John Lennon album review: Forty years on, his music is fully alive

Forty years on, John Lennon’s music is fully alive, his influence has never faded… Gimme Some Truth features gleaming remixes by Paul Hicks

John Lennon                               Gimme Some Truth                             Out Friday

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Anniversaries are two a penny in pop these days, but the odd one can still stop you in your tracks. This week, it’s 80 years since John Lennon was born; in December, it will be 40 years since his murder. 

His influence has never faded. From beyond the grave he supplied the Gallagher brothers with their entire career.

His widow, Yoko Ono, and their son Sean are marking the 80th with ‘a suite of beautifully presented collections’ of his solo work. John might have scoffed at that wording, while being secretly delighted at the loving care on display. 

This week, it’s 80 years since John Lennon was born; in December, it will be 40 years since his murder. His influence has never faded

This week, it’s 80 years since John Lennon was born; in December, it will be 40 years since his murder. His influence has never faded

Gimme Some Truth comes in two sizes, either 19 tracks (one CD or two LPs, magisterial) or 36 (two CDs, four LPs, more uneven). Both feature gleaming remixes by Paul Hicks and bold packaging by Jonathan Barnbrook, who designed David Bowie’s Blackstar.

IT’S A FACT 

McCartney is known for leaving The Beatles first, in 1970. But Lennon told Ray Connolly in 1969 he himself had left, swearing the journalist to secrecy. 

The curation feels bold too, with Imagine tucked away behind several grittier tracks. In fact the order is chronological. The boldness was there at the time, in the blazing honesty of Lennon’s sound and vision.

His melodies were often just descending phrases, vehicles for his views. With their chants and handclaps, these tunes would work at a playgroup, yet they tackle hefty themes, from Mind Games to Jealous Guy to Give Peace A Chance. 

Any old singer can write a love song, but it took Lennon to write a song called Love. He could work wonders with a single word: God, Woman, Isolation (now rather too resonant). 

They were all descended from Help!, the first song to bare his tortured soul.

As The Beatles came asunder, Lennon was lost – taking too many drugs and overshadowed by Paul McCartney, who wrote five of their last seven hits. On his own he found himself again.

If he couldn’t compete with Paul’s melodies, or his musings on matters of the heart, he knew how to find the heart of the matter. He was the lesser talent, but the stronger brand. Forty years on, his music is fully alive.

 

THIS WEEK’S CD RELEASES

 

Emmy The Great                                           April                                         Out Friday

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A new album that feels like a relic from another age. Emma Lee Moss, a Londoner born in Hong Kong, has written a set of hymns to her birthplace, where she has recently lived. She takes this weighty subject and turns it into airy folk-pop that will have you humming along in the car

A new album that feels like a relic from another age. Emma Lee Moss, a Londoner born in Hong Kong, has written a set of hymns to her birthplace, where she has recently lived. She takes this weighty subject and turns it into airy folk-pop that will have you humming along in the car

 

Sade                                                    This Far                                                   Out Friday

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Sade expects only one thing from her fans: patience. Since 2002, she has more honours to her name (an OBE, then a CBE) than new albums (one, released in 2010). To tide us over, here’s a box set of all six Sade LPs on heavyweight vinyl. They’re so calm that they may just see you through the next lockdown

Sade expects only one thing from her fans: patience. Since 2002, she has more honours to her name (an OBE, then a CBE) than new albums (one, released in 2010). To tide us over, here’s a box set of all six Sade LPs on heavyweight vinyl. They’re so calm that they may just see you through the next lockdown