Thursday, June 25, 2009

Museum Exhibit Puts You In The Bed-In

Museum Exhibit Puts You In The Bed-In

http://www.pollstar.com/blogs/news/archive/2009/06/16/673067.aspx

June 16, 2009
by Jay Smith

Want to soak up the atmosphere of the hotel room where John Lennon
and Yoko Ono held their famous Montreal Bed-In? It all comes alive in
a re-creation of the historic moment at The Museum at Bethel Woods.

The exhibit at the museum, located in at the Bethel Woods Center For
The Arts in Bethel, NY, is called "Give Peace A Chance: John Lennon
and Yoko Ono's Bed-In For Peace" and it freezes in time the moment
over 40 years ago when the newly married couple held court from their
bed in a room at Montreal's Queen Elizabeth Hotel in 1969 where they
spent a week campaigning for peace.

Oh, yeah. They also recorded a song ­ "Give Peace A Chance."

"They started to talk about maybe doing a recording a few days
before, but the actual decision was taken very shortly before the
actual recording took place," Andre Perry told Pollstar. As the
producer of the live recording session, Perry had insider access to
John and Yoko as well as the celebrities that flocked to the famous
Bed-In, including comedian / activist Dick Gregory, LSD advocate
Timothy Leary and Smothers Brother Tommy.

"It was a bit of a circus, really," Perry said. "There were people
coming in and out. There were newspaper people, film people. In and
out, in and out of the suite. Even though it's called a 'suite,' if
you were to go there you would realize on film and on camera it looks
much larger than it is. It's very small really, with a very low ceiling.

The recording of "Give Peace A Chance" took place on June 1, 1969.
Along with it being a landmark moment in '60s pop, it also features
one of the more unusual pairings in rock history ­ John Lennon and
Tommy Smothers.

"He [Lennon] spent most of his time with Smothers figuring out the
guitar playing, because Smothers was playing more in a folk style.
They kind of got that going, and then we had a run-through. The
second take ­ one, two, three, four, and there it went."

And that's how the first solo single by a Beatle while still a member
of the famous foursome was recorded.

"I wanted to preserve the essence of it, which was his voice and the
two guitars," Perry said. "What we're hearing on that recording is
exactly him. It's completely untouched. It's absolutely wonderful.
That energy is there.

"And it's take one because the first take wasn't considered a real
take. It was a take for sound. It was also a take making sure
everything was in place."

You can see it all at the "Give Peace A Chance" special exhibit at
The Museum at Bethel Woods, including never-before-seen photos from
the archives of photographer Gerry Deiter who was assigned by Life
magazine to cover the event, and was requested by John and Yoko to
stay for the entire week of the Bed-In.

The exhibit also includes, along with more than 30 large-format
photographs, 15 text panels with personal stories and recollections
from those who were there. Like Andre Perry.

"We spent four wonderful hours together ­ John, Yoko and myself ­
doing the flip side of the 45," Perry said. "That was a very tender
moment for me. They had just gotten married at that time, and it was
really wonderful because they were very much in love. He was very sweet to her.

"She sang 'Remember Love,' which was the flip side, a very difficult
song to sing in falsetto as she sang it. She had been bashed around
by critics for the Beatle thing, or whatever, She wasn't known to be
the greatest singer in the world, and yet that was a very difficult
song to sing."

Perry said they took numerous takes of the song, but Yoko was having
problems with it. Eventually, according to Perry, the famous couple
stopped recording and went back to bed.

"They tickled and laughed and kissed each other," Perry said. "I felt
a little strange, so I said, 'Look, do you want me to leave for a
while?' and they said, 'No, no no.'

"What he was doing was putting her in a relaxed mode. They were lying
on the floor leaning against the bed and I was about five feet from
them. They kept doing it until they got the perfect take."

"Give Peace A Chance: John Lennon and Yoko Ono's Bed-In For Peace"
runs through September 7. For more information, please click here for
the Bethel Woods Center For The Arts Web site.
http://www.bethelwoodscenter.org/

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