Lennon

Lennon
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The Man, the Myth, the Music - The Definitive Life

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
iran گزارش تخلف

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2011

نویسنده

G.S. Beard

نویسنده

Tony Gemignani

نویسنده

G.S. Beard

نویسنده

Tony Gemignani

نویسنده

Tim Riley

ناشر

Hachette Books

شابک

9781401303938
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

July 11, 2011
Is there room for another big biography of John Lennon, just a few years from Philip Norman's doorstopper, and four years from Bob Spitz's epic history of the Beatles? Journalist and NPR media critic Tim Riley (the author of previous books on the Beatles, Bob Dylan, and Madonna) proves there is with this insightful, page-turning examination of Lennon's roots, his Beatle fame, his art, his manic personality and relationship with Yoko Ono, and the peace he finally seemed to find, only to have his life cut tragically short by a crazed gunman. By now, the broad strokes of Lennon's life have been largely sketched, and Riley doesn't veer far from that scriptâa volatile early childhood; the groundbreaking success of the Beatles; the crumbling of the group as personal ties frayed, business soured, and artistic paths diverged; and Lennon's erratic, activist post-Beatle life with Yoko Ono in America before he settled down to be the father he never had to son Sean. Riley makes his mark in the details. With an impressive array of sources, he soberly explores Lennon's many contradictions, ably separating myth from reality. The result is a book that at once enriches our appreciation of Lennon's larger-than-life genius and his mortality.



Kirkus

August 1, 2011

After hundreds of books on the former Beatle, is there anything left to say? Surprisingly, yes, and music journalist Riley (Fever: How Rock 'n' Roll Transformed Gender in America, 2004, etc.) delivers intriguing news and commentary in this incisive biography.

The news comes mostly in the form of fresh insights, some closely argued, some merely observed in passing. On the latter score, the author briefly considers Lennon's role in what might be thought of as a virtual British Empire. The Windsors may have lost the real one, but thanks to the Beatles and kindred acts, Britain "lay claim to a new cultural empire, with significance far beyond its borders." Despite recent boneheaded claims that Lennon was a closet Reaganite, Riley shows that Lennon was no deliberate imperialist—Paul McCartney, maybe, who has had to live under the long heroic shadow cast on Lennon after his murder, and who now has to "endorse his sainthood, lest he be disrespectful of the dead." The author finds true significance in the partnership of Lennon and McCartney, which, for all their protestations, was a true two-way street. Moreover, he is quick to observe the little accidents out of which history is made—for instance, the Mellotron keyboard, the toy-loving Lennon's "latest gadget," too big to fit inside his apartment, on which McCartney casually tinkled notes that would shape one of Lennon's best-known songs, "Strawberry Fields Forever." Riley is much more respectful of Yoko Ono than have been many previous biographers, more forgiving of McCartney, more sympathetic even to Lennon, who can't have been easy to live or work with. He is also attentive to others of great but sometimes unsung influence in Lennon's life—not just Mimi and Julia, but also George Harrison, who helped shape the Beatles' sound more profoundly than he's often given credit for. Lennon had what Riley characterizes as "another kind of mind," and his book is a careful exploration of the man's musical genius, as well as his many shortcomings in the realm of personal relations.

Essential for Lennon fans, and one of the most thorough yet accessible rock biographies to appear in recent years.

 

(COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)



Booklist

Starred review from September 1, 2011
In this massive and insightful biography, music critic Riley bravely attempts to come to terms with the mass of contradictions that was John Lennon. Indeed, all of Lennon's many faces are explored here in depth: Lennon the brilliant musician, Lennon the acerbic bandmate, Lennon the druggie, Lennon the peacenik, Lennon the househusband. Riley divides the book into three large sections: Pre-Beatles, 19401959; Beatlehood, 19601969; and Beyond Beatles, 19701980. Throughout, he attempts to explode mythsfor example, that Lennon was the working-class hero of legend; he was solidly middle classand to set the record straight on many aspects of Lennon's personal and professional life. He also turns to mostly forgotten primary sources, including In My Life (1982), a memoir by Lennon's childhood friend, Pete Shotton, and Daddy Come Home (1991), a memoir by Lennon's absent father, Alfred Lennon, that reveal important incidents in Lennon's upbringing. Riley approaches Lennon's messy life from an intellectual perspective, so that the book is as concerned with Lennon's music as with the conflicting personae he projected to the world. A must for Lennon and Beatles fans.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)




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