Saturday, October 30, 2010

PETE BEST FIRMO EN EL MURO DE LENNON EN PRAGA

Beatles drummer Pete Best signs Lennon Wall in Prague

30 June 2010
Best with the John Lennon Wall on Kampa island behind. (ČTK)

Prague, June 29 (CTK) - Pete Best, former drummer of The Beatles, signed the John Lennon Wall on Kampa island in Prague's historical centre Tuesday.

Later on Tuesday, Best had a concert with his current band in the Czech Music Museum in Prague that was held within the "Beatlemania" exhibition.

He said he came to Prague to add his signature on the Lennon Wall and to support the link between Prague and Liverpool because many Czechs visit Britain but do not go to Liverpool.

After John Lennon was murdered in 1980, people started writing love and peace slogans and making pictures on a wall in Prague centre dedicated to him. Czech communist police damaged the inscriptions and pictures regularly in the 1980s, however, Lennon's fans always renewed them again.

Best recalled the days when he played with the legendary band. He said The Beatles had undergone the crucial change during a four-month stay in Hamburg, Germany, where they played six to seven hours almost every day.

Best said he was not angry at the other players anymore for making him leave the band but that his relations with the rest of the Beatles ended due to his departure.

He said he was in no contact with Paul McCartney and that he last talked to Ringo Starr in 1962.

Ringo Starr replaced Best behind the drums in 1962.

Pete Best, now 68, played with the Beatles in 1960-1962. He was the most popular member of the band among the fans, especially the girls. As the real reason of his departure is not known, there are many theories why he was made to leave the band.

Friday, October 29, 2010

EMITEN MONEDA EN HONOR A LENNON EN INGLATERRA

El recordado artista fue seleccionado en un voto que superó otras figuras antiguas de la cultura británica.


AP
Viernes, 29 de Octubre de 2010
John Lennon ha sido honrado con una moneda oficial británica conmemorativa.

El ex Beatle fue seleccionado en un voto popular en el que superó a la escritora Jane Austen y otras figuras británicas de la cultura.

La moneda conmemorativa, con un valor nominal de 5 libras esterlinas (8 dólares), salió a la venta el viernes.

Los coleccionistas tendrán que pagar 44.99 libras esterlinas por cada una de las monedas de edición limitada.

Lennon se une a William Shakespeare, Winston Churchill, Charles Darwin, Florence Nightingale y otras luminarias británicas cuyas imágenes han agraciado monedas especiales.

La suya lo muestra con el cabello largo y patillas y sus característicos anteojos redondos.

Lennon habría cumplido 70 años de edad este año. El aeropuerto en su ciudad natal de Liverpool ha sido nombrado en su honor.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

FOTO NUEVA DE LOS BEATLES


The Beatles make American TV debut on CBS’

The Ed Sullivan Show


Volumes have been written about John, Paul, George and Ringo, the four lads from Liverpool who changed youth culture overnight-and just as significantly inspired the rest of the world to embrace new ideas as their own.

With the Beatles, it wasn’t just about the music-although their genius manifested itself in a seismic shift-but also their irreverent outlook, decidedly cool sense of fashion, camera-ready image and irrepressible optimism. The Fab Four played a perfectly timed part in lifting society from the cookie-cutter monotony of the 1950s toward the unbounded idealism and unrepressed attitudes embraced by a generation coming of age in the 1960s.

At the front lines of the mid-’60s British invasion, the Beatles attracted 73 million viewers to The Ed Sullivan Show during their debut performance-45 percent of the U.S. adult population at the time. (During that appearance, CBS superimposed a caveat to young, impressionable fans over John Lennon’s visage: “Sorry, girls-he’s married.”) A week later, they appeared again with Sullivan, this time live via satellite from their Miami Beach hotel.

Suddenly, it was obvious that Beatlemania had stormed our shores. The Beatles had taken the world from shades of gray into a new Technicolor reality. Suddenly, long hair, imagination and individuality were in. Blandness, conformity and closed minds were out.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

INSPIRACION MUNDIAL


Músicos de la talla de U2, Bon Jovi y Mary J. Blige han homenajeado el legado de uno de los grandes artistas, que ayer estuvo de aniversario.

En diversas oportunidades cantantes como Lady Gaga y Bono han expresado su admiración por el fallecido Lennon. Tal es el caso que la controversial intérprete de “Paparazzi” ahora es una de las íntimas amigas de Yoko Ono.

Para el día de su aniversario se planeó un concierto benéfico, charlas a cargo de quienes conocieron al músico y una fiesta de cumpleaños en el emblemático Cavern Club. Muchos fueron los famosos invitados a esta celebración que unió a todo un pueblo en Liverpool.

Lennon fue reconocido por sus éxitos con The Beatles y como solista. Él nació un 9 de octubre de 1940 y falleció el 8 de diciembre de 1980 a manos de Mark David Chapman, quien lo asesinó al frente de la puerta de su casa.

En 1960, John Lennon y Paul McCartney se juntaron para formar la banda de rock más importante de todas las época: The Beatles, junto con Ringo Starr y George Harrison, quienes se convirtieron en los cuatro de Liverpool que cambiaron al mundo con sus temas, look y rebeldía.

Junto con McCartney, Lennon fue el eje de The Beatles, interpretando grandes temas como “She Loves You”, “Help!” y “A Hard Day’s Night”.

En los años setenta y tras la separación del grupo inglés, cada uno tomó su rumbo y John hizo el suyo al lado de la artista plástica Yoko Ono, quien es considerada por muchos como la causante del rompimiento de la banda. Lennon escribió y produjo exitosos temas como “Imagine”, “Woman”, “Love”, y otros que tuvieron las mejores críticas.

Finalmente ayer, como todos los años, se recordó al maestro John Lennon. Por esta razón su viuda, Yoko Ono, lanzó la discografía remasterizada de su difunto esposo. Ella, junto al hijo de Lennon, invitaron a la exposición “White Feather: The Spirit of John Lennon”, con objetos “que repasan la íntima y emotiva historia de la familia”. La culminación de las celebraciones se dio en el tributo musical en el Echo Arena de Liverpool, ante 11 mil seguidores.

Le rinden honores

En el día que el fallecido músico de Liverpool hubiera cumplido 70 años de edad, sus más fieles seguidores visitan el sector Strawberry Fields del Parque Central de Nueva York a unos pasos del edificio Dakota, donde el ex Beatle fue asesinado.

Los honores a Lennon comprenden un mosaico que donó la ciudad italiana de Nápoles y una placa que nombra los 121 países que están a favor de declarar Strawberry Fields como Jardín de la Paz.

ABOUT JOHN LENNON




If John Lennon had only been one of the four members of the Beatles, his artistic immortality would already have been assured. The so-called “smart Beatle,” he brought a penetrating intelligence and a stinging wit both to the band’s music and its self-presentation. But in such songs as “Strawberry Fields Forever,” “Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown),” “Rain” and “In My Life,” he also marshaled gorgeous melodies to evoke a sophisticated, dreamlike world-weariness well beyond his years. Such work suggested not merely a profound musical and literary sensibility - a genius, in short -- but a vision of life that was simultaneously reflective, utopian and poignantly realistic.

While in the Beatles, Lennon displayed an outspokenness that immersed the band in controversy and helped redefine the rules of acceptable behavior for rock stars. He famously remarked in 1965 that the Beatles were “more popular than Jesus” - a statement that was more an observation than a boast, but that resulted in the band’s records being burned and removed from radio station playlists in the U.S. He criticized America’s involvement in Vietnam, and, as the Sixties progressed, he became an increasingly important symbol of the burgeoning counterculture.

But it was only after the breakup of the Beatles in 1970 that the figure the world now recognizes as “John Lennon” truly came into being. Whether he was engaging in social activism; giving long, passionate interviews that, once again, broadened the nature of public discourse for artists; defining a new life as a self-described “househusband;” or writing and recording songs, Lennon came to view his life as a work of art in which every act shimmered with potential meaning for the world at large. It was a Messianic attitude, to be sure, but one that was tempered by an innate inclusiveness and generosity. If he saw himself as larger than life, he also yearned for a world in which his ego managed at once to absorb everyone else and dissolve all differences among people, leaving a Zen-like tranquility and calm. “You may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one,” he sang in “Imagine,” which has become his best-known song and an international anthem of peace. “I hope someday you’ll join us, and the world will live as one.”

Such imagery, coupled with the tragedy of his murder in 1980, has often led to Lennon’s being sentimentalized as a gentle prince of peace gazing off into the distance at an Eden only he could see. In fact, he was a far more complex and difficult person, which, in part, accounts for the world’s endless fascination with him. Plastic Ono Band (1970), the first solo album he made after leaving the Beatles, alternates songs that are so emotionally raw that to this day they are difficult to listen to with songs of extraordinary beauty and simplicity. Gripped by his immersion in primal-scream therapy, which encouraged its practitioners to re-experience their most profound psychic injuries, Lennon sought in such songs as “Mother” and “God” to confront and strip away the traumas that had afflicted his life since childhood.

And those traumas were considerable. Lennon’s mother, Julia, drifted in and out of his life during his childhood in Liverpool - he was raised by Julia’s sister Mimi and Mimi’s husband, George - and then died in a car accident when Lennon was seventeen. His father was similarly absent, essentially walking out on the family when John was an infant. He disappeared for good when Lennon was five, only to return after his son had become famous as a member of the Beatles. Consequently, Lennon struggled with fears of abandonment his entire life. When he repeatedly cries, “Mama, don’t go/Daddy come home,” in “Mother,” it’s less a performance than a scarifying brand of therapeutic performance art. And in that regard, as well as many others, it revealed the influence of Yoko Ono, whom Lennon had married in 1969, leaving his first wife, Cynthia, and their son Julian in order to do so.

The minimalist sound of Plastic Ono Band was significant too. Lennon had come to associate the elaborate musical arrangements of much of the Beatles’ later work with Paul McCartney and George Martin, and he consciously set out to purge those elements from his own work. Co-producing with Ono and the legendary Phil Spector, he built a sonic environment that could not have been more basic - guitar, bass, drums, the occasional piano -- whatever was essential and absolutely nothing more. Lyrically, he turned away from the psychedelic flights and Joycean wordplay of such songs as “I Am the Walrus” and “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” - as well as his books, In His Own Write and A Spaniard in the Works -- and toward a style in which unadorned, elemental speech gathered poetic force through its very directness.

On his next album, Imagine (1971), Lennon felt confident enough to reintroduce some melodic elements reminiscent of the Beatles into his songs. Working again with Ono and Spector, he retains the eloquent plainspokenness of Plastic Ono Band, but allows textural elements such as strings, to create more of a sense of beauty. The album’s title track alone ensured its historical importance; it is a call to idealism that has provided solace and inspiration at every moment of social and humanitarian crisis since it was written.

From there Lennon turned to a style that was a sort of journalistic agit-prop. Sometime In New York City (1972) is as outward-looking and blunt as Imagine was, for the most part, soft-focused and otherworldly. As its title suggests, the album reflects Lennon’s immersion in the drama and noise of the city to which he had moved with Yoko Ono. And as its cover art suggests, the album is something like a newspaper - a report from the radical frontlines on the political upheavals of the day. His activism would create enormous problems for Lennon, however. The Nixon administration, paranoid about the possibility that a former Beatle might become a potent leader and recruiting tool of the anti-war movement, attempted to have Lennon deported. Years of legal battles ensued before Lennon finally was awarded his green card in 1976.

Lennon’s political struggles unfortunately found their match in his personal life. He and Ono split up in the fall of 1973, shortly before the release of his album, Mind Games. He moved to Los Angeles and later described the eighteen months he spent separated from Ono as his “lost weekend,” a period of wild indulgence and artistic drift. Like Mind Games, the albums he made during this period, Walls and Bridges (1974) and Rock N Roll (1975), are the expressions of a major artist seeking, with mixed results, to recover his voice. None of them lack charm, and their high points include the lovely title track of Mind Games; Walls and Bridges’ “Whatever Gets You Through the Night,” a rollicking duet with Elton John that gave Lennon his first number-one single as a solo artist; and the sweet nostalgia of Rock N Roll, a covers album that was Lennon’s tribute to the musical pioneers of his youth. But none of those albums rank among his greatest work.

In 1975, Lennon reunited with Ono, and their son Sean was born later that year. For the next five years, Lennon withdrew from public life, and his family became his focus. Then, in 1980, he and Ono returned to the studio to work on Double Fantasy, a hymn to their life together with Sean. The couple was plotting a full-fledged comeback - doing major interviews to support the album’s release, recording new songs for a follow-up, planning a tour. Then, shockingly, Lennon was shot to death outside the apartment building where he and Ono lived on the night of December 8, 1980.

Lennon’s death broke hearts around the world. In the U.S., it recalled nothing so much as the assassination of John Kennedy in 1963, an event for which, ironically, the arrival of the Beatles a few months later had provided a welcome tonic. In the twenty-five years since, Lennon’s influence and symbolic importance have only grown. His music, of course, will live forever. But he has survived primarily as a restless voice of change and independent thought. He is an enemy of the status quo, a bundle of contradictions who insisted on a world in which all the various elements of his personality could find free, untrammeled expression. Innumerable times since his death Lennon has been sorely missed. And just as many times and more he has been present - evoked by all of us who find ourselves and each other in the music he made and the vision that he articulated and tried to make real.

-- Anthony DeCurtis

HOY CUMPLE 70 AÑOS EL GENIO JOHN LENNON

Feliz cumpleaños maestro, gracias por Los Beatles


Hoy se celebra el aniversario del natalicio del cantautor John Lennon, una leyenda que alcanzó fama con el grupo inglés, The Beatles. Posterior al gran éxito de la banda y luego de una difícil separación, Lennon logró brillar con luz propia.

"Working Class Hero", "Woman", "Imagine" y "Whatever gets you through the night", por mencionar algunos, son éxitos que el artista ha logrado colocar en la mente de sus seguidores a través del tiempo.

Como parte de los festejos, en Estados Unidos se estrenó la película "NoWhere Boy", donde se revela el lado sensible e inseguro que caracterizaba a Lennon en su adolescencia.

El actor Aaron Jonhson, quien encarna al cantante, comentó que interpretar a un astro del rock fue uno de sus más grandes retos en su carrera.

Por su parte, Liverpool apuesta por mostrar lo que sólo esta ciudad conoce: los orígenes de uno de los más grandes músicos pop del siglo XX.

Las celebraciones comienzan hoy en el emblemático Cavern Club con una fiesta de cumpleaños.

En ese lugar, entre 1961 y 1963, los Beatles ofrecieron alrededor de 300 conciertos en los que pulieron sus actuaciones en vivo, comenzaron a dar fama a canciones como "She Loves You" y conocieron a Brian Epstein, su manager.

Un mes antes de viajar a Estados Unidos por primera vez, en agosto de 1963, los Beatles dieron su último concierto en el legendario bar con la promesa de regresar algún día.

La fama les impidió volver a ese escenario, pero una escultura de un joven Lennon a la entrada del club recuerda que los Beatles nunca llegaron a marcharse del todo de Liverpool.

Legado musical

A la celebración también se han unido sus colegas músicos. Tal es el caso de Ozzy Osbourne, quien recientemente grabó la canción "How", tema que pertenece al segundo álbum "Imagine" del fallecido artista.

"Si queremos sobrevivir como raza humana, tenemos que enfrentar de forma directa los problemas. John y Yoko tomaron el toro por los cuernos y por eso uno tiene que quitarse el sombrero ante ellos", expresó Osbourne.

Artículos promocionales, subastas de objetos del artista han sido parte de las noticias que se publicaron durante toda la semana previa a la fecha de cumpleaños.

Además, los sitios más visitados de internet como Google y YouTube también se unen a la especial fecha.

Ringo Starr, Jeff Bridges y Aerosmith, entre muchos otros, recuerdan la figura del ex Beatle, a través de testimonios que han sido colgados en Youtube. Pero no sólo las celebridades podrán posterar sus saludos, ya que Yoko Ono publicó un video personal donde le solicita a todo el mundo que grabe su propio homenaje a través de www.youtube.com/johnlennon.

"Espero que todos se unan a mí y a la gran familia de la paz en todo el mundo para celebrar este día tan especial", dice Ono en dicho video.

Ono también puso a disposición del público con un sonido remasterizado los siete álbumes que Lennon, los cuales realizó entre 1970 y 1980. Además, incluye el disco con canciones inéditas publicado cuatro años después de su muerte.

Por su parte, Google desde ayer mantiene un logotipo especial que honra al artista que revolucionó el mundo de la música.

Además, la viuda de Lennon y su hijo Sean encenderán hoy "La Torre Imagine", en memoria del cantante, seguido de una pequeña actuación de los guardianes del legado del compositor inglés.

Al mismo tiempo en la cuidad natal de Lennon su ex esposa Cynthia Powell y su hijo Julian Lennon revelarán un monumento de artistas jóvenes dedicado al fallecido cantautor, financiado por Global Peace Initiative.

Asimismo, al rededor del mundo se estarán desarrollando diversas actividades como charlas y conciertos benéficos para honrar una vez más el natalicio de John Winston Lennon, verdadero nombre del singular compositor de "Give peace a chance ".