拍品专文
John Lennon recorded his most popular solo album Imagine in February and May 1971 between Abbey Road and in his home studio in Tittenhurst Park near Ascot, and further days overdubbing with Phil Spector at the Record Plant in New York in July, the album was later released in October of that year. This, Lennon's second solo work, is commonly regarded to be his best. Following on from the uncompromising political crusade in his first solo work John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band it has been noted that many of the songs on Imagine were simply gentler renditions of the same key themes. Lennon himself described Imagine as 'Plastic Ono Band' with sugar coating... both the song itself and the album, is the same thing as 'Working Class Hero' , 'Mother' and 'God' on the first disc...But the first record was too real for people, so nobody bought it. Lennon's critics may have accused him of compromise or even sell out but he stood by the message in the first album, and as Peter Doggett suggests he made a conscious attempt to sweeten the bitter pill with melody and harmony..
It is fascinating to glimpse some of the thought processes Lennnon had when refining these songs in this rare set of lyrics sheets for the complete album. The annotations and additions in his own hand and the variations in the typed text and verse order bear witness to Lennon's creative process in the genesis of these songs.
In his accompanying letter, Ray Connolly vividly recalls the occasion when Lennon gave him these lyric sheets on one of his numerous visits to Tittenhurst Park: During one visit in July 1971 he played me a test pressing of his new album 'Imagine', which he'd just finished recording in the newly built studios there. As I was listening to it in John and Yoko's bedroom (where meetings often took place) on a Dansette type of player because we couldn't get the new fangled hi-fi system he'd had installed to work, I asked if I could read the lyrics. Whereupon he went downstairs to one of his two secretaries and asked that copies of the lyrics be made for me on the Xerox machine he had. No sooner had I got the copies than John began to take them off me and scribble on them, showing me where he'd made changes to the songs while he'd been recording..... Connolly remembers that the first track Lennon played him from the album was Give Me Some Truth, intended, said Lennon, to be the next single. Connolly states: I didn't think much of it... and asked what was on the other side. Whereupon he played me the song 'Imagine'. "Shouldn't that be the A-side?" I said. He turned to Yoko who was sitting on the bed. "Yoko, Ray thinks 'Imagine' should be the A side".. Connolly believes that this was a deliberate test to find out if I was a "yes man", or he [Lennon] wanted a genuine response from someone about the relative strengths of both songs. Whether this was a test or not, the outcome of the track order would suggest that Lennon got the answer he was hoping for from someone whose opinion he respected.
It is fascinating to glimpse some of the thought processes Lennnon had when refining these songs in this rare set of lyrics sheets for the complete album. The annotations and additions in his own hand and the variations in the typed text and verse order bear witness to Lennon's creative process in the genesis of these songs.
In his accompanying letter, Ray Connolly vividly recalls the occasion when Lennon gave him these lyric sheets on one of his numerous visits to Tittenhurst Park: During one visit in July 1971 he played me a test pressing of his new album 'Imagine', which he'd just finished recording in the newly built studios there. As I was listening to it in John and Yoko's bedroom (where meetings often took place) on a Dansette type of player because we couldn't get the new fangled hi-fi system he'd had installed to work, I asked if I could read the lyrics. Whereupon he went downstairs to one of his two secretaries and asked that copies of the lyrics be made for me on the Xerox machine he had. No sooner had I got the copies than John began to take them off me and scribble on them, showing me where he'd made changes to the songs while he'd been recording..... Connolly remembers that the first track Lennon played him from the album was Give Me Some Truth, intended, said Lennon, to be the next single. Connolly states: I didn't think much of it... and asked what was on the other side. Whereupon he played me the song 'Imagine'. "Shouldn't that be the A-side?" I said. He turned to Yoko who was sitting on the bed. "Yoko, Ray thinks 'Imagine' should be the A side".. Connolly believes that this was a deliberate test to find out if I was a "yes man", or he [Lennon] wanted a genuine response from someone about the relative strengths of both songs. Whether this was a test or not, the outcome of the track order would suggest that Lennon got the answer he was hoping for from someone whose opinion he respected.