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John Lennon Research Paper

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Another blow John Lennon got was from his unsuccessful album “Some Time in New York City “ which was released in 1972 talked about rights of women, race diversity, the Irish political problem in Belfast with the British colonization ,which for some critics showed an unparalleled transgression on some governments red lines.
Some of the media rejected broadcasting the songs of this album just because it contained some unacceptable words such as “nigger,” which would be considered as a sign of race discrimination. This was like an unexpected shock for Lennon which plunged him into depression.
Perhaps the incident that was about to weigh heavily on Lennon’s psychology was his separation from Ono. What was interesting about this period was his …show more content…

He was never satisfied with the quality of his voice.
Lennon’s affiliation to “The Beatles” band gave the whole group a widespread popularity and an unprecedented adulation among the public. Some even called the phenomenon as "Beatlemania.” Their music and everlasting fame has been exploited by many in various ways, and often out of their creative control.
John Lennon was one of the composers that revolutionized the attitude, the style and the sound of pop music. Many British Rock groups benefited from Lennon’s compositions, songwriting and music in general. His style travelled across the borders of Britain and made many hooked on it. It was considered highly original and irresistibly catchy. It went beyond the geographical frontiers and was reproduced by so many.
After he had established a reputation for himself and marked his era as one of the most influential cultural forces, he increasingly sophisticated and improved the field of experimentation by introducing and sometimes adopting new genres like baroque pop, country, folk-rock, and …show more content…

Well it can be seen from the above analysis that the distinctive style of these talented musicians helped support the human rights movements that were springing up at the time namely the hippie movement making use of drugs to escape the bitter reality. John Lennon probably thought of himself as a savior and at the same time a spokesman of the minority groups especially the distressed, the poor, and the outcasts of society. He has been known as a rebel and manifested that stance through his songs which made him gain worldwide recognition by these categories.
A direct impact of John Lennon and The Beatles on the British culture is the regional accents, many of which had been connected with the working class (e.g. Cockney), began to be generally accepted and started to appear on television and radio (MACDONALD 19, MARWICK 154).
It is interesting to know that in the beginning John Lennon and the Beatles didn’t use any social criticism in their early songs since all the members of the group originated from a poor social background (Marwick writes about John Lennon and Paul McCartney as about “two working-class lads”: MARWICK 132), but later on they began to consider their music as a spiritual thing, along with being a powerful weapon. And of course, they brought about some issues of the time like the generation gap in their lyrics as well as sympathized with and were influenced by the hippie

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