"As I listened to John's voice on the tapes, I felt as though I was
going through a time warp, and that John was actually in the same room
as me, sipping coffee as we used to in the long sessions at home or in
the studio...I couldn't stop the tears running down my cheek. It was so
hard. It was so sad."
--Yoko Ono, in the liner notes to The John Lennon Anthology
We live in a bulimic culture, constantly starved for diversion, yet
endlessly hacking up
what we get as soon as it's digested. At our worst, we are insatiable in
our desire for
more, whether it be more news on the latest scandal or more dish
on the pop flavor of the month. At our best...well, as soon as we reach
our best, I'll let you know how things look.
I'm as bad as the worst of us. When I heard that Yoko Ono would be
releasing four CD's
worth of outtakes and demos from the archives of her late husband John
Lennon, a buzz of
excitement raced briefly down my spine. Until I finally listened to the
eventual result, I never
stopped to consider what The John Lennon Anthology really meant
to Lennon fans, to
Yoko, to our culture. It's more than just a collection of new music;
this release literally represents a voice speaking from the grave, and
at the same time a culmination of our pervasive hunger for every piece
of an artist's heart and soul.
If there were just four discs of lost tunes, demos and oddities in
this Anthology, it
would be easy to dismiss as just a treasure chest for die-hard Lennon
fans. It's certainly that no matter what. But when hearing Lennon's
in-studio banter as well as stolen intimate moments between Lennon and
his family, the box becomes anything but easy to consume. We gain a far
deeper glimpse into John Lennon than any study of his music could offer.
We can percieve him as an unadorned human being.
He lives anew in a succession of tiny moments, stolen glances often
dwarfed on the box by
the music itself. These range from the trivial to the profoundly moving.
We hear Lennon count off tracks in bits that lead into most of the
songs, and sometimes little quips are presented in those brief beginning
segments. Some tracks consist entirely of Lennon's instructions to his
studio musicians. Yet the box also contains a tender conversation
between Lennon and his son Sean, in which Sean playfully sings "With A
Little Help from my Friends" to his father and then asks who sang it.
Viewed in whole, these little shards are heartbreaking reminders of the
music and perspective the world lost when Mark David Chapman murdered
Lennon in 1980.
They also embody the exorcism of John Lennon's ghost from out of a
culture that is finally
forced to surrender its grip on one of its most beloved sons. Until he
willfully left the public eye in 1975 to raise his son, Lennon could
never escape the demands of the media and public, both desperate to
cling to him at all costs. He may have left the Beatles behind in 1970,
but he could never avoid the public's continuing obsession with his past
phenomenon. As he worked on his final album in the months before his
death, Lennon began slowly to reenter the public eye, to offer himself
up once again at the altar of pop sacrifice. Then he died, and now
eighteen years later, these last remains of his creative life are
exhumed for worldwide distribution.
"He did not want to disappear into myth." That's what Anthony
DeCurtis writes in his
essay from the liner notes to the Anthology. And keeping those
words in mind, I can't
criticize the motivations behind releasing this box. The music is
fantastic, and the portrait of
Lennon that emerges helps to fill out his existing body of work,
humanizing him forever in
presenting the simpler side of his at times glamorous lifestyle. I also
can't criticize fans who enjoy this release, as I'm easily among their
number.
I guess what I'm wondering is this: have we pushed as far as we can
in remembering and
enjoying those pop culture forces who have passed forever from the
public eye? Can John Lennon now finally rest in peace, sure in the
knowledge that with these new public offerings of his private
utterances, he has satisfied the culture's hunger for his presence? Has
he given everything he can? Is his battle with his own image and with
the endless demands of his massive past now over?
It certainly sounds that way, especially on the most fragile and
gorgeous track on
Anthology, the demo of "Real Love" that appears near the end of
disc two. "Real Love" is
the song "donated" by Yoko Ono to the surviving Beatles for rebirth as
one of the two "new"
Beatles tracks featured on the Beatles' own Anthology project a
few years back, and a demo version also appeared on the original
soundtrack to the film Imagine. The Anthology cut is a
pure and honest version of the song, featuring simply vocals and piano,
both supplied by Lennon. As solo Lennon material goes, it's a simple
song, just your basic pop tune about love. But in its confidence and
wistful beauty, this demo reclaims the song from itself, shattering the
butchered nineties version. It's as close as you can get to John rising
from the dead and releasing his own version of the song, and it blows
the "new" version of the song out of the water. More than any other
track on The John Lennon Anthology, it seems to represent Lennon
himself framing his own genius one last time--and finally snatching his
self-image from the cultural grist mill and the surrender of
myth--before trotting back to the grave with a wink.