Lost John Lennon interview surfaces: “You smash it and I’ll build around it.”

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An open letter in the underground press that accused the Beatles of going soft and selling out to the establishment, comparing John Lennon’s call for pacifism in “Revolution” to a BBC radio soap opera, and conferring superior revolutionary credentials on the Rolling Stones, so incensed the Beatle that he spent six hours 40 years ago giving an interview to a couple of college students offering a rebuttal that was finally published today in the pages of the New Statesman magazine.

In 1968, Maurice Hindle and a friend hitch-hiked to Surrey to meet Lennon, who picked them up personally at the train station in his Mini Cooper. Yoko Ono fed them homemade macrobiotic bread and jam. Lennon spoke nearly continuously for six hours.

He says “Revolution” was no more revolutionary than Mrs Dale’s Diary. So it mightn’t have been. But the point is to change your head - it’s no good knocking down a few old bloody Tories! What does he think he’s gonna change? The system’s what he says it is: a load of crap. But just smashing it up isn’t gonna do it.

Hindle writes “Lennon demanded Black Dwarf publish his response, which took [writer John] Hoyland to task for his “patronizing” tone, and ended with the defiant challenge: “You smash it—and I’ll build around it.”
 

 
The full interview is only available in the print edition of New Statesman magazine.

Posted by Richard Metzger | 2 Comments
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Comments:
Dec 17, 2009
Mike B says:

What backwards-looking asshats The New Statesman must be. Can somebody scan and OCR this?

Dec 18, 2009
Arthur F says:

So I’m going to look for a print version of the New Statesman in the nearby small town magazine kiosk here in Europe! Right. Maybe that’s why there are so many jokes about legacy media. Given the chance to be global, even get some attraction to their website presence, they prove to be happy with servicing their subscribers. I’ll just wait for the pdf to appear in the usual places.

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