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John Lennon said ‘I Am the Walrus’ was tongue in cheek but he later started to write straightforward lyrics. During another 1980 interview, John discussed his approach to lyrics.
Beatles songwriter and musician John Lennon opened up about the lyrics that had many fans confused - famously admitting Glass ...
John Lennon once opened up about The Beatles' enigmatic lyric "the Walrus was Paul" from their 1967 hit Glass Onion.
When The Beatles officially broke up in 1970, fans all over the world wept in shock. It was truly the end of an era. The Fab ...
One of John Lennon’s favourite of his Beatles songs is 1967’s I Am the Walrus. Arguably the most cryptic of the Fab Four’s tracks, fans have debated the meaning behind the lyrics’ surreal ...
John Lennon Later Realized His Mistake On “I Am The Walrus” Years before John Lennon would write one of the Beatles’ most psychedelic tracks, the musician dabbled in prose writing with his ...
An ex-middle schooler recalled blurting out: “What does ‘goo goo g’joob’ mean in ‘I Am the Walrus’?” Several people remembered this question. No one remembered Lennon’s answer.
The Beatles were never afraid to be a little opaque in their writing, but a John Lennon track from 'The White Album' doubled down on the confusion.
John Lennon Wrote Some “I Am The Walrus” Lyrics Out Of Spite. It’s not hard to imagine the perpetually cheeky Beatles musician using an explicit encounter as inspiration for his lyrics, ...
John Lennon once stormed out of a radio studio when the DJ played a song that was created as a parody of The Beatles. The ...
Lennon was well aware that fans and critics were reading too much into Beatles lyrics - and by the time Walrus was released as the B-side to 'Hello, Goodbye', he tried to push back.