Portions of this page Copyright 1948 - 2008 Muze Inc.
All rights reserved.
All rights reserved.| Track Listing 1. Mother - (with Yoko Ono) 2. Hold On - (with Yoko Ono) 3. I Found Out - (with Yoko Ono) 4. Working Class Hero - (with Yoko Ono) 5. Isolation - (with Yoko Ono) 6. Remember - (with Yoko Ono) 7. Love - (with Yoko Ono) 8. Well Well Well - (with Yoko Ono) 9. Look at Me - (with Yoko Ono) 10. God - (with Yoko Ono) 11. My Mummy's Dead - (with Yoko Ono) 12. Power to the People - (with Yoko Ono) 13. Do the Oz - (with Yoko Ono)
Album Notes JOHN LENNON PLASTIC ONO BAND came out at the same time as an album by Lennon's wife Yoko Ono (also titled PLASTIC ONO BAND). Originally released on Apple (3372) Personnel: John Lennon (guitar); Klaus Voormann (bass guitar); Ringo Starr (drums); Yoko Ono (wind). Additional personnel: Billy Preston. Recording information: Abbey Road Studios, London, England (09/1970 - 11/1970). John Lennon's 1970 official solo debut is as remarkable for its startling contrast to the Beatles as it is for the passion and force of its songwriting. Stripped-down, gripping, and emotionally resonant, PLASTIC ONO BAND has little to do with the hook-heavy pop of his early Beatles work, or the psychedelic, word-salad approach of his songs on SGT PEPPER'S LONELY HEART'S CLUB BAND and ABBEY ROAD. Instead, this is an album of intensely confessional songs that lay bare the personal demons Lennon was trying to exorcise at the time--the ghosts of fame, family, faith, and individual identity, among them. The sound of the album is straightforward and hard-hitting. Spare, lean rock arrangements with piano, drums, bass, and guitar frame the songs effectively, letting Lennon's narratives carry the weight. The songs are shot through with bitterness ("I Found Out"), disillusionment ("God"), and regret ("Mother"), but there are also moments of hope in "Hold On" and the achingly beautiful "Love," which ranks alongside the very best of Lennon's ballads. Lennon was undergoing primal scream therapy during these sessions and the results can be heard, overtly (the strained vocals of "Well, Well, Well"), and in the rage and anguish of his harrowingly honest songwriting. This is one of the finest singer/songwriter albums of this or any era. Editorial Reviews Rolling Stone (06/10/1999) CMJ (05/24/1999) Q (06/01/2000) Mojo (11/01/2000) NME (10/21/2000) Q (12/01/2000) Rolling Stone (12/11/2003) | Find errors in the product description? Submit a catalog update request now. | ||||||||||||||||
All rights reserved.| Replace this search |
Email me daily when new items match my search for | |