Authors: Ken Bielen Ben Urich
non. The male and female voices sharing equally in the mix complement the
ideals of the song beautifully, and though the heartfelt lyrics become melodi-
cally cumbersome and distracting for no discernable reason, the song is still
one of true emotive power.
Lennon’s instrumental contributions are strongest on a handful of num-
bers, including “Kite Song,” where he provides a growling guitar undercur-
rent that anchors Ono’s account of a disturbing dream. No less impressive
is his guitar work on “Move on Fast,” a straight-ahead rocker that hits the
ground running and never lets up. Lennon then revisits some guitar play-
ing reminiscent of “Cold Turkey” on “Peter the Dealer.” The guitar lines
on “Yang Yang”—presumably performed by both Lennon and Elephant’s
Memory member Wayne “Tex” Gabriel—are appropriately forceful in
one of Ono’s better songs about social and internal revolution, and their
interconnections.
4
What You Got, 1973–1975
Radio airplay banning and its controversial nature helped keep “Woman Is
the Nigger of the World” from rising higher than number 57 on the charts,
and Lennon did not release any other single from the
Sometime in New York
City
album, despite the obvious choice of “New York City.” The general
public’s as well as Lennon’s fan base’s lack of appreciation for Ono’s work
(making up a significant part of the album), the extreme countercultural,
politicized content, the slightly higher cost for the “free” live disc, and the
lack of a top-40 hit single caused the album to be a comparative commercial
flop, especially in the wake of the much-praised and high-selling
Imagine
album. This occurred despite the fact that the duo, backed by Elephant’s
Memory, promoted the material on
The Mike Douglas Show, The Dick Cavett
Show,
and
The Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon
broadcast. In addition,
the two One to One charity concerts were also filmed and broadcast, and
later edited into the posthumously released
Live in New York City
album and
video tape.
By the end of the summer of 1972, Lennon’s immigration troubles had
deepened, consuming much of his time.1 In October 1968, he and Ono were
arrested for possession of cannabis resin, pled guilty, and paid a fine. Later,
this was used to declare Lennon an undesirable alien in the United States and
therefore deportable. Lennon’s high-profile, countercultural actions got him
noticed, and evidence shows he was in fact targeted by government agen-
cies and officials for expulsion for those very reasons, with the drug charge
being merely an excuse. The harassment slowed down after Richard Nixon’s
reelection as president, but did not really abate until Nixon resigned from
the presidency in August 1974. Soon after Lennon and Ono’s son Sean was
46 The Words and Music of John Lennon
born in October 1975, the U.S. government officially ended its harassment
of Lennon. However, it was not until July 1976 that Lennon was granted full
and permanent status as a resident alien, with the option to earn citizenship
five years later in 1981.
He and Ono cut back on their overt political activities and rhetoric as well
as their public appearances. While the couple finished both the Elephant’s
Memory and Ono’s albums, Lennon seems to have hit a period of creative
and personal malaise that began in the fall of 1972 and lasted until the start
of 1974. That malaise may have contributed to his and Ono’s separation in
the early fall of 1973 that continued until early 1975. Lennon later termed
the malaise and separation his “lost weekend,” and, while it clearly had its
personal and professional rough spots, it did not keep Lennon from working
and ultimately creating some of his best recordings.2
Ringo StaRR: “i’m the gReateSt”
Lennon’s former Beatle band mate Ringo Starr had produced two nonrock
albums and two nonalbum hit singles since The Beatles’ breakup. Both singles
had employed fellow former Beatle George Harrison, who had also played
on Lennon’s
Imagine
album. At the time, Starr and Harrison shared to some
degree Lennon’s frustrations with Paul McCartney, which was so fiercely
exhibited in
Imagine
’s “How Do You Sleep?” discussed in chapter 3. One of
Starr’s charting singles, “Back Off Boogaloo,” had been about McCartney;
the term “Boogaloo” was an insider code word for McCartney, and the lyrics
obviously related to him.3 Freudians may want to note that the promotional
film Starr made for the song at the time shows him amiably contending with
Frankenstein’s monster. Also, one of Starr’s B-sides, “Early 1970,” expressed
his uncertain relationship with McCartney while asserting the dependability
of his relationships with Lennon and especially Harrison.
By the time Starr decided to do his first rock-pop album, relationships
among the former Beatles were on the mend, and Starr asked each of them
to contribute something to the record. Harrison collaborated with Starr on
four songs, McCartney on two, and Lennon one. Lennon’s contribution was
performing on his composition “I’m the Greatest,” and it includes a sardonic
take on the Beatles’ experience.
The song became a sequel of sorts to The Beatles’ “With a Little Help
from My Friends” as Starr once again sings that “my name is Billy Shears”
while crowd noises cheer him on. Lennon’s lyrics compare The Beatles to
a circus by stating, “I was in the greatest show on earth,” but then deflate
the importance of that remark immediately by adding the pithy “for what it
was worth.” Klaus Voorman handled the bass, with Harrison on guitar, Starr
on percussion and lead vocals, and Lennon on piano and backing vocals.
The collaboration on “I’m the Greatest” was the closest thing to a Beatles
What You Got, 1973–1975 47
reunion during Lennon’s life time, and, though not a monumental work, its
humor and sense of fun recapture some of the true joy at the core of much
of The Beatles’ best work.
The
John Lennon Anthology
contains a portion of Lennon’s run through
with Starr, Harrison, and Voorman to rehearse them for the recording of the
track and to provide Starr with a guide vocal. What is most noticeable is how
assured Lennon is in directing the band and finding the feel he wants. Also
striking is how, even in rehearsal, the tone of the song seems harsher. Starr’s
shouting of “I’m the greatest, and you better believe it baby!” is inherently
affable and comical in a manner that Lennon’s obviously tongue-in-cheek
delivery of a similar phrase cannot quite match.
Feeling the Space
Before Lennon began work on his next album,
Mind Games,
Ono had
started on her next album, titled
Feeling the Space.
The production of the
albums overlapped, and both were released in November 1973. The album
remains one of Ono’s best and most accessible records.
Lennon contributed guitar work on “She Hits Back,” a percolating track
that musically sounds like it could have come from the
Double Fantasy
sessions. “Woman Power” showcases another especially gritty guitar line and
rhythm solo from Lennon that closely prefigures his work on the “Walk-
ing on Thin Ice” single released shortly after his murder. These tracks are
surprisingly similar to work that they did seven years later. It is as if Lennon
and Ono picked up in 1980 where they left off in 1973.
Lennon’s final contribution is to “Men, Men, Men,” where Ono satirically
engages in a comical reverse sexism. A condescending lecture on the nature
of and value of men while reducing them to sexual playthings ends with Ono
telling “honeyjuice” that he can “come out of your box now,” to which we
hear Lennon subserviently reply, “Yes, dear.”
Mind gaMeS
The
Mind Games
album was welcomed as a sort of recovery from the agit-
prop of the previous year’s releases. Lennon later dismissed it as hackwork,
and fans considered it a definite cut below
Imagine.
Time has been good to
it, however, and, although it largely fails as a unified effort, certain individual
songs have justifiably earned their spots in Lennon’s pantheon.
The title cut, which was also a single release, sets the tone and informs the
underlying theme for the album, a theme sometimes hard to discern as much
of a unifying force. Sonically lush, Lennon’s transformed and muted slide
guitar work ably stands in for an orchestra and is countered by a churning
rhythmic accompaniment that adds a feeling of earnestness to the lyrical pleas.
48 The Words and Music of John Lennon
The sound is reminiscent of “Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite” from The
Beatles’
Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
album, and a similar approach
would again be used on
Double Fantasy
’s “Watching the Wheels.”
Lennon started “Mind Games” in 1970 as another of his pop anthems
under the title of the then-popular slogan “make love, not war” and as an
abandoned 1950s-style melodramatic rocker called “I Promise.”4 Portions
of both appear on the
John Lennon Anthology.
However, enough time had
passed that he decided the “make love, not war” phrase was dated and would
appear passé at best or might be seen as unintentional self-parody. Clearly,
the phrase would have been the refrain, and its ghost can be heard as the
song fades out, with Lennon adding an apologetic “I know, you’ve heard it
before.” A consciousness-raising book with the song’s eventual title was also
an early inspiration for the song, but no less so was Ono’s conceptual art. In
fact, Lennon sings that “yes is the answer,” a direct reference to an instal-
lation of Ono’s at the Indica Gallery, where the couple first met. Lennon
frequently told the story of climbing up a ladder, grabbing a magnifying glass
hanging by a string from the ceiling, and using it to read the word “yes” on
a small piece of paper attached to the ceiling.5 Lennon was impressed by the
message of positive acceptance he inferred from the word, and, in later years,
he and Ono would express their belief in positive thinking and imagery as
tools for social change.
Lennon’s lyrics express that view on “Mind Games” and are sharp and
spirited, with his cheeky sense of humor evident throughout. The combination
of the solemn message delivered by a tongue-in-cheek cleverness is Lennon
at his best—a big improvement from the somber sloganeering of the previous
year’s output. The song could be seen as both the last hurrah of the flower
children and the opening salvo of new ageism. Lennon’s humorous catalog
of pop mysticisms runs the gamut of references, including mantras, Druids,
magic, the Holy Grail, the (instant?) karmic wheel, image projection through
space and time, ritual dancing, and soul power. These are all part of the mind
games. However they think of it, he calls on people to be “mind guerillas”
for the “absolute elsewhere.” The vagueness is clarified when he tells listeners
that it all comes down to love, which is ultimately “the answer.” This insight,
combining the power of the mental outlook and the power of love, makes
“Mind Games” of a piece with Lennon’s previous hopeful paeans, stretching
back at least to The Beatles’ “The Word” and including such songs as “All
You Need Is Love,” “Instant Karma!,” “Love,” and “Imagine.”
A taut number, the appropriately titled “Tight A$” cannot help but remind
listeners of “That’s Alright, Mama” or other similar rockabilly numbers that
surely inspired Lennon in his younger years. The song prances along with
jubilant energy, and Lennon seems to be having fun, cutting loose with
shouts of joy several times in the song.
The title is inexplicable word play on “tight as” and “tight ass” compounded
by the dollar sign. The lyrics do not offer much of an explanation, as clichés
What You Got, 1973–1975 49
such as “if you can’t stand the heat you better get back in the shade” are
tossed in with surprising similes such as “as tight as a dope fiend’s fix.” Rhym-
ing words provide shifts into harmless nonsense that sound like they probably
mean something but have rushed past by the time the listener realizes they do
not, such as “got it made” becoming “got it laid.”
The band captures the feel of country swing that informs much of classic
rockabilly, helped along considerably by the steel guitar playing of “Sneaky”
Pete Kleinow. There is not any emotional investigation to be had here, and
certainly no overt political commentary. The song is a rejuvenating slice of
simple rock, and it feels as good to the listener as it must have to Lennon.
“Aisumasen (I’m Sorry)” is definitely another matter, as Lennon apologizes
to his wife by name in this mid-paced ballad. This is the first release in which
Lennon uses Japanese words in the lyrics, and they are a tribute to Yoko