Beatles News
Mourners sang and laid flowers Tuesday on Central Park’s candlelit memorial to John Lennon on the 40th anniversary of his murder in New York City, as his widow Yoko Ono marked the moment with a call for gun control.
“The death of a loved one is a hollowing experience,” tweeted the 87-year-old artist, who still lives in the Manhattan building where her husband was shot.
“After 40 years, Sean, Julian and I still miss him,” she added, before quoting the 1971 song she co-wrote with Lennon that became the best-selling single of his solo career.
“Imagine all the people living life in peace.”
Source: japantimes.co.jp
The Beatles fans will never forget the day John Lennon was murdered. On December 8, 1980, 40 years ago this month, Lennon was shot in front of the Dakota hotel in New York City whilst walking with his wife, Yoko Ono. Lennon’s death sent shockwaves throughout the showbiz world, and indeed the music industry. One of the harder parts of Lennon’s death for his family was the constant hounding from the press for comment shortly thereafter.
Close friend of Lennon and his family, Elliot Mintz, recently spoke out about his experience at the time.
In a long discussion he revealed he flew out to be with Yoko and Sean Lennon - the star’s son - to help with anything he could.
During this interview Mintz explained: “I wouldn’t say I managed the press, but I interacted with it. At the time of John’s death he had no manager, no agent, no publicist, no spokesperson, just a very few people on staff - and there were 500 phone calls flying into the downstairs office.
Source: Callum Crumlish/express.co.uk
Tuesday marked the 40th anniversary of the fatal shooting of music legend John Lennon, and Patch editors in Hartford and Tolland counties asked readers to share their memories of the famed former Beatle.
Here is a sampling of some of the replies, as well as a video clip of Howard Cosell announcing Lennon's death during a Monday Night Football game between the Patriots and Dolphins.
"Friends of mine and I (attending seminary in NYC) had gone to the Rockefeller Center tree lighting and decided to walk back to 122nd street. As we passed 72nd someone point down toward the Dakota and remarked that Lennon's building was there. When we got to our dormitory 45 minutes later and flipped on the T.V. we were greeted by the news. How quickly a joyous event turned. The radio was playing "Imagine" and I can't hear it any more without being back in New York City." - Paul Goodman
Source: Patch.com
Forty years this month after his tragic death, John Lennon‘s music, both with the Beatles and in his solo career, is fondly remembered by fans who were there at the time and has gained admiration with every new generation that has come along. In addition, Lennon’s writing and particularly his vocals have been held in high esteem by music critics around the world for decades. He has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice, as part of the iconic band and for his solo career
While his work with the Beatles are most fondly remembered by pop music fans, following the break-up of the group, Lennon spun his career in an entirely new direction, both with fans and critics. His sound became far less pop and far more individualistic, as he balanced songs about politics with those about relationships. Though his life was cut short far too early, the work he left behind with resonate with fans long after our own lifetimes.
Source: Tom O'Brien/goldderby.com
A massive coup': Rare Linda McCartney retrospective to show at the Ballarat International Foto Biennale
Paul McCartney often joked that he ruined his wife's career.
Before he met her, Linda Eastman was an award-winning photographer whose talent was capturing pop stars in those character-revealing moments in between poses. She made her name in 1966 as an editorial assistant at Town & Country magazine in New York, wangling her way into a Rolling Stones party on the band's motor yacht on the Hudson River and snapping the cool weariness of a band on the run.
But then “she became known as 'Paul's wife' instead of the focus being on her photography,” McCartney told The Guardian in 2019, of the woman he married in 1969 while the long, painful break-up of The Beatles dragged on.
Source: Nick Miller/smh.com.au
When Led Zeppelin topped the charts on both sides of the Atlantic in 1969, the rock press realized it had a story on its hands. As rumors of The Beatles’ demise swirled, a powerful new British act had emerged. And it looked as if the Zeppelin could be as successful as the Fab Four.
That didn’t change when the calendar pages flipped to 1970. As The Beatles tried out solo projects and broke up, the Zep continued selling out concert halls and released another No. 1 record. And by the end of the year Melody Maker readers named Zeppelin the top British band.
So when John Bonham and his bandmates began giving interviews, journalists wanted to know how they felt about the Fab Four and their latest release, Abbey Road. Bonham had nothing but good things to say about the drums on Beatles albums. The only thing was, he wasn’t sure whether Paul McCartney or Ringo Starr played them.
Source: cheatsheet.com
By the time the Beatles broke up in 1970, the four members had already started work on their respective solo debuts. John Lennon produced the raw, vulnerable, critically lauded Plastic Ono Band. George Harrison's monumental All Things Must Pass sprawled over three vinyl records. Ringo knocked out two LPs within the span of five months — one a collection of jazz standards, the other a country album he cut in Nashville.
Paul McCartney's solo debut, simply titled McCartney, was the most modest of the lot, a series of doodles and improvs whose release coincided with a press release officially confirming his departure from the Beatles. It was the first public acknowledgment that the most successful band of all time had called it quits, and it unfairly marked McCartney as the true saboteur behind the Fab Four's demise (in fact, Lennon had privately "divorced" himself from the band the previous year).
Source: Nathan Weinbender/inlander.com
Fans of the Fab Four remembered John Lennon this week on the 40th anniversary of his death, when he was fatally shot four times in the back by Mark Chapman in New York. The Beatles left an indelible mark on music during eight years together, when they released 188 original songs and 25 covers. Now, a link between the Liverpudlian band and the Soviet Union’s downfall has been revealed by a friend of John.
Rod Davis knew the deceased singer-songwriter from the age of five, when they both attended Sunday school at St Peter’s Church, in Woolton, Liverpool.
They grew closer in Quarry Bank High School through John’s cheeky antics in class including making cardboard dog collars for everyone in a religious studies lesson.
Mr Davis was part of the original line-up for John's old band The Quarrymen and soon he met Paul McCartney – a moment that would change the history of music.
Source: Josh Saunders/express.co.uk
Looks like Jerry Seinfield is discussing Seinfeld Ever since the classic TV sitcom came to an end in 1998. And yet, he keeps finding new angles to take it. In his latest, Seinfeld compared his show to The Beatles, including its reasons when it ended. Seinfield was a guest The Tim Ferris Show podcast on Dec. 8. To discuss the end of Seinfeld Some 22 years later, the comedian used The Beatles to help explain it.Seinfeld The gang may be television’s Fab Four between Seinfeld, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Michael Richards and Jason Alexander. They were rallying five, including co-producer Larry David. The show also lasted as long as the band was together. Seinfield told Ferris, “I have never had any more than I have and I will never compare myself in any way, shape or form.” “The deadline of the Beatles was nine years.”Each of the Beatles went solo, and that’s how the artists produced it Seinfeld like. Seinfeld went back into standup and her costumes went on to other shows. However, there was no conflict within the cast.
Source: granthshala.com
Argentine Javier Parisi has been a mega fan of the Beatles since the age of eight - forming a tribute band, playing at Liverpool`s Cavern Club, and promoting a biography in Spanish. He is also the spitting image of John Lennon.
Fans around the world have been remembering Lennon and his music this week, 40 years after he was shot dead in New York.
Parisi - who is 40 years old - first realized his striking similarity to the Beatle as a teenager.
"The physical resemblance obviously exists and then as time went by I began to study his character," Parisi, dressed as Lennon, told Reuters at his house in Lanús, a suburb of Buenos Aires.
In 2009, Allan Williams, the Beatles` first manager, came to Argentina and invited Parisi`s band to play at Beatle Week in Liverpool.
"As a fan and admirer, I said `that`s it, what else can happen to me?," said Parisi, who even studied Liverpool`s `Scouse` accent and Lennon`s way of singing.
Source: wionews.com