Tag Archives: John Lennon

Review: “International Pop” exhibit at Philadelphia Museum of Art

War is Over pop artThe International Pop art exhibit is currently at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through May 15, 2016.  Unlike a lot of other traveling art exhibits, this one is free with paid admission to the museum.  They also offer free guided tours of the show sporadically throughout the day of the show, but my husband and I found it a little too artsy for us, so we decided to walk it alone and discuss the works among ourselves.

Here’s a description of the exhibit from the museum’s website:

Focusing on work made from 1956 to 1972, the exhibition presents Pop art as a movement that is at turns celebratory, critical, and probing in its message.
Beatles albums pop art
This exhibit includes paintings, drawings, ads, posters, and videos from around the world that are consider part of the pop art movement.  And how could these years (1956-1972) be complete without references to the Fab Four.  On display is John & Yoko’s War is Over poster (signed) and copies of albums Sgt. Pepper’s and the White Album.

If you dig the works of Andy Warhol, there are several of his pieces on display.

If you’re not sure if this show is for you, check out the International Pop trailer:

Additionally, musician Ben Vaughn created a musical playlist as a companion to this exhibit.  It includes two songs by the BeatlesDrive My Car and Tomorrow Never knows.  This soundtrack is only available on Spotify:
  

This exhibit only contains about 150 pieces of work from around the world, so if you decide to go you will have plenty of time to enjoy the rest of the museum or spend a day walking around Philadelphia.  And for that reason…

I rate this exhibit, 4 out of 4 Beetles!

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Book Review: “From Me to You” by Kelly Marie Thompson and Garry Berman

The book that I had originally planned to review this week was late showing up in my mail.  In the meantime, I had finished reading a book that a friend of mine wrote.  I make it a point not to review friend’s works because it’s not fair to them or to my readers if I feel I can’t be honest.  So, in this case, I’m going to tell you about the story behind this book and a quick synopsis, but I’m not going to rate it.

From Me To You by Garry Berman and Kelly Marie Thompson is the second published work by these writers.  This book is listed as a coming-of-age story, but I believe it would be of more interest to the Young Adult sector.

The story is about two penpals, one in New Jersey and one in Liverpool, UK, who begin writing to each other as part of a high school project.   Maggie, living in Liverpool, introduces Ricky, in New Jersey, to the music of the Beatles by sending him 45 rpms before anyone in the U.S. has even heard of the band.  As Beatlemania grows, so does their friendship.   The book takes you through their ever growing friendship up until the day it’s announced that the Beatles are splitting up in 1970.  But will their friendship last?  That’s the big question!

What makes this story even more interesting is that the two authors, Garry Berman and Kelly Thompson, met on the internet in a writer’s group.  They both like each other’s style of writing so much that they soon started co-writing projects via email, including their original hilarious six episode sitcom Barkers Upon Tyne (currently available as an ebook).

As I said, I think this would be a great book for a young teen girl, but for adults I would recommend getting the $2.99 Kindle version.

 

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Book Review: “Fire and Rain: The Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, James Taylor, CSNY, and the Lost Story of 1970” by David Browne

Fire and RainA couple weeks ago, while doing research at my county library, I decided to try something a little different to help me find a book to review.  I walked up to the computer and searched “Beatles” in the catalog, hoping to find something I hadn’t heard of to read.  That’s how I found –  Fire and Rain: The Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, James Taylor, CSNY, and the Lost Story of 1970 by David Browne.

One of the hardest things to understand about this book is that the way the book starts, is the way if flows until the end.  There really is no climax.  But after several chapters, that becomes alright.

The book gives a brief set up to the creation of extraordinary careers of The Beatles, Simon & Garfunkel, James Taylor and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, before telling their musical highs and lows of 1970.  Each of the bands seemed to cross paths along the way, with many of them seeming to mirror what the others were doing, including the dissolution of The Beatles, the break-up of CSNY and the drifting apart of Simon & Garfunkel.  David Browne walks you through it all, season by season, from each artists successful album releases that year, through their feuds and to their final demise.

Author David Browne also provides the political back-drop at the time to help the readers who were too young or not born yet to understand the socio-economic changes that were not only successful musicians of the time, but also influencing the beginning of the new decade, including Vietnam, Nixon and the riot at Kent State.

This book was good, but it did leave me wondering if similar books could be written about 1971, 1972 or 1973?  And for that reason…

I rate this book, 3 out of 4 Beetles!

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You can buy a used copy of this book for $0.01 on Amazon!

 

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Editorial: John Lennon vs. Barry Manilow

For those of you that follow my blog closely, you may remember in December 2015 I did two reviews on two different books written about “The Beatles vs. The Stones.”  In both reviews, I expressed the opinion that I think it’s ridiculous to compare the two bands at all.  But still, writers and on-air personalities can’t seem to let it be.  Every year there are hundreds of radio stations that hold listener polls, and millions of Beatles, Stones and Zeppelin fans rush to their phones and computers to prove their favorite band is better than all the rest.

And so, here is my response to all this nonsense.  I told my husband that some day I would write this blog to show the silliness behind comparing artists.

Back in 1987, I bought a copy of Barry Manilow‘s autobiography – Sweet Life: Adventures On The Way To Paradise.  I loved this book then and I love this book now.  In fact, I will admit for the first time publicly …I’m a FANILOW!  Phew…I’m finally out of the closet.

Let the comparison between John Lennon and Barry Manilow begin:

  1. Barry Alan Pincus was born June 17, 1943 in Brooklyn, NY.  Soon after his parents, Edna Manilow and Harold Kelliher were married, Barry’s father was drafted into the army, forcing his mother to move in with her domineering mother Esther and docile grandfather Joseph Manilow.  His father was not present for his birth.
  2. John Winston Lennon was born October 9, 1940 in Liverpook, UK.   John’s father, Alfred Lennon was a merchant seaman who was away most of the time but would send his checks to Julia who was living with her father at the time.  Alfred would not be present for his son’s birth.
  3. Upon seeing Barry for the first time in the hospital, his Gramma said, “Yes, Edna, you rest.  I’ll take care of him.”
  4. Upon the birth of John, his Aunt Mimi would be the first to rush to the hospital to see her new nephew.
  5. Soon after his father’s return from the Army, Barry’s parents would divorce.  Barry and his mother would continue to live with her parents.  His Gramma was a bitter and frustrated woman, who poured all her love into Barry. Barry changed his name to Manilow.  Harold was banned from seeing his son Barry.
  6. After returning from sea, Alfred Lennon would find his lonely wife living with another man, but refused to divorce her.  Aunt Mimi believing this was not the right environment to raise a young child, took John in to live with her and her husband George Smith.
  7. At age 11, while walking home from school, a Schaefer beer truck pulled up next to him.  It was Barry’s father.  After introducing himself, he handed Barry a tape recorder for his birthday, gave him a hug and a kiss and drove off.  Barry would never see him again.
  8. At age 5, Alfred Lennon showed up at Mimi’s offering to take John on a long holiday.  When it was found out that his real intentions were to migrate to New Zealand, Julia found them, recovered John and promptly took him back to live with Aunt Mimi.  Alfred was banned from seeing John again.
  9. Barry’s parents bought him a piano in his early teenage years.  By his sophomore year, he formed a band with is friends Larry and Fred on clarinet and vocals, Rosario on trumpet and Harry on drums.  Barry wrote arrangements and played piano.
  10. With a guitar bought for him by his Aunt Mimi, John started a skiffle band when he was 15.  Lennon and Eric Griffiths played guitars, and Pete Shotton and Bill Smith on washboard and tea chest bass.
  11. Barry married his high school sweetheart, Susan Deixler in 1964.  The marriage last 1 year.
  12. John married his college sweetheart, Cynthia Powell in 1962.  The marriage lasted 6 years.
  13. Barry Manilow hated the sound of his own singing voice.
  14. John Lennon hated the sound of his own singing voice.
  15. In 1971, Barry started using Primal Scream therapy to deal with his being too uptight.
  16. John Lennon and Yoko Ono started using Primal Scream therapy in 1970.
  17. Barry Manilow and Bette Midler taped joints to the bottom of the seats of the Philharmonic Hall until an usher snitched at the last minute.  They were to be the climax of the evening’s New Year’s Eve show for 1973.
  18. John Lennon and Yoko Ono were busted for marijuana possession on October 28, 1968 in London, when the police brought drug sniffing dogs into their apartment and found 1.7 grams of cannabis in an envelope and another 12 grams in a binocular case.
  19. Barry Manilow had his first Billboard #1, Mandy, on January 18, 1975
  20. John Lennon would have his first Billboard #1, Whatever Gets You Through the Night, on October 28, 1974.
  21. Barry Manilow married his longtime manager Garry Kief in April 2014 after 35 years together.
  22. In April 1963, John Lennon went on holiday in Spain with his manager Brian Epstein.  He’s quoted as saying, “I was on holiday with Brian Epstein in Spain, where the rumours went around that he and I were having a love affair. Well, it was almost a love affair, but not quite. It was never consummated. But it was a pretty intense relationship.
  23. In 1978, five of Barry Manilow’s albums were on the best-seller charts simultaneously.
  24. The week of April 4, 1964, the Beatles ranked at Nos. 1-5 with “Can’t Buy Me Love,” “Twist and Shout,” “She Loves You,” “I Want to Hold Your Hand” and “Please Please Me,” respectively.

Well, I could continue on with this historical comparison, but I won’t.  I could even place a poll at the end of this post to see which musician, Lennon or Manilow, is really the favorite among my readers, but would that really be fair?  No, because my readers are Beatles fans, John Lennon’s career was cut short by his murder and Barry Manilow lives on to create music and entertain the masses.

My unused Barry Manilow ticket from 1988

 

 

 

 

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Book Review: “The Seven Storey Mountain” by Thomas Merton


The Seven Storey Mountain by Thomas Merton is a book that I would think John Lennon would have read at some time in his short life.  I searched the internet to see if I could find a link telling me that Lennon had read Merton’s works or that was inspired by him to write a song.  Unfortunately, the only thing I could find was a really bad joke: What do Thomas Merton and John Lennon have in common? They were both killed by a fan. *boo*

None the less, indulge me this one week while I review a non-Beatles related book.  I’ve been reading this book on and off for 5 months now and needed to get it off my to-do list.

Several years ago, I went on a four day silent retreat to the Abbey of Gethsemani in Trappist, KY.  I’m not Catholic, but the monks do not pass judgment on anyone wanting to take refuge in their Abbey.  It’s the Trappist way.  It was at the Abbey that I found out about Thomas Merton., who lived there and was buried there.

Merton was born in France to parents who were artists.  He, like Lennon, lost his mother at a young age and then lost his father while he was studying at Cambridge.  He admits to being an arrogant young man who believed that after leaving high school that he knew everything he needed to to conquer the world.  He smoked, he drank, and he cavorted with women…all to excess.

This book is Merton’s story of how he went from a life of sin, to that of a Trappist monk taking a vow of silence.  He went on to write many books with the churches blessing, though some considered writing to be breaking his vows.  The church saw it as a form of meditation.  To tie Merton’s story in further with Lennon, John was also known to take a vow of silence for days while married to Yoko Ono.

I believe any true John Lennon fan would find this book interesting and will also see the parallels.  And for that reason…

I rate this book, 4 out of 4 Beetles!

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Book Review: “Beatlebone” by Kevin Barry


I started seeing mentions of Beatlebone by Kevin Barry on social media about 2 weeks ago. Couldn’t help but notice that major newspapers such at the New York Times were reviewing this book, so I decided to take a quick look see to find out what it was about. I don’t read other reviews of books before I review them…I don’t want to go into it tainted. But once I found out that it was a novel with John Lennon as it’s central character, I decided I needed to read it.

Within three days I was ranting to my husband about how wonderful this book is. The writing is in a style that I’ve never read before now. Conversations are without quotation marks, yet you feel as if you’re there with John and Cornelius as they try to get John to his island in Ireland. There’s darkness, then light. Darkness, then light.

Then…Part Six happens! What the f*ck, Kevin Barry and Doubleday?! Just when I was loving the story, Barry’s writing style, the cave, the hotel, the birds, the rabbits, the elf and the wolf…they dump Part Six in there. Seriously, folks? Why? I wanted so bad to give this book my best rating.

Go out and get this book, but when you get to Part Six, skip over it and then go back and read it at the end. Either that, or read it before you start the book. And for that reason…

I rate this book, 3 out of 4 Beetles!

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Movie Review: “The Beatles: Parting Ways”

I thought I’d throw one more movie review out here before ending my Prime subscription, but it’s not as much a review of this movie, as a warning not to bother wasting even a free membership to Prime on this one.

The Beatles: Parting Ways – is a 52 minute documentary about the life of the Beatles after their split in 1970.  Going in the order of John, Paul, George and Ringo, each of the Beatles is given a little over 10 minutes of air time in this film that seems to take a lot of liberties and uses a lot of stock film footage that was also used in Strange Fruit.

One of the first things that caught my attention was that the makers of this film chose other bands’ music to play as a backdrop to their commentary.  Really…The Animals “We Gotta Get Out of This Place” as background music in a Beatles documentary?  Warning…there is no Beatles music in this film.

The other glaring (disturbing) error was when the narrator says Ringo and Maureen had 3 sons together – Zak, Jason and LEE! Wrong…just so, so wrong.  And for that reason…

I rate this film 1 out of 4 Beetles!

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Movie Review: Mugshots: John Lennon – Death of a Beatle

I found this movie through Amazon Prime and decided to give it a go.  Apparently, “Mugshots” is a whole series of movies about either famous people who have been murdered, famous murderers or famous murders.

Mugshots: Mark D. Chapman – John Lennon: Death of a Beatle – is actually not a bad documentary for Lennon fans, if you can get past the taped interview of Mark David Chapman.  But if you are one of the folks that lives by the belief that “he who’s name shall not be spoken”, should also not be heard, then you’re going to have a big problem with this film.

The movie is more of the story of John Lennon, his life growing up and his life as a Beatle.  Several very familiar people participated in the making of this documentary, including such names as Pete Best, Bob Gruen, and Scott Muni.

At times, it almost appears as if this is two separate stories being told…that of Lennon and that of his killer, with each of the stories being able to stand on it’s own if it had to.  Chapman’s words are haunting…his story is strange…and his reasoning just unfathomable when you hear him tell it.  Yet, like a train wreck, it’s hard not to look and listen just to try to comprehend what he did.

If you’re a true Lennon fan who has to know every detail, then yes…watch this film.  If you love Lennon, but believe Chapman’s name should not be spoken, then watch Hard Day’s Night.

This documentary is well made, but because of my own personal beliefs on the subject…

I rate this movie: 2 out of 4 Beetles!

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Book Review: “Ramones: An American Band” by Jim Bessman

I picked this book up several years ago at an online clearance sale.  My intent was for my husband to read it, since I really never dug The Ramones.  Then I found out that they were heavily influenced by the Beatles. And, there is no lack of Beatles references in this book! Even the story of them rewriting the lyrics to a John Lennon song and getting Yoko’s permission to record it.

Ramones: An American Band was published in 1993, long before Johnny, Joey, Dee Dee, Marky, or any other Ramone wrote their autobiography. In fact, it was written prior to the band breaking up in 1996, so it’ll bring you right up to what was the present moment of the band at that time.

The Ramones are credited with creating Punk music. What a lot of people thought was just a joke band that would never last went on to become one of the greatest bands of all time. This is a band who was the influence behind the Sex Pistols, Debbie Harry and so many Punk bands of the 70’s and 80’s. And though they never enjoyed huge commercial success or even a #1 hit, Spin magazine ranked them the second-greatest band of all time trailing only the Beatles.

I’m glad I took the time to read this book and to get to know the Ramones. This book has made me want to pick up each of the band members autobiographies and get their individual views of how the Punk scene looked from the inside.

You can still buy this book online at all the major retailers, with used copies starting at $0.01.

I rate this book: 3 out of 4 Beetles!

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Book Review: “The Private John Lennon” by Julia Baird

Excuse me while a catch up on reading all the Beatles related books that have been collecting dust on my bookshelf these past several years.

The Private John Lennon: The Untold Story from His Sister by Julia Baird was published in early 2008.  In the UK, the title of this same book is “Imagine This: Growing Up with My Brother, John Lennon”.  This book was the basis for the film “Nowhere Boy,” which I reviewed when it first come out in theaters.  You can read that review here.

It’s always refreshing when you can read a first-hand account of someone’s life from someone who was actually there to witness it.  Much like Cynthia Lennon or May Pang‘s books, Julia Baird brings the reader into her and her families’ private lives to give you a glimpse of what it was like being John Lennon’s sister.  Those facts or times that she is unable to recall or know as fact, she’s gone about finding those family members and friends who can fill in the blanks for her and her readers.  It’s during her research that Julia uncovered several family secrets that help Lennon and Beatles fans better understand the world that John grew up.

This is a story of unbelievable tragedy.  Even if she wasn’t related to one of the Fab Four, one has to agree that they would not wish Julia’s losses throughout her life on anyone.   She tells of Cynthia’s kindness towards her and her sister Jackie after the loss of their mother and she tells of the embarrassment she felt at her brother John’s strange behavior after taking up residency with Yoko.

After reading this book, it becomes obvious what John saw in Yoko.  He was returning to the strange, controlled world that he had always known growing up.  Thank you Julia for telling your story.

If you’d like to read this book on Kindle, it’s available as an ebook in it’s UK title –Imagine This.

I rate this book: 4 out of 4 Beetles!

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