John Lennon - 1970 - Piano Compositions
- Type:
- Audio > FLAC
- Files:
- 54
- Size:
- 101.55 MiB (106478644 Bytes)
- Uploaded:
- 2023-05-06 17:53 GMT
- By:
- GRNS3
- Seeders:
- 24
- Leechers:
- 8
- Info Hash: 3AAE1B3E67A4FA1C3C0A11A64027D2E4DAA0B357
Here is an excellent vintage bootleg with a great performance by John Lennon. Recommended for fans. Please enjoy, share with friends and please seed :) > i can't do it all alone! You can help by keeping this music alive :) I really want to share more rare stuff that is not available in shops, but i need your help to keep my collection alive for all, now over 1600 concerts still available for you! Stuff like this needs to be preserved for future generations of music lovers. Thanks to all the peers from everywhere seeding my huge archive, i love you! Look for my music archive here: https://1337x.to/user/GRNS3/ ======================================================== John Lennon - Piano Compositions 1970 Vigotone Release "Compositions" (VT-191) Feb. 2000 After the emotionally exhausting Plastic Ono Band writing and recording sessions, it was time for John Lennon to exhibit a lighter compositional touch. Perhaps showing the strain of the single-minded effort that went into his first LP, John, in contrast, often seems all over the place with this batch of songs and noodlings,recorded in the late fall of 1970 at the Tittenhurst Park estate. A rare glimpse into a single, lengthy Lennon piano demo session, Compositions reveals an artist trying to find his way to what would eventually become the Imagine LP. While John is not in the best voice of his career, it's still a fascinating listening experince, highlighted by his brief, slowed down reworking of the Beatles hit "Help". This collection has never before appeared in its entirety from the original source tape. 1. Make Love, Not War (4:14) (Early version of "Mind Games") 2. I'm the Greatest (1:36) 3. I'm the Greatest (:40) (two passes of a song later given to Ringo) 4. How? (1:49) (first pass) 5. Child of Nature (:56) 6. Child of Nature (1:15) (John revisits his unused 1968 composition) 7. Oh Yoko! (:49) (first pass) 8. Sally and Billy (1:16) 9. Sally and Billy (1:37) (two passes of a song John would not return to until the dakota Days) 10. Rock and Roll People (4:21) (early version of a song given to Johnny Winter) 11. Oh Yoko! (2:50) 12. Oh Yoko! (:48) (second and third passes) 13. Help (2:24) (attempt to rework The Beatles hit, hampered by John's inability to remember chords) 14. instrumental (4:12) (unknown song) 15. Happy Christmas (3:18) 16. Happy Christmas (2:26) (two passes at a seasonal message) 17. People Get Ready/How? (5:26) 18. How? (5:05) 19. How? (2:31) (three more attempts to polish the song) 20. My Heart is in Your Hands (1:34) (unknown song) 21. Mailman, Bring Me No More Blues (2:06) (one of John's favorite Buddy Holly songs - can't remember the chords) 22. I Promise (2:47) (becomes the bridge to "Mind Games") 23. You Know How Hard It Is (1:59) (unknown song) 24. I'll Make You Happy (1:56) 25. I'll Make You Happy (3:42) (two passes at a discarded song) Total duration: 63:46 Liner Notes: After the emotionally exhausting Plastic Ono Band writing and recording sessions, it was time for John Lennon to exhibit a lighter compositional touch. Perhaps showing the strain from the amount of single-minded effort that went into that LP, John in contrast seemed to be all over the place with this batch of songs and noodlings, recorded in the late fall of 1970 at the Tittenhurst Park estate. A rare glimpse into a single Lennon piano demo session, Compositions reveals an artist trying to find his way to what would eventually become the Imagine LP. While John's not in the best voice of his career, it's still a fascinating listening experience, and has never before appeared in its entirety. The tape begins with "Make Love, Not War". This song did not appear on the next LP Imagine, but in rewritten form as the title track of 1973's Mind Games, after being combined with a song heard later on the tape, "I Promise". Both of these sound much better than the edited versions released officially on The John Lennon Anthology in 1998. "I'm The Greatest" also emerged in '73, but not as a Lennon track; it was the leadoff song on Ringo Starr's Ringo LP. At this point in 1970, the song was in embryonic form and had more John-oriented references than it would later have upon being handed over to the ringed one. The next three songs all showed up the next year on Imagine. "How?" is featured as a false start, then with a complete run-through. The first pass here is a very tentative attempt with John singing in the plural: "How can we go forward when we don't know which way we're facing". "Child Of Nature" was on its way to being "Jealous Guy", but it still held onto its 1968 "Beatles in India" origins at this point. There are three false starts prior to the full performance. Next comes "Oh Yoko!" On Imagine, it is a song of joy to his wife. Here, it sounds more like a dirge in the vein of "Mother". More confident takes appear later in the tape. Following these three eventually issued tunes, the next two songs went unreleased in John's lifetime. A track usually given the title "Sally And Billy" is up first in this duo, featured in a series of breakdowns; John never really gets the song down in this try, but he'll give it another attempt at the Dakota in 1976. Next is "Rock And Roll People", a song not released by John until the posthumous Menlove Ave. compilation in 1986, for good reason! A highlight of this tape is the reworking of "Help!" in a much slower version than the1965 Beatles arrangement. Around this time, John was exploring the possibility of re-recording some of his more personal Beatle's songs. This might have been an attempt to work up a new arrangement. In any event, he abandons the effort after not being able to work out the chords for the chorus. An amusing moment occurs when Yoko makes a comment and John answers "I don't care how you want to sing it, Dear, I'm singing it meself at the moment..." This is followed by an improvisation that didn't exactly go anywhere, but eventually turned into a Christmas message which appeared in part on Vigotone's The Ultimate Beatles Christmas Collection; two takes of the message are featured here in their entirety. Next, The Impressions' spiritual call "People Get Ready" leads into a second pass of "How?" now sung in the familiar first person singular: "How can I..." Over and over he repeats what he's written until the final structure of the song is arrived at: a series of searching questions aimed at himself. By this time, Yoko has made her presence known, and is heard in the background during yet another lengthy run-through of "How?". Don't worry, you'll hear more from her later. The next song, a fifties-style rocker a-la Fats Domino, is unnamed but possible titled "My Heart Is In Your Hands". It's featured in a false start and a "complete" attempt. Too bad he never completed it, as it has some potential. John does however quickly move on to a song familiar to anyone who's bought the Beatles' Anthology 3. "Mailman Bring Me No More Blues", issued as the flip side of Buddy Holly's first solo single, "Words Of Love". Next, in the fifties vein of "Oh! Darling" comes "I Promise", the kind of apologetic ode to Yoko that he was still writing until his final days. Finally, we come to the most difficult titles to enjoy: an untitled track by John with the line "You Know How Hard It Is" being a likely title for the song (and hard indeed it is to listen to!). The tape ends with two passes of a song apparently called "I'll Make You Happy". Yoko recorded an answer to this this song of John's which can be heard on Bag's Lost Lennon Volume 30. Only the true masochistic need apply. ...and so we come to the end of this particular demo session. John and Yoko would go on to make individual LP's, Imagine and Fly, the next year, and would move to New York, leaving Tittenhurst Park and England behind for good. This piano tape is an excellent example of the post-Beatle days of Ascot creativity, and some of the last home recordings John made in his native land. Tony Cooks February, 2000 Jw603 Notes: = = = = = = = Info on the date was taken from a similar boot: During "Help", Yoko makes a comment and John answers "I don't care how you want to sing it, Dear, I'm singing it myself at the moment..." Posted to ZOMB 12/05, grabbed 3/06. md5sum checked OK. new torrent created: artwork from bootlegzone (20) and label website (6) added non-seekable shn files converted to flac level 8 (137 MB saved, wow) Tags added with Mp3tag v2.38 enjoy!