Donovan Leitch133
Jerry Lee Lewis137
Mark Lewisohn139
Michael Lindsay-Hogg141
Nils Lofgren143
Norman Mailer145
Albert Maysles147
Elliot Mintz151
A Love Letter from John and Yoko175
Desmond Morris177
"Cousin Brucie" Morrow193
Bobby Muller195
Andy Newmark197
Philip Norman203
Cynthia O'Neal209
Vicki Peterson213
Kate Pierson215
Iggy Pop217
Billy Preston219
Joe Raiola221
Bonnie Raitt225
Paul Reiser227
Carlos Santana231
James Manseau Sauceda, Ph.D.233
Fred Schneider237
Carly Simon239
John Sinclair241
Phoebe Snow245
Tom Snyder247
Pete Townshend249
Klaus Voormann253
Loudon Wainwright III263
Jann Wenner267
Jon Wiener275
Mary Wilson283
Barbara Worton285
Ritchie Yorke289
Yoko Ono Lennon: Paper Cups301
Acknowledgments305
Credits307
About the Editor310
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