John Lennon - Wonsaponatime Audio CD

A fair review of the John Lennon "Wonsaponatime" Audio CD. Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all John Lennon reviews here, or go back to the John Lennon tabs.

John Lennon Band: John Lennon
Title: Wonsaponatime
Rating:
Release Date: 1998-11-03
Media: Audio CD

Tracks: 1: I'm Losing You 2: Working Class Hero 3: God 4: How Do You Sleep 5: Imagine 6: Baby Please Don't Go 7: Oh My Love 8: God Save Oz 9: I Found Out 10: Woman Is The Nigger of the World 11: A Kiss Is Just A Kiss 12: Be Bop A Lula 13: Rip It Up/Ready Teddy 14: What You Got 15: Nobody Loves You When You're Down And Out 16: I Don't Wanna Face It 17: Real Love 18: Only You 19: Grow Old With Me 20: Sean's "In The Sky" 21: Serve Yourself

GOOD BUY.
It's neat to hear how the songs came around. It's all out takes if your into out take this is for you.


Just My Two cents....MOSTLY GREAT STUFF
On the other hand the quality of much of it is vastly improved. If you are like me and already have every other John Lennon album and a number of bootlegs most of this stuff is not new. Buy it if only for the first track. CHEAP TRICK with Lennon on I'M LOSING YOU. Why this version wasn't used on the STRATING OVER album is a complete mystery to me (and Rick Neilson). This is Lennon rocking harder than he had in years. It'sworth the price of the CD just for this. Buy it used if you have to.


Great, like everything else.
The songs have a way of slowly growing on you. I strongly recommend this album to any fan of Lennon. I also have the Lennon box set, and while I do appreciate all of Lennon's work, I find that Wonsaponatime contains most of my favorite songs from the box set.

If you are unsure if you like Lennon's solo work, this is a good first album to get a feel. .


Reader's Digest Version
This CD is a single disc distillation of highlights from that box set. On the heels of the success of the Beatles ANTHOLOGY albums in the mid-1990s, Capitol decided to give John Lennon's solo career similar treatment in 1998 by releasing a four disc box set of his previously unreleased, if widely bootlegged, songs and alternate takes.

Every phase of Lennon's solo career is here. The best tracks include an unplugged performance of "God" that is every bit as gripping as the version on PLASTIC ONO BAND. Take 1 of "Imagine," featuring a harmonium and lacking Phil Spector's strings, is quite beautiful in its own way. "God Save Oz" brims with Lennon's enthusiasm and wry wit. The alternate take of "I'm Losing You" rocks harder than the version on DOUBLE FANTASY. That song and "I Don't Wanna Face It" demonstrate that Lennon was still capable of making vital music at the age of 40. Both make one wonder about the great music he might have made later in the 1980s, had he not been taken from us so prematurely.

"Real Love" may be the song with the most emotional resonance. The liner notes don't say so, but it's a safe assumption that this is the demo that Yoko Ono gave to the three surviving Beatles, which they then overdubbed and turned into a "new" Beatle song in 1995. As embellished by Paul, George and Ringo, it was an exuberant and slightly speeded up song. But this demo, with John alone at the piano, is a much more somber piece.

There is something else about most of these recordings that is striking: John's voice sounds great. In his days with the Beatles he had a lot of success using studio tricks to distort his vocals on songs like "Tomorrow Never Knows," "Strawberry Fields Forever" and "Come Together. " Unfortunately, this technique spilled over into his solo career with mixed results. Perhaps it's no coincidence that his best solo albums (PLASTIC ONO BAND, IMAGINE and DOUBLE FANTASY) were also the ones on which he tended to let it all hang out vocally. Since most of the material on this album was recorded live in the studio with minimal production, John's voice shines through like nature intended.

The album contains some dross. The demo of "I Found Out" adds no new insight. "Serve Yourself," John's satirical rebuttal to Bob Dylan's "Gotta Serve Somebody," had the potential to become a good song, but the demo is a little too goofy for its own good. "Baby Please Don't Go," an outtake from the IMAGINE sessions, probably should have stayed on the cutting room floor.

Yet even this album's lesser moments have their charms. WONSAPONATIME certainly offers an opportunity to dig deeper into the Lennon vault than most people would have thought possible. Essential listening for fans and even casual listeners will find much of it rewarding.


Interesting material for Lennon fans
One highlight is "Real Love", which the other three Beatles completed in 1995, as well as some home recordings. Twenty-one songs from "The John Lennon Anthology" are showcased here, with alternate tracks and rough demos from "Plastic Ono Band", "Imagine", "Some Time In New York City", "Walls And Bridges", "Rock 'n Roll", "Double Fantasy", and "Milk And Honey". Some interesting material, some ho-hum, but definitely worth a look for Lennon fans.


You can see a complete list of all John Lennon discography, or go back to the John Lennon tabs. There is also a good guide on how to read guitar tabs here.

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