yoko ono

Yoko Ono’s Controversial Work at Tate Modern

Yoko Ono’s Controversial Work at Tate Modern

Yoko Ono: Music of the Mind at Tate Modern is an engaging overview of the polarizing artist’s career, but her career didn’t end post-John Lennon and Fluxus.

John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s ‘Two Virgins’ at 55: Still Telling Naked Truths 

John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s ‘Two Virgins’ at 55: Still Telling Naked Truths 

John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Two Virgins inspired so much ire and distaste back in the day that we can take this opportunity to see what all the fuss was about.

John Lennon’s Work of Faith

John Lennon’s Work of Faith

Removed from the pandemonium of Beatlemania, John Lennon knew the limits of his influence. All he could do was sing his truth and suggest people “imagine” a better world for themselves. Or not.

Yoko Ono’s Greatest Work Is Aptly Represented on ‘Walking on Thin Ice’

Yoko Ono’s Greatest Work Is Aptly Represented on ‘Walking on Thin Ice’

Released in May 1992, Walking on Thin Ice is a great primer for the kind of esoteric, avant-garde pop Yoko Ono forged in the 1970s.

‘Ocean Child: Songs of Yoko Ono’ Is a Highly Enjoyable Tribute

‘Ocean Child: Songs of Yoko Ono’ Is a Highly Enjoyable Tribute

Helmed by Ben Gibbard Ocean Child: Songs of Yoko Ono is a highly enjoyable tribute to one of music’s most unfairly maligned artists. It reframes the songs in exciting ways.

Why Yoko Ono’s Music Matters

Why Yoko Ono’s Music Matters

Yoko Ono’s story is of a passionate and powerful songwriter and artist. A creative and sensitive musician who worked doggedly to bring her avant-garde aesthetic to pop music and to use her voice to advocate for the rights of women, racial minorities, and LGBTQ people.

John Lennon: Revolutionary Man As Political Artist

John Lennon: Revolutionary Man As Political Artist

John Lennon helped transform the art and image of the pop star. His very public political activism and socially and politically aware lyrics have earned him a prominent place in the creative and political history of rock.

John Lennon and Location: Someone’s Time in New York City

John Lennon and Location: Someone’s Time in New York City

John Lennon's new adopted country and hometown became the inspiration for one of his most sprawling, savage albums, Some Time in New York City.

John Lennon’s Minimalist Journey to Independence

John Lennon’s Minimalist Journey to Independence

By 1970, John Lennon struggled to break free from his former Fab Four image and transform himself into a more cynical, hard-edged solo artist. John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, in particular, is known for its emotionally naked and brutally honest songs. Tracks like “I Found Out” and “God” deconstruct a multitude of sacred cows, from organized religion to naive hippiedom, to the idea of the Beatles themselves. However, Lennon’s metamorphosis from a lead Beatle to “just John” is not only apparent in the pronouncedly pessimistic lyrics of Lennon’s early solo career. The sparse instrumentation and minimal melodies from the Plastic Ono era testify to Lennon’s primal descent into cold, harsh reality as well. Some Beatles fans might have gently wept while listening to the song “God” as Lennon sang, “I don’t believe in Beatles.” Given the artist’s attempt to break free from the romantic sonic and compositional experimentation of the Sgt. Pepper era, though, the truth of these stark lyrics should have eluded no one.

When Lennon fans first gave Plastic Ono Band a spin in 1970, its opening strains clued them into the fact that they were going to hear something quite different from the Lennon of the past. Four strikes of an ominous-sounding bell lead into John singing, “Mother, you had me, but I never had you.” The instrumentation on “Mother” is notably sparse, with only piano, bass, and drums accompanying Lennon’s impassioned vocal about coming to grips with his troubled childhood. The piano arrangement through most of the song consists of block chords sustained for a measure at a time with very little rhythmic accentuation. Similarly, the bass sits on the tonic of each chord, lacking any ornamentation. Lennon’s lyrics are appropriately direct. When Lennon sings “mamma don’t go… daddy come home”, the listener can feel the raw pain in his vocal, since it’s unadulterated by artificially lush production values.

The rest of the record continues in a similarly minimalistic bent. Even the album’s most lyrically optimistic tunes, “Hold On” and “Love”, embrace musical simplicity and avoid romantic sentimentality. “Hold On” uses a bluesy guitar as its textural base as Lennon reassures himself and Yoko that “it’s gonna be alright”, as if to ease the primal pain of “Mother”. “Love” features a gentle, contrapuntal, classical-style piano. Lennon isn’t lyrically far removed here from such memorable McCartney tracks as “Here, There, and Everywhere” or “I Will”. However, rather than filling the arrangement with layers of sound, he brings the unassuming piano track to the fore, demonstrating a difference in aesthetic philosophy with his former musical partner in crime.

“Working Class Hero” and “Look at Me” feature only acoustic guitars for accompaniment. The lyrics of ‘Working Class Hero” have a complex, ironic connotation when juxtaposed with a strummed guitar style reminiscent of 1960s protest music. “Look at Me”, in which Lennon asks himself pointedly, “What am I supposed to be?” features a Merle Travis finger-picking style in the mode of “Julia” from the White Album. Even the tracks on Plastic Ono Band that ‘rock’ the most are sonically minimal. “Remember”, a tune inspired directly by Lennon’s therapy experiences, is driven by a repetitive rhythmic piano. “Well, Well, Well” features a distorted, bluesy electric rhythm guitar layered upon only one raucous, yet basic lead guitar track.

The two most lyrically cynical tunes on the album, “I Found Out” and “God”, are especially pointed in their embrace of minimalist principles. On “I Found Out”, Lennon effectively rejects the 1960s counterculture and the mythical idea of the Beatles themselves. In addition to taking one last dig at the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the subject of Lennon’s White Album-era “Sexy Sadie”, he says that he’s “seen religion, from Jesus to Paul”, referring to both St. Paul and Paul McCartney, a saint himself in the eyes of many Beatles fans. The song’s relentlessly stark lyrics are accompanied at first only by a bluesy guitar playing the melody in unison with the lead vocal.

img-1571Design Face Eye by Geralt (Pixabay License /

“God” features a repetitive, gospel-tinged piano part played by Billy Preston. Lennon begins the tune with the audacious statement that “God is a concept by which we measure our pain.” He goes on to provide a list of people or concepts he no longer believes in. Alongside Jesus, I Ching, and Buddha, he lumps such 1960s idols as the Kennedys, Bob Dylan, and, most famously, the Fab Four themselves. While Lennon’s vocal is quite dynamic, changing in timbre and range to match the lyrics’ cynicism, the rhythm section stays relentlessly consistent, giving Lennon a stable musical palate from which to work. While this “faux gospel” tune could have easily turned into a full-blown production with organ and a choir, Lennon once again keeps the texture simple so that his virtuosic vocal is accentuated.

Plastic Ono Band is now universally regarded as not only Lennon’s most important post-Beatles effort but one of the greatest records in pop history. Many years removed from the record’s original release, it is difficult to imagine what an audacious artistic move it was for Lennon to make this album. Not only did Lennon run the risk of alienating his fans with the lyrics rejecting his past self, but his artistic principles stood in contrast to those employed during much of the Beatles’ career. In making the austere Plastic Ono Band, one source of Lennon’s inspiration was the “primal scream” therapy he was undergoing at the time.

The primitive nature of Lennon’s vocals and the confessional mode of his lyrics reflect his therapeutic experiences. The record’s musical minimalism in the arrangement and sonic texture support the “primal” concept effectively. The listener often has the feeling of being alone in a quiet room with only Lennon’s inner reflections. Lennon’s bold turn to the minimal, though, was not just a result of his lyrical introspection and personal circumstances. Rather, the former Beatle was placing himself in diametric aesthetic opposition to not only Paul, George, and Ringo, but the John of the Beatle era.

When one looks at the primary musical contributions Lennon made during the Beatles’ artistic and critical peak (circa Revolver and Sgt. Pepper’s), one is struck by the contrast with Lennon’s early solo work. Tracks like “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds”, “Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite”, and “Good Morning Good Morning” all reflect a fascination with sonic experimentation and a “fullness” of sound. While Paul is often credited with taking the band in the direction of larger musical forms and symphonic sonic principles, it is clear that John did his share to lead the group down this road as well.

“Mr. Kite” in particular features layer upon layer of odd sonic effects and unconventional instrumentation to place the listener in the middle of Lennon’s psychedelic circus. “Strawberry Fields Forever”, one of the most introspective songs in the Beatles catalog, features a wall of sound to illustrate the “strange” nature of childhood innocence. The Dadaist “I Am the Walrus” swims in a river of psychedelic experimentation as well. In fact, Lennon references this song in “God” to clearly delineate the ‘old John’ vs. the ‘new John’, when he asserts, “I once was the walrus, but now I’m John.”

Although in many ways the minimalism of John’s early solo work stands in opposition to the experimental romanticism of the Beatles at their peak, Lennon’s burgeoning minimalistic tendencies coincided with the Beatles’ own disillusionment. Many have stated that the White Album represents the vision of four separate individuals rather than the unified statement of a single group. If this is the case, the White Album‘s John Lennon is interested in exploring a “less-is-more” philosophy.

“Julia”, for example, consists of only an acoustic guitar and John’s quiet vocal, a precursor to “Look at Me”. The emotionally naked “Yer Blues” features a simple, yet raucous texture, predicting “Well, Well, Well”. If Lennon’s minimalism was hinted at on the White Album, it was developed even more during the troubled sessions that eventually led to Let It Be. The whole concept behind this record, in fact, was a “return to roots” mentality. The Beatles wanted to get back to where they first started, four young lads from Liverpool playing rock ‘n’ roll music. Lennon joyfully contributed such simple tunes as “Don’t Let Me Down” and “Dig a Pony”. Let It Be‘s failure to establish artistic and critical credibility was at least partially due to Phil Spector’s completion of the project. A track like “Across the Universe”, originally intended as a quiet meditation on the nature of change, was bloated into an orchestral assault on the senses.

“Come Together”, the opening song on Abbey Road, arguably reflects Lennon’s embryonic minimalism more than any other Beatles tune. The combination of blues riffs and the sparse texture was surely a harbinger of things to come. Although Lennon had explored a less-is-more approach to composition and performance during his time with the Beatles, Plastic Ono Band represents John’s first chance to fully embrace his minimalist aesthetic and push it to its long-playing logical conclusion. Unencumbered by the need to compromise with other musical collaborators, John’s stark vision was revealed in its entirety for its first time upon the record’s 1970 release.

While John started his solo career with an embrace of simplicity’s chilling beauty, he did not follow this path for long. His follow-up record Imagine is infinitely more mainstream than his debut, both lyrically and musically. The opening strains of the title song feel like they could be a continuation of Plastic Ono Band. A single, unassuming piano begins the track before John begins his idealistic vocal. However, by the second verse, where John asks us to “imagine there’s no country”, a sentimental-sounding string section enters, leading the listener down the road more traveled. Overall, Imagine is a more settled record. John no longer asks the big questions about who he is supposed to be and how he can overcome his sainted past as a Beatle.

Overall, he expresses a state of contentment about his relationship, his music, and his life. While there are exceptions to this generalization (especially “Gimme Some Truth” and “How Do You Sleep?”), Lennon’s sophomore solo effort represents a retreat from cynicism. Listening to both records many years removed from their original release, it seems infinitely clear that the former is a landmark record of true artistic significance, whereas the latter suffers from a lack of unified vision. John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band is a boldly Spartan foray into realism, whereas Imagine is a more-sophisticated-than-average Hallmark greeting card for the masses.

While Lennon didn’t consistently embrace the minimalist principles of his earliest solo work for his entire career, the legacy of his artistic austerity is still with us today. Several contemporary indie bands have embraced the “less-is-more” attitude espoused by Lennon on Plastic Ono Band. The xx, a modish London band, embraced a minimalist aesthetic and presented emotionally direct lyrics on their own debut record. Spoon, over the course of several albums, have consistently and creatively reduced pop music to its most essential elements. Wilco, in their post-A Ghost Is Born incarnation, have returned to a more basic texture on records like Sky Blue Sky.

Certainly, Lennon wasn’t the first or the last to embrace minimalism as an artistic ideal in pop. However, because Lennon is such a prominent figure in contemporary music, his aesthetic choices lend validity to younger artists trying to get back to basics as well. Lennon successfully built upon musical principles established during his time with the Beatles, while pushing them in new directions, free from the crippling responsibility of living up to his image as one of the Fab Four. By the time Lennon died in 1980, many fans had long since stopped believing in the Beatles but had started believing in John.

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This article was originally published on 14 November 2010.

Defragmenting Bodies: Yoko Ono’s ‘Fly’ at 50

Defragmenting Bodies: Yoko Ono’s ‘Fly’ at 50

In her 1970 avant-garde short Fly, Yoko Ono works within the same parameters as directors like Alfred Hitchcock or Takashi Miike. Yet, she posits the intermixture of her celluloid images as reconstructive effort, not a destructive one.

John Lennon and Yoko Ono Share Their Wedding With the Masses on ‘Wedding Album’

John Lennon and Yoko Ono Share Their Wedding With the Masses on ‘Wedding Album’

The Wedding Album's "John & Yoko" is a brilliantly disquieting composition that exists unequivocally as an intentional, constructed art piece.

John Lennon and Yoko Ono: Imagine / Gimme Some Truth

John Lennon and Yoko Ono: Imagine / Gimme Some Truth

Remastered video documents form part of the massive Imagine reissue program, and reveal a couple who were struggling to find the balance between the cool avant-garde and the comfortingly domestic.