McCartney Times

“Imagine”: Why do we always turn to John Lennon’s best-known song after a violent tragedy?

“Imagine”: Why do we always turn to John Lennon’s best-known song after a violent tragedy?

November 25
11:31 2015

When disaster strikes, musicians respond the way they know best: with song. As composer Leonard Bernstein said three days after John F. Kennedy was assassinated, “This will be our reply to violence: to make music more intensely, more beautifully, more devotedly than ever before.” And as the dust of a violent tragedy settles, you’re likely to hear one tune in particular: the contemplative strains of John Lennon’s 1971 “Imagine,” which reached No. 3 in the UK when it was first released and sailed to No. 1 after Lennon’s murder in 1980. On Saturday, Coldplay opened their L.A. concert with “Imagine” in tribute to the victims of the terrorist attacks in Paris. (The band had planned to unveil new material from their upcoming album, but ended up performing an acoustic set of older songs out of respect.)

Source: “Imagine”: Why do we always turn to John Lennon’s best-known song after a violent tragedy?

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