Lennon was born in 1940 during
the Nazi bombing of Britain and given the middle name Winston, after prime
minister Churchill (he would later change his middle name to Ono). Lennon's
father, a merchant seaman, walked out on the family when John was five years
old. Years later Lennon met him again, during the height of Beatlemania.
Imagine
by John Lennon
Both of his parents had
musical backgrounds and experience, though neither pursued music
seriously. Lennon was sent to live with his “Aunt Mimi” after his
parents separated. The rest of his childhood and adolescence Lennon lived with
his "Aunt Mimi" and her husband, George Smith at 251 Menlove Avenue,
Mendips, Liverpool.
John
Lennon as a child with his aunt Mimi, who raised him
In 1956, Aunt Mimi bought Lennon
a guitar. His incessant playing prompted her to remark, "The guitar's all
very well as a hobby, John, but you'll never make a living out of it."
Years later, when The Beatles were the top act in show business, he presented
her with a silver platter, engraved with those words.
Mimi and George, who had no
children of their own, became strong parental figures to Lennon. On 15 July
1958, when Lennon was 17, his mother was struck and killed by a car driven by a
drunk, off-duty police officer, as she returned from Mimi's house. The death was
one of the most traumatic events in John's life, she was a loose, optimistic
person who understood John's struggles in school. Julia Lennon's death was one
of the factors that cemented his friendship with McCartney, who had lost his own
mother to breast cancer in 1956, when he was 14.
Lennon attended Dovedale County
Primary School until he passed his Eleven-Plus, and from September 1952 to 1957
he attended Quarry Bank Grammar School in Liverpool, which he referred to as the
start of his misery. He was a trouble-maker there and did little work, sinking
to the "C-stream". He started drawing cartoons, and making fun of his
teachers by mimicking their odd characteristics. Though failing at his exams by
one grade at grammar school, Lennon was accepted into the Liverpool College of
Art with help from his school's headmaster and his Aunt Mimi, who was insistent
that her young ward should have some sort of academic qualifications. It was
there that he met his future wife, Cynthia Powell. Lennon would steadily grow to
hate the conformity of art school, which proved to be little different from his
earlier school experience, and ultimately he dropped out.
October
1957: Paul McCartney, aged 15, performs with The Quarry Men, led by John Lennon
Lennon started a band in
grammar school that was called The Quarry Men after his alma mater, Quarry Bank
Grammar School. With the addition of Paul McCartney and George Harrison, the
band switched to playing rock 'n' roll, taking the name "Johnny and The
Moondogs", followed by "The Silver Beetles" , which was later
shortened to The Beatles spelled with an "a" in reference to their
identification with "beat groups". Ringo Starr joined the band as a
drummer.
The Beatles
became one of the most commercially successful and critically acclaimed
bands in the history of popular music.
In the United
Kingdom, The Beatles released more than 40 different singles, albums, and EPs
that reached number one. This commercial success was repeated in many other
countries; their record company, EMI, estimated that by 1985 they had sold over
one billion records worldwide. The Beatles are the best-selling musical act of
all time in the United States, according to the Recording Industry Association
of America. The Beatles also stared in several hit movies-A Hard Days Night
,Help! ,Magical Mystery Tour, Yellow Submarine, and Let It Be. The Beatles
recorded their final album, Abbey Road, in the summer of 1969.
The
Beatles Late 1960's
Having experienced the horror of
a world at war as a child and then living through the Vietnam era as a young
man, Lennon came to embrace and embody pacifism. His was the voice and vision
that powered such Beatles classics as "All You Need Is Love" and
"Strawberry Fields Forever." Yet Lennon also had a dark side that
found expression in pained outcries dating as far back as "Help," and
his was the most naturally adventuresome musical spirit in the band, as
evidenced by such tracks as "I Am the Walrus” and “Being for the
Benefit of Mr. Kite.” The uncensored, self-lacerating aspect of the Lennon
persona reached a fevered pitch with the drug-withdrawal blues of "Cold
Turkey," a 1969 single released under the name Plastic Ono Band.
"Give Peace a Chance"
was recorded on 1 June 1969 in Room 1742 at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in
Montreal, Canada. The recording session was attended by dozens of journalists
and various celebrities, including Timothy Leary, Joseph Schwartz, Rosemary
Woodruff Leary, Petula Clark, Dick Gregory, Allen Ginsberg, Murray the K and
Derek Taylor. Lennon played acoustic guitar and was joined by Tommy Smothers of
the Smothers Brothers, also on acoustic guitar.
Although Lennon was a complicated
man, he chose after the Beatles to simplify his art in order to figure out his
life, erasing the boundaries between the two. As he explained it, he started
trying "to shave off all imagery, pretensions of poetry, illusions of
grandeur...Just say what it is, simple English, make it rhyme and put a backbeat
on it, and express yourself as simply straightforwardly as possible."
His most fully realized statement as a solo artist was 1970's John
Lennon/Plastic Ono Band. It followed several collaborative sound collages
recorded toward the end of the Beatles era with Yoko Ono, his wife and
collaborator. The raw, confessional nature of Plastic Ono Band reflected the
primal-scream therapy that Lennon and Ono had been undergoing with psychologist
Arthur Janov. He dealt with such fundamental issues as “God” and “Mother”
and the class system (“Working Class Hero”) on an album as full of naked
candor as any in rock has ever been.
Many of Lennon’s post-Beatles
compositions – "Imagine," "Mind Games," "Instant
Karma," and "Give Peace a Chance" – have rightfully become
anthems, flaunting tough-minded realism, cosmic epiphany, hard-won idealism and
visionary utopianism in equal measure. For all of the unvarnished genius of
Lennon's recordings, however, much of what lingers in the public memory goes
beyond musical legacy. Rather, it has to do with leading by example. The
relationship between John and Yoko endured challenges to became one of the most
touching and celebrated of 20th-century romances. They were gallantly foolish in
undertaking performance art pieces - bed-ins, happenings, full-page ads
declaring "War Is Over!" - that spread their message of peace.
During the early Seventies Lennon
fought the U.S. government to avoid deportation – a campaign of harassment by
Nixon-era conservatives that was overturned by the courts in 1976 – and came
to love his adopted city of New York. That same year, Lennon had his first #1
single – somewhat ironically, he was the last Beatle to top the charts as a
solo artist – with “Whatever Gets You Thru the Night,” from the album
Walls and Bridges. He was joined on vocals by Elton John, who cajoled Lennon
into joining him onstage at Madison Square Garden on November 28, 1974. It would
turn out to be Lennon’s last public performance.
He channeled his penchant for
controversy into his work as a peace activist, artist, and author. Lennon had
two sons: Julian, with his first wife Cynthia Lennon, and Sean, with his second
wife, avant-garde artist Yoko Ono.
Beginning with the birth of his
second son, Sean Ono Lennon, in 1975, John Lennon dropped out of sight for five
years. During this spell, he chose to lay low and raise Sean as a proud
househusband. Simply by stepping back and "watching the wheels,” John
Lennon made a statement about priorities that said more than words and music.
His eventual return to the recording scene in 1980 was one of the more eagerly
anticipated musical events of the year. The album Double Fantasy, jointly
credited to John Lennon and Yoko Ono and named for a flower he’d seen at a
botanical garden, was released on November 17, 1980. On December 8, a brilliant
life came to an untimely end when Lennon was shot to death outside his New York
City apartment. He was returning from a recording session for an album that was
posthumously released as Milk and Honey.
October 9, 1940 John Lennon is
born at Oxford Street Maternity Hospital in Liverpool, England, to Julia
Stanley and Alfred Lennon.
1945 Julia, separated from
Alfred, entrusts her son, John Lennon, to the care of her sister, Mary
Elizabeth Stanley Smith, "Aunt Mimi."
1956 Julia, John Lennon's
mother, bought him his first guitar through a mail order ad. His incessant
playing prompts John's Aunt Mimi to say, "The guitar's all very well as
a hobby, John, but you'll never make a living out of it." John forms
his first group, the Quarrymen.
July 6, 1957 John Lennon meets
Paul McCartney at the Woolton Parish Church in Liverpool during a
performance by John's group the Quarrymen. Impressed by Paul's ability to
tune a guitar and by his knowledge of song lyrics, John asks him to join the
group.
February 1, 1958 Paul
McCartney introduces George Harrison to the Quarrymen at a basement teen
club called the Morgue. George joins the group.
August 1, 1960 The Beatles
make their debut in Hamburg, West Germany, with Stu Sutcliffe on bass and
Pete Best on drums.
January 1, 1961 The Beatles
make their debut at the Cavern Club in Liverpool.
November 1, 1961 Local record
store manager Brian Epstein is introduced to the Beatles. He soon signs a
contract to manage them.
April 10, 1962 Stu Sutcliffe
dies of a brain hemorrhage.
June 1, 1962 The Beatles
audition for George Martin at Parlophone/EMI Records. He agrees to sign the
group, but insists that Pete Best be replaced. Within months, Richard "Ringo"
Starkey joins the group.
August 23, 1962 John Lennon
marries Cynthia Powell. The marriage will last six years.
SEPTEMBER 4-11, 1962 The
Beatles record their first sessions at EMI Studios in London, with George
Martin as producer.
April 8, 1963 John Charles
Julian Lennon is born to John and Cynthia Lennon at Sefton General Hospital
in Liverpool.
February 11, 1964 The Beatles
begin their first U.S. tour at the Coliseum in Washington, D.C.
March 23, 1964 John Lennon's
first book, 'In His Own Write,' is published and becomes an instant
best-seller.
July 6, 1964 The world
premiere of The Beatles' 'A Hard Day's Night' takes place in London.
April 1, 1965 John Lennon
composes "Help!" the title song for the Beatles' second film. He
later confides that the lyrics are a cry for help and a clue to the
confusion and despondency he feels.
June 24, 1965 John Lennon's
second book, 'A Spaniard in the Works', is published.
August 15, 1965 The Beatles
play in front of almost 60,000 fans at Shea Stadium in New York City.
October 26, 1965 The Beatles
are awarded England's prestigious MBE (Members of the Order of the British
Empire). John comments, "I thought you had to drive tanks and win wars
to get the MBE."
March 1, 1966 London's
'Evening Standard' publishes an interview with John Lennon in which he
states that the Beatles are "more popular than Jesus now." The
comment provokes several protests, including the burning of Beatles records.
July 31, 1966 John Lennon's
comments on the state of Christianity – made in March, but only lately
picked up in the U.S. - spark protests and record burnings on the eve of the
Beatles' 1966 American tour.
August 29, 1966 After their
concert at San Francisco's Candlestick Park, the Beatles declare this to be
their final concert tour.
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1966 John
Lennon makes his first appearance away from the Beatles in the role of
Private Gripweed in Richard Lester's film 'How I Won the War'. He writes
"Strawberry Fields Forever" during the filming.
November 9, 1966 Yoko Ono and
John Lennon meet at a preview of her art show, Exhibition #2, at Indica
Gallery in London.
June 1, 1967 'Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band' is released in Britain.
September 1, 1967 John Lennon
writes "I Am the Walrus" while under the influence of LSD. He also
anonymously sponsors Yoko Ono's Half a Wind Show (subtitled Yoko Plus Me) at
London's Lisson Gallery.
May 1, 1968 Apple Corps, Ltd.
begins operating in London. It is the Beatles' attempt to take control of
their own creative and economic destiny. Later that month, John invites Yoko
to his house in Weybridge. They make experimental tapes all night.
MAY 1968 - JUNE 15, 1968 John
Lennon and Yoko Ono exhibit their first official joint venture at the Arts
Lab in London. Soon after, they plant acorns outside Coventry Cathedral as a
conceptual "living arts sculpture."
SUMMER 1968 John Lennon moves
out of his house in Weybridge. He and Yoko Ono move into Ringo Starr's
apartment in Montague Square.
July 1, 1968 John Lennon holds
his first art exhibition, entitled You Are Here—To Yoko from John, with
Love.
October 18, 1968 John Lennon
and Yoko Ono are arrested and charged with possession of cannabis.
November 1, 1968 John Lennon
pleads guilty to marijuana possession charges. He pays a nominal fine but
insists that the drugs were planted by police.
November 8, 1968 A divorce is
granted to John and Cynthia Lennon.
November 11, 1968 John Lennon
and Yoko Ono release their first album together, 'Unfinished Music No. 1:
Two Virgins'. The cover, a full-frontal shot of them naked, is banned.
DECEMBER 11-12, 1968 The
Rolling Stones film the 'Rock and Roll Circus', with guests Eric Clapton,
John Lennon, Jethro Tull and the Who.
January 30, 1969 The Beatles
make their last performance as a group on the roof of the Apple building
during the filming of 'Let It Be'.
March 20, 1969 John Lennon and
Yoko Ono marry on the island of Gibraltar.
MARCH 25-31, 1969 John Lennon
and Yoko Ono celebrate their marriage by hosting a "bed-in" –
their "commercial for peace" – at the Amsterdam Hilton.
April 22, 1969 John officially
changes his name to John Ono Lennon.
MAY 26 - JUNE 2, 1969 John
Lennon and Yoko Ono conduct a bed-in at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in
Montreal. They record "Give Peace a Chance," with Tommy Smothers,
Timothy Leary and others.
June 4, 1969 "The Ballad
of John and Yoko" - a musical summary of Lennon and Ono’s
relationship, containing the lines, "The way things are going/They’re
gonna crucify me" - is released. Credited to the Beatles, it will reach
#8.
July 26, 1969 "Give Peace
a Chance," recorded by John Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band, enters the
charts. It will peak at #14, which barely suggests its lasting significance
as a peace anthem.
August 1, 1969 John Lennon and
Yoko Ono move to Tittenhurst Park, a 400-acre estate in Ascot.
September 1, 1969 John Lennon
returns his MBE. He says it is to protest the British government's
involvement in Biafra, its support of the U.S. in Vietnam and the poor chart
performance of his latest single, "Cold Turkey."
September 12, 1969 John Lennon
appears at the Toronto Rock ‘n' Roll Revival concert, accompanied by Eric
Clapton, Klaus Voormann, Alan White and Yoko. 'The Plastic Ono Band – Live
Peace in Toronto' is released in December.
September 13, 1969 John Lennon
appears at the Toronto Rock ‘n' Roll Revival concert, accompanied by Eric
Clapton, Klaus Voormann, Alan White and Yoko Ono. 'The Plastic Ono Band –
Live Peace in Toronto' is released in December.
December 16, 1969 "War Is
Over! If You Want It!" billboards go up in 11 cities around the world,
as a Christmas message from John Lennon and Yoko Ono.
April 5, 1970 "Instant
Karma (We All Shine On)," credited to John Ono Lennon and produced by
Phil Spector, hits #3 on the singles chart. The #1 album that week is
"Let It Be," by the Beatles.
December 26, 1970 'John
Lennon/Plastic Ono Band,' Lennon’s debut album as a solo artist, enters
the album charts. This stark, confessional recording is regarded by many as
his greatest achievement.
June 6, 1971 John Lennon &
Yoko Ono jam with Frank Zappa at the Fillmore East in New York City,
recorded for subsequent release on the Plastic Ono Band album 'Sometime in
New York City'.
July 1, 1971 John Lennon cuts
'Imagine' at his home studio. The anthemic title track is inspired by a
message in Yoko Ono's book 'Grapefruit.'
November 1, 1971 John Lennon
appears at a benefit concert at the Apollo Theater for the families of
inmates at Attica Prison.
January 1, 1972 The staff of
the U.S. Senate Internal Security Subcommittee of the Judiciary Committee
prepares a memo about John Lennon's involvement with such radicals as Jerry
Rubin, Abbie Hoffman and Rennie Davis.
February 4, 1972 In a secret
memo, Senator Strom Thurmond suggests to Attorney General John Mitchell that
John Lennon, whom the government suspects of consorting with “known
radicals,” be deported.
FEBRUARY/MARCH 1972 With the
expiration of John Lennon's U.S. non-immigrant visa, deportation proceedings
begin. Lennon will wage a four-year battle with the federal government to
remain in the U.S.
June 12, 1972 'Some Time in
New York City,' a double album by John Lennon backed by the New York rock
group Elephant’s Memory is released.
August 30, 1972 John Lennon
performs at Madison Square Garden. It will be his last concert as a
headliner. The show will posthumously be released in 1986 as Live in New
York City.
April 1, 1973 John Lennon and
Yoko Ono purchase an apartment at the Dakota on Central Park West and West
72nd Street in New York.
FALL 1973 John Lennon and Yoko
Ono begin an 18-month separation, during which Lennon embarks on his
infamous "lost weekend" in Los Angeles.
November 1, 1973 John Lennon's
'Mind Games' is released. It peaks at #9, and the title track reaches #18.
August 1, 1974 John Lennon
records his 'Walls and Bridges' album. He claims to have written ten of the
songs in a single week. The album goes to #1, as does its leadoff single,
"Whatever Gets You Thru the Night."
November 28, 1974 John Lennon
performs three songs with Elton John at Madison Square Garden. It will turn
out to be his last public performance.
January 2, 1975 John and Yoko
are reunited. The Beatles' final dissolution takes place in London.
January 11, 1975 "#9
Dream," from John Lennon’s Walls and Bridges, enters the Top Forty,
where it will peak, appropriately, at #9.
September 20, 1975
"Fame," a song from David Bowie's 'Young Americans' album, tops
the US singles charts. It is cowritten by Bowie, John Lennon and guitarist
Carlos Alomar.
October 9, 1975 Sean Taro Ono
Lennon is born at New York Hospital on father John Lennon's 35th birthday.
July 26, 1976 John Lennon's
application to remain in the U.S. as a permanent resident is approved at a
special hearing.
1977 - 1979 The majority of
John Lennon's time is spent as a "househusband" – taking care of
Sean – while Yoko handles the family's business affairs.
June 1, 1980 John Lennon takes
a cruise to Bermuda, where his songwriting muse is rekindled.
October 23, 1980 John Lennon's
first new single in more than five years,, "(Just Like) Starting
Over," is released.
November 17, 1980 'Double
Fantasy,' by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, is released.
December 8, 1980 John Lennon
is shot by a deranged assailant as he and Yoko return to the Dakota after a
recording session. He is pronounced dead at Roosevelt Hospital.
December 27, 1980 "(Just
Like) Starting Over," by John Lennon, reaches #1 for the first of five
weeks.
John
Lennon
Imagine
Imagine there's no heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today...
Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace...
You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will be as one
Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man
Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world...
You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will live as one
Give Peace A Chance
John Lennon
Two, one two three four
Ev'rybody's talking about
Bagism, Shagism, Dragism, Madism, Ragism, Tagism
This-ism, that-ism, is-m, is-m, is-m.
All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance
C'mon
Ev'rybody's talking about Ministers,
Sinisters, Banisters and canisters
Bishops and Fishops and Rabbis and Pop eyes,
And bye bye, bye byes.
All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance
Let me tell you now
Ev'rybody's talking about
Revolution, evolution, masturbation,
flagellation, regulation, integrations,
meditations, United Nations,
Congratulations.
All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance
Ev'rybody's talking about
John and Yoko, Timmy Leary, Rosemary,
Tommy Smothers, Bobby Dylan, Tommy Cooper,
Derek Taylor, Norman Mailer,
Alan Ginsberg, Hare Krishna,
Hare, Hare Krishna
All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance
Data
compiled from The British Antarctic Study, NASA, Environment Canada,
UNEP, EPA and
other sources as stated and credited Researched by Charles
Welch-Updated dailyThis
Website is a project of the The Ozone Hole Inc. a 501(c)(3) Nonprofit
Organization