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Short Review of John Lennon Solo Career for English Speaking Visitors John Lennon's career apart from The Beatles combined
politics, avant-garde art and old-time rock'n'roll.
His solo recordings began before The Beatles had
officially disbanded, with 1968's "Unfinished Music No.1: Two virgins", recorded with future wife Yoko Ono
before Lennon and his wife, Cynthia, had divorced.
More than half of his non-Beatles work came out under
Lennon and Ono's names, such as "Instant Karma!"
in 1969 and "Merry XMas (War Is Over)" in 1971.
Lennon's 1971 "Imagine" album reached No. 1 as did
"Walls and Bridges" in 1974. "Whatever Gets You Through
the Night (1974) was his only No. 1 song of the '70s.
Lennon retired from music after a 1975 album of oldies,
becoming a house husband to his and Ono's son, Sean.
Lennon and Ono returned in 1980 with "Double Fantasy",
a dialogue of songs that included "(Just Like) Starting Over",
Lennon's last No. 1 song.
He was killed by a deranged fan on Dec. 8, 1980, as he returned
to his New York apartment from a recording session.
Unabriged Version
John Winston Ono Lennon was born on October 9,
1940 to a troubled, working-class Liverpool family.
John's father deserted his mother when John was
only three, so at an early age Lennon was sent to
live with his aunt in the suburb of Woolton, where
he was a rebellious child. Frequently skipping
school and doodling instead of studying, Lennon
left Quarry Bank High School at age 16 after his
aunt persuaded the headmaster to
write him a recommendation to Liverpool Art
College. At art school Lennon became involved in
music, buying a guitar and starting a skiffle band
in early 1957. That band, the Quarrymen, evolved
over the next few years into the Beatles. Lennon
remained a principle singer and songwriter for the
band through its decade-long career, splitting
these duties with Paul McCartney. The pair agreed
early on to share songwriting credits, though they
directly collaborated on only a few of the Beatles'
hits. Lennon, for his part, contributed more
experimental and mystical music during the
band's
later years, while McCartney was more
pop-oriented; Lennon also led the group into drug
use during the mid-'60s and encouraged them to
follow his guru, the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.
Shortly after forming the Beatles, Lennon married
an art school classmate, Cynthia Powell, with
whom he had a son, Julian, in 1963. Their
marriage was rocky, especially after Lennon
began openly dating an older Japanese-American
artist named Yoko Ono. Cynthia divorced John in
1968, clearing the way for John and Yoko to begin
living and working together full time. Shortly after
the release of 1968's The Beatles (aka The White
Album), John and Yoko released the experimental
"found sound" collection Unfinished Music, No. 1
-- Two Virgins. The cover of this album featured a
naked photo of the couple, causing it to be banned
from many stores. Lennon and Ono became the
subject of media attention as reporters speculated
that Ono was "controlling" Lennon and causing
trouble for the beloved Beatles. In the spring of
1969, shortly after the trouble-filled Get Back
sessions were completed, Lennon and a very
pregnant Ono embarked on a "honeymoon" to
Europe, stopping along the way to get married in
Gibraltar on March 20th. The couple staged a
notorious "Bed-In" at the Amsterdam Hilton, where
they recorded the single "Give Peace a Chance,"
released later that year. Opposition to the Vietnam
War was very important to the couple, who
constantly decried political injustices from their
celebrity bully pulpit.
The newlyweds returned to England in May 1969,
where Yoko had a miscarriage, the first of several.
To deal with their anguish, John and Yoko hastily
recorded two more avante- garde albums, Life with
the Lions -- Unfinished Music No. 2 (which
features such
"songs" as flipping through various radio stations
and several minutes of silence) and The Wedding
Album (whose entire B-side consists of John and
Yoko screaming each other's name). After
recording Abbey Road during the summer of 1969,
Lennon flew to Toronto, where he performed at a
September rock 'n' roll festival with "The Plastic
Ono Band," consisting of Ono, famed guitarist Eric
Clapton, German session bassist Klaus
Voormann and drummer Alan White; the band's
performance was captured on a live album
released later that year.
As Lennon spent more time collaborating with
Ono, he began to distance himself from the other
Beatles. In late 1969 he informed the group that he
wanted to quit the band, but because contract
negotiations were underway with EMI, his decision
was kept quiet. Lennon and the Plastic Ono band
recorded the single "Cold Turkey," about Lennon's
struggles with heroin, but the song was not
particularly popular. Lennon intensified his political
actions, paying for billboards in various cities that
called for the end of war, and returning an award
given to him by the Queen in protest of Britain's
involvement in Biafra. Lennon refocused on his
music career in February 1970 with the Top 10 hit
"Instant Karma." Two months later Paul
McCartney released his debut solo album and
publicly announced the end of the Beatles,
angering Lennon, who had first had the idea and
wanted to be the one to break the news. Lennon
vented his anger with John Lennon/Plastic Ono
Band, his first official album, which consisted of
highly personal songs often screamed in rage. A
few months later, in early 1971, Lennon released
the protest song "Power to the People."
In the spring of 1971 Lennon and Ono relocated to
New York City, moving into the Dakota, an historic
apartment building on Central Park West. Lennon
wasted no time becoming involved in American
society, siding with Chicago Seven political
radicals and frequently speaking out on political
issues. That fall Lennon released his most popular
solo album to date, the No. 1 charting Imagine,
which dealt with personal and political issues in a
more accessible manner than his earlier works. In
early 1972 Lennon began fighting off U.S.
Immigration Authorities, who had denied him a
work visa due to a 1968 conviction for marijuana
possession. Partially in protest, Lennon
collaborated with the radical New York band
Elephant's Memory on the album Sometime in
New York City, a simplistic political work which is
widely regarded as a commercial and artistic
failure. In 1973 the INS ordered Lennon to leave
the U.S.; Lennon refused, and began publicly
attacking the agency. Later that year Lennon
released the surprisingly tame Mind Games,
whose title track was a minor hit.
In 1974 Lennon separated from Yoko Ono,
relocating to Los Angeles. For the next two years
Lennon became heavily involved in drugs, and
became a frequent attendee of celebrity parties
and wild night clubs. Through the party circuit
Lennon developed a friendship with Elton John,
with whom he co-wrote the song "Whatever Gets
You Through the Night," Lennon's 1974 No. 1
comeback. The single was featured on the album
Walls and Bridges (which also reached No. 1). On
Thanksgiving night Lennon joined John onstage at
Madison Square Garden, a legendary performance
which turned out to be Lennon's last public
concert. The following year Lennon recorded a
contractual obligation album, Rock And Roll, a
collection of cover tunes from the 1950s. Several
months before the official release of the album,
businessman Morris Levy released a bootleg of
the record as Roots. Lennon later sued Levy,
winning a large
judgment in court.
By the end of 1975, things had turned around for
Lennon: Elton John had helped John and Yoko
resolve their marital differences, and in early
October an appeals court overturned the
deportation order which had been haunting
Lennon. The following year Ono became pregnant
yet again, and on October 9, 1975 (John's
birthday) gave birth to their child, Sean. After
contributing to a David Bowie album in the
summer of 1976, John retired from music to raise
his child and tend house, while Ono handled the
family's complicated business and legal affairs and
worked on her conceptual art.
In early 1980 Lennon came out of retirement and
signed a new record deal
with Geffen. John and Yoko recorded a new album
that summer, Double Fantasy, which was
released in November. The highly listenable album
and its first single, "(Just Like) Starting Over," both
charted, and Lennon seemed to be on the verge of
a comeback. While leaving his New York
apartment on December 8, Lennon was
approached by a sleazy-looking fan who requested
an autograph. When John returned home several
hours later, the fan was still outside his apartment,
and shot Lennon several times. He died minutes
later, and the crazed fan, Mark David Chapman,
was quickly arrested. On December 14 at 2 p.m.,
Lennon fans around the world participated in a
widely publicized 10-minute silent vigil. Naturally,
Double Fantasy and "Starting Over" went to No. 1
and sold thousands of copies. As Chapman went
to trial, bizarre details came out about the
disturbed loner, who apparently was obsessed not
only with Lennon, but also with the popular novel
Catcher in the Rye. He was easily convicted and
sentenced to an indefinite term in The Attica State Prison, N.Y.
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Jak zil John Lennon v letech 1977-80
Selected Songs Lyrics of John Lennon
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