1972 single by Yoko Ono
"Now or Never"
is a song written by
Yoko Ono
that was first released on her 1973 album
Approximately Infinite Universe
. It was also the lead single off the album, backed by "
Move on Fast
." A remixed version of "Move on Fast" was later released as a single and reached #1 on the
Billboard
Dance Club Songs
chart.
[1]
[2]
"Now or Never" is a political song.
[3]
[4]
[5]
According to
John Lennon
's biographer Peter Doggett, the lyrics of "Now or Never" sum up Ono's philosophy that "Dream you dream alone is just a dream/But dream we dream together is reality."
[6]
Cash Box
described it as having "a delicate social commentary with an extremely important message that should be heard by all."
[7]
Record World
said that Ono is "more melodically and lyrically sound" than on previous songs and that this song has an "important message, so listen."
[8]
New York Times
music critic Stephen Holden described this line as expressing a "
Beatles
-style
utopianism
."
[9]
A Yoko Ono press release described the song as a "wistful wake-up call to a tuned-out, slacked-off America."
[1]
Vietnam War
historian Lee Andresen considered the song to be a protest against the war.
[10]
The notorious cover of the single release, which depicted dead Vietnamese victims of the
My Lai Massacre
reinforced the Vietnam connection.
[10]
Andresen describes the cover as being "the most painfully graphic of any produced by record companies during the war."
[10]
Ben Urish and Ken Bielen describe the lyrics as being "interrogative."
[11]
Rolling Stone
reviewer Nick Tosches was underwhelmed by the lyrics, using lines such as "People of America/When will we stop/It is now or never" as examples of the "obnoxiousness" of Ono's lyrics at the time, describing them as "philosophical and political party-line corn that went out of style with last season's prime-time TV."
[12]
The music of "Now or Never" is
folk music
-like in the vein of early
Bob Dylan
.
[1]
[13]
It was recorded in February and March 1972 at the
Record Plant East
in New York.
[4]
John Lennon played guitar and
Elephant's Memory
provided the other backing instrumentation.
[4]
[5]
Ono and Lennon
co-produced
the recording.
[4]
[11]
Lennon and Ono rehearsed "Now or Never" for their One on One concerts at
Madison Square Garden
in New York in August 1972, prior to any official release of the song, but the song was ultimately not performed in the actual concerts.
[14]
The couple did perform the song at their TV appearance for the
Jerry Lewis Telethon
a few days later on September 4, 1972.
[3]
[6]
[14]
"Now or Never" was the second of three songs they played at the telethon, after "
Imagine
" and before "
Give Peace a Chance
."
[3]
[6]
[14]
At the time Lennon was under threat of deportation from the United States, and Ono introduced the song by stating that “John and I love this country very much and we’re very happy that we’re still here.”
[3]
The telethon would prove to be the couple's last performances with Elephant's Memory.
[14]
In 1984, a revised version of "Now or Never" was released on the album
Every Man Has a Woman
celebrating Ono's 50th birthday.
[5]
[11]
This version used a children's choir to provide the vocals.
[11]
According to Urich and Bielen, this added urgency to the lyrics, "as if a very aware child were chastising the adults for what they were permitting the world to become."
[11]
The instrumentation was from the original 1972 sessions, including Lennon and Elephant's Memory.
[5]
In 1994, the song was included in Ono's
Off-Broadway
musical
New York Rock
.
[9]
According to Holden, "Now or Never" "distills the childlike quality of a show that is as sweetly idealistic as it is hopelessly naive."
[9]
In 2018, Ono included a new version of the song on her album
Warzone
.
[15]
This version had the same lyrics but different instrumentation, including synthesizers.
[15]
According to
Pitchfork
contributor Sasha Geffen, this version differed in tone from the original in that the original asked the United States to dream of a reality without violence while the new version is sad that the country chose "never."
[15]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
"Ono: Move On Fast is #1 in the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play Chart"
. Yoko Ono Lennon
. Retrieved
2017-11-20
.
- ^
"Yoko Ono Chart History: Dance Club Songs"
.
Billboard Magazine
. Retrieved
2017-11-21
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Bocaro, Madeline.
"When John and Yoko Helped Jerry Lewis"
. Best Classic Bands
. Retrieved
2017-11-20
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Blaney, John (2005).
John Lennon: Listen to This Book
. John Blaney. p. 231.
ISBN
9780954452810
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Blaney, John (2007).
Lennon and McCartney: together alone : a critical discography of their solo work
. Jawbone Press. p. 166.
ISBN
9781906002022
.
- ^
a
b
c
Doggett, Peter (2009).
The Art And Music Of John Lennon
. Omnibus Press.
ISBN
9780857121264
.
- ^
"CashBox Record Reviews"
(PDF)
.
Cash Box
. November 11, 1972. p. 20
. Retrieved
2021-12-11
.
- ^
"Single Picks"
(PDF)
.
Record World
. November 4, 1972. p. 16
. Retrieved
2023-03-28
.
- ^
a
b
c
Holden, Stephen
(March 31, 1994).
"Review/Theater; Another Chorus in the Ballad of John and Yoko"
.
New York Times
. Retrieved
2017-11-20
.
- ^
a
b
c
Andresen, Lee (2003).
Battle Notes: Music of the Vietnam War
. Savage Press. p. 58.
ISBN
9781886028593
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
Urish, B. & Bielen, K. (2007).
The Words and Music of John Lennon
. Praeger. p. 93.
ISBN
978-0-275-99180-7
.
- ^
Tosches, Nick (March 15, 1973).
"Approximately Infinite Universe"
.
Rolling Stone
. Retrieved
2017-11-20
.
- ^
Perpertua, Matthew (March 4, 2011).
"Yoko Ono Scores Sixth Consecutive Dance Chart-Topper With 'Move On Fast'
"
.
Rolling Stone
. Retrieved
2017-11-21
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Madinger, C. & Easter, M. (2000).
Eight Arms to Hold You
. 44.1 Productions. pp. 77, 84.
ISBN
0-615-11724-4
.
- ^
a
b
c
Geffen, Sasha (October 23, 2018).
"Yoko Ono: Warzone"
. Pitchfork
. Retrieved
2021-08-14
.
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