• Your Honest First Reaction to Double Fantasy

    From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 9 13:00:50 2024
    I found it depressing and felt that Lennon sounded like a spent force.

    Everyone knew Yoko would be a trainwreck.

    Suppose MDC had not happened. Would Lennon have had a future as a
    songwriter? I think he would have if he had gotten away from Yoko and
    stopped penning dreary odes to her.

    Douglas confided to Goldman that Lennon was desperate to get out of his marriage. Douglas' girlfriend at that time recalled Lennon asking her
    if she felt women might find him attractive. He also admitted to her
    that he liked the Swedish actress Maud Adams. Coincidentally, Douglas' girlfriend knew Maud Adams and was working to arrange for Lennon to meet
    her when MDC intervened.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 9 15:36:01 2024
    Geoffrey Stokes of the Village Voice summarized Double Fantasy with:
    "Vampire woman sucks life out of man who enjoys every minute of his destruction.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From super70s@21:1/5 to Norbert on Mon Dec 9 17:53:27 2024
    On 2024-12-09 13:00:50 +0000, Norbert said:

    I found it depressing and felt that Lennon sounded like a spent force.

    Everyone knew Yoko would be a trainwreck.

    Suppose MDC had not happened. Would Lennon have had a future as a songwriter? I think he would have if he had gotten away from Yoko and stopped penning dreary odes to her.

    I think all of John's songs are pretty good, they should have put them
    all on one side and Yoko's songs on the other. Of course John would be
    the first to object to that. Thankfully programmable CD players came
    along not too long after 1980 (I also have a burned CD with only John's
    songs on it).

    Ironically I don't mind Yoko's songs on Milk & Honey at all, I actually
    listen to those and the album straight through (her post-death material
    is really poignant).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 10 12:43:23 2024
    I think "Watching the Wheels," with Tony Levin playing bass in a
    McCartneyesque style, and "I'm Losing You" are okay.

    It's tragic, IMO, that Lennon got involved with a narcissist like Yoko,
    but that's what happens to people who fry their minds and lose their
    standards.

    When John had temporarily escaped Yoko and topped both the albums and
    singles charts with Walls & Bridges and "Whatever Gets You Thru the
    Night," Yoko deemed it "all just hype." She was furious, I sense, that
    he was successful again -- and without her.

    She derailed his plans to follow W&B up with an album he would have
    called Between the Lines.

    Additionally, when Lennon felt he had recovered his songwriting muse in Bermuda, his plan was to do a reggae-influenced album dealing with the
    theme of "living on borrowed time." Again, Yoko derailed his plan and instructed him, according to her then-lover Sam Green, to write songs
    about his love of her.

    Once Yoko had gotten Lennon to agree to allow Yoko on his comeback
    album, Yoko presented producer Jack Douglas with *boxes* of tapes of her
    own songs from her time with David Spinozza. Douglas, bewildered, asked
    Yoko: "How many songs are you going to HAVE on this album?"

    "As many as I can," Yoko replied.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)