AN INTIMATE INTERVIEW WITH YOKO ONO AND HER LATE HUSBAND John Lennon reveals just how much the two clicked as soul mates.
“It keeps your mind alive, you know,” Lennon said of his relationship
with Yoko. “It’s no good being with people who can dominate you all
the time or that you can dominate all the time. But if you’re with
somebody who’s got a ticking mind, which was the best part of being in
the Beatles…but you can’t slow down. With Yoko, it’s like living with
four or five Beatles.”
The intimate revelation is part of a series of interviews known as “The Smith Tapes” project. Howard Smith was a journalist as a radio personality for New York’s WABC and a star columnist at the Village Voice throughout the 1960s and early ‘70s. Hundreds of his interviews with some of rock’s biggest names were discovered in 2000 when his architect son Cass Calder Smith was helping him move to a smaller apartment.
The intimate revelation is part of a series of interviews known as “The Smith Tapes” project. Howard Smith was a journalist as a radio personality for New York’s WABC and a star columnist at the Village Voice throughout the 1960s and early ‘70s. Hundreds of his interviews with some of rock’s biggest names were discovered in 2000 when his architect son Cass Calder Smith was helping him move to a smaller apartment.
The tapes contained hundreds of conversations with legends like Mick
Jagger, Eric Capton, Lou Reed — and remained untouched for 40 years.
Smith, now 80 and fighting cancer, told his son that he had hoped to use
them to write a memoir. The younger Smith then spent years cataloging
and digitizing the interviews with the assistance of producer Ezra
Bookstein. “This is not someone talking about the time; this is the
time,” Bookstein told the New York Times of the tape’s amazing contents. Since last November, segments of the interviews have been released on iTunes as part of The Smith Tapes project.
On March 12th, Collection No. 5 debuts, with Smith interviews with
the The Rolling Stones, Jerry Garcia, and John Lennon and Yoko Ono.
In the upcoming Lennon interview, John and Ono address the criticism
that the couple faced about their relationship. People were accusing the
two artists of being too close and dependent on one another.
“To be apart we don’t have to actually be apart,” Lennon tells Smith
during one of five interviews they gave to him at their room at the St.
Regis Hotel. “We’re all brought up to think that you mustn’t give a
child too much love, a couple mustn’t be together too much, also it’s
good for the husband to be working in America while the wife’s in
Brazil. We don’t believe all that jazz. That’s just some social
Christian jazz that somebody must have laid on us a few generations
ago…We don’t want to be apart.”
Ono tells a story about wanting to attend a women’s meeting with
John, but being told that she had to come alone. But Ono insisted that
John be by her side. The group acquiesced, but then proceeded to
criticize her, calling her arrogant and dependent on John.
“Every person can have his or her own bag,” Ono said. “We don’t all
have to be alike. We can’t be….We just have to realize our own bags. I
wish they would understand that. … Let us be as we are.”
Ono then expresses her frustrations with people trying to label her
relationship with Lennon. “To make some fantastic, you know, kind of
theory out of us is ridiculous,” Ono said. “Well this is a sign of
dependence or whatever. Both of us are very strong people, and also very
vulnerable.”
Lennon then makes the obvious statement that close bonds with friends and loved ones are a natural occurrence.
“There were times when I spent as much time with George, Paul, and
Ringo as I did with Yoko,” Lennon said. “I mean, I slept with them in
the same room in twin beds, of course, on tour, and I lived, ate, and
breathed with them for five or ten years. Nobody said that about four
young fags living together.” Lennon laughed before continuing. “But
between a man and a woman, oh my goodness, what’s going on there with
each other all the time? There must be something perverse about it.”
“It’s not fashionable anymore, I suppose,” Ono said in response to
Lennon. “We’re both particular people. I don’t think we can stand for a
moment anything that we can’t stand, and we wouldn’t even think of doing
something that we can’t stand….You know we’ve been together for a long
time [and] it seems like it’s agreeable to us, doesn’t it?”
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