Beatles
Remastered

Some Time in New York City

Some Time in New York City
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Reviews


An Absolute Joy.
Review date: 2008-03-15 Rating: 10 out of 10

This album belonged to my wife, as did her whole, then on vinyl, Lennon collection, and she played them, perhaps, too frequently. With the advent of children, whereas nowadays couples spank the credit card, with no such thing available to us back then, instead, we would sell a few LP's at the local used record shop to pay a bill or make ends meet. Of course, like a good many of my own records, her John Lennon collection gradually became depleted to nothing, until now. Older, with the kids grown up and neither rich nor as stoney-broke as we once were; it's time to buy a few of them back; and what an absolute joy it is to hear this album again.
Out of all John's album releases, I think this one might have been the less popular of the bunch, and yes, back in the days of the el pea, we didn't play side 2 with Yoko's 'wailing' very often, either. And yes, one can press the 'stop' button on a CD player at any time, but no, the whole thing played through, and maybe we've matured and / or have a broader taste, but the live 'jam' tracks are far better than remembered.
Of course, 'Angela,' 'Luck Of The Irish' and 'John Sinclair' are still out-and-out classic tracks these days, so even if you do find the live jams and wailing not to your taste, you still have ten cracking tracks for your money, and here, the bonus cuts of 'Happy Xmas War Is Over' and its B-side, are indeed a welcome bonus!


Yoko Ono cannot sing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Review date: 2007-01-30 Rating: 6 out of 10

Let's get one thing absolutely straight - Yoko Ono cannot sing but she can wail and warble like an alley cat being strangled. If this album were all songs sung by John Lennon it'd probably be considered a classic because his solo songs on here are actually very good if a little controversial.
But ............ upon first hearing this album I found myself tapping my feet to the Lennon songs and wearing a pretty ugly grimace on my face during the Yoko Ono songs, the only reason this woman ever recorded a note of music is quite simply because of the Lennon name. She is a truly horrible singer.
If you're a Lennon completist then this album is a definite must buy but it might be best trying to find a site where the decent songs can be downloaded and the rubbish by Yoko omitted and never heard or spoke of again, i'd rather live in ignorance that this woman never existed in any form of popular music at all.


Luck of the Lennons
Review date: 2006-02-25 Rating: 6 out of 10

John's third conventional solo studio album had a lot to live up to. Following 'John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band' and the now classic 'Imagine', and the Lennon's move from their peaceful country home in Ascot to the constant buzz and bustle of New York City, 'Some Time In New York City' seemed to reflect the experience of John's move to an entirely different environment. Being influenced by radical poitics and emersing himself in the raw rock and roll power or Elephants memory, John wrote songs about topics, moreso than feelings, with mixed results. 'Luck of the Irish', a beautiful irish type ballad with a very pointed message which works well with Yoko's singing, was one extreme to 'New York City', a rocking story of his arrival on the New York shores. 'Sunday Bloody Sunday' sounds shrill in comparison to 'Born in a Prison' or 'Angela'.

When the record come out in 1972, it was touted as John's nadir, just as Paul McCartney was getting pummeled by the press for his album 'Wild Life'. John's record was critisized for replacing poetry with sloganeering while Paul's was critisized for sloppiness and being generally light weight. Both records deserve a fresh look today.

Yoko has remixed Some Time in New York City and to her credit it is a great improvement. Her mixing has reduced the chaotic echo feel of the Phil Spector production. The 2005 CD has a presence the 1980s issue of the CD lacks, no doubt to the improvements in technology at Yoko's disposal and her own underestimated ear for sound and production skill. The remixed CD has a warmth and clarity it lacked in all orther incarnations, and the Lennon's Zappa number, now edited to John's performance only (a wise move given that the 'Au' and 'Scumbag' numbers were tough to sit through) you can now hear Flo and Eddie's back up vocals on the track. the Slide guitar on 'John Sinclair' jumps out at you, and the single, 'Woman is the Nigger of the World' remains on of his better collaborations with Phil Spector.

I would suggest that anyone interested in learning about Lennon's music pick up this CD. It is side of John Lennon that was just as interesting as his confessional side, and in hindsight, not so very much removed.

Lennon's (and Yoko's) Best Album
Review date: 2006-01-05 Rating: 10 out of 10

With this album, Lennon comes of age and writes his most intelligent, politically devastating and far-sighted lyrics. He lashes-out at just about every aspect of society that is oppressive. The album is a sustained attack on colonialism, the oppression of women, racism and the British class system.

In this album, Lennon transcends the "sad, bad, glad" teeny-bopper songs of the mid-60s and takes a cold, hard look at the world he is living in. He doesn't like what he sees and he now addresses a very different audience: Nixon is in the White House, the Vietnam War rages on, there is a massive peace movement in the US burning draft cards, Kissinger is engineering a coup in Chile, the US black civil rights movement is ongoing and inspires a similar civil rights movement in Ireland which also begins peacefully, but is soon repressed and ends in flames. "Bloody Sunday", the day when 13 unarmed civilians were murdered by the British Parachute Regiment in Derry, is still fresh in everyone's mind. It sends IRA membership sky-rocketing and initiates a war that will last for decades. Then, along comes Lennon with this album containing the tracks "Sunday Bloody Sunday" and the ironically entitled "Luck of the Irish". The first is a furious reaction to the massacre:

"You Anglo pigs and Scotties sent to colonise the north, you wave your bloody Union Jack and you know what its worth!"

The second is a beautiful, lilting song, but it too doesn't pull any punches:

"Why the hell are the English there anyway, as they kill with God on their side."

The album was considered to be so subversive that it was banned by the BBC when it was first released in the early 1970s. That's why many people in Britain don't even know it exists to this very day.

The other interesting development is Lennon's refreshingly clear and unambiguous acknowledgement of the oppression of women in the provocatively and courageously titled: "Woman is the Nigger of the World". Coming from a very male-chauvinist north of England working class background, this is a big step forward for Lennon personally and politically and shows the very positive influence of Yoko. The "I'm not a racist/sexist, but" brigade will no doubt tell us that this can all be dismissed as "political correctness"--the war cry of every Alf Garnett in the land. Well, they would say that, wouldn't they? Lennon is undeterred. He appeals for men in particular to think seriously about the issue:

"Woman is the nigger of the world
Yes she is...think about it
Woman is the nigger of the world
Think about it...do something about it."

And even more pointedly:

"Woman is the nigger of the world...yes she is
If you don't believe me, take a look at the one you're with."

Despite that fact that Yoko is singing in a Western musical idiom which is very different to that of her native culture, she shows that she can sing charmingly in the tracks "Born in a Prison" and "Sisters O Sisters"--two songs which speak of the way in which society crushes the aspirations of the most vulnerable people at a very early age.

"We live with no reason
Kicked around for no reason
Thrown out without reason like tools"

The thread that runs through this album, and the reason it was so widely suppressed/rubbished, is one of STRUGGLE against all forms of injustice. That is why future generations will remember this album as Lennon's best--most thoughtful, most courageous (especially after the earlier death threats) and far-sighted. It is better even than the previous album, the superbly presented "Imagine". "Sometime in New York City" builds on some of the themes begun in the title song of "Imagine". But there is massive mood change in between. The songs may not be as pretty as those in earlier/later albums, but this album radiates an appeal for people to resist through a heady mix of radical politics and rock and roll.

The saddest part about the aftermath of this album is that John was threatened with expulsion from the USA by Nixon and the FBI if he didn't shut up. Faced with this ultimatum, that is exactly what he did. The Vietnam War ended and he retired to private life and he never returned to political themes again.


Product Details/Specifications


Artist(s):
John Lennon
Yoko Ono
Plastic Ono Band
The Mothers Of Invention

Recording label: EMI Records
Manufacturer: EMI Records
EAN: 0094634097628
Binding: Audio CD
Format: Original recording remastered,
Release date: 2005-11-07
Universal product code (UPC): 094634097628
Number of discs: 1

Disc 1 Tracks:
1. Woman Is The Nigger Of The World
2. Sisters O Sisters
3. Attica State
4. Born In A Prison
5. New York City
6. Sunday Bloody Sunday
7. The Luck Of The Irish
8. John Sinclair
9. Angela
10. We’re All Water
11. Cold Turkey (Live At The Lyceum Ballroom, 1969)
12. Don’t Worry Kyoko (Live At The Lyceum, 1969)
13. Well (Baby Please Don’t Go) (Live At The Fillmore East, 1971)
14. Listen, The Snow Is Falling (Bonus Track)
15. Happy Xmas (War Is Over) (Bonus Track)

Publishers: EMI Records

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