C.D U.S.A • Capitol Records • 09463-74912-2-5.
2006 • U.S.A.
Back cover.
Inlay.
Disc.
Booklet.
Booklet.
Booklet.
Booklet.
Booklet.
Liner notes:
Executive Soundtrack Producer: Davdi Leaf
Soundtrack Album Producer: Lisa Wohl
Executive in Charge of Music for Lionsgate: Jay Paires
Production Assistance: John Scheinfeld, Arlene Wszalek, Robert Vasquez, Peter Lynch, Rob Christie
Art Direction: Tom Recchion
Design: Steve Silvas
Photography: Frank Barratt/Hulton Archive/Getty Images; Photo by Bob Gruen
U.S. National Archives; Photo by Rudd Hoff/Ⓒ Yoko Ono; Lenono Photo Archive/
Ⓒ Yoko Ono; Ⓒ Barrie Wenzell
Mastering: Robert Vosgein Ⓒ Capitol Mastreing Studios Hollywood
A VERY SPECIAL THANK YOU: Yoko Ono Lennon
INSPIRATION: John Lennon
GIVE PEACE A CHANCE
From the very first moment John and I saw each other, we knew something was about to happen – something big. We just didn’t know how big. When John and I sang ‘Give Peace A Chance’ from our Bed-In in Montreal, we had no idea the song would become an anthem not only for our time but for generations to come. It went around the world, and made other songwriters realize that you can convey political messages with songs. Millions of people got together and joined in its chorus. Singing it together made us all realize that we were a power strong enough to change the world. Little did we know that that’s when we, John and I, really made out beds for life.
Both of us experienced World War II from two opposite sides. We knew what it meant to be in the war. We knew how, suddenly, you could lose everything. We knew that people like us were the ones who really suffered, and the Generals and the politicians just kept dishing out lies to keep us pacified. That was an insult to kids like us. Two angry people… That’s what we were. So when we met and hugged each other, our back bones literally relaxed. Let’s change the world for the better together. YES! Never in a million years, did we think that promoting World Peace could be dangerous. Were we naive? Yes, on that account, we were. John sings on the CD: “Nobody told me there’s be days like these.” That was his true confession. ‘Gimme Some Truth’, another song in this collection, is a song only John could write and sing. It’s a John Lennon Special born out of that unmistakable Liverpool attitude. Nobody would ever write a song like this and sing it the way John did.
The songs in this collection aren’t just about peace; they also focus on issues of social injustice that were so important to us back then, like ‘Attica State’. John was inspired to voice the injustice in the world he saw. He did it quickly just like the editorials of daily papers.
What’s fascinating to me is how these songs, taken from the original albums and used as score for the film, are given a whole new life. ‘I Don’t Want To Be A Soldier Mama’ and ‘Here We Go Again’ tragically speak to life in our 21st Century. These songs have become relevant all over again. It’s almost as if John wrote them for what we are going through now.
The filmmakers have chosen his best songs: powerful and insightful. There are the political slogans, ‘Give Peace A Chance’ and ‘Power to the People’ as well as the deep and tender songs like ‘Love’ and ‘Scared’ – songs from his heart that still touch us today.
Watching the film triggers in me memories of wonderful times, frightening moments, great victories and the final heartbreak – the moment the world stopped for me – and for so many people around the globe. At its heart is a story of a man who was driven to make a better world for all of us. I believe John would have loved this film. It’s not tabloid, but rather it tells it like it was. “Gimme Some Truth”, indeed.
It is with great pride that along with my filmmaker friends at Authorized Pictures (David Leaf & John Scheinfeld), Lionsgate, VH1 and EMI that I present the soundtrack to this important film, "The U.S. Vs. John Lennon."
War is Over (If You Want It)
Yoko Ono Lennon
Summer of 2016
Poster:
ReplyDeleteThe U.S. vs. John Lennon is a soundtrack to the 2006 documentary film The U.S. vs. John Lennon.
It was released in September 2006 and it peaked at number 19 on the US Top Soundtracks chart on 14 October that year.