

John
Lennon








John Lennon, died December 8, 1980, age 40

Singer, songwriter, co-founded the Beatles;
from Liverpool. The murder of John Lennon, who in so many ways represented the
heart and soul not just of the Beatles but of all '60s rock'n'roll, was perhaps
the most emotionally felt of all rock deaths. Certainly there was an equal
outpouring of emotion for Elvis Presley, and perhaps as much in some quarters
for Buddy Holly, Jimi Hendrix, and Janis Joplin. But John Lennon's death was
more stunning than any of them. He was just emerging from a long period of
silence with a vigor as surprising as it was refreshing, and he seemed in
command of his powers as never before, at a time when rock'n'roll and the world
desperately needed his voice. It was the time immediately following the first
landslide election of Ronald Reagan, a discouraging prospect to so many who had
embraced all that Lennon seemed to stand for and believe in. If the two events
were unrelated, and clearly they were, they are indelibly linked on an emotional
level. Not only had Ronald Reagan been elected president, with all his cold,
brutal values coming to ascendance -- but the one rock star who seemed the
warmest and most human (much of that merely public image, as it turned out) had
been summarily slain a month later. Asked about Lennon's death within days of
its happening, Ronald Reagan cupped a hand to an ear and then shrugged and
grinned, saying something affably inaudible toward the crowd of reporters. He
obviously didn't care.
But don't get mixed up about John
Lennon. His true genius, which he practiced all his life, was to make people
love him. As a human being, he was seriously troubled, the result of a lifetime
of festering pain. Separated from his parents as an infant (his father went off
to sea and his mother on to good times, the next relationship, and eventually an
early death), he was raised by his aunt, Mimi Smith, in a middle-class British
setting. He was a behavior problem all through school, but early on found
something like salvation, or at least balm, in U.S. rock'n'roll, which he loved.
He formed his first band at age sixteen. Paul McCartney attended a performance
in 1957 and shortly afterward became a member. McCartney's musical skills
impressed Lennon -- and Lennon's savvy impressed McCartney. Soon they had agreed
that everything written by either would from that point on be credited to
"Lennon-McCartney," a promise they kept for nearly fifteen years.
George Harrison eventually joined and, later, Pete Best, who was replaced on the
brink of the group's breakthrough by Ringo Starr. Known variously as the Quarry
Men, Johnny & the Moondogs, and the Silver Beatles, they finally settled on
the name the Beatles, after the Crickets, whom they idolized, with Lennon
misspelling it to make the pun on "beat group." In 1960, a four-month
stint in Hamburg, Germany, playing some eight hours a night, helped them get
their impressive performing act together and provided the physical endurance
training they needed to survive Beatlemania when it hit. The last pieces to fall
in place were a manager and a record deal, both of which had happened by
mid-1962. Lennon, who had been deeply involved with Cynthia Powell since 1957,
married her in 1962 when she became pregnant with Julian. The Beatles' enormous
success, which followed almost immediately, was overwhelming beyond belief. As
mere mortals, we can only try to imagine what it was like to be a Beatle between
1964 and 1970. Lennon on touring: "Oh, it was a room and a car and a car
and a room and a room and a car." Fast-forward to Lennon in a 1966
interview with British journalist Maureen Cleave: "Christianity will go. It
will vanish and shrink. I needn't argue that; I'm right and I will be proved
right. We're more popular than Jesus now." He was to pay dearly for those
remarks, which raised a stink some six months later in the U.S. and earned him
and the group lasting enmity from many.
The Beatles retired from the road
shortly after that, at the end of 1966 -- in hindsight that was the beginning of
the end. In November of 1966 Lennon met Yoko Ono at a gallery opening; almost
immediately they hit it off, and she pursued him. But Lennon was not available
yet. He was still married, and he was also busy making his contributions to the
vastly celebrated Sgt. Pepper. In reality it was an album all too sorely
wanting in concept and containing more filler than the two previous outings (Revolver
and Rubber Soul) combined. But still it has somehow insinuated itself as
a lasting hippie totem and a permanent symbol of the times. Then the Beatles
embarked on a very sad and a very silly time, with LSD adventures at home, TM
adventures in India, the death of Brian Epstein (with whom Lennon did or did not
have sex on a vacation to Spain in 1963 -- Lennon was always exceptionally
touchy on the subject, but no one is alive any longer who can say positively
either way), the dissolution of Lennon's marriage, and the formation of Apple.
Meanwhile, as the moral center of the U.S. dissolved the Beatles had somehow
become an integral part of it, every step of the way. No one knew quite how or
why or what it all meant, but few denied it. The White Album seemed to capture
the sense of 1968. Abbey Road seemed to capture the sense of 1969. Let
It Be seemed to capture the sense of 1970. It didn't matter when any of them
were really recorded. How did they do that?

And then, finally, the
group broke up. Lennon, switching his psychic allegiance and expectations from
McCartney to Yoko, was ultimately traumatized by it, as his public statements
and behavior of the time made clear. But the overall impact of this difficult
time on him nonetheless resulted in some of his most fascinating and enduring
work: 1970's John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band and 1971's Imagine, both
of them startling testaments to scathing self-disclosure. Somehow, when Lennon
opened up and exposed all his running sores, everyone's first impulse was to
respond with love. There was his true genius again, the evidence of which really
became obvious after his death. Those gut-wrenching albums set the tone for
Lennon in the '70s, a decade that was not good to him despite the stories that
claimed otherwise. He spent the first half fighting the U.S. Immigration
Department for his green card, drinking heavily, and yawping non-stop for peace
(for which we almost have to assume that Lennon, an unusually violent man in his
personal life, was driven by his overwhelming need for the "of mind"-
type even more than the end to armed conflict, despite his overt, conscious
focus on war; he doubtless understood the interconnectedness therein at some
level, or so we may hope). He spent the second half in seclusion after the birth
of his son Sean. Reports conflict on his activities then, some claiming that he
baked approximately as many loaves of bread as Jesus distributed with the fishes
in the miracle described in the Bible, others reporting a series of ugly
psychotic episodes. The ("just gimme some") truth is no doubt
somewhere in between, and we will likely never know it. Yoko, at any rate, was
in charge of their financial affairs, and Lennon was mostly on sabbatical from
life. Then a sudden creative fit in 1980 resulted in the material for Double
Fantasy. The album came together extraordinarily quickly and was released in
November. Still in a creative frenzy, the couple were already at work on their
next project when, coming home late from a session, Lennon was hailed by a fan
to whom he'd given an autograph earlier that day, Mark David Chapman. Lennon
turned and Chapman shot him five times with a .38 revolver. Lennon was rushed to
the hospital but pronounced dead on arrival from a massive loss of blood.
Chapman later claimed it was Lennon's remarks in 1966 on Jesus that drove him to
his act, but more likely he was just a schnook in search of fame. He found it.


***From The Death of Rock'n'Roll:
Untimely Demises, Morbid Preoccupations, and Premature Forecasts of Doom in Pop
Music by Jeff Pike (Faber & Faber).
***Personally i consider John Lennon
one of the legends of the music in general and rock 'N' Roll in particular
although his life was pretty much a big contradict. I am not a very big fan of
his personality because he did alot of stuff that he never believed in not to
mention his ways of doing things but I am a big fan of his music and probably
many of you know by now that I call myself Ziad Lennon...not only because of my
admiration to John Lennon but also because it sounds good...Ziad Lennon,dont
ya think?!!

