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John Lennon said ‘I Am the Walrus’ was tongue in cheek but he later started to write straightforward lyrics During another 1980 interview, John discussed his approach to lyrics.
John Lennon explained why The Beatles’ ‘I Am the Walrus’ was a personal favorite The book Lennon on Lennon: Conversations With John Lennon features the text of a radio interview from 1974.
Following The Beatles' breakup in 1970, fans scrutinized Lennon's lyrics for hidden meanings. Derek Taylor, their press officer, believed Lennon always intended to craft lyrics wi ...
John Lennon said The Beatles' "I Am the Walrus" was similar to Bob Dylan's music. He even accused the "Lay Lady Lay" singer of getting "away with murder" among intellectuals.
Out of the members of The Beatles, the lyrics of John Lennon were often the most exploratory and philosophical.
When The Beatles officially broke up in 1970, fans all over the world wept in shock. It was truly the end of an era. The Fab ...
Beatles songwriter and musician John Lennon opened up about the lyrics that had many fans confused - famously admitting Glass Onion was a 'throwaway song' ...
One of John Lennon’s favourite of his Beatles songs is 1967’s I Am the Walrus. Arguably the most cryptic of the Fab Four’s tracks, fans have debated the meaning behind the lyrics’ surreal ...
John Lennon once stormed out of a radio studio when the DJ played a song that was created as a parody of The Beatles. The late singer, who was assassinated in New York City in 1980, became furious ...
It’s an uncontested fact that The Beatles were the finest songwriters of their generation - with the lion’s share of their culture-shifting output being penned by John Lennon and Paul ...
It was a story I could tell anywhere — When I was in second grade, John Lennon came to my school! My 22-year-old daughter had heard it so many times she could recite it.