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The Legend of Lennon

 

I have just spent hours, after having been sucked in by the allure of the site, reading frightening stories of occult and murder and hauntings that drive the new homeowners to replicate the murders of yore, and have returned to feed upon the gore of another relevant site, The True Crime Library. By process of association, I had watched a TV special on the John Lennon legend and the murderer, Mark David Chapman, and had out of extended curiosity about Chapman gone online to read more. The Lennon legend exists not because of Chapman but in spite of him.

 Or, I should say, the Lennon legend would still be the Lennon legend had the freak not shortened Lennons life. Lennon founded The Beatles. Like Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr (drummer after Pete Best), John Lennon was young, beautiful, and creative, appealing to millions of young women who would get so apoplectic at seeing him and his fellow musicians they would faint.

Fainting of fans was known only to The Beatles and Elvis in those early touring days, suggesting how popular these performers were, how loved they were, how revered. Lennon co-wrote the Beatles songs, pieces that range from pop and love lyrics and ballads to revolutionary statements for change and for peace. By the time Lennon and the others were going their separate waysin the sixties they had finished touringthe John Lennon legend was separating from the Beatles legend. He had made an impact on the music world and industry in general and on the mindset of the culture in particular.

He was open-minded, progressive I spirit, quick-witted, and outspoken. The press followed his comments; the fans swore by them or lived by them. By the time he married second wife, Yoko Ono, he was on his way toward becoming elevated to guru for many of us: in keeping with or leading the trends of the time (and I say this loosely, for Lennon was not trendy, per se), his hair was past his shoulders, he had a beard and moustache, his clothes were looser linens, his jewelry suggested spiritual seeking, and his speeches were directed away from violence and war and toward higher consciousness and peace.

 For example, a major impressionone which contributes to the best of the Lennon legendis one wherein he and Yoko, having just married, spent their honeymoon not at Niagara Falls or in some island resort drinking Pina Coladas but in a bed in a Hilton Hotel in Amsterdam: they were staging a bed-in for peace, promoting, they told the press, nonviolence, anti-war approaches, and revolutionary social changethe latter of which Lennon and Yoko would pursue over and again, with such song lyric headers as, All we are sayingis give peace a chance. The Lennon legend, again, comprises so much more than that ironic and antithetical moment when Chapman, thinking he was identifying with Holden Caulfield, an anti-celebrity fictional character in the classic, CATCHER in the RYE, shot him to death.

The Lennon legend was built, or crafted, by a higher consciousness most humans of the Vietnam and other disgrace periods did not, do not, and will not ever attain. The irony continued, as did (and does) the Lennon legend: The morning of September 12, 2001, the deejays played what is likely the finest song of all time: they played John Lennons Imagine. He wrote and sang, You may say Im a dreamer/But Im not the only the only one. I hope some day youll join us/and the world can live as one. I wonder how Lennon would us the global auspices of the Internet.

Billboard.biz - Jazz Genre News
Updated : Thu, 04 Dec 2008 10:30:908 EST

Jazz Veteran Al Gallodoro Dies
Al Gallodoro, a jazz saxophonist who also played clarinet, and bass clarinet, passed away peacefully in Oneonta, New York, aged 95.
Author : By Ed Christman, N.Y.
Publ.Date : Wed, 15 Oct 2008 12:00:00 EDT

Neal Hefti, Composer Of 'Batman' Theme, Dies
Neal Hefti, a Big Band trumpeter, arranger and composer of themes for the movie "The Odd Couple" and the "Batman" television series, has died. He was 85.
Author : By Associated Press
Publ.Date : Wed, 15 Oct 2008 12:00:00 EDT

Grammys Turning Nominations Into TV Special
The Grammys are turning a dry nominations announcement into an hourlong TV special.
Author : By Associated Press
Publ.Date : Fri, 17 Oct 2008 12:00:00 EDT

Hancock, Lang Lang Plotting 2009 Summer Tour
Herbie Hancock and Chinese pianist Lang Lang are planning to join forces for 2009 summer tour of the United States and Europe, Lang Lang tells Billboard.biz. Details are still being worked out, but the pair intends to visit at least 10 markets in the United States.
Author : By Mitchell Peters, L.A.
Publ.Date : Thu, 16 Oct 2008 12:00:00 EDT

Jazz Mentoring Scheme Returns
The Jerwood Charitable Foundation and the PRS Foundation for New Music (PRSF) have announced the fifth edition of Take Five, a U.K. artist development initiative targeted at emerging jazz musicians.
Author : By Jen Wilson, London
Publ.Date : Wed, 05 Nov 2008 12:00:00 EST

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