MetaChat REGISTER   ||   LOGIN   ||   IMAGES ARE OFF   ||   RECENT COMMENTS




artphoto by splunge
artphoto by TheophileEscargot
artphoto by Kronos_to_Earth
artphoto by ethylene

Home

About

Search

Archives

Mecha Wiki

Metachat Eye

Emcee

IRC Channels

IRC FAQ


 RSS


Comment Feed:

RSS

09 December 2011

John Lennon—Where were you when you heard of his death, what were you doing? [More:]I've not seen anything about the anniversary (12/8) here on this site, nor on the mother-ship. I knew he was shot in early December but the day slid by me, but link following link tonight I just came across a post about it online, someone else writing about what it was for them to hear about it, who told them, etc and etc. And I thought maybe that'd be a good topic here; I've not posted but once here but I've been reading more lately, trying to get a bit of a sense about it here. So…

I was on my way out to Gilley's with probably my best friend at the time, who'd never been to Gilley's, which I felt criminal. Frank is almost certainly the biggest Beatles fan I've ever known, which made it more interesting of course.

So we're on our way out there and it's Beatles music plastered all over the radio, which Frank noticed but hey, co-incidence or whatever. Plus anytime a song ends I'm on the lookout for another station, I can't stand commercials so we wouldn't have gotten a chance to hear when it was talked about, which it absolutely had to have been, ad nauseam.

And so then we get into Gilley's and the band—probably it was the house band, I don't remember it being any big name—the band is playing friggin' Beatles songs, at friggin' Gilley's. WTfriggin'F?

And of course it wasn't long before we found out WTfriggin'F. Something else. It would have been a pretty big deal to me anyways but being with Frank magnified it, just one hell of a lot. We were sortof shocked, rocked, jangly, we talked a long time that night.

And I remember the next morning, driving that green Buick Skylark to the jobsite I was working that day—it was a chill, rainy morning in Houston, I'm on I10, the radio on, listening to it all, thinking about it all, wondering about it all, it's portent, the huge sadnesses of it, the huge loss. John Lennon was weak, and broken, and strong as stone, courageous, unbelievably creative, unreal stylish, obnoxious behind the scenes, brittle, brilliant, a junkie, one of the coolest people to walk this ball of dirt and water during my lifetime, one of the best, and one of the most influential.

It was/is a huge flashbulb memory moment to me, one of the largest in my life. (Cuban missal crisis, JFK's assassination, Beatles on Ed Sullivan, race riots (Detroit in particular, for whatever reason), MLK's assassination, Bobby's assassination, Reagan getting shot, 9/11, plus tons of others of course but more personal and likely not needed here.)

tl;dr—What were you doing when you heard John Lennon was shot?
I woke up to the news, which I heard on the radio. I had a friend from Merseyside staying with me, sleeping on my sofa, so I went into the living room, woke her up and told her. We didn't have a TV at the time, so we listened to the radio reports, which played Lennon and Beatles music non-stop, until we both had to leave for work/college.
posted by Senyar 09 December | 05:19
I was sitting in my high school library, waiting for homeroom to start, and the other kids were all buzzing about it. I was a BIG Beatles fan in my youth, but I remember it just felt unreal when I heard the news, like everyone was talking about a plot twist on a TV show.
posted by BoringPostcards 09 December | 06:45
I was in middle school (also in Houston, dancestoblue). I woke up in the morning nervous about my debate that day; I was arguing in favor of stronger handgun control.

I walked into the kitchen where Mom was watching the Today show while she cooked breakfast. I stopped in mid-step, took in the news, and burst out sobbing, which shook up Mom pretty hard. She liked The Beatles, but I don't think she felt any connection to Lennon as a person.

Or maybe I'm way off on that. Maybe she was already upset, and then shaken further by the realization that her kids would find it upsetting, too. I do remember that she made me pull it together long enough to get to school, where I started crying again.

I only hazily remember the debate, which got a great deal more heated and emotional on all sides than they usually did. I may even have cried at the podium.
posted by Elsa 09 December | 08:11
I was in high school, but I don't remember when I heard about it; probably on the evening news on tv. I do remember that I was not particularly upset because Lennon/Beatles really didn't mean much to me, and the level of grief on tv and the radio was somewhat bewildering.
posted by JanetLand 09 December | 08:51
I was 12,at home with a headache and didn't hear about it until the next day.

It was also my grandfather's birthday.
posted by brujita 09 December | 09:56
I was getting ready for work. We had been married for a total of 10 days and living in our little, crappy apartment. My wife had just brought-in the newspaper and was, suddenly waving it in my face. The headline hit me hard in the gut. I made it to work that day, but I remember all of us just sort of being in a funk all day.
posted by Thorzdad 09 December | 10:15
I was 11. My sister told me that it had happened. My sister also had a history of telling me lies, just so that she could laugh when I fell for them. So, I didn't believe her, but then she later laughed anyway, saying "I was right, and you didn't believe me, ha ha!" I was then twice as angry: once because I fell for her shit again, and again because she deprived me of properly grieving for Mr. Lennon.
posted by Melismata 09 December | 10:26
I was teenager and was up listening to Vin Scelsa's show on WNEW New York when he got the news on air just a few minutes after it had happened. The radio studio wasn't too far from The Dakota so it felt very immediate and close. Lennon had been in the news a lot then since he had his first hit record in many years and was doing a lot of interviews and such. The Vin started taking calls from upset listeners and playing Beatles and Lennon songs all night. It's definitely an evening that I remember well.

Weird to think that he was only forty.
posted by octothorpe 09 December | 10:37
I was 5. Yeah, I don't remember it.
posted by gaspode 09 December | 10:38
Gestating.
posted by The Whelk 09 December | 11:37
I was in boarding school over on Vancouver Island. We had no TV or radio there, so I found a day or two later when the newspaper finally made it to me
posted by rollick 09 December | 11:56
I was reading the front page of Metachat just seconds ago.
posted by mullacc 09 December | 13:52
I was 17, living in Spain. I was walking into the village just at twilight, heading for the bar and some of my friends pulled up in a car, yelling the news. Everyone was very shook up about it, horrified at the senselessness. My friends put a - hmm, what would you call it? An ad? A eulogy notice? - anyway, a thing into the local paper that week. It had a big picture of John Lennon and the birth death dates and it said In Remembrance and then all their band names - Kevin Ayers Band, Pa Amb Oli Band, Sex Beatles. I still have it in my scrapbook. I think I was dating Jeremy from the Sex Beatles at that point, so, you know, we would naturally feel it deeply. ;-) 11 years later my son would be born on December 8 and so now I always think first of that. Reincarnation fail, though: he seems to have achieved John Lennon's wilder more nihilistic traits and not, alas, his musical talents. Still, he has some of that hidden sweetness too.
posted by mygothlaundry 09 December | 15:26
I was with a date watching A Clockwork Orange at the 8th Street Playhouse in Greenwich Village, NYC. The manager broke into the movie to announce that John Lennon had been shot. We thought it was some sick joke and watched the rest of the movie. When we exited the theater there were people crying in the street. By then he was dead. It was a surreal sight. People openly weeping on cars, being consoled by other sad faces. The rest of the night is a blur.
posted by Splunge 09 December | 15:59
Me, I was laying on the floor of our "game room" watching the news. I remember looking back to my dad and telling him how I thought it sucked since he had just come out with a great album, and was moving on from the Beatles. I was young (16), and thought it such a great loss. The Beatles were the first band I loved, and their Paperback Writer/Rain single was the first album I ever bought (for 25 cents from my middle brother, and I still have it). The loss was really great then, but it's even worse now knowing that he could have made a lot of fantastic music in the meantime. Sigh, the things I remember...
posted by eekacat 09 December | 19:38
And I agree it's weird that he was only 40. Here I am at 47, and haven't done shit compared to him. I did realize then that he was the actual creative force behind the Beatles, the part that made them innovative, but it took a band, and he wouldn't have made it without the others. All the great bands are like that: the sum is greater than the total parts.
posted by eekacat 09 December | 19:50
I was 13. I don't remember any specific details but I was aware of it happening. I liked Lennon and the Beatles but wasn't a huge fan. My step-father brought home the Magical Mystery Tour album that night. That in itself made it memorable because he just didn't do things like that.

My sister-in-law cried for days and mourned for months. I thought it odd as she didn't know the man.
posted by deborah 09 December | 22:45
I didn't hear about it until the next morning. It hit me pretty hard, far more than any other celebrity death. I'd been doing photography for a few years back then and I had an image I wanted to send to Yoko Ono as a condolence. I made the card, but then never actually sent it.
posted by DarkForest 09 December | 22:59
I wrote about this a few years back during another Giftstravaganza.

Octothorpe, I was a follower of Vin Scelsa's by a few years later but was too young to be a listener in 1980. I bet that was a pretty memorable show. A masterful radio host.
posted by Miko 09 December | 23:04
I was a freshman in college. It didn't make much of an impression on me. I didn't much like the Beatles prior to that, and among them, Lennon was the one I liked the least.
posted by Doohickie 10 December | 16:05
Photo Friday: Ordinary/Mundane || December Musical Giftstravaganza Day 9!

HOME  ||   REGISTER  ||   LOGIN