He Said He Wanted a Revolution. He Tried to Find It in New York - Rolling Stone
A presidential candidate who plays to white grievance is almost assassinated. A Black woman runs for president. A major deportation threat hangs in the air. People take to the streets to protest bombings and genocide. Sounds very much like modern times. Instead, it’s the post-Woodstock world of the early Seventies seen in Kevin Macdonald’s One to One: John & Yoko, a documentary that dares to take you into one of the most polarizing periods of one of pop culture’s most controversial couples. It’s the movie you didn’t think you’d want that turns out to be one of the few recent Beatles products you’ll need.
-----
John Lennon and Yoko Ono Doc Shows a 'Different' Side of Ono, Says Director: 'A Mother in Pain' - People
The film reframes their U.S. move as a search for Ono’s kidnapped daughter, Kyoko — a heartbreaking story that shaped much of the period for them.
-----
Paul McCartney explains how the Beatles introduced harmonized guitar leads to rock and roll with one remarkable song - Guitar Player
Absent from rock for years before the Fabs used them, dual lead lines would eventually be embraced by 1970s guitarists ranging from Brian May to Tom Scholz
-----
Comments
Post a Comment