Or Lennon’s Other Revolution: How Yoko Changed Everything.
When John Lennon first encountered Yoko Ono at London’s Indica Gallery in November 1966, he was still the cheeky, acerbic Beatle, trapped in a suburban existence that was slowly suffocating his rebellious spirit. What happened next fundamentally altered not just Lennon’s musical trajectory but his entire philosophical outlook on life, art, and politics, a transformation that continues to reverberate through popular culture decades later.
Ono wasn’t just Lennon’s lover and eventual wife; she was his artistic conscience, political awakening, and spiritual guide. The sneering British music press – and the majority of Beatles fans – initially dismissed her as the dragon lady who broke up the Fab Four. How simplistic that view seems now. In fact I’ve heard people say since that Yoko didn’t ruin John’s career, he ruined hers.
Lennon, before Yoko, was drifting. The moptop façade had worn paper-thin. The man who’d once proclaimed the Beatles “more popular than Jesus” was living in a psychological prison of his own making in Weybridge, searching for meaning beyond the endless machinery of Beatlemania.
Enter Ono, already an established avant-garde artist, with her conceptual installations and performance pieces that challenged conventional thinking. She didn’t need Lennon’s fame; she had her own artistic vision that predated their meeting. Her work, exploring themes of audience participation, peace activism, and feminist perspectives, provided Lennon with an intellectual framework his previous life had lacked.
The influence was immediate and profound. Listen to “Revolution 9” on the White Album, a sound collage that bears Ono’s experimental fingerprints. Compare early Beatles tracks with the raw emotional honesty of “Cold Turkey” or “Mother.” This wasn’t simply a stylistic shift; it was Lennon finding his authentic voice under Ono’s guidance.
Their collaborative albums, particularly “Unfinished Music No. 1: Two Virgins” and “Wedding Album” shocked audiences expecting conventional pop. Critics howled, but that was precisely the point. Lennon was shedding his moptop skin, and Ono was providing the knife.
Most significantly, Ono awakened Lennon’s political consciousness. Their bed-ins for peace, billboard campaigns, and outspoken opposition to the Vietnam War weren’t mere publicity stunts, they reflected Ono’s longstanding artistic engagement with peace activism, now amplified through Lennon’s platform.
While much attention focuses on how Ono changed Lennon, less discussed is how their collaboration transformed her work. Her avant-garde sensibilities found new expression through pop music’s accessibility, creating a unique fusion that neither could have achieved alone.
Were there missteps? Certainly. The self-indulgence occasionally bordered on narcissism. But their partnership produced something genuinely revolutionary: art that refused to separate the personal from the political, that insisted music could change consciousness.
Decades later, the easy narrative that Ono was some kind of manipulative force still persists in some quarters. The reality was far more complex and interesting, a genuine artistic partnership that pushed both participants toward their most challenging work.
In Lennon’s final interviews, he repeatedly credited Ono with his intellectual and spiritual rebirth. The evidence is in the music from the primal therapy-influenced screams of “Well Well Well” to the tender vulnerability of “Love.” Lennon with The Beatles gave us brilliant pop. Lennon with Ono gave us something harder to categorize but sophisticated and ultimately more human.
Perhaps that’s Ono’s most profound influence she helped transform Lennon from a rock star into an artist in the fullest sense of the term.
John Lennon studied at Liverpool College of Art 1957-60
Yoko Ono studied art, film making and experimental at Gakushuin University (Tokyo) and Sarah Lawrence College (New York) and a course taught by John Cage at New School For Social Research.
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Art Pop / Pop Art: a study of the influences of art school, famous artists and movements on pop and rock music. Those institutions where failure is motivation, where the eccentric and pretentious emerge into the fascinating space where art and music meet.