VOA英语2010年-Remembering John Lennon 30 Years Later(在线收听) |
Thirty years after his murder by a fan on December 8, 1980, John Lennon's music and personality still resonate strongly. This may be especially so in New York, which the former Beatle adopted as his home with his wife, Yoko Ono. Lasting memories Strawberry Fields is a peaceful spot in Central Park which is dedicated to John Lennon's memory. It's a mere 50 or so meters from the apartment building where he lived and died. The usual gaggle of tourists and fans are sitting on benches, some in contemplation, others in song.
"It means music. Serenity. It feels like my home," says one man in the park. "I feel closer to him when I'm here. " Three decades ago, a deranged fan got close enough to the musician to shoot him. The murder shocked the city and the world. Rock and roll photographer Bob Gruen, who knew John Lennon well as a friend, says the pain can last a lifetime. Meaningful music Lennon wrote the melancholy "In My Life" during the Beatles' earlier days. Its tone is in sharp contrast with the saccharine lyrics that were typical for boy groups at the time. Reporter Larry Kane, the author of "Lennon Revealed," got to know the Beatle during the band's American tours. "John Lennon was a man who was very angry and embittered most of his life. He was born to a father who was never around, a mother who disappeared mostly. He had a best friend who died of a brain hemmorage at the age of 20," says Kane. "But on the flip side of all that, all the drugs and all the problems - he was also one of the most extraordinary people I have ever met, in terms of his ability to overcome those demons that lurked inside him and produce beautiful music and beautiful poetry." Lennon also produced highly political music and poetry. Lennon often used his fame to make a point in theatrical ways. In the early 1970s, he and wife Yoko Ono recorded "Give Peace A Chance," in a Montreal hotel room with their friends during the couple's weeklong Bed-In for Peace. Family life A watershed moment for Lennon came in 1971, when he left his native England and settled in New York City with Ono. Photographer Bob Gruen says Lennon saw the Big Apple as the world's artistic and cultural center, and felt he could be almost anonymous there. In 1975, when he was 35 years old, Lennon stopped writing and recording music. For the next five years, he settled into life as a house-husband and dedicated father to the couple's young child, Sean, while his wife handled his multi-million dollar music business. This reversal of gender roles was unusual for that era. In 1980, the couple recorded and released a new album called "Double Fantasy." Its hit single, "Starting Over," proved to be John Lennon's last. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2010/12/129726.html |