- From Faith Current: “The Sacred Ordinary: St. Peter’s Church Hall” - May 1, 2023
- A brief (?) hiatus - April 22, 2023
- Something Happened - March 6, 2023
Earlier this week, reader @Maya wrote me, knowing full well the flood of words that this would cause:
“Hey, just wondering your thoughts on this video. At around the 1:20:00 mark, Lewisohn says that he thinks John and Yoko weren’t addicted to heroin? This is really throwing me and has got me worried about his third volume, should it ever be released.”
Having listened to the relevant bit, @Maya, I have to say I’m worried too. Strap in folks, this is gonna be a long one–I don’t have time to write it shorter.
A couple of things to begin with…
Mark Lewisohn is an excellent researcher—he’s a chronicler. That’s what he’s been doing since the early 1980s, and there’s nobody better. Future scholars will use his work, and rightly so. However! I don’t always agree with his interpretations, which I sometimes find fairly surface. That doesn’t make him wrong, just that I don’t expect him to say much that I haven’t read or pondered before. And when he does attempt to overturn some orthodoxy, I can find myself dubious of his interpretation. Here’s an example:
Midway through this interview he makes a point of saying that Allen Klein has been perhaps unfairly treated, made into a monster by Beatles biographers. To which I say, “The guy whose previous clients, most notably Sam Cooke and The Rolling Stones, did not exactly thrive under his care? The guy whose one job was to keep The Beatles together and productive, and instead decided to play John and Yoko against Paul, effectively destroying the group? That Allen Klein?” Klein is a figure who worked in the shadows, on purpose. You can’t really ascertain who or what he was via documents and his own statements; this is intentional. It benefitted him in his business dealings to be…well, duplicitous is a kind way to put it. Klein is actively hiding important things; if you take him at face value, you’re going to be misled, because Klein lies. Morality is not the point here; it is figuring out the most true model of what was going on. The only hope is to gather information from a wide variety of informed sources, then pull back and assess.
Allen Klein was an excellent Mob-style accountant, and there’s smarts and skill in that—setting up tax dodges and dummy corporations, striding into offices and shaking fatcats down for nickels per LP. That he could do, nobody can deny. But he was not, in any way, a good manager of artists, and anybody who says he was…just look at the careers of his clients. Sam Cooke died intestate—what reasonably competent manager allows that?—and Klein later bought his back catalog from his starving widow. The Stones straight up lost the rights to their music from 1963-69. Being murdered without providing for your family, losing six years’ worth of iconic hits, becoming estranged from your writing partner and breaking up the biggest group of all time—these are all catastrophically bad outcomes for the artist. And they were pretty unwise for Klein too—how much would Allen Klein have been worth, if he’d actually taken care of his clients? David Geffen would be asking him to borrow money.
Klein’s behavior—with Cooke, with The Stones, and The Beatles—makes no sense if he was trying to nurture and protect his clients over the long haul. It makes perfect sense, however, if he was primarily concerned with short-term gain for ABKCO. But short-term gain is dumb when you’re the manager of Sam Cooke in 1964, or the Stones in 1966, or The Beatles in 1969. Why would Klein, a smart guy, act so stupidly?
It’s almost as if Klein kept doing something destructive, and couldn’t stop. Anyone with a smidgeon of experience in showbiz recognizes this for what it is: reflexively screwing the talent, because you think they’re dumb, and think you can lawyer up longer and better than they can. IIRC, ABKCO and The Stones finally settled in 2015.
In the face of Allen Klein’s pattern of behavior, to say he is unfairly maligned by Beatles writers strikes me as—I want to be careful in my language here. I respect Lewisohn immensely and revere what he’s given all of us. He’s forgotten more about The Beatles than I will ever know. Let’s just say, to me it speaks to Lewisohn’s assuming that everyone is as honest as he is, and not knowing what he doesn’t know.
In the first part of this video, Lewisohn speaks about listening to all 95 or whatever hours of the Get Back Nagra reels, fifty years to the day that The Beatles made them. And he concludes—like Peter Jackson would later—that the sessions were quite peaceful and productive.
Okay, fair enough—but as I’ve said before, this reinterpretation creates a big problem. It directly gainsays what John, George and George Martin said, consistently, over years, about the sessions. They were there. They are primary sources. You can’t just ignore that data because the Nagra reels seem sunnier than you expected, or sunnier than Let It Be. There’s also the issue of Let It Be itself, which was undeniably, indisputably what The Beatles wanted the world to think about those sessions, as of May 1970. It was practically anti-Beatle propaganda, made by The Beatles.
Were John, George, and George all lying? How likely is that? Were they all mistaken? How likely is that? Were they all wrong in one particular way? Why? Similarly, was Let It Be a reverse whitewash? At whose direction, and for what purpose?
A mere chronicler does not have to answer these questions. A historian, however, must.
Like Jackson, Mark Lewisohn believes that the important truths of The Beatles are accessible via the sources we have—like the Nagra Reels. But I think the only way you can square things like the questions above is to acknowledge that there were conversations, essential interactions, which happened outside of the record we have.
This, to a chronicler, is terrifying; it hacks at the very root of their sense of self-worth. (Not to me; I personally think chronicling—unearthing information, organizing and cataloguing it—is absolutely essential. Lewisohn’s an absolutely essential man, and I’d promote the hell out of a Kickstarter for him; he should be supremely well-paid and supported for what he’s doing.) But the idea that sources are incomplete, or misleading, or worst of all, being used by liars to shape a narrative, that is a terrifying thing to a chronicler. It flips them from a discoverer of truth into a mouthpiece for propaganda. They will resist that conclusion if at all possible.
What does all this have to do with Maya’s question? Everything.
The impact of drugs on an individual, and a situation, is really hard to ascertain—something practically guaranteed to drive a chronicler crazy. Who took what, when? What consequences did it have on them, individually? Their relationships with others? The kinds of ideas they had? How can we tell? It’s invisible. And where’s the baseline? It’s all down to judgment.
Because of when it happened, and the business they were in, drugs are central in The Beatles’ story. It is a story about creativity, and luck, and drive, and money and Britain, and America, and the 50s, and the 60s, and sex, and the Cold War…and, inevitably, unavoidably, drugs. What they do to people, particularly artists.
Let’s take the most neutral, most accepted, most harmless aspect: Prellies. You cannot understand what The Beatles did in Hamburg, and what Hamburg did to them, without addressing the topic of amphetamines. That chemical isn’t just “a thing that happened in the story,” but “a thing that made the story happen.”
For years, historians attempted to understand blitzkrieg—how it worked, why it worked—without foregrounding the fact that the Nazis provided their soldiers with amphetamines. The astounding success of their tactics wasn’t just that Heinz Guderian was a genius; it was that German soldiers on speed could fight harder for longer, and move faster than their enemies. This internal, invisible chemical higher-than-baseline state is key to understanding the external, visible one—the fall of France in 1940. Yet until about ten years ago, historical consensus just said, “Well, the Germans were very motivated.”
That’s true, certainly. But they were also on speed.
Did speed give John, Paul, George and Ringo, normal British teens, the energy, drive and focus necessary to become The Beatles? Highly likely. Did speed also play a role in the supposed streetfights, including the one where Stu got kicked in the head? Highly likely. Did a mixture of Prellies and alcohol play a role in Lennon’s nearly beating Bob Wooler to death in 1963? Perhaps. These are canonical events, all—the Prellies and the violence—yet Beatles writers have yet to acknowledge their interconnection. And we must, not to point fingers or assert immorality, but to understand.
How much of the Beatles’ fabled “cheekiness” and amazing capacity to work pre-1964 is due to their ambition, how much to their quick wits, and how much is due to speed? What impact does taking that much Preludin over that much time, do to a nervous system? How does it change one’s thoughts, one’s relationships? A chronicler can get away with saying, “No records exist which allow us to ascertain any of this.” But to the degree that a biographer can answer these questions, they must. If you know someone is taking drugs, those drugs are playing some role in their behavior; you can’t just set them aside as net-neutral because it’s impossible to quantify.
The same questions can, and should, be asked about The Beatles use of pot. In the podcast, Lewisohn says that, according to George, smoking a joint was no big deal, like having a few beers. Well, that’s true…but not for everyone, and not every time, either. And also, if you smoke pot like The Beatles smoked—incessantly—that’s no more benign or neutral than walking around with an open beer all the time.
And the same questions must be asked, of John at least, regarding LSD. LSD may not be habit-forming, but if you take it every day over long periods of time…it changes the brain. It must.
Just as a high person acts and talks and thinks different from a sober person—that’s why we take drugs, to change ourselves—John, Paul, George, and Ringo’s career, interpersonal relationships, and public behavior was different than if they’d been four teetotalers. This is simply factual, and telling their story without strongly factoring in how drugs impacted them and their relationships (including with each other), is like telling John DeLorean’s story that way, or John Belushi’s. Drugs had a massive impact on everyone involved in the counterculture—if you weren’t taking them, you were dealing with people who were, or you were dealing with the ideas and attitudes that they spawned or encouraged.
There is no reason to believe that the John Lennon of 1963, with a chemical diet of booze and Prellies, imagined himself crawling around naked in a bag with a Japanese performance artist five years later. What changed him? The Beatles experience, yes, but also the experience of more and different drugs, both on him, and on the society around him. And that’s why he took them—that’s what “mind expansion” is and does. But mind expansion comes at a cost. Sometimes that cost is obvious–being an acid casualty, or a heroin zombie–but often it’s not. Often it must be inferred.
Before I say any more, let’s read what Lewisohn actually says.
Lewisohn to interviewer, 1:21:
“You called John ‘a heroin addict.’ I don’t believe he was ever addicted. I don’t see the signs of an addict there. And in fact I’m not so sure how many times he took it. He ended up writing the song that suggests that he was addicted, ‘Cold Turkey.’ Incredible song. And so revealing because no one knew he was taking heroin, and he writes a heroin addiction and withdrawal song, and puts it out as a record. I don’t know whether at that point he’d actually gone through that experience. He probably had, to know it. But that suggests a stronger addiction than there’s any indication of.”
First off, I wondered what are “the signs of an addict”? Here’s a thirty-second Google search:
WARNING SIGNS OF ADDICTION
- Bloodshot eyes, pupils larger or smaller than usual.
- Changes in productivity, attitude and focus.
- Increase in absenteeism and late arrivals.
- Sudden weight loss or weight gain.
- Deterioration of physical appearance, personal grooming habits.
- Unusual smells on breath, body, or clothing.
- Tremors, slurred speech, or impaired coordination.
- Apathetic attitudes toward broken relationships and the consequences of using drugs and/or alcohol.
All of the factors in bold are ones we see in John Lennon during the White and Get Back periods. The last one, particularly, is troubling. Lennon is suddenly saying things like, “I’d give all of you up for her.” Why would he suddenly say something like that? Because that’s not just about Yoko; it’s also about the woman who introduced him to heroin, who he is doing heroin with. The Beatles were John’s drinking buddies, Prellie gang, pot friends, (to some degree) his LSD pals…but the moment he does a drug that only he’s doing, he transfers his loyalties from them to his fellow heroin user. This is a sign of an addict. You seek friends not because they are good for/to you, but because they enable the addiction, which is paramount. Best of all is the same kind of addict; second-best is another kind of addict; third-best is an enabler. Even if we agree with Lewisohn and say that Yoko didn’t break the band up, the business stuff did, it’s impossible to separate John’s relationship first with Yoko, and then with Klein, from his use of heroin. In ’67, The Beatles were a united front ready to mutiny over being sold to Robert Stigwood; now John is ready to cozy up to a bad new, gangster-adjacent guy like Allen Klein? Has he lost his mind?
No. It makes perfect sense; he’s started using heroin, and thus prefers the company of other heroin users (Yoko), and other addicts (Klein?) to enablers (The Beatles and support staff). Suddenly there are three things between him and the other Beatles, and they all are connected. Thinking of Lennon as an addict isn’t a value judgment on him, it’s simply a theory that helps explain the story in a logical way.
Back to the interview:
Interviewer: Think he had a relapse after “Cold Turkey” into heroin again? With Yoko?
Lewisohn: The suggestion is that George said that Yoko had got John into heroin and they didn’t like her for that. But I don’t think she was an addict, either…there’s no sign that either of them was. They functioned to such a high degree. I mean, John is so creative—okay, he’s not writing many songs at the start of ’69, but you look at John Lennon’s performance, most of January he’s…fine. At Savile Row he seems completely clean. He’s not strung out on heroin the whole month like I’ve read. He’s not, at all. The Bed-In, he’s so switched on, he’s definitely not doing any heroin in Amsterdam. Maybe, very late at night when the room finally is cleared, and finally the two of them are alone after another extraordinary day of their room being full of people, they might have a smoke. There is an allusion in one of the films to ‘Thanks for the grass’ whatever, it was nice, which is newlyweds, after an exhausting day, make love and have a joint and go to sleep, fine. I don’t think they’re doing heroin.
Interviewer: He’s so lucid.
Lewisohn: He’s so lucid, he’s so on top of it…He never drops the ball at any point, and it’s the same in Montreal. I think he has a heroin problem again in New York in 1971-72. There’s a story of them going cold turkey in a car being driven across America. They put themselves in the car and told the driver to drive and they would go through their hell in the back of the car. And when they arrived at the destination, they were over it. Which must’ve been a trip. And a half…But nonetheless. But I think it’s very easy to be frightened, obviously, of the word “heroin”and its potential, and to assume that John was strung out on heroin the whole time, and it’s very evident that he was not. He’s far too creative and lucid…he doesn’t exhibit any signs whatsoever of being strung out. In fact, in Twickenham, I think it’s the 14th of January, it’s the last day at Twickenham, John begins the day with an interview set up the day before with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation…and John is kind of green in this interview, he’s clearly unwell and in fact he goes off to throw up. And we know he’s thrown up because he comes back and says, “I’ve just thrown up.” There’s no secrets with these guys, they told us everything.
Did they, though? Or does Lewisohn want to believe they did, and for us to believe that, too? What if The Beatles didn’t tell us lots of stuff? What if they intentionally misled us at times? Or lots of times? Where does that leave a guy like Lewisohn? Doesn’t that totally change his job from what he’s so good at—accumulating and organizing facts—to something that he’s not good at, which is skeptical interpretation of someone who may have something to hide?
But let’s look at his words themselves. There are two things I want to point out here. The first is, Lewisohn’s story-making. We have no idea what John and Yoko did in the Bed-Ins late at night when it was just them. They might’ve had cups of cocoa; they might’ve been constructing a nuclear bomb. We don’t know. But instead of saying, “We don’t know what John and Yoko did after everyone left,” Lewisohn creates a story—presumably of what Mark Lewisohn would’ve done. (And what Mike Gerber would’ve done, for that matter.) But the whole point of John and Yoko is that they are not Mark or me. They lived an entirely different kind of life than we do, and it’s one that—not coincidentally—was full of drugs, legal and illegal, and people doing drugs, legal and illegal. Constantly. All the time.
Filtering a Beatle’s story through expectations formed solely by our own experiences will mislead us. These people were extraordinary to begin with, and then had lives that made them more unique and exaggerated, not less. Plus the time they lived in had very different attitudes towards certain important things, like drugs and sex and politics. We have to know what we don’t know, and ask people who might be able to tell us.
The second thing Lewisohn does in the above excerpt is this: he assumes that Lennon isn’t an addict because he doesn’t conform to what Lewisohn thinks an addict acts like. Does Lewisohn have extensive contact with addicts? I do, and Lennon of ’68-’70 rings my addict-warning system hard. He’s got a tremendous amount of random anger and defiance, especially towards people who used to be his closest friends; he’s got a ton of chaos in his family life, and in his professional relationships, and in his business affairs. And so forth. True, he’s not a drooling zombie; but a guy who could help produce Revolver, Pepper, and all the songs of 1967 while “eating LSD like candy” is maybe not going to have the reactions to drugs we might expect.
The one thing we know about John Lennon and drugs is that, at every time of his life after Hamburg, he’s using chemicals, and usually a mixture of chemicals, to control his mood. Constantly titrating up and down. What was he like sober? We don’t know, we never met that guy. But people with a normal relationship to drugs and mood do not consume to the degree he did. And money can cover for a lot of personal messiness. When you think of a heroin addict—say someone like Charlie Parker hocking his horn, or stumbling around the Lower East Side at the end—how much of that is drugs, and how much is being a poor African-American musician who’s lost his cabaret card? A smack-addicted Beatle is likely not going to look like Charlie Parker. He’s not even going to look like a pre-Redlands bust Robert Fraser. A smack-addicted Beatle is still making a lot of people a lot of money.
John’s not on the nod, drooling; ergo, he’s not an addict. Lewisohn admits he’s taking heroin on January 13, 1969, even going so far as to finger Tony Sanchez as the connection thanks to photos, but then says John “regretted” taking the heroin, because he told Paul and Ringo “last night, I took something he shouldn’t have.”
This is story-making again. Did John really regret taking that heroin? If so, he would’ve stopped—which we know he did not do. Or did John, as committed to the Heroin Lifestyle as ever, simply run into some H that was too pure, or cut with something that made him sick? Or was he performing contrition for Ringo and especially Paul, on the off-chance that tales of his morning vomiting had gotten back to them? “Handling one’s drugs” was a core value in those days, and still is in some circles today. Who knows what John meant? I have my guesses, based on my tangles with addicts, but we really don’t know. We certainly can’t make the kind of calls that Lewisohn is making here, not on the data we have.
I know why Lewisohn is making up these stories; he’s a Lennon fan. I’m a Lennon fan, too. I hate thinking that John Lennon, amazing artist, was in thrall to anything bad for him. It really bugs me, that thought, because I care for the guy and appreciate everything he did that’s given me so much joy. But we have to go with the data.
The data says John wasn’t a zombie…in public. The data also says that he was taking heroin for longer than anyone knew, had to kick (that’s what an addict calls it, not a casual user); then picked it up again, then kicked again. And this is just up to 1972! (I read last night he checked himself into a hospital t0 kick in 1974.)
Lewisohn’s fundamental misunderstanding is that he thinks “addict” is a perjorative, that it’s got a moral connotation. I would argue that it’s simply descriptive, and what it describes is a person who has an injurious behavior they cannot stop engaging in.
You know, like Allen Klein. And John Lennon.
Addicts lie about their addiction, particularly about who’s in charge. They can stop, the cliché goes, any time they want; it just sometimes takes them tying themselves to a chair, or a couple years later, going for a drive cross-country.
“I don’t think the word addiction should be applied,” Lewisohn said in the podcast. “I think he was in control of it, rather than the other way around.”
John said he could handle it—because he told stories about kicking H that show a kind of addict machismo. Rather than thinking, “Yeah, addicts often talk like that”—Lewisohn believes him. But you really can’t believe an active addict when they are speaking about their addiction. If someone in recovery speaks about their addiction, they’re not spinning yarns about how they kicked in a manly way. Addicts in recovery are remorseful. John never, not once in all those interviews, suggested publicly that his prodigious, protracted drug use caused anybody any trouble. He never, not once, surmised that his prodigious, protracted drug use impaired his first marriage or his relationship with Julian. Or with the other Beatles. Or even with Yoko. Drugs were just a thing he did…and it’s one thing for John’s manager and co-workers and flunkies and hangers-on not to call him to account. But we can, and we should. Not to moralize, but to understand.
So why is any of this important? What does it matter if Mark Lewisohn writes a third volume that promotes the countercultural myth of John Lennon, Drug Superman? Why do I endlessly rant about this topic on the blog?
Because if addiction can wreck John Lennon—if it can break up the Beatles—it can mess you up. And being real—not Nancy Reagan, but real—about addiction changes the way we look at history since the Sixties.
Our culture is very poor at identifying addictive behavior. In fact, I’d argue that much of our society is actively instilling addictive behaviors into us, to build ever-growing streams of profit. How many of you are addicted to your phone? I am. Twitter or other social media? Me, too. This impacts my behavior, my thoughts, the way I move in the world. And if a person is an artist, it comes out in their art, because it changes what they see and how they see it. I write differently when there’s a lot of Twitter in my bloodstream.
To try to get some distance on this, I asked a friend of mine who is an addict. “How can you tell when someone is an addict?” They said, “If someone does a behavior that they know is bad for them, but continues to do that behavior, they are addicted to it. And a very good way to tell if someone is an addict—is indulging in harmful behavior, and will not stop—is to look at their life. Is there a lot of disorder around them? Are they doing things they later regret?”
Unlike the five years previous, John Lennon’s life has a lot of disorder between May 1968 and the end of the Beatles. Something happens to John Lennon, and he realized it too, because the whole Rolling Stone interview in 1970 was a retcon centered on that. He hangs it on Brian’s death, because that’s neutral…but is that the whole story? What if it’s drugs? What if all the chemicals that John had ingested since 1960 or so started to hit him funny? What if the steady dose of chemicals he needed just to keep going, started to have different effects on him? Which is more likely, that John fell out of love with The Beatles because Brian died, or because his poor mistreated nervous system just couldn’t take the punishment any more?
When you strip away the moral aspect—when you stop thinking that using drugs, even opiates, made John a bad person, and simply accept him as a fallible frail human with a fragile nervous system who acted in sadly predictable ways—the whole Beatles story begins to change. A lot of what John says, especially after Brian’s death, and certainly after the return from India, stops sounding like the interesting thoughts of a particularly perceptive young man, and starts sounding like late-Counterculture drug-guy spiel. Paul still sounds like Paul, George gets into Indian stuff but it still the same laconic fellow he was before, Ringo is ever-Ringo, but John starts saying things like, “Shooting (H) is exercise,” writing songs like ‘Cold Turkey’ and whispering “Shoot me” in “Come Together.” “I need a fix, ’cause I’m goin’ down…” That’s not someone who snorts a little recreational heroin at parties (and that absurd sentence seems to be what the consensus is). That’s a junkie talking about his life.
I do not get a sense that Mark Lewisohn is particularly well-read on substance abuse, nor particularly interested in its role in The Beatles’ story. That’s a shame, because unlike the reputation of Allen Klein, this really is a consensus worth challenging. I think just a few conversations with people in recovery, specifically well-off people who had long-term “maintenance habits” of opioids, would open his eyes. Did John’s heroin habit impact his working relationships? Of course it did.
Beatles fans must challenge the idea that all four Beatles, and John Lennon in particular, tried and did everything but somehow came out utterly unchanged by it—or only changed for the better. That’s the Sixties fantasy, but it’s simply not possible. Furthermore, there are aspects of the Beatles story that drug addiction is the most logical answer for; I don’t think it’s merely coincidental that John Lennon’s life explodes almost exactly the same time he gets into heroin. I don’t think it’s merely coincidental that John and Paul seem to enter a Cold War almost exactly the same time John gets into heroin. And any Beatles biographer who says that—especially THE Beatles biographer—is missing a huge opportunity to tell an important truth.
In my life I have occasionally encountered a peculiar belief that drugs are neutral substances. That they have their neurological and physical impact, sometimes profound, then leave. That they do not leave traces. In my experience, many people from the UK believe this; that a pint or four every night is normal and has no impact. The language and understanding of addiction and recovery seems to be catching on there, but for many years, it was considered to be as American as capped teeth. Fake somehow, or weak.
There’s also a political aspect; don’t be a narc, man! The counterculture believed that drugs were either harmless or beneficial. When someone “couldn’t handle it,” that was a weakness in them. You do the drugs, have the fun, and then you’re back to normal—or better. Many people who indulged in the 1960s and 1970s seem to believe this. And many people who love those people, want to believe it. Sometimes even I want to believe it.
But I think the wiser idea is this: everything we do to our nervous system leaves a trace in our self, and our relationship with others. And that goes ten times for something used regularly. Given what we know about Lennon’s life and habits, we must assume that he was an addict, and use the forensic tools appropriate to addicts—people who lie about their cravings, people whose cravings cause alienation and disorder and make them be not who they truly are—to make sense of who Lennon was and what he did. Not to moralize, but to understand.
Of course there is a rather obvious reason that Lewisohn may not be able to see this: he hasn’t had a lot of close contact with addicts. This is my hope for him personally. Never having been around the lying, self-deception, and wreckage of an addict and his untreated addiction, Lewisohn may simply be reverting to media depictions of them as his model—”The Man With the Golden Arm.” Since Lennon didn’t ever act like a steroeotypical junkie (at least in public), he must have been master.
But I would hope that as Mark Lewisohn writes Volume II and III of The Beatles story—the point where the Fabs’ drug use becomes more intense, exotic, and a more upfront part of the story, essential to how they copied with being Beatles—he consults widely with experts on addiction and neurology, and we get sound medical thinking on these issues. So that we might stop viewing all this as morality, and truly understand.
Or he could just ask Ringo, “Do you think John was an addict?” I think I know what Ringo would say.
And while we’re exploring addiction, I’ll assume the controversial position of armchair analyst — let’s explore its effects in particular on someone suffering from autism spectrum disorder, specifically the variety formerly referred to as Asperger’s. I’ll list some symptoms or common behaviors, pick your favorite terminology, as someone who has it myself, and you tell me if this reminds you of any Beatle you might know:
* Lack of managing appropriate social conduct
* Anger management issues
* Stress caused by a change of routine
* Issues controlling feelings, leading occasionally to depression or anxiety
* Specialized field of interest
Uh-huh. Think about just how many of those tick boxes in his personality, with and without the drugs.
Philip Norman, no doubt wishing to remain in Yoko’s good graces, tried to dampen the flames Goldman started on that front in updated editions of Shout!, applauding the Imagine film’s brilliance for dispelling the worst-case scenarios, but Goldman’s purported diagnosis 1) pushes everything up to 11 for maximum negative impact, as a lot of things in his book were, and 2) is likely working from a much older understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders, which is to say virtually none (outside of specialized medical journals, perhaps) compared to today.
Combine the two research foci, and I think you’ll find in your Mr. Lennon a classic, virtually textbook case study of the effect of addictive substances on a person with an autism spectrum disorder.
And this is why, flawed as it is, Goldman’s book can be so useful, because 99% of Beatles writing is by and for fans, and fans generally don’t want to confront how uncomfortable this stuff is, not because they’re dumb, but because they love their heroes and want them to be OK. The way Lewisohn discusses these subjects, I don’t get the Yoko Ono-lying-about-it-to-make-money vibe as much as the “person on the Internet who doesn’t understand addiction or drug use and therefore treats it as a net neutral.” As you say, it’s not.
How much of the Beatles’ disintegration, even before Yoko/Klein/heroin, had to do not only with the things we know about–like George’s disinterest, John’s insecurity, and Paul’s ambition colliding–but also with all four not being into the same drugs? In 1966, there’s a chasm between John and George (and, I don’t know, maybe Ringo) and Paul, who hasn’t taken LSD yet–and the Revolver sessions end with the first walk-out in Beatles recording history. Revolver itself, for all its greatness, is at its core a much more White Album-y approach to making an album: five songs of John’s acid rock, five songs of Paul’s baroque pop, three George songs. In contrast, both Rubber Soul and Sgt. Pepper have a unified front, John and Paul offering complimentary, interlocking approaches to soul and folk-rock or psychedelia steeped in Britishisms. Might that be a result of all four Beatles being fully-fledged potheads on Rubber Soul, and Lennon/McCartney tripping together around Pepper? Maybe. I’ve never seen a Beatles book even explore this question.
The other big thing I don’t understand about Lewisohn’s comments is, they’re not even accurate on a surface level. John looked *rough* in the first three hours of Get Back. He’s wearing the same clothes day after day (he even makes light of it at one point, so it’s clearly not something he always did), he’s unshaven, his hair is unwashed, and at one point, he falls asleep at the electric piano. Yes, when they get to Saville Row, he’s a little better. But which is more likely: that he was just “recreationally” taking heroin (has anyone offered a decent explanation of what “recreational” heroin use even means?) for a couple of weeks at the start of January, then stopped, or that after the project and the band nearly blew up *and* Paul nearly confronted him *on-camera, in footage that Jackson chose for his cut of the movie* about his drug use, Paul said something to John either off-camera or in footage Jackson didn’t include, and for the remainder of the project, John made more of an effort to not show up stoned on smack—but because he was still addicted, that meant “doing more speed” or “snorting some coke,” not “stopping his recreational heroin use”? Or that even John realized he needed to be a little more together, and added one of those chemicals to his daily diet so that he would be more “on” for the rest of the month? The “he just stopped”/”wasn’t doing that much to begin with” explanation contravenes everything we know about how Lennon used drugs (and pretty much did everything) for his entire life.
This forces people who care about the Beatles and live in a celebrity culture Beatledom helped create to ask: how often were the Beatles lying to you? Or not telling all of the truth? Not just about drugs, but in general? And why does that matter? Those questions seem to make people very uncomfortable. Witness the arguments we’ve seen on this very site in the past about whether John’s appearance in 1980 looked healthy or not. I think not; he looks malnourished. There are reports of him having issues with food (not to mention drugs) since 1964/65. But, some say, he said he was eating macrobiotic food! And that he was happy! Well, okay. But why are we so sure he was telling the truth? And what are the implications if he wasn’t? Was he actually off drugs since the time Sean was born? Was he happy being married to Yoko? Was he planning to go on a world tour in 1981?
@Michael, I have never seen it in a Beatle book, as you say, but drug affinity is precisely how I look at Beatle records. When they are all taking the same drugs, they are welded together at the hip, and those albums are unified—With/Meet the Beatles, Hard Day’s Night, HELP, Rubber Soul, Pepper/MMT. When they aren’t, the albums are infused with a centrifugal energy that I, often as not, find so chaotic its uncomfortable——Beatles for Sale, Revolver, White, Let It Be, Abbey Road.
As with Lennon’s addiction, the theory is simply very useful in organizing and explaining the story of the group. And people avoid it because of the Sixties/Seventies culture of hip versus square. And I don’t give a shit about that, nor should anyone else at this late date. Mister Rogers never took a drug in his life, and he’s unquestionably hip; R. Crumb marinated his brains in LSD and has only gotten more square.
Fans cannot countenance the idea that The Beatles are lying to us because the primary seduction—besides the music—is an intimacy with them. Just as Hard Day’s Night and HELP purport to show their lives for our pleasure, they too seem to let us in. To suggest that this wasn’t always authentic makes us fans feel like suckers, and who wants that? Especially if the alternative is the coolest four friends in the world?
“drug affinity is precisely how I look at Beatle records. When they are all taking the same drugs, they are welded together at the hip, and those albums are unified”
Perhaps this would shed some light on the intermittent schisms (some more serious than others) between Paul and the others. If Paul has ADHD and anxiety (which I think he does) then many drugs might affect him in a VERY different way —sometimes in the outright opposite way—as the others. Prellies and cocaine might level him out; pot might facilitate his productivity; acid might be overwhelming/scary more often than not. And he’s on the record saying he got none of the usual numbing effect from heroin, which he tried during his breakup depression.
It’s pretty easy to imagine tension arising if they’re all smoking pot and instead of getting lazy and cuddly like G/R/J, Paul’s like “Wow, I can actually think about JUST ONE THING at a time now! What a great opportunity to GET SOME WORK DONE!!! :D”
@Annie, I have a dear friend who started taking Ritalin for ADHD and that was exactly the effect on them. Your comment makes me smile.
I just don’t think this kind of discussion can be a bad thing, if it’s done compassionately. It’s one of the few angles on The Beatles that really hasn’t been addressed.
@Annie, that’s also really interesting because Paul’s burst in productivity happens after the Beatles start smoking pot. Before that, he was coming up with about 2 songs per LP compared to John’s 8-10 (which also would make sense if John was guzzling uppers at that time). Once Lennon and McCartney are both smoking a lot of pot, they’re writing about the same number of songs per album–and once John veers into acid, and later heroin, abuse, the ratios tilt way toward Paul. Funnily, in India, when they’re comparatively drug free, they’re writing about the same amount of music again.
They were smoking cannabis in India, I believe.
I am happy for this conversation. It would seem all of The Beatles suffered negative effects of substance abuse. I can see how the disparity of the drugs used can exacerbate the problem. This subject should be addressed honestly. It seems most writers want to white wash it. Could it be a result of Yoko quashing the project? After all Prisoner of Love has diasappeared.
Totally agree, except that I’d put “Beatles for Sale” in the “same drugs” category (as far as I know, they were all still taking speed when the first sessions occurred, and had been exposed to pot when the sessions ended); I think it’s disjointed because they didn’t have enough time to write ten new songs and held I Feel Fine/She’s A Woman off for UK marketing reasons. (But I digress.)
Okay, but it’s that disjointed feel that I’m talking about. Speed up front, pot at the end.
Yeah, I was thinking about this more after I wrote that comment, and that’s the disjunction going on in that album. Speed songs recorded by a band that’s now getting into pot, including covers played by a Prellied-up Hamburg band that’s now slowing down and exploring acoustic textures, but hesitantly. Early pot songs recorded by a band still guzzling speed on their tours.
Not to get nitpicky, but I think there are some complications with the timeline regarding this theory. John and George took LSD after being drugged by John Riley sometime spring 1965. Then, they got Ringo to trip with them on August 24th, 1965, but Paul refused. They did not start recording Rubber Soul until months after this, on October 12th, 1965. By the time Rubber Soul was released, the peer pressure had built up enough that Paul decided to take LSD, opting to trip with friend and Guinness heir Tara Browne. Here’s Paul talking about this first trip in Many Years From Now:
“I was more ready for the drink or a little bit of pot or something. I’d not wanted to do it, I’d held off like a lot of people were trying to, but there was massive peer pressure. And within a band, it’s more than peer pressure, it’s fear pressure. It becomes trebled, more than just your mates, it’s, ‘Hey, man, this whole band’s had acid, why are you holding out? What’s the reason, what is it about you?’ So I knew I would have to out of peer pressure alone. And that night I thought, well, this is as good a time as any, so I said, ‘Go on then, fine.’ So we all did it.”
Many Years From Now dates this trip to 1966, but drummer Viv Prince, who was also present, stated that this took place right after the Beatles’ last concert for their 1965 UK tour, dating it to December 13th, 1965. With this timeline in mind, this means two things: One, during all of the sessions for Rubber Soul, Paul had not taken LSD while the rest of the band had. Two, this caused enough tension that Paul felt pressured to take the drug by December. All this happened before the sessions for Revolver even started (April 6th, 1966).
I don’t think that any of this disproves the popular notion that LSD caused internal division during the making of Revolver. The fact that Paul opted to have his first trip without any of his bandmates and didn’t want to try it again (the next time Paul took LSD was when he tripped with John during the making of Pepper in March 1967) could have actually caused more tension. Paul finally trying LSD and STILL refusing to become its devotee? What a nightmare! I can picture John being particularly perturbed by this, though I don’t have any specific evidence in support of this theory. However, the fact of the matter is that all four Beatles had taken LSD by the time sessions for Revolver began. And despite the cohesiveness of the album, this was not the case for Rubber Soul. Between August and December of 1965, pressure on Paul grew enough that he went from refusing to take LSD to feeling like it was something that he had to do. The Rubber Soul recording sessions fit neatly into this timeline.
I have a few more miscellaneous thoughts and questions on this theory. If a lack of unity in drug habits led to a lack of unity on albums, what about Paul’s cocaine use during the making of Pepper? He was definitely taking more cocaine than the other three during 1967. I can imagine how Paul McCartney, already a very…enthusiastic individual, on stimulants could have ruffled some feathers. However, I can equally see how this would not have had a major effect on band dynamics. Also, can you elaborate on how drugs contributed to disunity on Beatles for Sale? What was different about their drug use then that wasn’t occurring during the making of Hard Day’s Night or Help?
@Maya, as I use it, I don’t map the drug use that tightly.
Revolver, like Beatles for Sale, seems to hit a time when the chemicals are changing — pot to LSD (in the case of Revolver) and speed/alcohol to pot (in the case of BFS). And since the change hasn’t occurred for all of them — they’re all not living the same way — there’s more dissonance.
The subject at hand is drugs, but if it’s simpler, just think of it as a time when they’re each having powerful experiences not shared by the group. It’s like two of them go to Disneyland for two months, and two don’t — it’s not that they can’t work together after, but that the minds of the first two and the other two are bound to be different.
I have often thought that what the others perceived as “bossiness” from Paul was traits exacerbated by cocaine. And if one party is smoking a joint, and the other is on coke, the psychic gulf between them will be emphasized.
In Anthology, Paul refers to 1967 as “a great ideas time,” and I assume that phenomenon is at least in part a coke by-product. He certainly did seem inspired: “Mal misheard my request for condiments, so I have invented the concept album.” “Let’s make a movie based on this pie chart.” “How about we project a gigantic image on the outside wall of our boutique?”
(He was also involved in the larger artistic scene in London, which would have been inspiring in its own right. Plus, he’s brilliant. Add coke to the mix, and apparently you reimagine what pop music can be.)
I wonder why speed didn’t have the same effect on him? Maybe he was just too young when he was taking it, not the mature artist he would be in 1967.
I also wonder why coke didn’t have that effect on John. Why did he prefer soporifics to uppers, at least after the early 60s? Perhaps LSD and heroin tamped down his anger and hurt, whereas speed and cocaine magnified his most painful feelings?
@Crow,
When looking back at the period of late ’66 to mid ’67, I don’t think we can discount what a lot of people said as it was happening, and directly after: it was a great ideas time for LOTS of people, especially in London and San Francisco. So what’s going on with Paul during that time is the drugs, yes, but also the general ferment, and also the great release of not having to tour, and his own age and coming into the fullness of his talent, and so on and so on.
Where I see coke is in Paul’s tendency to be overbearing. You see the same kinds of behavior among comedy people (Doug Kenney, John Belushi) who have been very very successful and productive in creative teams (as leaders, as led) while under the influence of other drugs (pot, mostly), but really start to rub each other the wrong way once coke becomes the main ingredient in their pharma diet. Coke doesn’t make you a genius — in fact, I think rather the opposite — but it certainly makes you THINK you are one.
Also: whenever we’re talking about the Beatles and drugs, remember how most of these details have been dribbled out of them over decades. Paul only revealed his coke use in Many Years From Now, IIRC. [This is incorrect. See @Crow’s comment below; it was actually revealed in the late 80s.) So for
thirtytwenty years after Pepper, we didn’t know it was part of the mix. We only knew he became particularly obsessive and directive at that time — that Pepper was Paul’s record in a way that was new for The Beatles. And in retrospect we can say, “That’s coke.”Agreed–I think the avante garde scene and the other factors you mention were the main inspirations for Paul’s blossoming creativity at the time.
“Coke doesn’t make you a genius — in fact, I think rather the opposite — but it certainly makes you THINK you are one.”
Ha ha; must be similar to how alcohol makes me think I can sing. I do wonder if that phenomenon led to Magical Mystery Tour, though: a perhaps half-baked idea that may have seemed more brilliant than it was, especially to someone whose most recent brainchild was Sgt. Pepper. And Paul had the others back in the studio so quickly after Pepper to start recording for MMT; he had boundless energy and output, whereas the others might have liked to bask in their success for a little while that summer.
My only nitpick with your post — and it doesn’t detract from your argument at all — is that Paul was talked about his coke use in this 1986 Rolling Stone interview:
https://www.the-paulmccartney-project.com/interview/paul-mccartney-the-rolling-stone-interview-2/
So, 1986 vs, 1997; it still holds that this is information we got well after the fact. I bring it up only because so much of that interview covers exactly what we’ve been talking about here:
****
RS: Did it sadden you to see Lennon subsequently drift off into heroin addiction?
PM: Yeah, I really didn’t like that. Unfortunately, he was driftin’ away from us at that point, so none of us actually knew. He never told us; we heard rumors, and we were very sad. But he’d embarked on a new course, which really involved anything and everything. Because John was that kind of a guy – he wanted to live his life to the full as he saw it. He would often say things like, “If you find yourself at the edge of a cliff and you wonder whether you should jump off or not – try jumping.” And I am afraid I would always say, “No, man, I’m not gonna jump off that cliff; I don’t care how good it is.” I remember we had dinner one night – just a friendly dinner, just bein’ mates – and I remember John saying he was thinking of having this trepanning thing done: drilling a hole in the skull. The Romans or the Greeks or somebody used to do it, so that gave it a validity in John’s mind, I think. And he said, “Would you be up for that? Do you fancy doin’ that? We could go and get it done.” I said, “Why?” He said, “It relieves the pressure on your brain.” I said, “Look, you go try it, and if it’s great, you tell me, and maybe I’ll do it.”
That was the kind of stuff that was floatin’ around then. I just feel very lucky to have said no to those things. ‘Cause at the time, I felt bad about sayin’ no. I thought, “Oh, here I go again, look at me, unadventurous, I’m always the one, they’re gonna make such fun of me.” I mean, I got such pressure when I wouldn’t take acid the first time. I got a lot of pressure there.
RS: Was it like the group sitting around all dropping acid, and you . . .
PM: Yeah. They were sayin’, “What’s wrong with him?” Now, looking back on it, I think, Jesus, I must have had some courage to actually resist that peer pressure. But at the time, I felt really goody-goody, you know: “Hey, Mr. Clean, squeaky clean,” you know? It was like “Aw, come on, fellas, I’m not really squeaky clean, but, you know, acid is maybe gonna do our heads in.”
RS: But you eventually did try LSD.
PM: Yeah, finally. In actual fact, it was because John had done it by mistake one evening. We turned up for a session at Abbey Road, and he thought he’d taken a pep pill – speed, or whatever – to sort of wake him up for the evening, but it turned out to be acid. He had a little pillbox, and he’d taken the wrong pill. This was around the time of Sgt. Pepper. Well, we didn’t get a lot done that night. John came over and said, “Jeez, I’m trippin’.” And we all went, “Ahhh . . . okay. Keep cool, lad. Now, is this a good place to be tripping?” He said, “No, not really.” Okay. George Martin didn’t know. We said, “George, John’s not feeling too well” – so George took him up on the roof! We said, “Maybe that’s not a good idea, George.” I said, “Tell you what, I’ll take him home.” So I took him home, and that was my first trip, that night, because I figured, you know, I can’t leave the guy on his own – he was all aowooommm. . . .
RS: Your apparent preference for marijuana has made many headlines over the years. Do you still indulge?
PM: I don’t talk about stuff like that no more – it’s too crazy. Where I was lucky was with my avoidance of heroin. I went through most of the other stuff, and I had a friend in the Sixties who was getting into heroin. He said to me, “Man, the thing about heroin is that it’s okay as long as you’ve got the money to support the habit – there’s no problem as long as you can pay. And you’re not likely to have a problem with that, so it’s cool.” But something in my brain went djing! – a little light went on – and I said, “No, this is wrong.” So I was very lucky. I said, “No thanks,” and avoided that scene. And I thank God that I did, because a lot of my friends didn’t, and they went through some horror zones, you know? Some of them didn’t come out of it.
RS: It’s sobering to realize that the recreational drug taking of the Sixties, which seemed so lighthearted, has resulted in the wall-to-wall drug scene of today – which is anything but.
PM: I think a lot of it’s been caused by people’s ignorance of the drug scene – like lumping marijuana with heroin, saying, “Well, one leads to the other.” I always say to them, “Well, booze leads to it just as easily, and cigarettes lead to booze, and so on. It all leads to each other.” I personally think that if the older generation had been more sensible, instead of busting people and using scare tactics . . .
RS: Like the scare stories about cocaine in the States recently.
PM: I’m not sure about coke. I’m not into that. Again, I was lucky, because I was into that just before the entire record industry got into it. I was into it at the time of Sgt. Pepper, actually. And the guys in the group were a bit, kind of, “Hey, wait a minute, that’s a little heavier than we’ve been getting into.” And I was doing the traditional coke thing – “No problem, man, it’s just a little toot, no problem.” It was all very lightweight, really. But I remember one evening I went down to a club, and somebody was passin’ coke around, and I was feelin’ so great, and I came back from the toilet – and suddenly I just got the plunge, you know? The drop. And somebody said, “Have some more. Come on, get back up again.” I said, “No, man, this isn’t gonna work.” I mean, anything with that big a downside. . . Anyway, I could never stand that feelin’ at the back of the throat – it was like you were chokin’, you know? So I knocked that on the head. I just thought, “This is not fun.”
I must say, since we’re gettin’ into drugs – and at the risk of sounding goody-goody again – that I do personally feel, from this perspective, today, that my favorite thing is to be clean and straight. I think you can enjoy your life better that way. I mean, when we were very straight in the Beatles, we did music that was pretty much as far out as the stuff we did later. Maybe it wasn’t as far out, but actually, beneath the surface, it was every bit as meaningful.
Oh that’s really valuable context, thank you @Crow.
Coke also apparently caused weight loss in Paul. John made his own weight an issue, but Paul was borderline gaunt for a period in 1967, which corresponded with his greatest cocaine usage.
Lennons appearance in 1980 to me is extremely worrisome, though other than a few whispers here and there, it’s just simply not talked about due to the fact that he was murdered anyway, but his physical appearance totally does not comport with the official happy househusband narrative at all. He looked gaunt, frail, hollowed out…and for the first time much older than his years. Lennon in 1980 could’ve passed for 48-50. If he had not been shot and lost any more weight around 1981-1982…the media would’ve started addressing it because by then it would’ve started looking too scary to ignore.
Was his appearance though due to him relapsing into hard drugs, or was it bulimia…or all those things?
“I don’t think she was an addict, either…there’s no sign that either of them was. They functioned to such a high degree. I mean, John is so creative—okay, he’s not writing many songs at the start of ’69, but you look at John Lennon’s performance, most of January he’s…fine. At Savile Row he seems completely clean. He’s not strung out on heroin the whole month like I’ve read.”
Sorry for the cliche, but this smacks of “tell me you’ve never known a heroin addict without telling me you’ve never known a heroin addict,” as Michael suggests. Addicts aren’t necessarily spread-eagled and drooling all day. For one thing, they have to get up and scrounge for money to buy more heroin. (That wouldn’t have been a problem for John, of course.) Eventually they’re not even getting high anymore, they’re just using to stave off the nausea. The nodding off is a distant memory, an ideal they can’t ever grasp again.
In my experience, addiction looks more like this: Every time you come to visit, you’re OK for the first two days, and then you’re sick in bed for the rest of the trip. Finally you just stop visiting. Sometimes I call and you’re effusive and cheerful, and sometimes you seem to be offended that I exist. You’re not working as much as you used to. You’re not doing much of anything as much as you used to.
This certainly sounds like Dakota John to me, unfortunately. Sometimes he’s happy to see Paul, and sometimes he scolds Paul that he can’t just show up like in the Liverpool days. He’s not recording as much. He pinned it on baby care, or house-husbanding, but I have my doubts.
I’m not a baby boomer, but I know plenty of them. Having grown up in the era of AA, straight-edge, and “just say no,” I often forget the degree to which, for that generation, drugs marked whether you were in or out. And still do: Even among some of my 50- and 60-something family members, the attitude remains that drugs are a — or perhaps *the* — indicator of coolness.
As long as they’re the correct drugs, of course, i.e. whatever that person used or uses. Heroin’s usually taking it a bit too far. But that line is subjective, arbitrary, personal — it’s somewhere between whatever you could handle and your friend couldn’t. And none of this applies to their kids, because the drugs are so much more potent today. Here’s Paul saying that, and being called out for it by the interviewer (at 35 min 20 sec): https://archive.org/details/EntertainmentThisWeekAugust231986SpecialPaulMcCartneyInterview
@Crow, this is really helpful, thank you.
That emotional volatility you describe creates utter chaos in co-workers and family members. You just don’t know who you’re going to get, and after enough times of expecting Dr. Jekyll and getting Mr. Hyde, I know I simply disengage. And I think this explains the difficulties of The Beatles after May 1968–by the middle of 1969, the other three simply didn’t know who they were going to get, and were surely very tired of it. The story of Lewisohn’s Volume III is essentially the story of the breakup, and to not give the heroin use of the erstwhile leader of the group pride of place in that story…well, what are you going to talk about? The fight between the Eastmans and Klein?
Christ.
If Allen Klein loved The Beatles one-tenth as much as Brian Epstein did, he would’ve said this: “Fellas, I’m gonna renegotiate your EMI deal for free. I’ll make plenty of money being known as the guy who saved The Beatles from bankruptcy. If you wanna pay me something as a thank you, fine. But you don’t have to. I’ll do it for free.”
And The Beatles and Allen Klein would’ve lived happily ever after, from a business standpoint. Both healthy, weathy, and wise.
But because Klein himself was probably some kind of addict, he couldn’t help himself from wrecking everything, ending up in court (as he always did). That’s not “business,” any more than when Trump does it. It’s pathology, and should be recognized as such.
Hear hear, to you entire comment.
I wonder if the other Beatles recognized John’s increased volatility as the result of his heroin use. John was mercurial already — Cynthia, especially, talks about this. Did rock stars at the time know enough about the behavior patterns of addiction to identify them in their friends?
Now, after the high-profile ODs in the 1970s and the dissemination of AA concepts in the 1980s (a result of all those ’60s and ’70s celebs going to Betty Ford, perhaps), the mechanisms and hallmarks of addiction are widely known. But in the late ’60s? Rock stars would have been more likely to have witnessed these behaviors firsthand, but my sense is that there was a real resistance to calling them what they were, because of the “Sixties/Seventies culture of hip versus square” that Michael referred to above.
A few years ago, GQ ran an oral history of various rock stars’ journeys to sobriety. (https://www.gq.com/story/clean-musicians) The musicians were asked what scared them most about getting sober, and Jason Isbell answered, “What’s going to happen to this romantic sort of Hemingway idea I have of my life? Am I going to be tucking my shirt in and getting up at seven o’clock every morning and acting just like everybody else?” Isbell was born in 1979, by the way — that ’60s ideal still seems pervasive in popular music, even if it has waned in the general public.
Also, I am embarrassed to see that I wrote “objective” when I meant “subjective in my comment from October 8. Is it possible to fix that? If so, I would really appreciate it!
Word fixed, @Crow.
I read and enjoyed that GQ oral history, thank you! This was my favorite part:
Yoko reputedly turned John on to heroin by convincing him it was “for artists,” and I think as the Sixties ground along and as the chemicals became more intense, there was a persistent drumbeat there. And they were not well served by the recent history: in the 40s and 50s, marijuana had been demonized and it turned out to be as benign as a recreational drug can be (except perhaps caffeine–and I’m speaking as a person whose neurology doesn’t really allow him to consume either cannabis or caffeine). Then acid comes along, and racks up a bunch of positive uses in psychotherapy, and that too is demonized. So by the end of ’67 and into ’68, someone who warned you against heroin wouldn’t have a great answer for, “Well, they said pot and acid would kill you, too.”
Mistrust of a highly untrustworthy authority; the cult of drugs as liberation AND creative tool; Lennon’s emotional pain (which as I’ve said tracks with “spiritual emergency” which would sure as hell make him desperate to numb his nervous system); and his addictive biochemistry all made his trying “H” practically inevitable.
@Michael
Pot and acid were indeed vilified, but wouldn’t the experience of jazz musicians have been enough of a warning to John and Yoko that herion was in a different league?
Here I’m thinking of Parker, Coltrane, Stan Getz, and a great many others who served as a flashing red warning sign to the musical community that horse came with real dangers – especially to those with a tendency toward addictive behaviors.
On the other hand I am not sure how much exposure Yoko had to the jazz scene in NYC and the struggles of the musicians who practiced within it nor how prevelant opioid abuse was in England at the time.
If it was indeed Yoko that turned John onto H, then I am starting to cleary understand those who argue that while Yoko didn’t break up the Beatles, she pretty close to ruined John as a creative musical force.
@Neal, in the interview, Lewisohn speaks of George watching the movie “The Man With the Golden Arm” and crediting that for scaring all The Beatles away from heroin. I mean, sure, but…that’s not how drug addictions work, if you have any proclivity whatsoever. A sensible person might well see that artifact from exactly the time and place you’re referencing–the US jazz scene of the 40s and 50s–and conclude that heroin’s no good.
On the other hand, IIRC heroin really got its claws into the jazz scene AFTER Bird started the be-bop revolution; people went crazy for his playing, saw he was a sloppy junkie, and still concluded that heroin was the cause of his genius, taking up the drug so they could play like Bird. Parker was horrified by this; he himself had gotten hooked on opiates while recovering from a car wreck. He told someone–I think it was the trumpeter Red Rodney–“it doesn’t help, man.”
Once heroin became common in hip London–and I think Robert Fraser was doing it in 1967?–it was inevitable that all the musicians in the rock scene would be surrounded by it, and those who had addictive tendencies would try it, and some would get hooked. Given that it was Yoko who apparently turned John on to it, I would expect it to be Art People or Hip People, not necessarily musicians.
“while Yoko didn’t break up the Beatles, she pretty close to ruined John as a creative musical force”
I’m not comfortable saying Yoko didn’t break up the Beatles, full-stop, no discussion. That reading can be fueled by misogyny and racism, but it doesn’t HAVE to be. If Tony Barrow had done what Yoko did in 1968-70, it would be absolutely legitimate to shorthand that “Tony Barrow broke up the Beatles”–that for his own reasons, Tony created the conditions where an angry, addicted John Lennon felt he had to choose Tony over the Beatles, and did. This includes relentless pursuit of John for a year; her part in the break up of his marriage; her part in introducing him to heroin; her part in creating the JohnandYoko character which made Lennon impossible to have as a bandmember and business partner; her part in convincing John to go with Klein; and…have we ever heard, at any point, in any context, Yoko saying during those years something positive about The Beatles, and/or encouraging John to remain in them? If my wife was as dismissive of comedy writing as Yoko was towards Beatledom, it would remain my choice to stay or go, but at a certain point would be pretty hard for me to maintain a lot of enthusiasm for it. And some portion of that would be on my wife, yes, as well; not just me.
I’ve written about this many times, but the breakup is painful for Beatles fans because they see the Chief Beatle falling out of love with what THEY love. So they look for stories that avoid that; just like “wedding bells are breaking up this old gang of mine,” the “evil Yoko” story is one way to avoid the truth that John broke up the Beatles. Maybe unwittingly, maybe only temporarily, but he did it. But looking at her actions and statements of that time, it’s clear Yoko was a huge, HUGE contributing factor in how Lennon acted towards P/G/R between 1968-70. And she didn’t need to be. She didn’t need to define The Beatles, and especially Paul, as a rival. She didn’t need to introduce John to heroin. She didn’t need to draw a bright line between what she did as “serious Art for serious Artists” (debatable then, and now), and what The Beatles did as meaningless drivel. She didn’t need to speak for John in meetings, or accompany him to the toilet–even if HE asked her to! She actively did all those things, as an absolutely equal human being with agency. Does that make her bad or evil or Lady MacBeth? No. But it also makes her a huge contributing factor to her husband’s breaking up of the Beatles.
We went through the period of “Yoko broke up the Beatles!” And now we’ve gone through a few decades of “Of course Yoko didn’t break up The Beatles, you racists and sexists!” I think perhaps enough time has passed so that we can see Yoko as a very complex, very driven person who wanted John Lennon to herself, and didn’t really give a damn about what happened to The Beatles. She’s said as much herself. Lennon broke up the group, and he was the only one who could; but Yoko was a huge factor in that decision, and it denies her agency to pretend otherwise. It diminishes her, it makes her into a passive, fragile entity, always the victim. But Yoko Ono was an actor in the Beatles’ story from 1968-70, a doer as much as a done-to, and any other reading is spin. I agree with the impulse, and the reasons for it–I abhor racism and sexism, and feel we should interrogate our readings of history to remove their influence–but I think we might be ready to move to the middle of the two poles.
@Michael
Thank you for the time you put in to this reply. I not only appreciate the thoughts on the use of heroin in jazz scene, but also the thoughts on Yoko and her responsibility for John’s diminishment as a musician.
I would agree that those who saw Bird’s brilliance unfold were hungry to know what the source of it was. I believe it was Art Tatum who said (and I paraphrase) “Heroin could not make you play any better, but it certainly allowed you to hear better.” It was this hearing that the be-boppers were working around and experimenting with.
I only started to take a serious look at the Beatles with the onset of Covid. It was certainly an opportune time to plow through the books and podcasts, but as I did so I, as I am sure many others do, started to run across the taboos. Other, of course, than the internet cranks who throw bilge around just because it is always open sewer night at the internet-improv, I noticed that certain pieties had to be maintained—and one of them is paying lip service to the artistry and skill of one Yoko Ono.
Well…one did not need to be that perspicacious of a critic to notice the faux fawning behind some of this. Just this past week, while walking the dog I listened to the guest on a well-known podcast gushing about how he really liked Yoko’s singing and the depth of artistry she brought to things like Double Fantasy. I hadn’t heard that much syrup since high school.
The New Yorker recently ran an article ( https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/06/20/yoko-onos-art-of-defiance that states what a significant figure she was in the avant-garde before she met John. Anyone who spends more than five minutes in Beatledom sees and hears this all the time. I feel like screaming “Seriously??” Fluxus here, Fluxus there. I feel like locking these people in a room to get acquainted with some serious artistry from the likes of Mark Rothko as an antidote to Yokoism.
Knowing that these pieties are seemingly written in stone and that I am but a newbie in all things Beatles, I for some odd reason feel that I must be extraordinarily deferential to all things Yoko—as if it is the price of admission to the wider discussions. Inside however, my brain is rattling around trying to figure out if she is one of the greatest grifters of all time, in the Trumpian league say, just a selfish individual, a master of PR, or a combination of all three?
I find that the discussions are hampered but what you mentioned as the almost reflexive response of any criticism of Yoko being racist of misogynistic and would agree that any whiff of that merits our immediate disengagement. Yet if one is going to put him or herself forward as a “serious” artist then the works and results (not the person) are open to valid and exploratory critique. Why do so many seem to struggle with the very basic concept that you can separate the person from the artist and critique the latter without traducing or maligning the former—even if their behavior is culpable of infractions against the code of being a decent person?
Anyway, I take your words to be a very necessary corrective to the whole John and Yoko discussion. We need to move from the poles and examine the facts.
I appreciate the generosity of your time and will search the achieves for previous discussions on this. As you can see, I am still struggling mightily with the question of exactly what are Beatles fans SO afraid of in gathering facts. I know you and others have mentioned that the fans do not want their enjoyment diminished or that they want to have their set of facts and that the perceptions formed in youth stay entrenched for a lifetime.
Perhaps I just cannot stretch far enough intellectually to understand that. I don’t need the prurient, but like all here wish for a balanced look at the facts and how and why things unfolded as they did. If that path requires some unpleasantries regarding John and Yoko then I would think that fans would welcome the challenge and not run from it with craven shibboleths of “I liked Yoko’s singing or she was a serious artist doing serious things.”
Thank you again for tackling this corner of the Beatle’s progression and having the rigor to look at the situation as it was instead of how we, collectively, wished it had been.
@Neal, I’m glad my various thoughts, worth exactly what you paid for them, are stimulating your own various thoughts.
Here’s what I’ll say about Yoko Ono as an artist, strictly my opinion:
I’m not an artist, but I know a LOT of them, and it’s a very hard, thankless life. It would’ve been particularly hard, and particularly thankless, to be a female Japanese artist in the 60s. I watched a documentary about Yayoi Kusama, and as they described her struggles, I thought of Yoko several times. So just to have achieved what Yoko has achieved is quite laudable. That she was able to be a working artist in 1966, prominent enough to be shown at a hip London gallery, is an accomplishment.
But I don’t think there’s any evidence whatever that she’s a genius, or any kind of seminal figure, and the only reason this question is asked is her late husband’s constant praising of her in these inflated terms. I think that had a lot to do with the detente in their marriage; they seem to have been in a kind of competition, and when one partner is a Beatle, the other one is going to need a lot of praise for the marriage to feel balanced.
Ono’s work itself has always struck me as…a bit thin? Even in the items that I think are unquestionably interesting, like “Cut Piece,” or Grapefruit, they are really of their time in the same way “a room full of TVs all playing footage of Vietnam” is. To me, Ono’s art is calculated, cold, needlessly hortatory, and a bit obvious. I don’t feel it expresses anything new about society or the nature of reality, nor do I feel I know her any better than when I began.
Often, when you examine the conceptual foundations of a piece, they seem quite heavy on the “oh wowwww” factor, but not really well thought-out. Take “Bagism,” John and Yoko’s attempt to satirize racism; if a speaker covers themselves in a bag, the theory goes, all characteristics would be covered, and the speaker could only be judged by the content of the speech alone. But this message was being delivered by one of the most famous men (and voices) on Earth; if there was anyone who wholly invalidated the premise of Bagism as it was being presented, it was John Lennon. Bagism, the Bed-In, these events were complete borrowings from John’s fame and access to media; they were mere notions, even in the world of performance art. Which is OK with me–they’re fun!–but it doesn’t suggest that Yoko, with or without John, was a particularly profound thinker working out a nuanced vision.
See, this is the thing: to take Yoko Ono’s measure as an artist, I think you have to try to separate her cultural impact from her husband’s. Yoko-partisans would say that this is unfair or impossible, but I think you have to try. And if you do that, Ono comes off as an interesting, minor artist–who might have developed into something major, if she’d eschewed the wife-of-a-rockstar life and kept working. Just like writers write, artists make art; where are the big shows, the great evolutions of style, et cetera? Her 2015 MOMA retrospective spans the years 1960-1971.
The argument could be made that she became a musician, but…if anyone thinks that Yoko Ono’s recording career would’ve been anything like the same magnitude–indeed if she would’ve had any recording career at all–without her famous husband, we simply differ. Ono’s connection to her art was, by the late Sixties, so weak and (ahem) performative that she basically dropped it and never looked back, opting instead for celebrity. Even Warhol, who loved celebrity and money as much or more than Ono does, kept working and developing.
Some people really love her work, and I’m glad they do. But even they seem more enchanted by the idea of her–of Ono as a powerful woman of color unfairly treated by the art establishment who didn’t back down. And we must acknowledge that the murder of her husband fundamentally changed her relationship with the press and the fans; after 1980, people have really ached for Yoko’s loss, and striven to honor her as a way of honoring John’s wishes. That’s a good thing to do, and I try to do it here. But speaking of her strictly as an artist, I think that the best we can say is that at age 35 she was an interesting artist with another half of life to go. For many reasons–some we may surmise, some we cannot know–she basically stopped growing at that point, and turned instead towards the business of being famous, and then later, being the widow of a beloved cultural figure. And I think her prickliness around these very issues stems from the fact that she, too, knows that she moved away from the career of being an artist into something much less noble–it’s like Orson Welles in the 70s and 80s, primarily a piece of cultural shorthand rather than a genuine creative force.
When I was digging around for this comment, I ran across the following text for her 2015 MOMA exhibition: “Two years later [1966] Ono made Film No. 4, which again centered on the body, though to much different effect. The film—a sequence of naked, moving buttocks—signaled Ono’s desire to break down class hierarchies by focusing on a universally shared feature.”
If there is anything Yoko Ono is NOT interested in, it’s breaking down class hierarchies; and any honest appraisal of her artistic work needs to cut the crap and grapple with stuff like that. Was that really what Film No. 4 was about? Did Ono’s mind change once she was on the other side of that velvet rope? Why focus on naked asses rather than naked hands? How much of that was a young artist desperate for attention, trying to use nudity to gain notoriety? As with her husband, it’s time to try to understand, and stop paying fealty. Maybe there are hidden depths to Yoko Ono’s work. Maybe she is a truly sublime, important figure–but we can’t see any of that if we’re primarily concerned with placating a billionaire, or paying homage to a widow.
This is fascinating. It reminds me of your comparison of Citizen Kane and John Lennon (clapping for Yoko).
As far as I know though, Yoko’s withdrawal wasn’t imposed on her from the outside. Orson had people like Hearst and Hearst’s friends in the movie studios thwarting him. His work was re-edited. He couldn’t raise money for his projects.
Yoko on the other hand was free, especially with John’s wealth, to launch whatever project she could dream up. It’s interesting she decided to reinvent herself as a recording artist and songwriter. I’m guessing she calculated there was more juice in that than in performance art. And perhaps it was done in a competitive spirit (she was hoping to beat John at his own game?)
Oh agreed, @Baboomska — though Welles’ personality had something to do with his decay, given Yoko’s wealth and access I can’t imagine the wonderful things he would’ve done. Whereas she decided to become a popular musician who absolutely rejected “popularity.” That turns cultural prominence into merely an assertion of capitalist force — similar to the reason why people prattle on about Bezos or Musk. Whatever you want to say about J/P/G/R, they achieved fame and wealth because people loved them and their work. Yoko Ono has always rejected that basic transaction which, in its potential for meritocracy, I think is one of the few good things about capitalist media.
I find Yoko’s relationship to her art very peculiar; she stopped the moment she could’ve done anything. It feels like she went into a field where communication is everything, determined not to reveal anything whatsoever about herself. Look at this installation: it’s not just spare, it’s blank, as if AI had a “Yoko” setting. The typography is affectless; the color palette neutral; it’s the low neural buzz of someone who’s not really there. I’d say it was a parody, but it’s not that flavorful. And while we might talk about the concept of “nothingness” in Zen, that is actually luminous, active, full of creation. This is blonde wood and recessed lighting, nebulous slogans and uncomfortable chairs. Corporate totalitarianism.
I think one of the things John really respected, maybe even loved, is how she considers the fan-artist connection to be totally one-way–“I give you a room full of nothing, and you give me money and power and respect.” For reasons I don’t quite understand, Lennon deeply resented what he felt showbiz had taken from him, without ever weighing what it had given to him. That comes out so very strongly in all his post-68 interviews.
There’s a meme online that says, “Your hatred of Yoko says more about you than her” or something. And there can be some truth in that; but also, people who LOVE Yoko are revealing something about themselves. She is not some cute and gentle Japanese elf, a spunky Art Girlboss asking gnomic questions; that diminishes her. Straight off, there is a note of authoritarianism in her work and persona that I find troubling, in part because it’s never mentioned. Ono’s work should be interrogated, as the serious artist she is, and not just on the terms she sets for it. That’s only the starting point. I’ve never once heard/read a discussion about what she means by “peace.” When she says it, what is she referring to? Does it exist? How would we achieve it? What would our lives look like? It would be as if I was constantly using the word “steak” but not mentioning cows, or blood, or slaughterhouses. Sure, everybody likes steak, Mike, but what do you mean when you say this?
I fear that Ono’s “peace” is the pink cloud of getting high. And if it is, that’s fine–but we should get to that, after 60 years! We should address, acknowledge, grapple with it. An honest discussion of Yoko Ono’s life and work, and her cultural profile, would immediately go into some intense places, so instead we continue with this silly pretense of the billionaire victim, so common these days.
“For reasons I don’t quite understand, Lennon deeply resented what he felt showbiz had taken from him, without ever weighing what it had given to him.”
YES, you put this so well, Michael. Whereas McCartney seems to appreciate, deeply, what showbiz has given him. Ringo as well. George somewhere in the middle, perhaps.
Wonderful, man! Great exposition of what drug use might have done to the group. It is insidious. And addicts can certainly be productive, and write songs, and stay awake. But that does not change the essential fact of addiction, which is “continued use, despite negative consequences”. I think many of us know what that is.
So glad you liked, @Steven — I am trying to be respectful of people’s experiences. And of my own failings, which are many.
For some odd reason I was, upon listening to this clip, actually embarrassed for Lewisohn. I realize that his life is the Beatles, but why be an apologist on this point? Has he not realized, over his decades of research, that his hero had, just as all of us do, feet of clay? He comes across very poorly in this segment.
Playing the ball here and not the man, but both Michaels are spot on in remarking on our goal of understanding. Why is ML so fawningly shy to confront the facts? We wish to uncover them not to judge but rather to complete the picture.
As an aside, I appreciate these discussions for, as I mentioned in the past, I have not knowingly had to deal with anyone who is suffering from addiction issues. Knowing more has helped me shift my perspective from that of being critical to trying to understand there is much more involved than meets the eye.
@Neal, I once was very close to a family headed by an alcoholic—a wonderful, brilliant man, functional in every conceivable way; while not Beatle-level in his attainment, damn close. After one particularly terrible scene involving alcohol, his wife asked me, “What should we do?”
“Admit that he’s an alcoholic, see if he’s ready to recover, and if not, give the kids and yourself lots of tools to understand more and protect yourselves. And pray for him. Being an addict has got to be terrible.”
“Oh we could never do that,” she said. “What else?”
Sometimes the admission of addiction feels so dangerous, so dislocating, so disloyal, that it seems impossible. But until it happens, you’re putting band-aids on a chest wound.
I also wanna be clear: my hands were not entirely clean in that situation either. Addicts are surrounded by a constellation of helpers, enablers, co-dependents, etc, who ALSO have their work to do to become healthy. John being an addict gives lots of people in the Beatles story work to do, and they might not be up to it. It’s scary and I’m certainly not judging them for wanting to avoid pain.
But the group’s biographer should definitely go into the writing of Volumes II and III with a clear, state-of-the-science understanding of drugs and addiction.
And it’s not like the other three Beatles didn’t have their own complicated relationships to substances and/or compulsive behaviors used to mitigate the pain or stress of life. Paul and weed/work, George and meditation (and drugs), Ringo and alcohol. The difference is in the severity of the addiction—there isn’t data suggesting that Paul or George were showing up as Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde the way John was, even if they were moody or if their moods were affected by their addictive behaviors. But those behaviors—and the steeped-in-alcohol world in which they grew up—would have informed how much P/G/R enabled, excused, or helped John’s addictions.
As you’ve said, the alcoholic family matrix is a useful way to look at the Beatles, and watching Get Back only confirmed my suspicions that it’s an accurate one. There are moments when Paul talks *around* the Lennon Problem when John’s not there, but actually confronting John about it could have resulted in violent anger, recrminations, and possibly John destroying the whole thing right there. Paul’s tiptoeing around because there are cameras, sure, but even when they don’t know they’re being recorded, he’s the same. That eggshell-walking is very practiced. Like the somewhat passive-aggressive way Paul ended the group, through PR material to promote his solo record, it likely came from a much earlier fear about confronting an addict.
A biography like Lewisohn’s could be powerful stuff if it looked at the Beatles through this lens—did the Beatles break up because John was using drugs Paul wouldn’t use, and after two terrible years of trying to keep the peace, Paul (mired in his own dependencies on booze and weed) finally drew a boundary? When did John actually start using heroin? Was it April 1968, like Goldman says? Or a few days in January 1969, like John says? How much heroin was he using? Was it true that when he wasn’t at EMI or doing a conceptual art/peace thing in 1968-69, he was likely passed out with Yoko in junkie squalor? Was Yoko using heroin before she met John? Where was Yoko introduced to heroin? Who was giving it to her? Did John ever invite the other Beatles to get high with him, the way he roped them into being his drinking/speed/pot/acid buddies? Or was it enough that Yoko wanted to get high with him? Did his heroin addiction bring him into contact with Mob types like “Spanish Tony,” who presumably were trying to get a slice of the Beatles but most definitely were in the Stones’ orbit? What were those relationships like? Did *those* people ever suggest to P/G/R that smack was a great thing to do?
All great questions, @Michael, but mostly painful unanswerables, so they’ll never be asked.
“Like the somewhat passive-aggressive way Paul ended the group, through PR material to promote his solo record, it likely came from a much earlier fear about confronting an addict.”
Like…his dad? (And here’s where some might comes out and act as if I’ve slurred Jim McCartney, when I absolutely am not doing. In addition to all his good qualities, we know Jim had a temper, hit the boys occasionally. We also know Mike has seemingly struggled with drink. All this, plus the fact that Paul’s mom had died when he was young, and the massive people-pleasing/co-dependence that Paul displays throughout the entire Beatles experience…If Paul grew up with an angry, alcoholic father, it’s a reasonable theory that explains much. I have no doubt there was much love there, between all of them; addiction is another matter, and worth exploring given Paul’s eventual co-workers, and his role in the band.
I wonder if gambling was Jim’s addiction, rather than (or in addition to?) alcohol. Mike said one of Jim’s “hobbies” was gambling: “Not that Dad was an insatiable gambler, he just didn’t know when to stop.” (Whatever that means???) And Paul recently told Howard Stern that Jim had sometimes blown his wages on gambling. It would certainly make much sense of Paul’s money anxiety.
Salewicz also reported that Jim couldn’t pass a slot machine without buying a spin.
Wow.. I didn’t know this about Jim. No wonder Paul felt so anxious after his mother died. I knew she was the breadwinner. And then his odd comment about couples in his neighborhood only fighting about money makes more sense.
…and it would also make sense for a young man who eschewed conventional success to wager everything on becoming a rock star.
That which makes us sinners, also makes us saints.
It’s just unbelievable to me that someone purporting to be as objective as Lewisohn could ignore the completely overwhelming amount of evidence that Lennon was using heroin (if inconsistently) until the year he died; that he cannot seem to account for the performative factor involved in a month of sessions where the Beatles were surrounded by cameras and a film crew; or that he thinks the handful of barely there Lennon songs that the other Beatles and Martin were forced to bolster in 1969 were not an amazing DROP in creativity compared to what he’d come up with pre-heroin in India.
@Matt, agreed on all fronts, and the only thing I can really come up with is that Lewisohn’s own acculturation is so tied into the Seventies that he cannot or will not see how drugs diminished his hero. I think there’s a type of Lennon fan who desperately wants to hold on to the idea that Lennon was stronger than drugs…when the whole point of drugs is that nobody is stronger than them. If we were truly stronger than they are, we wouldn’t take them. Certainly Lennon, who seemed to particularly relish the idea of being swept away.
Many biographers of Lennon view this issue as one of “siding with” Lennon against the squares. It’s not about that, and anybody who views drugs in that fundamentally adolescent way, rings alarm bells for me.
…the whole point of drugs is that nobody is stronger than them. If we were truly stronger than they are, we wouldn’t take them.
Or need/want to take them.
@g_i_b, I’m not like this, but I could imagine a type of person who really could take anything once, as a philosopher. But I don’t think John Lennon was that, and I think that person is rare indeed. And to your point, if one took drugs in this way, it would probably lose its lustre quickly.
And the Get Back film is the best footage they could find of John, and it still shows someone who looks like his life is a mess. When he perks up, it’s practiced performative clowning. This was a guy who would wake up and grab a handful of pills at random out of a jar on his dresser—what are the odds he looks more together at Saville Row because he started going to sleep earlier and taking a brisk walk every day?
Not only is there a drop in creativity in 1969, it’s more or less sustained for the rest of his life. Plastic Ono Band is an exception—written while he was more or less drug-free and in therapy. But Imagine is the inspired title track, some good songs from India/1968 (Gimme Some Truth, Jealous Guy, Oh Yoko), and some filler (including the very heroin-sounding It’s So Hard and I Don’t Want to Be a Soldier); the next three albums are patchy and composed while he was apparently relapsing/kicking, and then there’s a period of five years where he was apparently (a) relapsed and (b) unable to finish a song.
In whose interest was it that John remain addicted to heroin for eleven-plus years—maybe even longer than people like Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, Jimmy Page? Why did no one try to help him? And how long had he been clean before he died?
@Michael B
“And how long had he been clean before he died?”
I believe he quit heroin around the beginning of 1980, with the aid of a sensory deprivation tank. But given that he’d been kicking and relapsing continuously since 1968, there is unfortunately no reason to think he would not have repeated the pattern. In fact, I would be surprised if he wasn’t using H again to level out all the coke he was doing during the making of Double Fantasy.
“Imagine is the inspired title track…”
It says a lot that all but three songs on Imagine were leftovers from the few years before. He was back on heroin by that point. All he came up with was ‘Crippled Inside’ (largely borrowed from a folk song); ‘It’s So Hard’ (rote 12 bar blues); and ‘How Do You Sleep?’ (written by committee.) The most significant spurts of creativity he had post-Beatles (Plastic Ono Band; Walls and Bridges; Double Fantasy) were all at times he was in temporary respite from H. The correlations between Lennon’s use of smack and his (lack of) output are so obvious to anyone who takes the time to look.
Here’s the AP article quoting Goldman’s book on Lennon kicking heroin with a sensory deprivation tank. No word as to whether he de-evolved, a la Altered States.
KEN RUSSELL — now there’s the fellow who should’ve made Let It Be. 🙂
@Michael G In parallel time line 1972, a plump mustachioed Paul McCartney abruptly abandons the Wings tour of colleges to play Urbain Grandier in KR’s “The Devils” after the forcible ousting of Oliver Reed. McCartney was convinced after seeing the psychedelic pseudo-religious film Russell made from a script by John Lennon about his semi-erect penis entitled “The Contrabulous Fantabulous Malfunctioning Fabtraption of the Sinister Dr. Lennonbottom” on BBC2.
I vastly prefer this timeline you’ve outlined, to our own.
Remind me to tell you my story about watching “The Devils” with Ken Russell.
And there’s a type of fan who believes the Beatles benefited from drugs. That if they hadn’t experimented with substances they would have been locked into their Hard Day’s Night phase forever. I disagree, but it’s a belief that seems to endure.
I wonder if Ms. Ono was the ultimate drug. She certainly swept John away.
And before drugs it was alcohol. I wonder how many fans of writers like Dylan Thomas believed their alcoholism was “romantic” and a key to their talent?
Here’s a quote from James Crumley that sure sounds macho and smart but is neither:
“Son, never trust a man who doesn’t drink because he’s probably a self-righteous sort, a man who thinks he knows right from wrong all the time. Some of them are good men, but in the name of goodness, they cause most of the suffering in the world. They’re the judges, the meddlers. And, son, never trust a man who drinks but refuses to get drunk. They’re usually afraid of something deep down inside, either that they’re a coward or a fool or mean and violent.”
How many lives were ruined by advice like this?
@Baboomska
How many lives were ruined by advice like this?
Ain’t that the truth? I’d introduce you to some relatives, but they’re dead.
I don’t think there’s any way to separate The Beatles–who they were, what they created–from their era, which was deeply shaped by drugs. It would be like imagining the years after 1945 without the atomic bomb. I’m deeply grateful for the role that drugs played in making the Beatles, keeping them sane, and allowing them to create amazing music; but I’m also clear-eyed about how much it took out of each of them, and how at a certain point, the drugs were in charge, not the other way around.
Here’s how Crumley is remembered by friends:
Not the first time a charismatic person invented whole philosophies to justify their addictions.
Heck, I’ve done it myself (even though I have no charisma): “I love cannabis because it helps me appreciate the Beatles on my headphones.” My friends: “Yes, but every day??”
I was also aghast when I saw that quote from Lewisohn—John and Yoko’s struggles with heroin really are established beyond doubt. This is totally at odds with the ‘Man of the Facts’ that Lewisohn is always presenting himself as, and also, how on earth is Lewisohn qualified to judge whether John was an addict? His own statements are even self-contradictory: John was highly creative and productive (but also not writing many songs); he wasn’t strung out at all (but also throwing up in interviews)… has Lewisohn watched that interview? It’s nicknamed ‘Two Junkies’ for a reason!
(Also, Allan Klein misunderstood? Sure, there’s probably more to him than the cartoonish bad guy that he’s often presented as, but his track record – and legal record – speak for themselves).
I think you’re on the money that Lewisohn is not that good at stepping outside his own frame of reference, and accounting for the way people may consciously distort the historical method. Hell, we already see that in Tune In vol 1 where he quotes from Lennon Remembers, a source that can hardly be taken at face value. I think he’s so focused on assembling various sources that he doesn’t think enough about what level of credibility he should assign to them. I would also add to that that Lewisohn doesn’t strike me as particularly, uhhh, worldly.
Lewisohn’s an incredibly detailed researcher, but not as strong on analysis – which is a view that is gaining traction in certain corners of Beatle fandom. His strengths make him well-suited to tackle the early years, with all of the background on Liverpool etc, and I can see him doing a decent job on the Beatlemania years, but I have my doubts that he’ll do a good job of analysing the studio/final years, for all the reasons you’ve outlined here.
On the subject of drugs, I happen to be currently reading Joe Goodden’s Riding So High: The Beatles and Drugs, and I think it’s a really worthwhile book, because drugs are such an important part of the story.
@Kristina, I remember Joe writing me to ask if anybody had written a book about The Beatles and Drugs, and immediately thinking, “I should write that book!” and then thinking, “Oh I am way too sick to write that book!” But I’m VERY GLAD Joe did, and gladder still that it is so worthwhile.
“Worldly” is a great word to use in this regard; whereas Goldman seems rather too worldly–everybody’s always trying to screw everybody else in Goldman-world–Lewisohn definitely seems perhaps too reluctant to assign duplicitous motives. Even to someone like Klein who was manifestly duplicitous.
Yes, in some ways we can see Lewisohn’s work as a bit of an overcorrection to Goldman, Peter Brown, etc. Wallowing in the prurient details a la Goldman is the opposite of Lewisohn’s approach, but neither should the sex and drugs and rock and roll of it all be totally ignored…
I do understand Lewisohn’s approach, because so much of Beatles history is poorly written/researched, reliant on hearsay, etc. But without wanting to seem too harsh (I respect his work!), I don’t like the way that Lewisohn portrays himself as this super-objective researcher and historian. He has his flaws and biases, just like everyone else.
Regarding Peter Brown, his book was not good, but I remember him stating that heroin was the largest factor in the Beatles’ breakup. That might have been shocking at the time, but from 2022 looks like an entirely reasonable read on things.
I dunno, I haven’t re-read Peter Brown in ages, but given what it was, I don’t recall it being particularly awful. It was exactly what it said on the packet, right? 🙂
Oh, The Love You Make is definitely not awful, and it has its place – I just don’t think it’s particularly well-written. It would have been a better book if Brown just stuck to his own experiences rather than trying to blend those with a general-purpose history.
By the way, I found out recently that Peter Brown has done PR for Gaddafi (!) and the al-Assad family (!!) So I guess he didn’t make all that much money off TLYM…
@Kristina, remember that in 1982 SHOUT! had just come out, and was the only general history since Davies’ authorized book in 1968. There was little inkling at that time that The Beatles would be anything more than nostalgia in the future, a small niche interest like JFK or something, so I give Brown’s book (and lots of stuff from that time) a bit of rope. It was only in the mid-90s that it became clear The Beatles were not going to fade away as a topic, and were in fact a large permanent market that would buy books. That’s why we got Mark Hertsgaard’s wonderful book in 1995, and Anthology; Magic Circles in 2003; and then Spitz in 2005 and Gould in 2007. Dullblog itself was founded to sift through all the good data and deep thinking in print that had been done in those 10 or so years. Which, in some sense, had been created by the high quality bootlegs of the early 90s.
Brown’s book is showbiz tell-all, because when it was published, Beatles History was not yet the well-rounded, well researched, somewhat sober pursuit in later became. Goldman’s book is really interesting, because in tone it’s utter trash (and purposely so), but in research, it’s really the first book to apply the kind of obsessive excessive amounts of detail that Beatles fans have come to expect.
Kristina, I agree that Lewisohn is good as a researcher and much weaker on analyzing the results of that research. I found Tune In Volume 1 disappointing because it feels flat. It seems to lack an animating vision, the energy of engagement that gives a biography or history force. It feels dogged to me. In that way it’s the opposite of books like Shout! or The Lives of John Lennon, which have too much animating vision and energy balanced with too little attention to inconvenient facts. For me the book on the Beatles that does the best job of combining animating vision and factual analysis is Devin’s Magic Circles. It’s how I came to Hey Dullblog back in 2009.
This is a really really good comment, @Nancy.
Tune In felt strangely inert to me, and The Beatles story is a THRILLING story. Because I love New Journalism, I will excuse almost any fudging of fact if a book is fun to read–because I think multiple books tend to create an agreed-upon narrative. This is why I’ve always–stuck up for? not been overly bothered by?–both Shout! and The Lives of John Lennon. I somehow managed to read the former with my love and respect for Paul intact, and the latter the same but for John. Why is this? My wife says, rather ruefully, that I am “very inner-directed.” 🙂
Quite agreed on Magic Circles! I have even talked with Devin about arranging a Dullblog-published version, which we would then promote the bejeezus out of here, but I think there’s a rights issue with Harvard University Press. Anyway, Devin’s book fundamentally opened my mind about The Beatles, at a time when I thought I’d thought all the interesting there was to think. READ IT.
Brian weighs in on Soft vs. Hard (liquor) drugs:
https://oldshowbiz.tumblr.com/post/698436154312228864
This reminds me of a story. I was out with a friend late one night and we stopped at a diner. The waiter was an old friend from junior high. We’d been close as kids — we’d even been boyfriend and girlfriend for 2 weeks. But there was no light of recognition when he brought us our menus. After he walked away, I turned to my friend and said “Did you see that? We went to school together and he acted like he didn’t even know me.” I later reconnected with this old school chum and told him he’d waited on me — and even run my card which has my name on it! — and didn’t recognize me. He said, “I didn’t acknowledge you at all? I must have been high.” He’d had a heroin problem. He’d seemed entirely normal as my waiter. He didn’t have slurred speech, he was friendly and he got my order right. Him not recognizing me was the only weird part. It seems that once you get to the point where you have to take heroin to function normally, you can look pretty normal when you’re on it.
I do wonder whether the catch-and-kill thing, which was discussed on a recent SATB episode, is relevant here. Maybe Lewisohn is trying to avoid getting on the wrong side of Yoko, lest she put the kibosh on his book?
@Beth, that sounds painful but thank you for sharing.
After reading Robert Rosen’s essay on the matter, I don’t feel comfortable having an opinion about “catch and kill,” which (as I understand it) would assume that the publisher was acting in bad faith from the beginning, and that there was some payment from the Estate to them? I don’t think that can be known. I will say with tongue planted firmly in cheek that in this era of the book biz, is probably a better business model than conventional publishing! 🙂
Even a cursory knowledge of the topic — certainly more cursory than any competent legal counsel would have to be, certainly part of any digging up of comparable books for P&Ls — could have predicted a threat of legal action from The Estate. But the problem with “catch and kill” is that it relies on an old-style Hollywood information embargo, which I don’t think is possible in today’s digital age. I firmly believe that Doggett’s book will see the light of day, if only as a pirated PDF, if enough fans want it to happen. He’s bound by an NDA, but some assistant seven years from now who works there for six weeks and feels ill-treated…
In fact, in a situation like this anyone with an encyclopedic knowledge of the topic and a gift for parody could potentially WRITE ANYTHING, and release it into the wild, claiming that it’s Doggett’s book.
Don’t worry, I do not have a taste for such pranks; nor do I suggest anyone else do this — we should figure out the truth, not spread falsehoods about our dear Beatle pals. I bring it up just to say that “catch-and-kill” in our era is potentially a really BAD IDEA for someone trying to control the narrative.
We’re all just making up stories now, but I’d put my money on the leakiness of information.
I don’t think I’ve commented here before, though I have been a regular reader for years. This piece really made sense to me. I was the child of San Francisco natives who moved east to a college town in 1967, where things got weird(er). Grew up with knowledge that weed, acid, speed, probably more (though not opiates) were being done by parents, friends and students of parents, etc. I thought it was cool, even at the time, and in an odd way I still do. But it’s given me unique insight into how drugs (and the sneakiness and other culture that surrounds them) impact the lives of everyone involved. I’ve managed to, with rare exceptions, limit my addictive tendencies to something relatively harmless (weed), but if I’d had money at certain points in my life, who knows what could have happened.
I find your arguments here very persuasive, always have. And it is troubling that an authority like Lewisohn apparently has no desire to tell this fundamental part of the story. It’s a shame really, because if he doesn’t, who will? And how can anyone even do it with so many primary sources disappearing year by year? I fear that the record will forever be not quite as complete and accurate as it could very easily have been. Thanks for making these points here. Hopefully this will be archived for posterity so future generations (should our planet be inhabitable by then) can at least find other points of view if they look.
@Claudecat, thank you! I am always very glad when an opinion I post here resonates.
If we were ever truly honest about addictive substances, and the difficulties they create, the world would be a much, much different place. But it’s the same with oil, for a lot of the same reasons.
I will try to keep the site up, and then archived.
I’m enjoying these Elements mixes the Estate has been releasing. Here’s Cold Turkey:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXU3iyl30WM&list=PL4H5cduO6BiepVSj3weHjyWPuAEqEU-1p&index=13
This has been really enlightening to me, and has brought up a few things that I hope will add to the discussion. If not, feel free to ignore my comments!
Firstly, I lived in San Francisco from the mid ’90s to the early ’00s, and due to my connections to the rave scene there, I knew a number of people who had drug problems (coke, meth, heroin). All of these people managed to be functional, in that they were able to hold down jobs and pay their bills. Lewisohn’s belief that John couldn’t possibly be a heroin addict because he was showing up to work every day doesn’t really hold water. I’ve never been an addict, and I never tried meth or heroin, but I did indulge other drugs, including coke and ecstasy (I haven’t had either in at least 15 years). I’m mentioning this because I likely have a lot more experience with drugs than Lewisohn has had, so I’m not as naive as he seems to be about the Beatles’, and Lennon’s in particular, drug use. It absolutely contributed to their music and their personal behavior, and therefore to the breakup as well.
Regarding Lewisohn in general, I read the abridged version of Tune In, V1, and, while overall think he’s done a pretty good job with the story so far, like a couple of people above I have some concerns about the next two volumes. Kristina very astutely wrote, “Lewisohn’s an incredibly detailed researcher, but not as strong on analysis.” I couldn’t agree more. I’m a history teacher, and a big part of my job is teaching students historical analysis. I find some of his gaps in analysis to be puzzling. The biggest, for my part, are around Paul. Lewisohn spends a lot of time on John’s relationship with Julia and the long-term effects her death had on him. I absolutely agree with his handling of this, because it’s necessary to understand John’s behavior in some situations. John had lifelong issues stemming from his relationship with his mother and her too-early death. However, he doesn’t do the same for Paul. He spends about 1.5 pages on Mary McCartney’s illness and death, and writes that Paul put up a wall, but never again mentions anything about it, as if Paul was only affected for a little while after his mother died, but then got over it and her death was never a factor in his behavior after that. I also don’t know how Lewisohn could overlook the extremely negative economic impact her death had on Paul’s family. Lewisohn basically criticizes Paul for being cheap, but never seems to connect that with the fact that his family relied on Mary’s income to stay afloat, so of course Paul would have concerns around money after she died, especially if his dad was also spending his pay on gambling. There’s a good reason why Jim McCartney was bugging Paul to get a job, and even Lewisohn says that a big part of Jim letting Paul go to Hamburg was because of how much Paul would be paid. It’s probably pretty likely that Paul sent home a good chunk of his pay to his dad to help pay the bills at home. Maybe Paul wasn’t being cheap, he just had to watch his spending because he needed the money to help his dad. Lewisohn also never connects Mary’s death to Paul’s behavior regarding his jealousy of Stu Sutcliffe, which also could partially be based in Paul’s fear of losing someone close to him. It doesn’t seem to occur to him that Paul might also have some abandonment issues. Finally, Paul was 18, and if you’ve ever spent time around teenagers you know that their behavior isn’t always rational, to say the least. And this particular 18-year-old was up most of the night for months, wired on uppers, drinking heavily, hardly eating, and having a lot of sex with randos. This can’t have been good for Paul’s mental state, not to mention the others’ either.
I also wonder about selection bias in his sources. For example, also in regards to Paul vs Stu, he cites a letter Stu wrote home where he states that everyone hated Paul during the first trip to Hamburg. There are no quotes from either George or John to support this assertion, and if that were the case, wouldn’t John have kicked Paul out of the Beatles? In addition, there’s an interview that Astrid did in either the ’80s or ’90s where she said that a lot of Paul’s animosity toward Stu was due to Stu’s lack of commitment to his bass playing, stating that he never practiced and that, when she would show up to the Top 10, on several occasions Stu would hand his bass to Paul so Stu could hang out with Astrid instead of playing. If I was able to easily find this interview, why wouldn’t Lewisohn have used it? If you are a serious historian, you use the evidence to determine your thesis, not the other way around. Therefore, if you turn up a piece of evidence that is an important piece of the story, you have to include it, not ignore it because it doesn’t fit with your narrative. This goes back to the Lennon and heroin issue as well. You can’t deny the evidence just because you don’t like the evidence.
In general, he doesn’t seem to give Paul the benefit of the doubt much, while usually trying to give the same to John. To be clear, I don’t want Paul to get a pass for bad behavior, any more than I want the other three Beatles, including John, to get a pass. However, if you’re going to anoint yourself THE Beatles expert, you’d better be prepared to apply historiographical methods to your writing and deal with all four of them evenhandedly, and especially John and Paul. I’m not sure, given his refusal to see the reality of John and Yoko’s heroin use, that Lewisohn has that ability. He might be too much of a Lennon fanboy. If he can’t detach himself from his own feelings about the Beatles enough to look at them with objectivity, then he has no business writing their history.
Maybe I’ve been seeing this wrong in recent times so, apologies if that is indeed the case, but, from my standpoint, it would appear that the glean of high regard for and towards Mark Lewisohn’s work on The Beatles has been losing its sheen. Before I go on here, I’m not here commenting in order to defend him against this loss of glean, or indeed to dance in joy because of it, but only to mention it, especially beause some of that doubt in Lewisohn’s abilities has come from this very site (not only in this particular article above me, but also in the comments underneath it and in comments in other articles at ‘Dullblog’).
I must reiterate, I’m not here to berate that, just to add my two cent’s worth (or, as we say in the UK, ‘my two pennies worth’).
For me, Lewisohn, in his role as as a researcher (or, in other words, a seeker) of facts and information during the putting together of Vol. 1 of ‘Tune In,’ is to be admired. I’ve held Lewisohn in very high regard for that. Also, having been a researcher myself both professionally and as a lay-person (and this is within the worlds of media: radio, news-journalism as well as podcasting and article-writing and blogging), I look at Lewisohn’s exhaustive fact/info-searching with regards to his ‘Tune In’ tome(s) with some degree of understanding and empathy as I like to think of myself as being a bit of an exhaustive seeker of information too. There’s more to it than one might assume. It’s not only that you have to seek out information, there’s also the fact that it’s sometimes hard to find (and in some cases, deliberately designed to be hard to find), then there’s the information you stumble across that you never expected which is often exciting and elating to see, but at the same time, quite daunting because it means hours of extra work involved in sifting through it and adding it to your narrative which is a jigsaw puzzle in the working without even an exact clue as to what the picture is you’re trying to put the jigsaw pieces together for. Then there’s the double-checking of the info you’ve discovered… is it real, a lie, is it in any way accurate or reliable? So you check, double-check, triple-check, maybe treble-check. Then there’s the hours of flitting/commuting from one town or city – or country – to another to meet with some eye witness or ‘insider’ who might have something valuable and rare to share. I’m making a wild, stabbing guess that this is a flavour of what Lewisohn has been up to for the last few years – and if it is, then – yes – I tip my hat to him.
Okay… get ready for the ‘however’…
I might be mistaken – perhaps my memory’s playing tricks on me – but I seem to recall Lewisohn saying in one or more podcast interviews in earlier years that his aim with ‘Tune In’ is not to cloud the reader with the personal opinions that the author might have of the Beatles’ history but to lay out, in the book(s), the heavily-researched and cross-checked information that’s been discovered (in other words, the real, hard, true facts – or as close as you can humanly get to that) and to leave the reader to make up his/her mind where there might be differing accounts of this history, differing accounts that, indeed, Lewisohn has presented within the pages of Volume 1. That, again, I commend, and perhaps, is a definition of what a history book should be, a book that can be pored over in generations to come by keen students rather than a biography which is low on proper, hardcore research but heavy in support of an opinionated agenda that suits the author. This is a condition that I rather recently began to view a little of in Lewisohn though, even if nowhere near as acutely as other Beatles authors (who I shan’t mention). It’s not that I think that Volume 1 of ‘Tune In’ has been tainted by this condition (although my view on that could well indeed change in not much time), instead, it’s the way in which he has conducted himself in more recent interviews, and, live on stage, namely at his recent ‘Evolver ’62’ talk/presentation at the UCL in London in 2022.
I might be imagining it but I’m sensing a more openly opinionated Lewisohn in interviews of more recent times compared (although, I might be wrong) to his more measured and impartial, more facts-led interviews of much earlier times. But, please, don’t take me on that literally. As I mentioned before, my memory might be playing tricks.
As far as opinions are concerned, actually, by and large, I welcome Lewisohn’s opinions in his interviews/podcast appearances. He’s an engaging, articulate speaker and obviously passionate about The Beatles. However, I grow increasingly concerned that his opinions might be affecting his work on ‘Tune In’.
Back to that ‘Evolver’ talk in London that I attended in October 2022… This is where my concerns really did spike…
To summarise; ‘Evolver ’62’ was a presentation in which Lewisohn talked about what he regarded as 62 key moments that occurred to the Beatles during 1962. It was a very, very entertaining, enjoyable talk and he regaled us with facts and info from his research vaults, some of which have already been published in Volume 1 of Tune In.’ But, as entertaining and enjoyable and interesting as it was, there was a few minutes in it where I saw and heard a side of Lewisohn that was unprofessional, patronising, highly judgemental, and rude and insulting, and, maybe also, deluded. Given that the theme of the talk was 1962, it was no surprise that Pete Best’s sacking was given the highlight treatment – and this is where I saw Lewisohn ‘turn.’ I don’t think it’s a secret that Lewisohn is of the firm view that Pete was sacked as according to the Beatles official story, that is, Pete was deemed by John, Paul and the Georges to be an unsatisfactory-to-lousy drummer – and who didn’t fit in with the personality of the band, as decreed by Lennon, McCartney and Harrison. Now, I’m not here to argue for or against this version of events. I’m not here to argue the case that actually, no, the real true reason Pete was sacked was because he was more popular with fans than Paul and/or because Pete’s mother was a domineering force and potential threat over Brian Epstein’s management. For sure, to his credit, in Volume 1 of ‘Tune In,’ Lewisohn does reference all these factors that led up to the day Pete was ousted, so one might say Lewisohn has displayed a fine show of impartiality there given that he believes Pete was sacked due to him not being up to the standard the Beatles wanted. However, the almost angry demeanour in which Lewisohn spoke at his live event in London about the sacking and his view that Pete was gone from the group because of his drumming, was a bit worrying for me. He told us that, yes, ‘conspiracy theories’ remain to this very day in Liverpool that there was more to the sacking than the Beatles-sanctioned version of events, and to illustrate his point, he then played us some soundbites over the UCL speakers of – what I’m guessing – were local Liverpool women talking about the sacking and giving us their alternative, “real” reasons for the sacking (i.e. it was because of Pete’s mum, it was because Pete was better looking, and so on and so on). Each soundbite from each Liverpudlian lasted mere seconds (maybe around 5 seconds each one). Lewisohn laughed and mocked when playing the clips. He then put on a high-pitched voice (trying to sound like a working-class woman, or what his stereotypical idea of what such a type is, I suspect), then proceeded to give us his version of a Liverpool accent, mimicking a few of the words that the ladies uttered in the soundbites. As I’ve already mentioned, and maybe I’ve perceived it wrong, Lewisohn’s mimicking didn’t come across to me as affectionate, but, it did come across as patronising and mocking, mocking and patronising towards the working-class, provincial accents on the tape-recordings and the homegrown ‘on the streets of Liverpool’ views of the ‘Pete Best situation.’ As I sat watching and hearing this, I thought to myself, ‘do the ladies in these soundbites know their voices are being used in this way?’ I’m assuming (although I could be wrong) that the soundbites he was playing us were from his own tape-recordings that he’d got off these ladies during his research for Volume 1 of ‘Tune In.’ If that’s the case, then what’s the likelihood that these ladies only consented to talking to Lewisohn on tape because they were told – or assumed – that it was to be used by the author – privately – for the writing of his book… not to be played to hundreds (maybe thousands?) of people in a London theatre over a series of days and nights. Believe me, having worked in radio for a long number of years, I have sometimes (although not regularly) approached folk who’ve refused to speak into a recording device purely because they don’t want their voice on the radio. Okay, sure, the soundbites that Lewisohn played us of these ladies didn’t have any names attached to them, but still, if they were indeed extracted from folk who thought they were merely for private use, then (as far as I’m concerned) that’s a bit off, especially if they’re going to be played to an audience for mocking purposes.
As for Lewisohn being – as I mentioned earlier – ‘possibly deluded.’ Well, again, this is with regards to his segment in his ‘Evolver ’62’ talk where he was addressing the ‘Pete Best issue.’ To make his case that, yes, Pete was sacked because the rest of the Beatles ‘didn’t think he was the drummer for them,’ he gave us some damn near irrefutable proof; He shone the spotlight on a letter from 1965(?). This was related to legal proceedings that had been brought against The Beatles by Pete and his lawyer. In the letter, for the attention of Pete’s lawyer, George Martin stated unequivocally that the reason he didn’t want Pete drumming in the studio with the Beatles was because he wasn’t up to standard. So, Lewisohn told us, there you go, what more proof did we need?
Is he kidding me?…
To reiterate, I’m not here to debate or argue the case for or against Pete Best’s grievances and as to who is telling the truth regarding his sacking, I’m here to ask questions about Lewisohn’s ability to provide us with impartial and as honest as possible historical data…
To throw a scenario to you here… So, just because George Martin states in a letter that Pete was sacked because he was crap, well… it must be true? This, to Lewisohn, is close to proof? So, doesn’t it occur to Lewisohn (if he were to put on an impartial/objective/pragmatic cap) that it might have been in Martin’s best interests to – ahem – be economical with the truth – in that letter? After all, Martin, Brian, and the Beatles, were onto a good thing in ’65, last thing they’d want is to wreck it by saying, “oh, yeah, Pete’s right. We sacked him because he was a threat.” Also, if I’m not wrong, according to the officially-sanctioned story, Martin claims that he told the Beatles that he wouldn’t be using Pete in the studio but that the band were free to use him in a live capacity, but of course (as we’re told, ‘officially’) it turned out that John, Paul and George wanted him out of the band entirely because of his drumming, so out he went – So, then!… He wasn’t sacked by Martin. So, by Martin stating in the letter that he didn’t deem Pete any good, that doesn’t actually PROVE that Pete’s ex-bandmates ousted him due to his lack of drumming capabilities, all it might possibly prove is that George Martin didn’t want his drumming, but that doesn’t prove the same for the three Beatles.
For Lewisohn to judge that letter as something close to some PROOF that Pete was sacked for his lousy drumming (as according to Lennon’s, McCartney’s and Harrison’s quality control), is a judgement that’s misguided, if not indeed deluded. It’s way off target. Is that all he needs to be convinced?
This delusion (or misguidedness if you prefer), ties in, to some degree, to what this here article has been pontificating, especially within the comments section, that is: Just how ‘tuned in’ is Lewisohn’s sense of judgement?
With regards to Lennon and heroin, I can’t comment on how right or wrong Lewisohn’s got it as I’ve never been too closely connected to people with this type of addiction (although there was a friend some years back who took it sometimes. I never witnessed any signs from him of what John is claimed to have experienced whilst he was in his period of using it, but, who knows, maybe my friend was addicted too. It certainly didn’t show).
Anyway, I must apologise if I’ve wasted your reading time here. Before I clicked on the ‘post comment’ tab, I did wonder whether what you’re now reading would be of any worth. I’m not entirely sure that my views are on point or even close to it. I mean, perhaps I’m being a bit too hysterical with my views on Lewisohn, reading too much into nothing? Any way, ‘Hey Dullblog’ is quite refreshing with regards to a number of its views on a number of subject-strands within the Beatles World, especially within the realms of the Lennon assassination and other dark corners of the band’s story, such as their alleged relations in one way or another to the Kray twins. Indeed, in the Dullblog article ‘The Beatles and the Krays’ it’s put forward by one or two in the comments area that the blackmail plot against Brian by the Krays for management control of The Beatles (according to the allegations of a former Krays associate) is an area that Lewisohn will not enter into for his proposed ‘Volume 2,’ even though he should investigate it – yes, even though he should be looking into the darker elements of what was going on in the music-business of 1960s London. If Lewisohn doesn’t go there, well, to quote an earlier commenter here, can he really ‘anoint himself to be THE Beatles expert’? And to quote that same commenter again (@Stephanie): “If he can’t detach himself from his own feelings about the Beatles enough to look at them with objectivity, then he has no business writing their history.”
Also, I’ll add, if he doesn’t look into an area as dark as the Krays or other elements of gangsterism in the British music-business of ‘swinging London’, then what else won’t he look into? The door for other Beatles researchers of future Beatles books is wide open as a result – to explore the parts Lewisohn won’t reach.
To conclude, I’ll take this full-circle, back to the subject of research…
Yes, so I’m in admiration of Lewisohn’s exhaustive research techniques – in other words, his seeking of data. But, there is a side of me in more recent times – especially given what I’ve expressed in the paragraphs above regarding his opinions and attitude in recent interviews and live on stage – that a researcher – or in other words, a seeker of information – as top notch as Lewisohn won’t be of much use as a historian if the data he’s collected is somehow clouded by his forthright opinions and his “misguided” judgement, how do we know for sure that he’s been showing us all the data he’s actually found over the years? One might be tempted, with such an opinionated mindset, to pick and choose what to include in one’s books, based on their opinions.
Me? Paranoid?
Maybe, maybe not.
Hi Matt, don’t worry about the length of your comment — we like longform here at HD, if that wasn’t already clear!
My take on Lewisohn is that he’s an indefatigable researcher who seems uncomfortable as an interpreter, and that this discomfort limits the value of his work. Research always involves interpretation — it’s inescapable, as you point out (what’s included, what’s not, etc.). I’d like Lewisohn’s work better if he owned his interpretation, given that reality. Thinking that it’s possible to write a work of research while somehow avoiding the responsibility of shaping it is folly (not saying Lewisohn believes this wholesale, just that it’s the tendency I see in his comments).
@Nancy Carr
Hi, Nancy. Yes, (assuming I haven’t read your comments wrong) I have thought, and have heard, the same as you, that I do hear this tendency in Lewisohn’s interviews that he’s giving the reader in Volume 1 a chronicle of the Beatles’ history that is meant to be heavily encased in facts, not in his personal interpretation, in other words, a reference book of history that can be accessed by students of future generations for pure, unadulterated facts should they be in the process of their own research. But, as I’ve sketched out in my previous post, the forthright delivery that I’ve heard in him in more recent interviews, and live on stage, make me wonder whether that truly is what we’ve got from him in Vol. 1, or will get in future (if indeed Volumes 2 and 3 are ever put down in words).
I suppose the only way one could compile a book that is as close to being a facts-driven/heavy history of The Beatles is to write it as an encyclopaedia, so, no floweriness in delivery, no dramatically-steered narrative, but merely the facts (or ‘the facts’ as close as humanly possible). Such a thing would be much easier to update and amend too should future data come along that challenges what’s in it. As a reference guide for students, this is what one would most require, wouldn’t it? But that’s not the vehicle that Lewisohn has chosen to deliver his Beatles history in, he wants it to have drama. Fair enough, I s’pose.
Matt, I think in essence there are two ways for a chronicler to go: a “just the facts” compendium/encyclopedia approach or a narrative/interpretive approach. Since we’re all human, even the compendium/encyclopedia approach will have some subjective elements: what is included and what isn’t, how things are worded, etc. The most illuminating histories and biographies take the narrative/interpretive approach, in my opinion. A responsible author looks at the verifiable facts and asks what the larger patterns are and how we can best make sense of them. He or she engages with the facts and gives us a take not just on what the facts are, but how best to understand them.
So my concern about Lewisohn isn’t that he’s subjectively interpreting facts, it’s that I haven’t heard him clearly recognize that this is what he is doing. I worry that he’s convinced he’s producing an unfiltered narrative and isn’t sufficiently aware of the interpretive work he is in fact doing. And that produces the worst kind of takes, in my opinion.
Contrasting Lewisohn with another prominent Beatles writer, Philip Norman, is instructive. Norman’s Beatles biography Shout! is biased against Paul McCartney — which Norman later admitted. But Shout!” is interesting and rather illuminating as long as you read it knowing Norman’s leanings. Norman’s recent biography of McCartney starts with an introduction in which Norman engages with his previous bias against McCartney, and he goes on to produce a pretty good account of McCartney’s life. I give Norman credit for acknowledging his interpretive stance and for course-correcting it (in part, I bet, based on feedback over the years since Shout! was first published).
If Lewisohn’s own biases are unconscious, and he’s resistant to surfacing them, then that creates problems for his books. I think the best an author can do is own up to their own interpretive leanings and clearly distinguish verifiable facts from interpretation. And you can’t do either without closely examining your own motivations and biases.
So well said, @Nancy.
The topic of the Beatles is really interesting to me as a historian manqué. On the one hand, we have a profusion of data–first-class data; tons and tons of primary source. But on the other, this is still a recent phenomenon with a fanbase, which means that scholars are 1) likely biased themselves and 2) subject to commercial pressures. SHOUT!’s anti-McCartney bias wasn’t just coming from Norman (though surely it was), it was also a post-murder commercial climate that made Norman’s editors unable or unwilling to recognize the anti-McCartney bias–or even ASK for a pro-Lennon tilt to satisfy the desires of the fans in 1981/82.
I think really sound historical judgment on this topic is going to have to wait for fifty or 100 years; the job now is to collect and collate as much primary source as possible, and be utterly relentless in keeping fake data out.
@Michael Gerber
Of course, there is still the strong likelihood (or in other words, it’s not impossible – as can be shown by some commentators looking back at more distant history than 60 years ago), that, even after 100 years, certain well-known public figures (especially, perhaps, the more loved, respected ones) have their history authored/commentated by ‘fanboys” who of course wouldn’t have been around at the time their ‘hero’ would’ve been alive.
With regards to Lewisohn, he has said that he is going to donate all his data to a museum?… Or was it the British Library? Can’t remember which, but he definitely said in one of his interviews I heard some time back that he wanted all his research data on The Beatles to go somewhere public so that it could be viewed by everyone for their own research purposes.
I would be curious if there’s any Beatles research out there, official or unofficial, hard-earned or not, even on the more interpretative side of things, that doesn’t treat the band’s early fangirls with at least a drip of condescension. Their approval is always taken unseriously, viewed as mindless, hysteric, and superficial. Putting that kind of frame on Pete Best’s removal seems like another way to undermine girls’ validity as fans–they weren’t really there for the Beatles’ sound if he wasn’t that good of a drummer, they just liked his looks, enough to believe conspiracies about his firing to this day. I’m sure Lewisohn doesn’t view this unconscious bias as harmful, but it worries me that any future volumes will just end up restating the well-tread belief that female Beatles fans were universally shallow and devotional and that gaining (older, richer, more intellectualized) male fans led to the band’s actual legitimacy.
@James Lefkowitz,
I really appreciate this comment. Beatlemania was an undeniable phenomenon, and in many countries a gendered one… but I feel you on the way that the female fans are often framed in the Beatles story.
I’m sure you’ve also noticed, as I have, that there are few Beatles-related books by women. Sure, we have the autobiographies by Cynthia Lennon, May Pang, Patti Boyd, etc – but all of the main histories, biographies, and analyses are written by male authors. I can’t think of a Beatles-related documentary or film directed by a woman either (hopefully there is one? But the fact that I’d have to research that kinda proves my point). If I remember correctly, this lack of female voices is something that Erin Torkelsen Weber talks about in her Beatles meta-history book <a href="https://mcfarlandbooks.com/product/the-beatles-and-the-historians/"The Beatles and the Historians (absolutely a must-read, by the way).
But to your main point – have you heard about A Women’s History of the Beatles by Christine Feldman-Barrett? It’s very much an academic book, but addresses the exact issues you’re talking about. I read the first section a while ago, but then got distracted by other things – that’s not at all a reflection on the work’s quality, though!
From the beginning of the introduction:
Thanks Victoria! I’m definitely going to put A Women’s History of the Beatles onto my Beatles reading list that I just created (along with The Beatles and the Historians).
@James Lefkowitz
Good observations there, James.
I’ve had a theory for years about the breakup, it’s nothing more than that. I’ve been reticent to share it but I think this might be a good time to do so. Okay, so let’s say that the Beatles in late ’69 having finished and released Abbey Road a nice glossy groundbreaking album to keep their reputation intact and are now looking for ways to end the band and get out. They would have been only too aware that people would never leave them alone and pestering them to reunite if they just disbanded. My theory is that someone, probably John, floated the idea: ” what if we told them we hated each other? Would that work?” There’s enough evidence to show that they continued to socialize during times we were led to believe that they were at each other’s throats. Whether they unintentionally created a real beef between J&P down the line I can’t even surmise. That’s my theory. Feel free to shoot down in flames / run with at will!
@Martin, that’s an interesting notion, but not something that can be proven, really.