[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/

Watching the Wheels

1981 single by John Lennon From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Watching the Wheels

"Watching the Wheels" is a single by John Lennon released posthumously in 1981, after his murder. The B-side features Yoko Ono's "Yes, I'm Your Angel." It was the third and final single released from Lennon and Ono's album Double Fantasy, and reached No. 10 in the US on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 7 on Cashbox's Top 100.[1] It peaked at number 30 in the UK.

Quick Facts Single by John Lennon, from the album Double Fantasy ...
"Watching the Wheels"
Thumb
Single by John Lennon
from the album Double Fantasy
B-side
Released
  • 13 March 1981 (US)
  • 27 March 1981 (UK)
Recorded1980
GenreSoft rock
Length
  • 4:00 (album version)
  • 3:30 (single edit)
LabelGeffen
Songwriter(s)John Lennon
Producer(s)
John Lennon singles chronology
"Woman"
(1981)
"Watching the Wheels"
(1981)
"Love"
(1982)
Double Fantasy track listing
Close

Writing and recording

In "Watching the Wheels" Lennon addresses those who were confounded by his "househusband" years, 1975–1980, during which he retired from the music industry to concentrate on raising his son Sean with Ono. The song features a hammered dulcimer accompanying the lead piano.[2] Though most of the musicians on the album were well-known and oft-recorded session players, the dulcimer was played by Matthew Cunningham. Lennon asked producer Jack Douglas to give the track a "circular" sound, which Douglas associated with hammer dulcimer, but the Musicians' Union had no dulcimer players listed. Douglas invited Cunningham to the session after hearing him busking on the streets of New York with a hammer dulcimer.[3]

Reception

Record World called it "a strong statement of independence and self-assurance that never grows old."[4]

Artwork

The photograph on the cover was taken by Paul Goresh, a fan of Lennon who also took the infamous photo of Lennon signing the copy of Double Fantasy belonging to Mark David Chapman shortly before Chapman murdered Lennon. Both photos were taken at the same place, in front of the Dakota building, which was the site of his 1980 shooting. Later, Chapman was recorded in police custody reciting the line "People say I'm crazy" from the song and was later sampled for use by the band EMF in the track "Lies" from their 1991 album Schubert Dip; however, upon immediate protests by Yoko Ono the sampling was removed on subsequent pressings.

Personnel

Chart performance

More information Chart (1981), Peak position ...
Close

Versions

The song has been covered by Gwen Guthrie (1992), The Samples (1997); Paraguayan rock band Deliverans released a Spanish version on the compilation album Lennon Vive: Un tributo del Rock paraguayo (2000),[17] Matisyahu for the benefit album Instant Karma: The Amnesty International Campaign to Save Darfur (2007), and Charly García under the name "Mirando las ruedas" for his album Kill Gil (2010). Patrick Wolf re-arranged the song for a performance at Yoko Ono's Meltdown Festival at the Southbank Centre.

An acoustic demo version of the song, performed by Lennon, was included on Disc 4 of the John Lennon Anthology.

In 2020, a cover of the song by Chris Cornell, a huge fan of John Lennon, was included on his posthumous album No One Sings Like You Anymore, Vol. 1.[18]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.