John and Yoko, Power to the People, the NYC One to One Concerts

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DISC 1: Live At The One To One Concert - Hybrid Show
DISC 2: Afternoon Show
DISC 3: Evening Show
DISC 4: New York City - The Ultimate Mixes
DISC 5: New York City - The Evolution Documentarys
DISC 6: Studio Jam - The Elements Mixes
DISC 7: A Star Studded Cast of Thousands
Frank Zappa and The Mothers
Live Jam - London 1969 & New York City, 1971
DISC 8: with David Peel and The Lower East Side and Elephants Memory 
Live Jam 2 - Ann Arbor, 1971 & New York City, 1972
DISC 9: John Lennon also featuring Phil Ochs
Home Jam - New York City & Ann Arbor, 1971

 

although it appears one song and it's controversial title will not be included, not sure how John would feel about that....

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Lead single 1972.... given the assault on women and minority rights in this country, it's probably got more meaning now than ever, unfortunately 

So the compilation is now Woke O Ono ? 

lol... im all over this release. I'm that one guy who loved the raw simplicity of Elephants Memory but I can't help but be a bit sad that the lead track may not be included... I hope I'm wrong, maybe it will be "hidden" or an Easter Egg. Or maybe RSD single? Yea right...

SUPER DELUXE EDITION 9CD/3BR/BOOK BOXED SET
9 CDs ⋆ 3 HD AUDIO BLU-RAY DISCS ⋆ LENTICULAR COVER
103 TRACKS ⋆ HD STEREO ⋆ HD 5.1 SURROUND ⋆ DOLBY ATMOS
204-PAGE BOOK ⋆ NEWSPRINT POSTER ⋆ 2 POSTCARDS ⋆ 2 STICKER SHEETS
2 REPLICA TICKETS, VIP BACKSTAGE PASS AND VIP AFTERSHOW INVITATION

LIMIT OF 4 PER PERSON. 

TRACKLIST: 

CD1 / BR1
HYBRID ‘BEST OF’ SHOW
1. Power To The People (intro) †
2. New York City*
3. It's So Hard*
4. Move On Fast* †
5. Well Well Well †
6. Born In A Prison* †
7. Instant Karma! (We All Shine On)*
8. Mother*
9. We're All Water †
10. Come Together †
11. Imagine*
12. Open Your Box* †
13. Cold Turkey* †
14. Don’t Worry Kyoko* †
15. Hound Dog
16. Law And Order
17. Give Peace A Chance
* denotes afternoon show, otherwise the performance is from the evening show

CD2 / BR1
AFTERNOON SHOW
1. Power To The People (intro) †
2. New York City
3. It's So Hard
4. Move On Fast †
5. Well Well Well
6. Born In A Prison †
7. Instant Karma! (We All Shine On)
8. Mother
9. We're All Water †
10. Come Together
11. Imagine
12. Open Your Box †
13. Cold Turkey †
14. Don’t Worry Kyoko †
15. Hound Dog †

CD3 / BR1
EVENING SHOW
1. Power To The People (intro) †
2. New York City †
3. It's So Hard †
4. Move On Fast †
5. Well Well Well †
6. Instant Karma! (We All Shine On) †
7. Mother †
8. We're All Water †
9. Born In A Prison †
10. Come Together
12. Open Your Box †
13. Cold Turkey
14. Hound Dog
15. Law And Order
16. Give Peace A Chance

CD4 / BR2
NEW YORK CITY (THE ULTIMATE MIXES)
John & Yoko/Plastic Ono Band with Elephant’s Memory plus Invisible Strings
1. New York City (Ultimate Mix)
2. Sisters, O Sisters (Ultimate Mix)
3. Attica State (Ultimate Mix)
4. Born In A Prison (Ultimate Mix)
5. Sunday Bloody Sunday (Ultimate Mix, extended)
6. The Luck Of The Irish (Ultimate Mix)
7. John Sinclair (Ultimate Mix, extended)
8. Angela (Ultimate Mix)
9. We're All Water (Ultimate Mix)

CD5 / BR2
NEW YORK CITY (THE EVOLUTION DOCUMENTARY)
John & Yoko/Plastic Ono Band with Elephant’s Memory plus Invisible Strings
1. New York City (Evolution Documentary) †
2. Sisters, O Sisters (Evolution Documentary) †
3. Attica State (Evolution Documentary) †
4. Born In A Prison (Evolution Documentary) †
5. Sunday Bloody Sunday (Evolution Documentary) †
6. The Luck Of The Irish (Evolution Documentary) †
7. John Sinclair (Evolution Documentary) †
8. Angela (Evolution Documentary) †
9. We're All Water (Evolution Documentary) †

CD6 / BR2
NEW YORK CITY (STUDIO JAM)
John & Yoko/Plastic Ono Band with Elephant’s Memory
1. Jazz Freakout †
2. You Can't Sit Down †
3. Roll Over Beethoven †
4. Honey, Don't †
5. Ain't That A Shame †
6. My Babe †
7. Send Me Some Lovin' †
8. Fools Like Me †
9. Down In The Caribbean †
10. Happy Birthday Yoko Ono †
11. That's Right †
12. Don't Be Cruel / Hound Dog †
13. Yoko's Rhythm †
14. Whole Lotta Shakin' / It'll Be Me †
15. Yakety Yak †
16. Road Runner †

CD7 / BR3
LIVE JAM 1
John & Yoko / Plastic Ono Band and A Star Studded Cast of Thousands
Peace and Love for Christmas, in aid of UNICEF
Live at the Lyceum Ballroom, The Strand, London
15 December 1969
1. Cold Turkey (live)
2. Don’t Worry Kyoko (live)
John & Yoko / Plastic Ono Band with Frank Zappa and The Mothers
Fillmore East, New York
6 June 1971
3. Well (Baby Please Don't Go) (live)
4. Jamrag [Say Please / King Kong / Aawk] (live)
5. Scumbag (live)
6. Aü (live)

CD8 / BR3
LIVE JAM 2
John & Yoko / Plastic Ono Band with David Peel and The Lower East Side
Live at the John Sinclair Freedom Rally, Crisler Arena, Ann Arbor, Michigan
10 December 1971
1. Attica State (live) †
2. The Luck Of The Irish (live)
3. Sisters, O Sisters (live) †
4. John Sinclair (live)
John & Yoko / Plastic Ono Band
Live at the Benefit for the families of the victims of the riot at Attica State Correctional Facility
Apollo Theater, Harlem, NYC
17 December 1971
5. Attica State (live)
6. Sisters, O Sisters (live) †
7. Imagine (live)
John & Yoko / Plastic Ono Band
Live on the David Frost TV Show, The Little Theatre, 240 West 44th Street, NYC
16 December 1971
8. Attica State (live) †
9. Sisters, O Sisters (live) †
10. John Sinclair (live) †
John & Yoko / Plastic Ono Elephant’s Memory Band
Live at the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Telethon, Americana Hotel, NYC
4 September 1972
11. Imagine (live) †
12. Now Or Never (live) †
13. Give Peace A Chance (live) †

CD9 / BR3
HOME JAM
John Lennon
Home Recordings at the St. Regis Hotel, New York
10 September 1971
1. Shazam †
2. Honey, Don’t †
3. Glad All Over †
4. Lend Me Your Comb †
5. Wake Up Little Susie †
6. New York City †
7. Wake Up Little Susie †
8. ‘Hey, que pasa?’ †
9. You’re So Square (Baby I Don’t Care) †
10. Vacation Time †
11. Heartbeat †
12. Peggy Sue Got Married †
13. Peggy Sue †
14. ‘Phone call from Henry Gotsello’ †
15. Peggy Sue †
16. ‘Now we’d like to change the mood a little...’ †
17. Maybe Baby †
18. Mailman, Bring Me No More Blues †
19. Rave On! †
20. Twelve Bar Blues †
John Lennon
Home Recordings at the St. Regis Hotel, New York
27 October 1971
21. I Got You †
22. Hi-Heel Sneakers †
23. Slippin’ And Slidin’ †
24. Gone From This Place †
John Lennon
Home Recordings at Campus Inn, Ann Arbor, Michigan
10 December 1971
25. Send Me Some Lovin’ †
26. He Got The Blues †
27. When The Teacher †
28. Pill †
29. It’s Real
John Lennon and Phil Ochs
Home Recordings at Campus Inn, Ann Arbor, Michigan
10 December 1971
30. I Ain’t Marching Anymore †
31. Joe Hill †
32. Chords Of Fame †
33. Ringing Of Revolution

† denotes never-before-heard, previously unreleased tracks

The funny thing about attempts to avoid the word "nigger" by using constructs like "the N word" is they fail to achieve what they set out to accomplish. Whenever you hear the phrase "the N word" the first you think is what it seeks to replace. So we haven't eliminated the word "nigger"; we've just masked it in ways that make people who aren't Negros comfortable.

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https://youtu.be/sL9fp5KmYTo

Chairman of the black caucus and congressman Ronald Dellums  letter to Lennon

“If you define ‘nigger' as someone whose lifestyle is defined by others, whose opportunities are defined by others, whose role in society is defined by others, the good news is that you don’t have to be Black to be a nigger in this society,” the politician remarked. “Most of the people in America are niggers”

 



 https://ultimateclassicrock.com/john-lennon-woman-is-the-n-of-the-world/...

I just recently watched this podcast with Elliott Mintz, publicist for John and Yoko.

Elliott was given the album before anyone else had it to play on his radio show.

This song is discussed and it's repercussions back in 1972:

https://youtu.be/4MoRmOZEW8Y?si=efT3CpKesJNFzv3a&t=3158

i got the 4 track EP vinyl 2025  RSD release...

Fuck revisionism and fuck political correctness, and fuck forbidden words.

It is obvious that John was for equality and love. If people don't get it, that's on them.

I am thinking that Allen Ginsberg's classic poem "America" must also now be verboten since it includes that word.

One of my long ago poems contains the word. It is about being high on acid and finding myself in the home of a racist. I quoted his use of the word. The next line I stated how upset I was by his racism. When I read the poem one time I was chastised by the audience (all white people) for using the word, told it was totally unacceptable for me, a white person, to utter the word under any circumstances.

 

I recorded a full reading of Mark Twain's "Tom Sawyer" a few years back and found myself self-censoring the word whenever it (infrequently) appeared in the text. I even editorialized on doing so because I had previously caught grief for uttering the word in a literary context. It got me wondering if one must always do so when reading that book, or "Huck Finn," or any other historical text where the word appears.

Damn. Censorship, and especially self-censorship, really bothers me. I want to be sensitive to people's feelings. I really do not want to offend anyone, and approach all people as individuals rather than part of a group, or stereotype, but you can get in fucking trouble for using the wrong word.

 

It's clear to me me that people that go out of their way to censor others are more often than not looking to abuse others whether they realize it or not.  Its one thing to use an offensive word , it's entirely different to use an offensive word to describe another person when that offending word is straight out of your rotten heart.