Imagine (song)

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"Imagine"
"Imagine" cover
Single by John Lennon
from the album Imagine
B-side(s) It's So Hard
Released October 11, 1971
Format 7" vinyl
Recorded 1971
Genre Rock/Pop
Length 03:04
Label Parlophone
Writer(s) John Lennon
Producer(s) Phil Spector, John Lennon and Yoko Ono
Chart positions
  • #6 (UK Oct. 1975);#1 (UK Dec. 1980)
  • #3 (U.S. Oct. 1971)
John Lennon singles chronology
"Power to the People"/"Open Your Box"
(1971)
"Imagine"/"It's So Hard"
(1971)
"Happy Xmas (War is Over)"/"Listen, the Snow is Falling"
(1971)

"Imagine" is a utopian song performed by John Lennon, which appears on his 1971 album Imagine. Although originally credited solely to Lennon, in recent years Yoko Ono's contribution to the song has become more widely acknowledged.

Imagine is widely considered as one of the greatest songs of all time. In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine voted "Imagine" the third greatest song of all time.[1] Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter said, "In many countries around the world—my wife and I have visited about 125 countries—you hear John Lennon's song 'Imagine' used almost equally with national anthems."[2]

In the book Lennon in America, written by Geoffrey Giuliano, Lennon commented that the song was "an anti-religious, anti-nationalistic, anti-conventional, anti-capitalistic song, but because it's sugar-coated, it's accepted."[3]

The lyrics were thought to be inspired solely by Lennon's hopes for a more peaceful world. In reality, the song's refrain was coined by Yoko Ono, in reaction to her childhood in Japan during World War II. According to The Guardian, primordial versions of the song's refrain can be found in her 1965 book Grapefruit, where she penned lines such as, "imagine a raindrop" and "imagine the clouds dripping."[4]

Contents

[edit] Composition and lyrical intent

The following is a quote by John Lennon on the message of "Imagine", interviewed by David Sheff for Playboy magazine in 1980:

SHEFF: On a new album, you close with "Hard Times Are Over (For a While)." Why?

LENNON: It's not a new message: "Give Peace a Chance" -- we're not being unreasonable, just saying, "Give it a chance." With "Imagine," we're saying, "Can you imagine a world without countries or religions?" It's the same message over and over. And it's positive.[5]

Yoko Ono said that the lyrical content of "Imagine" was "just what John believed—that we are all one country, one world, one people. He wanted to get that idea out."[6]

[edit] Nutopia

Nutopia is a conceptual country created by John Lennon and Yoko Ono on April Fool's Day 1973. This country (or nation) was supposed to live up to the standards set by the song "Imagine".

In the official declaration of Nutopia, it is stated that it

"has no land, no boundaries, no passports, only people. Nutopia has no laws other than cosmic. All people of Nutopia are ambassadors of the country. Citizenship of the country can be obtained by declaration of your awareness of Nutopia."

The flag of Nutopia has only one colour: white. The seal of Nutopia is a picture of the marine animal called a seal. The "Nutopian International Anthem" was included on John Lennon's album Mind Games, and consisted of a few seconds of silence.

A plaque engraved with the words "NUTOPIAN EMBASSY" was duly installed at their home at the Dakota. It is believed that the whole affair was a jibe at Lennon's ongoing immigration troubles, as he and Ono (who already had a Resident Alien "green card", which Lennon had been denied, through her previous husband) tried to move permanently to America.

In 2006 a Nutopia website [7] was created by Lions Gate Entertainment, [8] the producers of the documentary "The U.S. Versus John Lennon."

[edit] Critical reception

The song has also received a number of criticisms due to what some have seen as practiced hypocrisy. Journalist and broadcaster Robert Elms said "Imagine" was written by a "multi-millionaire with one temperature-controlled room in his Manhattan mansion just to store his fur coats."[9] Elvis Costello commented satirically on the song in "The Other Side of Summer," wherein he asks the question, "Was it a millionaire who said 'Imagine no possessions'?"

[edit] Legacy

The Strawberry Fields Memorial in Central Park, New York
Enlarge
The Strawberry Fields Memorial in Central Park, New York

[edit] Accolades

[edit] Cultural legacy

  • The song was used in the last sequence of the 1984 film The Killing Fields and was performed during a show commemorating the 30th anniversary of Star Trek.
  • In 1990, the song was featured in the Quantum Leap episode "The Leap Home" and is also on the soundtrack of the series.
  • When the Liverpool airport was named after Lennon, a phrase from the song, "above us only sky", was painted on the ceiling of the terminal. When commenting on this, the panel of Have I Got News for You joked that the baggage handlers' motto was taken from the same song: "Imagine no possessions".
  • A mosaic was constructed as a part of the Strawberry Fields Memorial in Central Park, Manhattan, near Lennon's final home, in memory of the singer. In the centre of the mosaic is the word "Imagine".
  • "Imagine" is the official song of the human rights organization Amnesty International.
  • A humorous telling of this song's origin appears in Forrest Gump, in which the main character, who is a guest on The Dick Cavett Show with John Lennon recounting his experiences in China. He claims that the Chinese do not have much stuff (which Lennon interprets as no possessions) and do not go to church every Sunday (which he interprets as no religion).
  • On January 30, 2003, the song "Imagine" was played to wake up the astronauts on the Space Shuttle Columbia during its final mission.
  • In 2005, post-hardcore band Thrice released a b-side from their album Vheissu called "Lullaby". The song is a response to "Imagine". Though Thrice lyricist Dustin Kensrue is an admitted fan of Lennon, he has stated that he disagrees with the message of the song because it doesn't offer any realistic solutions to world problems.
  • The song was WABC-AM 's final song before switching to its current NewsTalkRadio format.
  • The song was included in the list of songs deemed inappropriate by Clear Channel following the September 11, 2001 attacks.
  • In 2003, Bill Clinton joined Liel and 40 Jewish and 40 Arab children at the 80th birthday of Shimon Peres in Tel Aviv to sing "Imagine".[10]
  • In the Iranian left movement, the song usually relates to Mansoor Hekmat and his party, the Worker-Communist Party of Iran. The WPI plays the song in all of its meetings and demonstrations, and in its TV channel. Within Iran, the song is sometimes sung in protests and symbolizes the left movement, especially the WPI.
  • George Galloway quoted the line I'm Not the Only One for the title of his autobiography.
  • On November 18th, 2006, UFC fighter and known anarchist Jeff Monson used "Imagine" as his walk in/entrance song for his heavyweight title fight against Tim Sylvia at UFC 65: Bad Intentions in Sacramento, California.

[edit] Cover interpretations

  • Joan Baez has recorded and performed the song numerous times throughout her career. She first included it on her 1972 album Come from the Shadows, and often includes it in her concert set lists.
  • Diana Ross covered the song on her 1973 album Touch Me in the Morning.
  • American R&B/soul singer, Tracie Spencer, remade the song for her 1988 self-titled debut album. The song did moderately well in the USA, hitting #31 on the R&B/Hip-Hop charts. She was only 12 years old when the album was released.
  • In 1995, the band Oasis used a piano section from "Imagine" at the start of "Don't Look Back in Anger", from their second album (What's the Story) Morning Glory?.
  • In 2004, A Perfect Circle covered the song on the eMOTIVe album. This song is significally darker and gloomier than the original version.
  • In 2006, David Cassidy covered the "Imagine" with his son, Beau, and the University School Chorus, conducted by Thomas Gress, in Davie, Florida.
  • Dolly Parton recently released a cover of the song (2006), in a duet with David Foster. The video for Parton's cover of the song featured vintage footage of Lennon and Yoko Ono.
  • The song "Tasavor Kon" (in Persian: Imagine), written by Yaghma Golroyi and sung by Siavash Ghomeishi, is a free translation of this song.
  • Richard Cheese and Lounge Against the Machine covered the song on their 2006 album, "Silent Nightclub".
  • George Bush (Tom Compagnoni) / Wax Records on the album Mediacracy interpreted the song by using George W. Bush's voice to render the lyrics to a electronica background.
  • DJ RX remixed Tom Compagnoni's version and added Lou Reed's "Take a Walk on the Wild Side" He entitled it Imagine RX2008.

[edit] Live Cover Interpretations

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by:
"There's No-one Quite Like Grandma" by St Winifred's School Choir
UK number one single
January 4, 1981
Succeeded by:
"Woman" by John Lennon


John Lennon
Studio Albums
John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band | Imagine | Mind Games | Walls and Bridges | Rock 'n' Roll
With Yoko Ono
Unfinished Music No.1: Two Virgins | Unfinished Music No.2: Life with the Lions | Wedding Album |
Some Time in New York City | Double Fantasy | Milk and Honey
Live Albums
Live Peace in Toronto 1969 | Live in New York City |
Compilations
Shaved Fish | The John Lennon Collection | Lennon Legend: The Very Best of John Lennon |
Peace, Love & Truth | Working Class Hero: The Definitive Lennon
Posthumous Albums
Menlove Ave. | Acoustic | Wonsaponatime
Soundtracks
Imagine: John Lennon | The U.S. Versus John Lennon
Box sets
Lennon | John Lennon Anthology
Books
In His Own Write | A Spaniard in the Works
Related Articles
The Beatles | Lennon-McCartney
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