Tuesday, December 08, 2020

John, Forty Years On


I have never done this before. This is a repeat of something I wrote ten years ago. I never thought that I would need to repeat anything that I wrote. I stand corrected. With ever-so-slight editing, this piece need not be improved upon - if even for the passage of time.

I have had forty years to get used to the idea of John Lennon being gone from this troubled planet.

I'm sorry, but I cannot. I just can't.

*********************

Nothing to do to save his life. Call his wife in....

The passage of forty years does little to alleviate the sense of shock and horror that we felt on that awful night, Monday, December 8, 1980. It was unseasonably warm, that much I distinctly remember. It had been a pleasant day right up to the moment the news came over the television.

In the early afternoon I saw on HBO, the Peter Frampton/Bee Gees debacle, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - one of the worst movie musicals ever made. Late in the afternoon and early evening, I saw for the very first time, the Marx Brothers' 1932 classic, Duck Soup - a masterpiece. I remember wondering to myself whether or not John Lennon had ever seen this film. It's comic lunacy combined with an anti war theme would appeal to him, I thought. Irony of ironies: I had quit my job as a radio DJ earlier in the week. The man who owned the station, a legendary New York Disc Jockey who shall remain nameless (sorry, cousins) had turned out to be a real impudent son-of-a-bitch to work for.

The very last thing I did before I walked out of the place forever was play the new John Lennon single, (Just Like) Starting Over. At exactly eleven thirty, after having watched a rerun of M*A*S*H (an episode from the early years when that series was still watchable) I went back to the book I was reading, John Toland's massive biography of Adolf Hitler. Deep in concentration, I was barely aware of the news bulletin that was being relayed on W-NEW channel Five. All of the sudden, my subconscious was jarred by what I thought were the words, "John Lennon". I quickly looked up at the TV to hear the announcer say: "....is in critical condition at Roosevelt Hospital with multiple bullet wounds."

"Did I just hear that?" I said to myself, probably out loud, "Nah! Who the hell in their right mind would shoot John Lennon?" I consciously dismissed the very idea as absurd. ` I went back to the book. Hardly twenty seconds had elapsed when the telephone rang. It was my brother, Pete. I could tell by the first syllable out of his mouth that I had indeed heard what I thought I had only imagined....

Imagine.

"TOM...." 

 "Oh, my God! What happened??" 

 "Lennon's been shot." 

 I went back to the television and turned the channel to the American Broadcasting Company. I knew that the Monday night football game was still in progress and they had not yet broadcast their late evening news. Within a few short minutes the game was interrupted with a "Special Bulletin". The person who made the announcement was a woman named Roseanne Scamardella:

"FORMER BEATLE JOHN LENNON IS DEAD. HE WAS SHOT A SHORT TIME AGO. POLICE HAVE A SUSPECT IN CUSTODY."

Back and forth I paced the apartment - shell shocked, in a blind, grief-stricken rage and in utter disbelief. By chance, my eyes happened to wonder toward the stereo system on the bookshelf. The record resting on the turntable was called, The Beatles First, a collection of their earliest recordings, made in Hamburg, Germany in the summer of 1961 which I had been listening to earlier in the evening.

Then came the dreadful, televised image that brought the reality of what was happening crashing down with a vengeance too horrible to even contemplate: the image of John Lennon's lifeless corpse, wrapped in a body bag, strapped to a stretcher, being loaded like so much cargo into the medical examiner's van, bound for the coroner's office. For the first and last time in my life, I drank a bottle of scotch, a drink that under normal circumstances I can barely stomach. These were anything but normal circumstances. It was the only alcohol available that evening. I would never have been able to sleep otherwise.

The next day's headlines only confirmed what many of us, upon awakening from our troubled slumber, had hoped had merely been a terrible dream:

JOHN LENNON SHOT DEAD

The final act of insanity in this insane nightmare would be committed by Rupert Murdoch's New York Post. Three days after the murder, they sneaked a photographer into the New York City morgue. The next day's front page showed a close up of John's dead face; discolored and bloated by three day's rigor mortis.

  I read the news today, oh boy....

In the intervening years I have tried to concentrate on the life he lived, not the hideous manner in which he died. But on this anniversary it's difficult - if not impossible - to avoid remembering the events of that terrible evening forty years ago. Where did the time go? Just recently someone asked me how long it took me to get over the murder of John Lennon.

"I never got over it" was my answer. I never will. December 8, 1980 broke my heart.

Thankfully we can still hear that beautiful, otherworldly voice, forever young, eternally irreverent. John Lennon left an indelible impression on our culture that cannot be denied. He is still a very real part of our lives, almost as much as as he was all those years ago when he walked among us. Thanks to the miracle of recorded sound, the voice of John Lennon is still very audible, a lingering ghost from our distant past that stubbornly refuses to fade into the void. At least we have that to be grateful for. Dr. Winston O'Boogie won't be going away any time soon.

Anyone who was living in Goshen, New York in December 1980 will remember this: Five days after he died, on Saturday the thirteenth, a worldwide vigil in John's memory was held at 2 PM EST. For ten minutes there was silence - peace - all across the planet earth. I had a couple friends over to observe the event on television. In the village of Goshen, although it had been a clear and sunny day, the moment the vigil began at two o'clock, it began to snow - and not just flurries - for ten solid minutes there was a blinding blizzard. At exactly 2:10, the moment the vigil ended, the snow stopped and the sun came out. His child-like, 1971 anthem, Imagine, drifted through the ether:

Imagine no possessions I wonder if you can No need for greed or hunger A brotherhood of man,

 Imagine all the people Sharing all the world"

 It was only at that moment that I felt happy for John Lennon.

Tom Degan

 Goshen, NY

4 Comments:

At 6:25 PM, Blogger Mozart1220 said...

I was watching Monday Night football when an announcement came over "Former beatle John Lennon..." and my friend quickly joked "is dead" and the announcer said "is dead".

we both just sat there in shock. I don;t even remember who was playing.

The following Sunday a bunch os were down at the High school field playing football, and even though a couple of them got mad, about 6 of us sat down and observed the "moment of silence" Yoko had requested.

Two Saturdays later my band was playing in a bar, and played "Imagine" on my guitar. I saw old grown men crying and singing along. a bunch of bikers and old farmers singing together to honor John.

 
At 8:50 PM, Blogger Dave Dubya said...

John's songs had emotional depth that silly love songs could never have. (I still love Paul.)

"I don't expect you, to understand
After you caused so much pain
But then again, you're not to blame
You're just a human, a victim of the insane'

-From Isolation

Lest we forget, "All you need is love".

 
At 10:11 PM, Blogger Mozart1220 said...

Not all Pauls songs are "silly love songs" and besides, Lennon wrote his share of those as well.

 
At 9:34 AM, Blogger rustcoal said...

Well they killed Christ too. Meanwhile DeSantis is using gestapo tactics to harass his political enemies.

 

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