Saturday Star

Songwriter credit for Lennon’s Yoko

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John Lennon’s 1971 song Imagine is considered one of his masterpiec­es. It was also undeniably inspired by Lennon’s wife, Yoko Ono. Indeed, Lennon drew portions of the lyrics in Imagine from Ono’s 1964 poetry book, Grapefruit.

Soon, more than four decades after the song’s release, 84-year-old Ono is likely to receive the songwritin­g credit Lennon said was always her due.

On Wednesday, the chief executive of the National Music Publishers Associatio­n announced that the process is under way to add Ono to the song as a co-writer, Variety reported. David Israelite, the chief executive, shared the news at the organisati­on’s annual meeting in New York, where Imagine received the “Centennial Song” award.

Ono and her son, Sean Lennon, accepted the award onstage, where Ono proclaimed “this is the best time of my life,” Variety said. Ono, who is currently fighting a flu-like sickness and had to be pushed on stage in a wheelchair, said her current illness has made her appreciate the song even more. Patti Smith then performed what many described as a poignant rendition of the song.

Sean Lennon later wrote about the award ceremony on his Instagram account, calling it the “proudest day of my life.” “Cut to: my mother welling up in tears,” Sean Lennon wrote. “Patience is a virtue!”

And on Thursday morning, Ono tweeted a portion of an interview recording in which Lennon said Imagine was inspired by Yoko’s Grapefruit.”

“There’s a lot of pieces in it saying imagine this or imagine that,” Lennon said. “I know she helped on a lot of the lyrics but I wasn’t man enough to let her have credit for it. I was still selfish enough and unaware enough to take that contributi­on without acknowledg­ing it.

“I was still full of wanting my own space after being in the room with four guys and always having to share everything,” he continued.

The song, he said, “expresses what I lear nt through being with Yoko and my own feelings on it.”

Downtown Music Publishing, which manages Ono’s and Lennon’s solo work, tweeted that the award – bestowed to both its songwriter­s – was “an incredible honour for us.”

Adding Ono to the credits of Imagine is significan­t in part because it would extend the amount of time the song would be able to reap income for its creators, as Variety pointed out. A song enters the public domain 70 years after the death of its last songwriter. Lennon died after being shot in New York on December 8, 1980. – The Washington Post

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