On a dark evening of December 8, 1980, the music world was shocked to  hear the untimely assassination of Beatles legend John Lennon by Mark  David Chapman. Hours before the Lennon death, RKO Radio Network DJ Dave  Sholin and his crew had an exclusive final interview with the Beatles  icon. In commemoration of the 30th anniversary of the Lennon  assassination, Y101 Always First provides an in-depth look on the  people's reactions on the legacy he left behind.
In  the afternoon of that day, Sholin and his fellow interviewers Ron  Hummel, Laurie Kay, and Bert Keane were privileged enough to have taken  part in the last interview of John Lennon and Yoko Ono at their Dakota  building residence in New York. In an unprecedented first, the public  gets an inside look on the key conversations with Lennon and how the  immediate aftershocks of his assassination changed them and the world  that mourned his death.
In the build-up to the interview, the crew  reminisced in great detail as to how the Lennon-Ono residence looked  like as if they were there. They admit that it took them about a month  just to set up that historic interview with John and Yoko. As the  anticipation builds up, the crew talked with Yoko while John just  finished their iconic Rolling Stone pictorial with Annie Leibovitz.
Yoko  vividly recalled the tingling sound of glass just like how "Just Like  Starting Over" epitomized the sexual revolution and the counter-culture  movement of the 70s. Just as they were getting started with their  interview and John Lennon enters the scene. Sholin recalled that  Lennon's presence 'put him at ease' as if he is like 'an old friend he  knew.' Hummel felt at awe as if he was a little boy meeting his  favourite idol.
Lennon even poked fun at Keane as if he was just a  character at Sesame Street while Kay was concerned about the previous  Lennon interview with Playboy and he may not talked about his Beatles  past. Apparently, she was wrong and viewed him as the 'nicest human  being' she ever known. Lennon's sabbatical provided him the inspiration  for his last album "Double Fantasy" and really solidified his solo  career thereby separated him from the John Lennon of Beatles fame with  the John Lennon we know as Yoko Ono's partner. His hit single "Woman" is  believed to have encapsulated John's adoration to Yoko.
Lennon  relished his times as father to Sean and his domestic lifestyle as the  father he wanted to be. He sacrificed his music career and enjoyed his  role as a 'house-husband.' Despite his five-year self-exile, Lennon  still managed to find his creative talent and get back again to the  business he knows best - making his own music.
All the women from  John's life from his mother Julia to Yoko played an important part in  his creative process. In fact, Sholin can relate how John and Yoko are  perfect for each other as to how they made eye contact to each other and  finish each other's statements. In a rare moment in their discussion  despite John's jovial mood and optimism, he displayed an apparent  sadness as he opens up aspects of his personal life including his  haunting 18-month 'lost weekend" where his relationship with Yoko hit  rock bottom and how he tried to fixed things up.
As the consummate  storyteller that he is, Lennon has showed how he grown up and overcame  the challenges in his career and personal life. Hummel recalled Lennon's  animated response to the socio-political dynamics of the turbulent  decade of the 60s and 70s as shown in "Across the Universe" and  "Imagine." He espoused the philosophy of 'music is love' to counter the  horrors of the Vietnam War and the political climate of the time.
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét