Authors: Ken Bielen Ben Urich
the prison metaphor. The excellent saxophone work of Stan Bronstein ties
the verses together, with the chorus a harmonized duet of poetic statements
from Lennon and Ono, such as “Wood becomes a flute when it’s loved.”
The verses decry the human condition of being bounded by unjust social
constrictions that literally and figuratively stifle the individual and, by exten-
sion, society itself. Not only one of the better tracks on the album, it is one
of Ono’s better tracks from this phase of her career.
“New York City” is the album’s primary rocker and probably could have been
a solid-selling single if released as such. The fast-paced song is directly autobio-
graphical and a close relative to The Beatles’ “The Ballad of John and Yoko.”
The number recounts the goings on of Lennon and Ono, such as meeting up
with countercultural figures, while commenting on their immigration problems.
To the government’s attempts to force him and Ono out, Lennon reminds the
elected officials and bureaucrats, “The Statue of Liberty said ‘come.’ ”
Both David Peel (“The Ballad of New York City [John Lennon–Yoko
Ono]”) and Elephant’s Memory (“Local Plastic Ono Band”) had songs
about Lennon and Ono on their albums contemporary with this, and Ele-
phant’s Memory had a couple of seriously rocking numbers as well, the aptly
named “Power Boogie” and “Liberation Special.” In a sense, “New York
City” combines those efforts. Elephant’s Memory boogies in solid support
of Lennon’s energetic singing, and both vocalist and band seem reluctant to
let loose of the groove. Lennon seems to relish the band’s drive and momen-
tum. He urges them on several occasions with shouts and comments. It is
easily the most enjoyable and brisk track on the album.
Gimme Some Truth, 1970–1973 41
The killing of Irish Catholic protestors by British soldiers prompted the
angry “Sunday Bloody Sunday.” Lennon’s rage is palpable, and the recording
has a suitably chaotic and rambunctious sound, but the song does not quite
succeed. The lyrics start off with some nice rhetorical spins and a modicum
of insight, but after the guitar break they lose centering and all that remains
is the anger, thus drifting into lyrical hyperbole. Lennon also inexplicably
pronounces “learn” as “loyn” in the second verse, forcing him to then pro-
nounce “turn” and “burn” in a similar fashion so that they rhyme, which
detracts from Lennon’s message. The wailing of guitar and saxophone sup-
port a mix of Ono’s emotionally appropriate vocal screeching and Lennon’s
yells and calls of “do it!” as the song begins to fade out and then returns, as
if reminding listeners that the tragedy continues even when not the focus of
attention and it will not go away on its own.
“The Luck of the Irish” is more general and more successful. A listing
of innocent Irish clichés and idyllic stereotypes in the chorus sung by Ono
is cleverly countered with the harsh contemporary political realities and
historical summations sung by Lennon in the introduction and verses. This
is all set up with the sardonic irony of the opening couplets that play off
the usually bromidic phrase of the “luck of the Irish,” indicating that any
luck the Irish have had has been bad—so bad that “you’d wish you was
English instead.”
The contrasting irony continues with a pleasant lilting rhythm and a flute
providing fills and a near countermelody in support of Lennon’s singing of
“pain and death.” Lennon continues characterizing the then-current events
as rape and genocide while singing in pleasant, soft tones. The idea of a dark
humor approach is clever, and the song, as sociopolitical polemic, succeeds.
Interestingly, at the same time as Lennon and Ono created these songs and
recordings, Lennon’s former artistic partner Paul McCartney, inspired by the
same events, wrote and recorded “Give Ireland Back to the Irish,” enjoying
a number-21 hit with it.
Lennon’s song in support of activist John Sinclair, at the time serving a 10-
year prison sentence for the sale of two marijuana cigarettes, is simply called
“John Sinclair.” Here the lyrical statements and musical statements mesh to
form a strong song that communicates its point of view and message with
directness and simplicity. Lennon asks rhetorical questions to good effect in
the lyrics, from the opening “won’t you care for John Sinclair?” to the later
“what else can the bastards do?” referring to the corrupt and unjust system
as well as particular individuals.
Lennon compares the severity of Sinclair’s crime with the reputed immoral,
unethical, and criminal actions of others and then asks, “was he jailed for
what he done, or representin’ everyone?” The flowing questions and explana-
tory statements of the lyrics stream by to the sounds of Lennon’s exemplarily
played bluesy slide guitar that rolls and tumbles the song along with urgent
tension, but no stress. “They gave him ten for two,” Lennon repeats. He then
42 The Words and Music of John Lennon
pushes to the finale with “we gotta set him free!” with the word “gotta” ear-
nestly repeated several times.
Lennon performed the song on television and at a rally to support Sinclair’s
release, and Sinclair was in fact set free less than three months after the album
came out.
A song about activist Angela Davis was far less successful. Lennon and Ono
again duet more or less equally on the vocals, and instrumentally the song
has some vibrant orchestral string work in addition to fine guitar and organ
moments. But the lyrics do not really add up to much more than generic
platitudes such as “the world watches you” before veering into unintentional
self-parody with such absurdities as “they gave you coffee, they gave you tea,
they gave you everything but equality.” The point may be that the power
structure and social institutions deal in surface niceties but not in actual sub-
stance, but neither Lennon nor Ono seem to have been particularly inspired
here.
The album ends with another strong Ono track, “We’re All Water,” the
refrain having been adapted from one of her poems. Ono describes the essen-
tial oneness of humanity by listing a series of supposed similarities between
seemingly disparate celebrities, historical figures, and locations. For instance,
her opening line indicates that there may not be much difference between
Chairman Mao and Richard Nixon if we “strip them naked,” or between
“Manson and the Pope” if we “press their smiles” in a later passage. Another
line was adapted from her book
Grapefruit,
where she suggested counting
the windows of certain buildings. Here she says there may not be much dif-
ference between the White House and the Hall of People if we count their
windows.
The refrain happily states, “we’re all water” and that someday “we’ll evap-
orate together.” The band keeps the staccato beat going as Ono engages in
her familiar vocal escalations while asking, “what’s the difference?” and soon
replying, “there’s no difference!” The track is one of the better transferences
of her conceptual art instructions into song lyrics, and the high-energy per-
formance of the band adds immensely to the appeal of her playful yet serious
lyrics and delivery.
Live Jam
The original issue of
Sometime in New York City
included a bonus disc
entitled
Live Jam
. The first three numbers are from the aptly named Plas-
tic Ono Supergroup (including George Harrison) for the live show from
December 1969.
The first numbers performed are “Cold Turkey” and “Don’t Worry
Kyoko.” Although released only three months after the debut of both at the
Toronto Rock and Roll Revival Festival, the readings are noticeably different.
“Cold Turkey” now has the raw intensity of the single release, and the band’s
Gimme Some Truth, 1970–1973 43
performance builds the tension the song needs rather than lilting along as it
did in the Toronto show. Ono’s number is a stunning masterwork complete
with her vocals bouncing through a call and response with the horn section
and a hyped-up finale that even Ono has trouble sustaining.
The remainder of the
Live Jam
album is taken from a 1971 guest appear-
ance the couple did at the Fillmore East with Frank Zappa and the Mothers
of Invention. Lennon is featured on an old rhythm and blues number, “Well
(Baby Please Don’t Go).” Considering the few live appearances Lennon
made, this performance is a real gem. Lennon must have liked it, because he
recorded this song during his
Imagine
sessions a few months later, though it
was not released until the
John Lennon Anthology
collection in 1998. The live
version is a strong and welcome vocal performance with full-throttle support
from Zappa on guitar and the Mothers.
The rest of the album consists of a lengthy jam featuring Ono. The jam
loses momentum at some points but manages to recover and contains some
good work from all three principals. The nature of the jam made it possible
for Lennon to divide the performance into different numbers, although it is
not always clear why the divisions occur where they do. Two decades later,
Zappa released his own version on the double CD set
Playground Psychotics.
The differences in song divisions may be minor, but Zappa’s mix is superior
in sound quality and in the intuitive sense of where the jam changes. Perhaps
Ono was tacitly acknowledging this when she remixed and remastered the
Sometime in New York City
album for CD release in 2005 and omitted the
jam entirely, replacing it with the holiday single of “Happy Xmas (War Is
Over)” / “Listen, The Snow Is Falling.” The omission means that the only
available digital version of that portion of the concert is Zappa’s.
the elePhant’s memory Band:
eLePhant’s memorY
Lennon and Ono produced and played on this album for their backing
band. Lennon is on 6 of the 10 cuts, playing guitar and singing on 2 cuts,
playing electric piano on 1, and adding vocals to 3 others. Ono vocalizes on
4 of the cuts with Lennon.
Lennon historian John Robertson relates that Lennon worked on compos-
ing but then abandoned a song about classic rockers Chuck Berry and Bo
Diddley.15 Abandoned or not, just such a song titled “Chuck ’n’ Bo” closes
the first side of the album. Perhaps Lennon was running through this number
just for the fun of it and Robertson or his sources thought it was an aban-
doned composition of Lennon’s. In any event, it pastiches the famous charac-
teristic musical riffs and rhythms of the two men and tells an amusing story of
a concert situation in which Diddley and Berry demonstrate the invigorating
freedom of rock and roll music, a concept close to Lennon’s heart. In the
midst of the political turmoil of Lennon’s activities in 1972, it is interest-
ing to speculate that he might have contributed to this semi-nostalgic rocker
44 The Words and Music of John Lennon
that touts the liberation of the musical form itself, with no overt messages or
specific slogans. Both Berry and Diddley were at the 1969 Toronto Rock and
Roll Revival Festival, so perhaps the song was inspired by something Lennon
observed there, though he receives no songwriting credit for the song.
Both “Liberation Special” and “Power Boogie” are solid rockers, with
Lennon adding to the drive of “Power Boogie.” Each is also somewhat remi-
niscent of Lennon’s “New York City.” In addition, Lennon’s electric piano
contributions to “Wind Ridge” are quite appropriate and fill out the song
with real flourish. The album ends with a droll number called “Local Plastic
Ono Band,” in which Elephant’s Memory good-naturedly jokes about their
status as Lennon and Ono’s backup group. The lyrics playfully imply that the
notoriety may be both helpful and a hindrance to their career.
aPProximateLY inFinite Universe
Ono helped to open Lennon to more experimental composing and to
thinking more seriously of himself as an artist with a particular role in society.
And at the same time, his influence had been prompting her to make more
forays into conventional pop music songwriting. As the year closed, Ono and
Lennon worked on and completed this double album set of pop songs, Ono
style, with Elephant’s Memory backing her up as they had done on Lennon
and Ono’s
Sometime in New York City.
Lennon co-produced the album with Ono and can be heard both vocally
and instrumentally on many of the tracks. His genuinely exuberant happy
cheering on “What a Mess” and his vocal fills on “I Wish I Knew” are wel-
come additions to those numbers, but his most significant vocal contribution
to the album is on Ono’s remarkable and plaintive song of female forgiveness
and understanding for the sins of male sexism, “I Want My Love To Rest
Tonight.” Late in the song it features backing and harmony vocals by Len-