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Sto caricando le informazioni... The Playboy Interviews With John Lennon and Yoko Ono: The complete texts plus unpublished conversations and Lennon's song-by-song analysis of his music (edizione 1981)di John Lennon (Autore)
Informazioni sull'operaPlayboy Interviews with John Lennon & Yoko Ono: The Final Testament di David Sheff
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. What an interesting look at this mould-breaking couple. Lennon is shifty, needling, egoic. Ono, unpredictable, imaginative, but a shepherd for Lennon and their relationship. He seems to love the way she lets him be helpless. They talk about their domestic life, about creation; John evinces a surprising sweetbitter hostility to the other Beatles (possibly excepting Ringo); he talks at length about some of their songs and where they came from. We hear about their relationships with parents and children, and there are a few admissions--John's violence toward women; the crossworld hounding and intimidation of Yoko's ex-husband over custody of their kid--that you don't expect they shopped around to the mags in general. It surprises a little how much insecurity John wears so close to the surface, underneath his hippie-Liverpudlian combination of peacnicity, self-potentiality jargon and comewhatmayism; but it does the heart good to see John the happy househusband and Yoko the steely CEO. And then you think about what was shortly, so shortly to come, and moue downcast (even still) for his lost genius. He talks about the music he'll be making when he's 85; it's sad. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Includes the text of the interviews plus unpublished conversations not previously included in the magazine. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)784.5400924The arts Music Instruments and instrumental ensembles and their music [formerly: Voice and vocal music] Popular Music Rock music Rock music biographyClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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Back then, I could accept the somewhat spacier of John and Yoko's beliefs. I came at their words as a true believer.
Now, as the father of two, much more jaded by life, but still a Beatles and Lennon fan, and still mourning his loss, as well as George's, all these years later, I come at the book still admiring the man, admiring his convictions, his desperate search for peace, both within and without. I love how each deferred to the other, finished each others' sentences and, sometimes, gently disagreed with each other.
Harder to accept is their views on parenthood, but that's always a personal choice.
But, more than anything, what I took away from this interview series this time was, perhaps for the first time, John was human. He said incredibly intelligent things, he said dumbfoundingly stupid things, he said funny things, he said heartbreaking things.
John was, first a foremost, before he was a Beatle, a musician, a father, a husband, a champion of peace, he was a human being, with all the foibles and mistakes built in. Not a God, not someone to worship, hell, maybe not even someone to look up to.
But definitely someone we could learn from.
And I still am saddened that I live in a world without him. ( )