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Sometime In New York City Sometime In New York City

JOHN LENNON
YOKO ONO
BOB GRUEN

A MAJOR LIMITED EDITION PROJECT
AUTHORISED BY THE ESTATE OF JOHN LENNON

Price: £355

Photography by Bob Gruen. Words by John Lennon, Yoko Ono and Bob Gruen.

A large-format book comprising 236 pages master-printed in fine screen full colour and silver underprintings. This edition is limited to 3,500 numbered copies superbly bound in black leather with silver page edges and silk-screened aluminium front and back covers. The protective solander box features a silk-screened metal name plate. The first 2,500 copies are signed by Bob Gruen and Yoko Ono. Only a few signed copies remain.

Sometime In New York City is a detailed personal portrait of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, featuring mostly full colour and previously unpublished photographs. The book spans Bob Gruen's friendship with John and Yoko from 1971 through to John's death in 1980. He has remained friends with Yoko and frequently works with her.



This book tells the tale of two people and one city. It focuses on private studio moments as well as family life and includes rare opportunities to see John and Yoko during what has come to be regarded as their most creative working period together.

John and Yoko

John in NYC

"We were both that strong, John in his driven way and I, in my passive-aggressive way. But luck would have it that the circumstances were on our side. John had the whole world behind him. I respected him not only for his various talents and extreme intelligence but for what he had achieved in the world. I had nothing but my wits. He kind of respected me for that. It's like an experienced warrior with lots of medals meeting another warrior who not only has no medals but doesn't even carry a weapon of any kind. That tickled his curiosity. There was no friction between us - only intense curiosity. The fact the world was so terribly against me was a blessing in a way, too. John felt he had to protect me. He was scorned by the whole world for being with me. So I felt protective of him."
Yoko Ono

During John and Yoko's time in New York the couple faced major political and musical challenges. Sometime In New York City explores their increasing commitment to political causes - from Black Power to Feminism - and gives first-hand accounts of their experiences with the US Immigration authorities as they struggled to gain legal residency for John.

The traumatic split from Yoko, which John describes as his 'Lost Weekend', reveals Lennon at his most volatile and vulnerable. Here John and Yoko give their own accounts of the period.

"I really, really wanted to be with her, wanted to be with her and could not literally survive without her as a functioning human being - I just went to pieces. I didn't realize I needed her so much. I needed her more than she needed me, and I always thought the boot was on the other foot."
John Lennon





"There was an incredibly warm feeling between us. That was true with our separation period, too. Some couples go on living, holding on to each other because of insecurity, and then break up by lashing out at each other. That's sad. I didn't want us to be like that."
Yoko Ono



John in Madison Square garden

John and babe

As a close personal friend, Bob Gruen was invited to take some of the first photographs of Sean Lennon. These pictures capture intimate moments and show Lennon in his lesser-known role as a devoted father.



John and Yoko in studio
"Bob Gruen had a nice vibe. Most photographers got so tense and serious when they came to take John's photo. I think they were just nervous but they were so tense that it usually made us nervous too. But with Bob, it was a breeze... not too casual, but nice and relaxed. So we felt comfortable with him taking our pictures. Of course, we liked his photos, too. We looked real in them. Bob was cool and hip and he still is."
Yoko Ono



"I earned their trust by always showing John and Yoko their pictures before I sent them out. I wouldn't use anything they didn't approve. It was a friendly understanding. I wanted them to like what I was doing. I was in it for the long term. I wanted to do more next week.

We became friends the way you get to be friends with anybody. You meet, get along, share a sense of humour and get more friendly as time passes. There were many situations where I did not take pictures, in order not to intrude on their privacy."
Bob Gruen

Bob Gruen talks about photographing John Lennon

QuickTime
Visit the Picture House, which features two QuickTime movies on Lennon. In the first, Bob Gruen explains how from 1971 he came to assemble his compelling photographic record of John Lennon and Yoko Ono's time in the Big Apple. In the second, Bob tells why he thinks John was so drawn to life in the busiest city of them all.


John live





"Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King are great examples of fantastic nonviolents who died violently. I can never work that out. We're pacifists, but I'm not sure what it means when you're such a pacifist that you get shot. I can never understand that."
John Lennon

The original poster for the book

The original poster for the book




EXTERNAL LINKS:

BeatleLinks - The Beatles Internet Resource Guide

Instant Karma!


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