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John North
Editor & Publisher |
ìImagine no possessions/I wonder if you can No need for greed or hunger/A brotherhood of man Imagine all the people/Sharing the world.î ó Lyrics to ìImagineî
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John Lennonís song ìImagine,î which has achieved near-anthem status, keeps cropping up on my radar screen.
ìImagine,î recorded by Lennon in 1971 and produced by the now-notorious Phil Spector, is widely considered one of the greatest songs of all time, based on a number of surveys.
However, as Paul Harvey is prone to say, ìAnd now for the rest of the story.... î
Two of the most recent references to ìImagineî I have spotted appeared
in the Asheville Citizen-Times ó Gina Phillipsí Aug. 4 column headlined
ìImagining Lennonís brotherhood of manî and a Sept. 23 photograph
depicting a celebration of International Peace Day and Constitution Day
by the students at Evergreen Community Charter School in Asheville.
Predictably, Phillips further immortalizes the myth of the stellar John
Lennon and talks about his piano on which he (supposedly) wrote
ìImagineî that has been touring the United States. She termed the
songís lyrics ìone of the most poignant comments on world peace and
healing ever fashioned by man.î
As for Evergreenís gala, the Citizen-Times photo caption noted that the
children ìheld hands and closed their eyes and imagined the world as
they hoped it could be.î
While Iím all for idealism, Lennonís disconnect between ìImagineî and
his real life immediately causes me to harken to Henry David Thoreauís
advice: ìIf you have built castles in the air, your work need not be
lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundation under them.î
In the ultimate in hypocrisy,† Lennon sings ìimagine no possessionsî
and ìa brotherhood of man,î But he exemplified materialism and
spitefulness run amok.
A lifelong pack rat, the exorbitantly wealthy Lennon devoted an entire
climate-controlled room in his luxury Manhattan apartment to a
collection of expensive fur coats. Moreover, Lennon eventually could
not even bear to sit in a room with the other members of the Beatles to
record music. After the bandís breakup, Lennon never stopped sniping at
his former best friend and band co-founder Paul McCartney.
Indeed, Elvis Costello satirized Lennon in the song ìThe Other Side of
Summerî with the line: ìWas it a millionaire who said ëImagine no
possessions?íî
Contrary to Phillipsí romanticized assertion, the song was written, not
on the mythic piano, but on the back of a hotel bill on an airplane,
according to several sources.
I agree with those critics who have described Lennonís lyrics as
proposing ìnaive anarcho-communismî and ìa completely impractical
proposition put forth by a man far removed from reality.î The song
certainly describes a world that Lennon didnít inhabit in real life.
Ironically, Lennon used the master-and-disciple style in ìImagineî and,
unimaginatively, commanded his listeners to change themselves in order
to change the world ó a trite message that still constitutes the mantra
of the New Age movement.
The dark side of Lennonís legacy includes his propensity to make
grandiloquent statements and issue lofty challenges. Because he
detached himseff from everyday realities and instead dwelt in his
imaginary world, Lennon tended to be arrogant, eccentric and
overconfident in his beliefs and abilities.
Despite widespread ridicule, Lennon probably deserves at least some
praise for exhibiting strength of character to be true to himself and
to promulgate his ideals. To his credit, he once noted, ìWe are willing
to become the worldís clowns if it helps spread the word of peace.î
However, Lennon was prone to one-dimensional sloganeering, uttering one maudlin clichÈ after another.
ìëImagineí was a critical and popular success,î which, Lennon
biographer Albert Goldman noted, ìdoesnít speak well for the tastes of
either the public or the reviewers.î
Warts and all, I still admire Lennon for his musical abilities with the
Beatles, but consider his inability to practice the preposterous
philosophy that he preached as exemplifying the hypocrisy in his
stature as a pop-culture figure. Lennon seemed to believe he had all
the answers.
That the song ìImagineî remains so admired, to me, shows the appeal of
naive sloganeering with simplistic answers that holds sway over the
less sexy, but practical reality of changing the world, which requires
critical thinking and a never-ending quest for truth to put solid
foundations under oneís castles of ideals.
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John North, publisher and editor of the Daily Planet, may be contacted at
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