Love (John Lennon song)


"Love" is a song written and performed by John Lennon, originally released on his debut solo album John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band. The song's theme is more upbeat than most of the songs on Plastic Ono Band.

Song

The song first came out on Lennon's 1970 album John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band. Lennon considered releasing it as a single, but was dropped in favour of "Mother". However, "Love" received considerable airplay at the time from stations who hesitated at playing "Mother". "Love" later appeared on the compilation The John Lennon Collection, and was released as a promotional tie-in single for the collection. The single version is a remix of the original track, which most notably differs in having the piano intro and outro mixed at the same volume as the rest of the song; on the original album version, these parts begin much quieter and increase in volume. The B-side was "Gimme Some Truth", but labelled as "Give Me Some Truth".
An alternate take of the song appears on the John Lennon Anthology box set as well as the Acoustic album.
The picture on the sleeve for 1982 release of "Love" was taken by famed photographer Annie Leibovitz on 8 December 1980—the day of Lennon's murder.
Like the 1982 British issue, the original version of the song was released as a single again in October 1998 for the Japanese market only with the Japanese edition of another compilation '. This song gained great success on Japan's Oricon chart and won the song of the year 1999 in Japanese gold disc prize.
The song was also used as Lennon's entry on the iTunes exclusive 4-track Beatles EP
', released in 2014.

Personnel

The musicians who performed on the original recording were as follows:
covered this song on their album A Different Kind of Weather, and also released as a single. The single featured a strong Indian theme throughout. The song samples the "Funky Drummer" drum break. Like the album it was released on, it received mixed reviews. Many critics and fans felt that they over-stretched it. The CD single included six different mixes of the song along with "Mordechai Vanunu", which was written for Mordechai Vanunu. A second B-side, called "The Demonstration" can be found on the UK CD single version. There are also exclusive remixes issued on the cassette and 12" single. As it turned out, this was the band's penultimate single and has an accompanying video that was shot in India.

Other cover versions

recorded the song in 1971. This single became a top 20 hit on the Japanese Oricon singles chart and hit number 42 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, becoming the only charting version of the song in the US and the last charting single of the group's career.
Barbra Streisand covered the song in 1971 on her album Barbra Joan Streisand, along with another Lennon composition "Mother". AllMusic critic William Ruhlmann described Streisand's "delicate reading" as a "gem."
Another cover was by Norwegian actress/model/singer Julie Ege.
The song was later covered by Vicky Leandros, Shirley Bassey, Kenny Loggins, Asha Puthli, The Mission and The Cure. Jimmy Nail's version, featured on his album Big River, was also released as a single on 8 December 1995, and peaked at number 33 in the UK charts.
In 1990, Morgan Fisher, former keyboard player with Mott the Hoople, and a resident of Japan since 1985, recorded a version of "Love" for his album Echoes of Lennon. Yoko Ono read the lyrics over Fisher's ambient keyboards.
Italian artist Mango re-interpreted the song on the album Acchiappanuvole.
American singer, songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist Beck's cover version was released in January 2014, and included in the 2014 compilation album Sweetheart 2014.

Track listing (John Lennon single)

  1. "Love"
  2. "Gimme Some Truth"

    1998 Japan release

  3. "Love"
  4. "Stand by Me"

    Track listing (The Dream Academy single)

  5. "Love" - 3:42
  6. "Love" - 7:01
  7. "Love" - 4:00
  8. "Love" - 7:34
  9. "Love" - 6:52
  10. "Love" - 4:18
  11. "Love" - 5:07
  12. "Mordechai Vanunu" - 5:39
  13. "Love"

    Charts

John Lennon version

The Lettermen version

Jimmy Nail version

Trivia

The song was used during episode 12 of series 2 of Heartbeat, which was set in 1965.