She is adept at using the vocal dynamic of a person who is hailing a cab on a noisy, hectic, city street, combined with the enthusiasm of a tour guide.
Fil, you’re such a GOOD person! I love that you find goodness in everyone too! I loved John and could listen to him all day long. I’m sure I could not do that with his widow. Thank you, Fil 😊
Your analysis is so positive and fair, and I appreciate that. Personally, I would be fine with never hearing this version of the song again, haha. A cover by you, on the other hand, would be beautiful 😊.
You said word that other reviewers have left out. And, that word is "fair." I think that you are fair too, in addition to Fil's fairness. Both of you gave Yoko's singing a chance, and that is great. Most of us were not fans of Yoko, but give credit where credit is due. The woman actually can sing. Too bad she just made a bunch of noises when she was with John. She could have complimented his voice with real singing if she had applied herself to that.
I saw John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band at the 69 Rock & Roll Revival Concert in Toronto, with Eric Clapton as his guest guitarist. When Lennon took the stage the crowd erupted, and after doing a half dozen songs, Yoko screamed through two songs. Horrible would be an understatement, and thankfully we brought enough weed to get through it
Perfect example of an objective analysis in assessing a vocalist's technique and skill level. On point about the bilingual factor contributing to delivery and style of performance.
You need to look up Yoke ruining Chuck Berry and John Lennon's duet on the Mike Douglas show. The look on Chuck's face when Yoko jumps in is priceless.
Oh Fil what did we do to you to deserve this punishment? Did you see the video where John is singing with Chuck Berry & she just starts shrieking? Chuck is like WTF is that??? Sorry Fil you can't convince me on this one!😂😂😂
I was about to comment about that Chuck Berry performance, also. If I remember correctly, as soon as the stage people saw Berry's face, they unplugged YoNo's microphone.
I had to look it up. YEGADS! What in the actual blazes?! What is wrong with that woman?! For the life of me, I have never known what he saw in her. What hideous shrieking! Why would she do this? Absolutely sickening.
Autotune wont help because she is basically (mostly) in tune. Her problem seems to be one of having two volume settings: 0 and 11.... Every note hits like a truck.
He's being _objective._ Rather than falling in with the (weirdly) still resonant bitterness toward Ono, he has considered and explained the _context_ of this performance, explained some of the features of her voice and her style, qualified his judgements accordingly - and pointed out all the evidence that shows Ono did indeed sing in tune. Yep - her style is very different to what we've been used to. I'd like to see how so many critics here would go, just tapping their toe along to a jazz piece in 7/8 or maybe 5/4 time - much less when it changes.
I'm not into Yoko Ono and I don't care about her singing, but I do appreciate you pointing out all the good things about her voice, as only you can do. Thank you Fil, that was a great analysis! 😉👍
Thank you Fil, she just sang like she is from an Asian culture as how they hear and express notes and tones. Many blessings to you and your Family. Fil I really loved your singing of the line not the only one
@@M0odyBlue She is much more Kabuki than folk songs or pop songs.Kabuki uses sounds, yelling, etc, much like her performance art pieces in New Your when she was around John Cage
Great fair comments. But I do think to be even fairer, one of Yoko's solo songs could be analysed, such as Nobody Sees Me Like You Do, or Hell in Paradise where comparison with a certain John Lennon is less likely! Without his long and much-loved shadow and THAT song Yoko is much like other punk or Indie voices of their era, albeit a bit ahead of her time! She is of the Neo Dada school of thought - kind of anti-art, deconstruction of the normal aesthetic for political or ethical reasons so is she actually succeeding in her aim? I think so. Yoko sings according to her belief system, some works I enjoy, others not so much 😊
Lennon appreciated art in an abstract context from an early age, and that stretched him as an artist both before and with Yoko Ono. Yoko was a significant element of his growth in his later Beatle days and for the remainder of his life. Respect art and you respect Yoko. Only the shallow and childish take a piss on Yoko.
Well there are lots of childish people here in the comments who don't realize that she most likely deliberately chose to sing this particular song at that period in time in a harsh and abrupt manner. However, it seems unnecessary to ridicule her and make tired jokes at her expense, but that's what has been done in droves here.
I was really surprised by her singing. And she sang Imagine very respectfully and I could understand her words. I only seen videos of her that she was making a statement but not singing. Seen a video where Chuck Berry made a face. The thing too, is John loved her. She was that comfort for him in his world as a music star full of people who weren't all that trustworthy. She sang it as her self and she sang it the best she could with the voice she had. Thanks to your analysis of her, some of us have gotten to see a side of her most people didnt see including me 👍🙂👍
It’s not just you! I vaguely remember a video Fil made years ago of the worst songs ever. Someone in the comments mentioned a specific Yoko song (I don’t remember which one, and my ears can’t bear to search for it). One of her aural assaults is called “Why”. I think that defines her “music career” in a nutshell.
@@jeffmckee1825 , 😂 O, no. See the video with Chuck Berry and John Lennon, where she interrupts (a live broadcast) with shrieks, and other odd sounds. The audio tech finally pulled her plug. 😂
Try to listen to the B side of 1969's Plastic Ono Band's "Live Peace in Toronto." I had a cat who actually attacked the stereo because I played it for a minute or two.
To me she has a grating voice that I personally find irritating. Imagine my surprise that she can actually sing with accuracy. Thank you for this analysis. I think lol.
Not _liking_ Ono's style, and not _grasping_ that she sings in tune.... One is a subjective view - very easy and convenient. The other is an objective view - and that's too hard for some folk. 🙄
@assininecomment1630 I am grateful to hear at all. I will admit that my ears lack the acuity required for detailed hearing. After several years of not being able to listen to music at all I am amazed. I stand by my right to enjoy or not to enjoy what I do hear .
@@assininecomment1630 , Grasping that she can sing in tune does not negate the reactions of most listeners’ ears that her voice is physically painful to hear for a lot of us.
Actually, in my opinion she does a great rendition of this song. Her husband sung it gently with soft onset, trying to make this world a bit better. Her husband was murdered. So she sings his song, yelling harshly, not allowing to forget what was done to him. Brava!
The Yoko can't sing stuff comes from the early Plastic Ono Band music where she was deliberately doing all sorts of strange vocalizations while John was playing noisy guitar. She did do later recordings where she sang more conventionally. She could write songs as well and actually co-wrote "Imagine". (Quote from Wiki: "Shortly before his death, Lennon said that much of the song's lyrics and content came from his wife, Yoko Ono, and in 2017 she received co-writing credit.)
It would be a no if she couldn't sing, but she can. As someone who cannot sing, I definitely recognize Yoko Ono as someone who can sing. I enjoy her albums.
@@Heidishereandthere Therefore you also think Lisa Ono cannot sing and that her ancestors chose the last name "Ono" because she would not be able to sing? Where's your proof of that? "Ono" translated to English is not an "Oh no" of dismay. I've bought albums of both Yoko Ono and Lisa Ono and I think they're great.
I have heard Yoko sing in person a couple of times in New York, once with John Lennon. Yeh, I wouldn't buy her album, but I appreciate her enthusiasm. I sing in a choir of three in a tiny church. i can't read music, don't sing well, but I give it my all. Yoko and I are soul sisters though she is more on pitch then I am. Fil I think you are the kindest soul. You analyze each person/band with such care. I have learned so much from you.
Oh my. You are a brave man Fil. I have never heard this before, thankfully, but it wasn't as horrifying as I expected. I will never heard it again. I did get a giggle every time you cracked a smile while Yoko "sang".
Thank you Fil for a constructive criticism of Yoko Ono. While it would seem she has room for improvement, I get the impression she is giving it her all in her singing. I believe she has the passion for singing, even if somewhat flawed. The fact that she seems passionate about her singing, gives a respect her for her efforts. Kindness is the key to analyzing a singer that is a bit imperfect and you have demonstrated that in your analysis . Thank you again for professional, caring analysis...Rock...
Filistine! You are way too kind. But because of you, I now know why Yoko just sounds like she is yelling instead of singing. I could not listen to her for any extended period of time. Other people have suggested analyzing another song she did, but please, I couldn't take any more!
I guess I'm the only person in the comments who appreciates Yoko's performance. At times she sounds like she is about to cry. Imagine her experience and what this means to her.😢
Have you heard the Death of Samantha or Walking on Thin Ice? In this performance I think she was trying to convey anger and disappointment. In those songs he voice is very light and sweet. She has some fair amount of talent.@@robyn3349
I am disheartened by these unthinking haters as well. And I don't feel harsh or unfair in calling them "unthinking" as they are dissing her pitch, which is perfect, and her tone, which is full, and other unmerited barbs. I thought it was a very expressive and heartfelt rendition, and I'm glad to have heard it.
Her voice is 80% of the way there. But the 20% that's lacking leaves it really harsh and abrupt, especially when isolated. It's also a very dry vocal track and not well engineered on the recording. I'll have to watch the original video with the backing track to get a better idea of how it fits together in the mix. A Lennon, she is not. But, it takes a lot of balls to go on tour with that vocal style. I have to give her credit there. UPDATE: After watching the original (a few times), it isn't nearly as bad. It comes across that she is singing proudly with John in mind. She speaks at the beginning as well and has a very heavy accent which she clearly struggles with while singing. Can't say anything bad about her. She is 90 years old now and likely to see John again soon. I'm sure he's proud of her.
Why is "Wings of Pegasus" so compelling?? Incredible entertainment. .... Anyway, Team Yoko here, personally I love when she makes those crazy f*cking sounds.
Me as well. I get lots of requests when I sing, but it's mostly for two songs that I don't know, they are "Shut up and go away" and "Stop that or I'll hurt you".
Fil lol Bro what a great view! Appreciate you covering this one,what a excellent job Ty . Cheers! To continued success friend! What a blast it has been friend watching you Grow. It means alot to me (us) as I spent years teaching and sharing the knowledge of music, Absolutely the best content on this subject on RUclips & that's a fact! Ty, Luv&Peace 💛✌🏼💫
While I do understand Fil is only looking for her abilities as a singer, I must say there is more than hitting the notes. She has not the timbre to sing this song suitably, and also not the right feel which this song requires. If it was meant as a try to dare a different interpretation, then it fails on me. It is the similar to shouting PEACE AND LOVE!
@9:32 Fine tuning dynamics. I think that's the biggest issue here. John didn't always hit the right notes either. However, he was an expert in dynamics, expression, nuance, and feel of his vocals. And he intrinsically knew when, where, why, and how to apply them.
Absolutely. And he could sing in a very soft but perfectly controlled voice. It was all about expression. Yoko has one register only. Some of her records are listenable because she uses double-tracked voices and reverb and other production tools (I like Season of Glass, in fact), but as a rule she tramples over the melodies like the proverbial elephant. Yes, I do have almost all of her records.
All your points are well taken, but her point as an artist was always to challenge the audience to think differently about what we accept as everyday normal so her point was never to be a good singer. I believe if she wanted to, she could have been a more conventional singer, but that wasn't something she wanted to do, she wanted to sing this way and basically make us all say 'what the...' However, as you point out, she is able to sing in tune, so it is the presentation that is the message...it isn't about singing like garbage as some did in the Punk movement to prove a different point. I saw her in Battery Park in the early 2000s with DJ Spooky and it was unlike anything I have ever heard, especially when she really got going with the primal noises, screams and sensual sounds. As with most art of this type, I don't like it per se, but I am glad that someone found expression through it and that it exists. In effect, you listen to Yoko Ono because it is so strange and different, not because it is good singing.
It's kind of like looking at the work of avant garde painters. Some people think Picasso, just as an example, didn't have conventional skill in drawing, etc. He did, but his vision took him in a different direction. My point being that Yoko could sing well by traditional standards, when she chose. Someone in comments here mentioned The Death of Samantha. I went and listened, and was really impressed.
Hi Fil, Oh My… if Tiny Tim and Ethel Merman had a baby I think it would be YOKO Ono! Lol… You are truly the Master of The Video Analysis Illusion… cuz this was painful! Kudos to you for trying to find anything good about this woman’s singing! Good to look at: NO, pleasant to listen to: NO, Singing technique: ZERO! Oh please let them autotune and pitch correct her! Great job sitting through this nonsense and trying to find a silver lining…!! You Are The Best, love ya’ Debbie☮️
She planned every sound she made. The avant garde style is all worked out. Her third album, Approximately Infinite Universe, is all sung without sounding like......well Yoko. I rather like it. Not the avant garde stuff.
After reading your comment, I heard what you are referencing. However, I would much rather listen to Ethel singing this with all due respect to Yoko for trying.
Maybe better react to a studio version not a live version, she isn't used to that. She can soud very soft like in "I Have A Woman Inside My Soul" and "Listen The Snow Is Falling"
Bravo, Fil for your open-minded approach in your analysis of Yoko Ono's vocal performance. I was surprised to hear that her voice was accurate pitch wise and used vibrato--as you mentioned, she was consistent. I'm more used to hearing her making these Tarzan-like sounds. Just my opinion--I thought she sounded like Ethel Merman, maybe a rock version of her. Thanks Fil for maintaining a constructive perspective in your analyses. It's always a true pleasure to learn from you!
It may be worth looking at why John Lennon liked the way she "sang", he had an idea about a new way of singing, which is why he liked the B-52's Rock Lobster. It's complicated. Listen to his interview about the B-52's. There is a video of Fred Schneider explaining it.
Can’t say that I’m a fan of Yoko Ono’s singing but I certainly appreciate your professionalism, Fil. Hard to listen to her but you were heaven on the ears. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
I think so much of singing is finding the right kind of music that fits your voice and style (there are some great versatile singers who can sound great in multiple styles, but I believe that's a rare breed!). So to be fair, I went back and listened to Yoko's songs on John and Yoko's "Double Fantasy" album. It seems a bit unfair for me to listen to it with John's songs interspersed, because it's putting one of the world's greatest songwriters (and beyond that, some of his greatest work) back-to-back with Yoko's new wave dance-oriented tracks. But, if you're willing to disconnect momentarily from that context of John's outstanding songwriting and judge Yoko's singing and songwriting against other new wave/alternative music, it's actually not too bad (esp if one considers it as ambient/dance/mood music, and not music intended to last for all time), and she is capable of carrying a tune. I think if she had had a bit less reverb and maybe a little chorus or something on her voice, it might have softened the effect into something a bit closer to what subsequent new wave artists were doing (with the rather neutral delivery and quirkiness of it being the point). When John Lennon talks about Yoko Ono being a precursor (if not an influence) to the B52's, I think there's actually some merit to that. Anyhow, I think your assessment is more than fair- pity she didn't have a vocal coach because I do believe she had some potential (within a sort of new-wave/artsy genre).
But, TBH, I also lost all respect-love for John, too, after hearing him try to sing along with the protesters on the street below their apt. (Im referring to that 1st? documentary about them).
I liked her vocals on Oh Sisters and several songs on the last album John recorded with her. Double Fantasy LP. It’s her screaming that sometimes irritates me. But they call it art. She’s expressing herself. Good analysis here. Thank you. 🫶🏼
@AdamSmith - It was only last night that I'd come across a clip with a live performance of her doing her famous 'Rock Lobster' noises while on stage together with John, Chuck Berry and some others - and that's kinda also what I'd expected to hear in this video and am pleasantly surprised by being wrong! 😀
@@AdamSmith-wq2cj- Ah! 😄 Maybe check out Yoko's song lauraallen55 had pointed me to meanwhile, 'The Death Of Samantha'! You may be just as surprised as I was! 😊
Very true. It's got to be deliberate here to express the pain and anger at her husband being murdered. She can sing in a pleasing manner when she wants to.
Thanks for the fascinating analysis. For me Yoko Ono isn't the easiest listen, but at least uses her own voice. I don't think it could be mistaken for anyone else!
Fil you're an amazing person with great patience to do this analysis. Although I listened to the entire video, it's still a 'no' for me. This is like trying to do an analysis on Ethyl Merman's grating singing voice😵💫 I enjoyed the parts where you tried to imitate Yoko's voice....all I can say is you definitely have skill Fil, I don't think anyone else could have done it as kindly as you did.❤
We would have had a different John Lennon if he hadn't gotten together with Yoko Ono and he seemed to have been happy with her. I was and am not a fan of Yoko Ono, but I think she deserves more respect. Thank you, Fil.
All I hear are the emotions of a woman grieving the brutal slaying of her love. It isn't sadness, it is "you'll never break me", rebellion. She is pleading and pushing on every note. Screaming into the heavens "WHY!".
Wow, I shouldn't have read so many comments. Ridiculing the woman seems to be the order of the day. Different cultures sing differently. There's a reason she sang this song as she did. Performance art is lost on a lot of people. Cultural differences in art (and otherwise) are not widely appreciated or even accepted, it seems. Yoko Ono influenced other musicians and certain genres of music. She also influenced and loved her husband, helped him start to understand that how he'd spent his life up until then thinking about and treating women was wrong. She did a lot of good. She did not break up the Beatles, but she did treat John's first son, Julian deplorably. Ftr, I am not a fan of her music for the most part, but I have heard some songs from her with a much softer/different style of delivery. All the ridicule-filled comments aside, reading so many stating she had no expression in her voice just floors me... I really don't know what to think of so many people commenting just to say she screeches/sounds like a cat/banshee/etc. are a little disappointing but, well, there we have it I suppose. I appreciate that you did the analysis Fil, very much
Right? I was pretty disappointed to read a lot of the comment as it seemed they were intent of being 'funny'. I was disappointed for Fil, as well. I'm happy to know someone else gets it. A lot of people here seem to think she was a big nobody before meeting John, but that's not true either. *Sigh.@@buddyneher9359
Thank you as well. I couldn't believe all that I was reading from people. Very saddened that people are so shallow and out for a laugh, and mostly seemingly disinterested in learning. They seemed to have said 'oh, thus is about Yoko Ono, so time to diss her woo hoo!' How disappointed I would be if I was Fil.@@sherrybirchall8677
Have you heard the expression someone is their funniest when they are not trying to be funny? I've watched lots of your videos and they are very informative but I've probably never laughed out loud in a couple spots like I did with this one. When you were explaining about her shouting with her voice in the kindest way possible by imitating her technique, I was catching a look in your eye every time you would pause a second and say to yourself what's the nicest way possible that I can say this. I was grinning all way. Anyway, thanks for this. I never paid much attention to her music but at least you've educated me enough to know that she definitely can carry a tune. It's just a total lack of finesse. And I just finished your Barbra video of Evergreen before watching this one so this was great.
I'm glad you took a look at Yoko. I take a lot of razzing for actually (running and hiding) liking Yoko's music. Not all of it mind you but when she is good she is quite good. I don't think this is one of her better performances. Have a listen to some of the early 70s stuff, Death of Samantha for instance. And her stuff on Double Fantasy is not bad/listenable. . Funny thing, I listen to Yoko when I'm at the gym hehe. Also I'd be interested to hear your thoughts on her vocalizations for which she is well known. She's not everyones cup of tea. She does have a very abrupt chest voicey delivery but I think a listen to Death of Samantha can show another dynamic. The studo remixes are great, there is a video out there as well but the audio isn't as good.
Finally, a comment that isn't saying how awful she is! She is not a singer I listen to but I do appreciate that she can sing. Her cultural influence to her singing is a turn off to many, including to me, but I don't find that a reason to diss her singing.
Agree. Her singing here seems to be about making this more of a militant protest song. It's a different interpretation; of a song she co-wrote. She has a wide variety of voices, and can imagine Patti Smith and Tom Verlaine and maybe even Lyndsey Buckingham having been influenced by her more or less radical singing styles in the early 70s. Her song-writing, too, has been innovative, can be very simple or cryptic, but touching and meaningful, and you can hear her influence there in Lennon's writing, as he acknowledged. One of my favourite American artists
Fil, you're the only person on this planet who could have gotten me to watch a "Yoko Sings John" video. But that's what friends are for. You walked between the raindrops very nicely. And I agree that Yoko isn't the worst singer I've ever heard either. But let's just say she's not on my playlist. I just don't understand why she belted the damn thing out like that. It's a wishful, wistful, longing feel. Not Ethel Merman belting out to the back of the house for God's Sake. Isn't Yoko an artist? What the heck kind of interpretation was that? Fil being as complimentary and diplomatic as a person can be listening to Yoko. Very well done Fil 👍
@@JanMike9 Yes, but her interpretation was garbage. You can protest without screaming and warbling off key. Give Peace a chance is a protest song too, but it’s not just screamed out. There’s a melodic structure. You Dig?
Yeah, I don't really care for all her choices here, but I can appreciate that she can sing and that she is singing according to what she to wants to do musically. She just doesn't want to do the things I would do in this song, and she shouldn't do anything other than what she wants to do. To me it sounds very hard, very aggressive, very stark. But considering that the songwriter for this song, her husband, was shot dead at the entrance of their home, maybe that's how she feels about that song. Maybe she doesn't want it to feel as gentle and 'easy' as the way John Lennon sang it. It's also a clear signal that the original isn't a sacred cow to her, she is more than willing to change the key, change the dynamics, and give it her own personal stamp. If anyone has the right to do that, she certainly does. I just think of her as an artist who is much more experimental, much more about abstraction than someone who just wants to 'sound pretty' or whatever. I would characterize myself as a 'sound pretty' singer, but I can at least appreciate the more abstract approach to music as well, even if I don't always "like" it in the conventional sense.
Bless your heart for enduring hours of listening to Yoko Ono to create this video and for being so kind and generous in your analysis. I hope you gift yourself with a good singer for your next video. I only listened to this because I respect you so greatly. BTW, I can't top the Dalek comment. It was spot on, unlike her performance of this beautiful Beatles song.
It's a John Lennon song that she helped him write. She's on the credits. This performance was probably performance art because that's what she did. I suspect it was purposely done in a harsh manner for a very personal reason; one that impacted the world. She does know how to sing less forcefully and harshly as I've heard several songs where she is very light and soft, pretty even.
Seriously, I'm only a little bit in, but she is hitting the notes, she has a full tone. She has vibrato. I think when people hear someone sing something in a style they don't like, they go overboard, and make false criticisms concerning being off pitch, and anything else they can think of. I realize she has done performance art that has involved screaming, and that has caused people to react negatively on everything she does, even things like this, where the problem is just stylistic. She does have the vocal capability to be a good singer.
I like that one too! She has several I like. She sounds different on different occasions depending on what she wants to convey due to her performance art background I suspect. In this one, I think the intention was anger and pain.
@@jimfritz2087 I’m not sure if I had or not..but I have heard her scream into microphones like a complete nutjob! I don’t know what she was thinking to act so ignorant. I was disgusted by it, honestly.
@@A.Briggs628 if you heard it , you would remember it ! The violinist , Eric Clapton putting his guitar down + walking off. I don't recommend it late at night though. Audio nightmare
I am an individual who cannot sing on my own, I am consistently flat and have no range. I have always been prejudiced against Yoko's singing, primarily because of her yelling and screaming, which may just be part of her performance art, and because I resented her relationship with John. However, with your analysis I recognize that she does indeed have certain talents I have overlooked. Although I may (will) not rush out to buy any Yoko Ono albums, I have a better understanding of her abilities and must change my opinions of her. Thank you again for your unbiased evaluation of peoples" abilities. I continually gain a better understanding of music and its intricacies from watching your videos.
This was really interesting! Thanks for explaining what it is about her voice that people find so off-putting, and that it isn't that she "can't sing at all". Since she has "the hard part" down of hitting pitch, do you think it is an artistic choice she is making to always sing this way? I mean, I don't know why she would, especially for a song like this, to sing so forcefully seems bizarre. But if it is technically easier to accomplish the dynamic range part than it is to get the pitch accuracy down, why not do it?
Yoko Ono was sharing an intense emotional experience with a crowd of thousands at Giants Stadium. Let's see the people making critical comments here try to pull that off. And while she doesn't have the most pleasant tone to her voice, she can sing in tune. But the thing is -- with all good singing -- emotion is what it's all about.
@@lauraallen55, I agree. Yoko may have what we would call a beautiful voice. I am not sure that she wishes to please our ears. She wants to disturb and disrupt and make you think differently about things in our world. Performing in a traditional way in order to better get her point across is exactly what she does not want to do. She wants to challenge, not bow to convention.
Bless your heart, Fil! Bless your heart!😅 I want you to be my lawyer, should I ever need one! You'd make me look great if I committed the most heinous crimes! Love you!
Thanks for doing this. She has a lot of haters. And this is obviously ammunition for them. I understand she is a pretty good classical pianist. Okay I’m not a fan but I have enjoyed a few of her pieces like … It Happened and Skating on Thin Ice. I’d be interested to see your analyses of those.
Yoko was never a singer. In her day, she was one of the movers and shakers in the London avant-garde art scene and one of the original avant-garde performance art artists. She is singing it like a protest anthem. To me, she is a very interesting woman. I think she sang it how she wanted to sing it. And I doubt she ever cared what anyone else thought. Thanks so much Fil. Now if you could tell people that John said she wrote most of this song.......
You really are a nice person Fil. A really nice person. I thought this would be off one of Johns first solo album. Who has seen the wind. She was suffering from beginners jitters. Maybe. Did I mention that you really are a nice guy Fil?
You deserve combat pay for this one Fil
Hilarious! Cut her mike haha.
😂😂😂😂😂
Yes! Fil is our newest War-Hero! 😂😂😂❤
@@Water_is_Sacred777
Ohhh, that’s been done before! Her mic was turned off a few times.
Thank goodness for the people who made it happen. 😊
@@A.Briggs628Yup the Yoko effect.
@@Water_is_Sacred777
Hahaha!
Thanks, my friend! Happy Holidays to you, and yours! 💕🥰🎼
Yoko has the subtlety and expressiveness of a Dalek about to attack. Full marks to Fil for keeping it constructive and positive.
So true lol. Love this comment. You made me laugh since I understand your reference to a Dalek. I am a Dr. Who fan too.
😂 Attacking Dalek Ono 😂
Ha ha! Perfectly put, I was wondering how to say it ;-)
...and trying not to laugh
IMAGINATE IMAGINATE IMAGINATE😅😅
She is adept at using the vocal dynamic of a person who is hailing a cab on a noisy, hectic, city street, combined with the enthusiasm of a tour guide.
Fil, you’re such a GOOD person! I love that you find goodness in everyone too!
I loved John and could listen to him all day long. I’m sure I could not do that with his widow.
Thank you, Fil 😊
Your analysis is so positive and fair, and I appreciate that. Personally, I would be fine with never hearing this version of the song again, haha. A cover by you, on the other hand, would be beautiful 😊.
Yes, please add this to your repertoire!!!
You said word that other reviewers have left out. And, that word is "fair." I think that you are fair too, in addition to Fil's fairness. Both of you gave Yoko's singing a chance, and that is great. Most of us were not fans of Yoko, but give credit where credit is due. The woman actually can sing. Too bad she just made a bunch of noises when she was with John. She could have complimented his voice with real singing if she had applied herself to that.
I saw John Lennon & the Plastic Ono Band at the 69 Rock & Roll Revival Concert in Toronto, with Eric Clapton as his guest guitarist. When Lennon took the stage the crowd erupted, and after doing a half dozen songs, Yoko screamed through two songs. Horrible would be an understatement, and thankfully we brought enough weed to get through it
Lol 😂
That’s awesome that you’re there. Love it. After suffering through hours of current top 40 at Starbucks I’m yearning for anything pre 1977.
If you endured two songs of her screaming it had to be the weed. Good on you for being prepared. LOL
omg whatta crack up, on the weed saving you guys during those couple Yoko screeches!! I can imagine❤
@@carlasainz95😆
Dude, as a guy who grew up with this when it came out............ I have never wanted to mute one of your videos Fil, but damn. 😃
Yes, I had to turn off the sound and video.
You are spot on about the pitch correction. I'd rather hear a not great singer than the over auto-tuned fake music forced upon us nowadays.
Perfect example of an objective analysis in assessing a vocalist's technique and skill level.
On point about the bilingual factor contributing to delivery and style of performance.
You need to look up Yoke ruining Chuck Berry and John Lennon's duet on the Mike Douglas show. The look on Chuck's face when Yoko jumps in is priceless.
The sound engineer cut her off in that video
@dosrios9517 the hero we didn't deserve. Lol
Coincidentally, I'd come across that clip only only 1 day before _this_ video was posted! 😄
Seen it!
Yoko: starts to screech.
Chuck: (⊙ˍ⊙)
If a woman can really sing, like Annie Lennox, Chrissie Hynde, Beth Hart, Montserrat Caballé etc. I get tears in my eyes. Yoko makes me snort.
Annie Haslam!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
She reminds me a bit of Ethel Merman!
@@barbaramilone2800I hope I got the joke. I'm not a native English speaker.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Oh Fil what did we do to you to deserve this punishment? Did you see the video where John is singing with Chuck Berry & she just starts shrieking? Chuck is like WTF is that??? Sorry Fil you can't convince me on this one!😂😂😂
The look on Chuck Berry's face.
😂 I was just thinking of Chucks reaction. Priceless!
I was about to comment about that Chuck Berry performance, also. If I remember correctly, as soon as the stage people saw Berry's face, they unplugged YoNo's microphone.
I had to look it up. YEGADS! What in the actual blazes?! What is wrong with that woman?! For the life of me, I have never known what he saw in her. What hideous shrieking! Why would she do this? Absolutely sickening.
@@Lilah1754 😂🤣
I hate autotune but in Yoko's case I'll make an exception.
I was going to comment something similar.
I would watch a video of her being autotuned just to see how damn good that program really is because as she is, it`s fingernails on the chalkboard.
😂😂😂
Autotune wont help because she is basically (mostly) in tune. Her problem seems to be one of having two volume settings: 0 and 11.... Every note hits like a truck.
Yes, 😆 Would be a good idea!
Phil, you're just too nice of a guy, there should be more people like you.
Fil seems he would be a great guy to go to the pub and talk music with.
He's being _objective._ Rather than falling in with the (weirdly) still resonant bitterness toward Ono, he has considered and explained the _context_ of this performance, explained some of the features of her voice and her style, qualified his judgements accordingly - and pointed out all the evidence that shows Ono did indeed sing in tune.
Yep - her style is very different to what we've been used to.
I'd like to see how so many critics here would go, just tapping their toe along to a jazz piece in 7/8 or maybe 5/4 time - much less when it changes.
It sounds as if she is trying to do a comic interpretation of Ethel Merman. But man, it's tough listening to her any time.
Now I can only hear it as Ethel Merman….LOL
Oh wow..i posted ethel, then saw this afterwards.. we must both be old😢
Ethel Merman! That's the name I was looking for! Ethel Merman with no redeeming qualities!
Haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, you tell it !
Yeah, a PARODY of Ethel Merman. Ouch!
I'm not into Yoko Ono and I don't care about her singing, but I do appreciate you pointing out all the good things about her voice, as only you can do. Thank you Fil, that was a great analysis! 😉👍
Yes, I agree, he's probably the only one who can
Well, both of them, anyway. The time she was in tune, and the time she quit making noise.
my sister had to spend a whole day with Yoko related my sister's work ... said she couldnt have been nicer and more selfless throughout the day
I have heard that she is a very nice person! Yours is sadly the third comment here that is not putting her down for one of many reasons.
A friend was a minor cog in a professional meeting in Yoko’s apartment. She said she looked prettier and softer in person.
I've heard that about her, and also about Janis Joplin@@Prehab224
A friend was a minor cog at some sort of meeting at Yoko’s. She said she was much prettier and softer looking in real life.
@@lauraallen55 This is not about her person but about her singing. Being nice doesn't make her a good singer.
Actually this is the best I have ever heard her sing. She did some crazy stuff 50 years ago.
Listen to "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" from Some Time in New York City.
@@PFNelplease please NO!
That Japanese yodelling thing she did was horrible.
That’s exactly what I was thinking. All I remember was really shrieking, painful sounding, nonsense.
Thank you Fil, she just sang like she is from an Asian culture as how they hear and express notes and tones. Many blessings to you and your Family. Fil I really loved your singing of the line not the only one
Thank you. Because she is from that culture.
I have heard Japanese folk songs and pop songs from Asian cultures and none of them sounded like her.
@@M0odyBlue now that I read your comments I believe you are absolutely correct
@@M0odyBlue She is much more Kabuki than folk songs or pop songs.Kabuki uses sounds, yelling, etc, much like her performance art pieces in New Your when she was around John Cage
@@jdjohnson7299 You’re right. I never spent much time with Kabuki. I really like Japanese folk music, though.
Great fair comments. But I do think to be even fairer, one of Yoko's solo songs could be analysed, such as Nobody Sees Me Like You Do, or Hell in Paradise where comparison with a certain John Lennon is less likely! Without his long and much-loved shadow and THAT song Yoko is much like other punk or Indie voices of their era, albeit a bit ahead of her time! She is of the Neo Dada school of thought - kind of anti-art, deconstruction of the normal aesthetic for political or ethical reasons so is she actually succeeding in her aim? I think so. Yoko sings according to her belief system, some works I enjoy, others not so much 😊
Well said!
Now that you've isolated her vocal, you can cage it and send it elsewhere.
😂😜🤪
OMG, that's brutal! 🤣
😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂
Yassss...put it on a rocket and launch it into space
Lennon appreciated art in an abstract context from an early age, and that stretched him as an artist both before and with Yoko Ono. Yoko was a significant element of his growth in his later Beatle days and for the remainder of his life. Respect art and you respect Yoko. Only the shallow and childish take a piss on Yoko.
Well there are lots of childish people here in the comments who don't realize that she most likely deliberately chose to sing this particular song at that period in time in a harsh and abrupt manner. However, it seems unnecessary to ridicule her and make tired jokes at her expense, but that's what has been done in droves here.
I was really surprised by her singing. And she sang Imagine very respectfully and I could understand her words. I only seen videos of her that she was making a statement but not singing. Seen a video where Chuck Berry made a face. The thing too, is John loved her. She was that comfort for him in his world as a music star full of people who weren't all that trustworthy. She sang it as her self and she sang it the best she could with the voice she had. Thanks to your analysis of her, some of us have gotten to see a side of her most people didnt see including me 👍🙂👍
No
Mary Pang ?
Maybe it's just me, but I can't bear to listen to her sing. You have eardrums of steel, Fil. Seriously.
😂Sorry Yoko, Like nails on a chalkboard!! 😱
Her last name is "O-NO" for a reason!! 😂
Fil has got a heart of gold, and ears of steel!! ❤💋
It’s not just you! I vaguely remember a video Fil made years ago of the worst songs ever. Someone in the comments mentioned a specific Yoko song (I don’t remember which one, and my ears can’t bear to search for it).
One of her aural assaults is called “Why”. I think that defines her “music career” in a nutshell.
:::::::Plugging Ears::::::: One exposure is enough. Thank you. Great Job as usual Fil.
@@SuziQ. And the word "why" seems to be the only lyric that she shrieks.
@@jeffmckee1825 , 😂 O, no. See the video with Chuck Berry and John Lennon, where she interrupts (a live broadcast) with shrieks, and other odd sounds. The audio tech finally pulled her plug. 😂
Try to listen to the B side of 1969's Plastic Ono Band's "Live Peace in Toronto." I had a cat who actually attacked the stereo because I played it for a minute or two.
😹😸😹🙀😹😸😹
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😹😹😹
But why overly criticise this because you hated that?
@@sherrybirchall8677 What did I "overly criticize?"
Good for you for sticking to the analysis and not wading into judgment. ❤
To me she has a grating voice that I personally find irritating. Imagine my surprise that she can actually sing with accuracy. Thank you for this analysis. I think lol.
I’m right there with ya!!
It’s irritating. The Dalek comment was spot on.
Not _liking_ Ono's style, and not _grasping_ that she sings in tune.... One is a subjective view - very easy and convenient. The other is an objective view - and that's too hard for some folk. 🙄
@assininecomment1630 I am grateful to hear at all. I will admit that my ears lack the acuity required for detailed hearing. After several years of not being able to listen to music at all I am amazed. I stand by my right to enjoy or not to enjoy what I do hear .
@@assininecomment1630 ,
Grasping that she can sing in tune does not negate the reactions of most listeners’ ears that her voice is physically painful to hear for a lot of us.
Actually, in my opinion she does a great rendition of this song. Her husband sung it gently with soft onset, trying to make this world a bit better. Her husband was murdered. So she sings his song, yelling harshly, not allowing to forget what was done to him. Brava!
That is an astute observation.
Oh dear. Ok. 🤔 you’re so objective and respectful of performance, Fil. But…😱
Appreciate what you do. 🙏❤️
The Yoko can't sing stuff comes from the early Plastic Ono Band music where she was deliberately doing all sorts of strange vocalizations while John was playing noisy guitar. She did do later recordings where she sang more conventionally. She could write songs as well and actually co-wrote "Imagine". (Quote from Wiki: "Shortly before his death, Lennon said that much of the song's lyrics and content came from his wife, Yoko Ono, and in 2017 she received co-writing credit.)
Yoko was Johns wife, he was being nice.
@@davejones1226 Or maybe she really did co-write it. She had a career as an artist before she met John.
I think she helped him write it, truly. She has never been lacking in artistic/creative talent. Ftr I am not a fan of her singing.@@davejones1226
I think he wanted to give her something (royalties).
@@davejones1226and Imagine was hardly one of John’s more sophisticated songs.
It is a testament to you that I am listening to this. Yoko Ono is an incredible performance artist, but this... it is a no for me.
It's a no for me too
Incredible performance artist? Name what performance of hers is incredible.. please.
When you say incredible, I blv you actually mean just credible. Not to my taste either.
captain j.t.kirk sounds better.
I was trying to say something nice. Since you asked though Cut Piece. @@allennewborn936
It's the quality (?) of her voice that grates on my ears AND my last nerve.
Thank you Fil for giving her a free voice lest
😂Sorry Yoko, Like nails on a chalkboard!! 😱
Her last name is "O-NO" for a reason!! 😂
Fil has got a heart of gold, and ears of steel!! ❤💋
As someone who cannot sing I can have an opinion...Can Yoko sing ? THAT WOULD BE A NO !!!!!!!!!
😂Sorry Yoko, Like nails on a chalkboard!! 😱
Her last name is "O-NO" for a reason!! 😂
Fil has got a heart of gold, and ears of steel!! ❤💋
Agree 100%! LOL
It would be a no if she couldn't sing, but she can. As someone who cannot sing, I definitely recognize Yoko Ono as someone who can sing. I enjoy her albums.
@@Heidishereandthere Therefore you also think Lisa Ono cannot sing and that her ancestors chose the last name "Ono" because she would not be able to sing? Where's your proof of that? "Ono" translated to English is not an "Oh no" of dismay. I've bought albums of both Yoko Ono and Lisa Ono and I think they're great.
I have heard Yoko sing in person a couple of times in New York, once with John Lennon. Yeh, I wouldn't buy her album, but I appreciate her enthusiasm. I sing in a choir of three in a tiny church. i can't read music, don't sing well, but I give it my all. Yoko and I are soul sisters though she is more on pitch then I am. Fil I think you are the kindest soul. You analyze each person/band with such care. I have learned so much from you.
Dear God help us.
😂
God did help us, and Yoko Ono is it. :-)
Oh my. You are a brave man Fil. I have never heard this before, thankfully, but it wasn't as horrifying as I expected. I will never heard it again. I did get a giggle every time you cracked a smile while Yoko "sang".
You are so good at analyzation.. you made this a great learning experience instead of 💩
*analysis*
Thank you Fil for a constructive criticism of Yoko Ono. While it would seem she has room for improvement, I get the impression she is giving it her all in her singing. I believe she has the passion for singing, even if somewhat flawed. The fact that she seems passionate about her singing, gives a respect her for her efforts. Kindness is the key to analyzing a singer that is a bit imperfect and you have demonstrated that in your analysis . Thank you again for professional, caring analysis...Rock...
Check out her song Death of Samantha to hear another side of her - they light, soft, airy side.
I'm absolutely no Yoko fan but I know a lot of popular vocalists who aren't a lot better but are compensated for by their fans' blind devotion.
You're very good at holding back your laughter ...
Well I can mark this off my list! Thanks Fil.
You are so kind, Fil.....
Too kind in this case.
I have a Japanese album where she only sings in her language and it’s lovely.
She can sing very pleasingly when she wants to yes!
Filistine! You are way too kind. But because of you, I now know why Yoko just sounds like she is yelling instead of singing. I could not listen to her for any extended period of time. Other people have suggested analyzing another song she did, but please, I couldn't take any more!
😂Sorry Yoko, Like nails on a chalkboard!! 😱
Her last name is "O-NO" for a reason!! 😂
Fil has got a heart of gold, and ears of steel!! ❤💋
For sure! @@Heidishereandthere
I guess I'm the only person in the comments who appreciates Yoko's performance. At times she sounds like she is about to cry. Imagine her experience and what this means to her.😢
I appreciate it too. I was kind of disappointed at so many nasty comments about the woman.
It was the best performance from her that I have heard... I'll give you that.
Have you heard the Death of Samantha or Walking on Thin Ice? In this performance I think she was trying to convey anger and disappointment. In those songs he voice is very light and sweet. She has some fair amount of talent.@@robyn3349
I am disheartened by these unthinking haters as well. And I don't feel harsh or unfair in calling them "unthinking" as they are dissing her pitch, which is perfect, and her tone, which is full, and other unmerited barbs. I thought it was a very expressive and heartfelt rendition, and I'm glad to have heard it.
The second one I've seen (after a good while). Ono is the one
I can’t do it!!
Wait! Let me turn down the volume!
I did have to turn down the volume!
I just turned it off at the first hint of screamy. But the comments are a lot of fun.
Her voice is 80% of the way there. But the 20% that's lacking leaves it really harsh and abrupt, especially when isolated. It's also a very dry vocal track and not well engineered on the recording. I'll have to watch the original video with the backing track to get a better idea of how it fits together in the mix. A Lennon, she is not. But, it takes a lot of balls to go on tour with that vocal style. I have to give her credit there. UPDATE: After watching the original (a few times), it isn't nearly as bad. It comes across that she is singing proudly with John in mind. She speaks at the beginning as well and has a very heavy accent which she clearly struggles with while singing. Can't say anything bad about her. She is 90 years old now and likely to see John again soon. I'm sure he's proud of her.
Why is "Wings of Pegasus" so compelling?? Incredible entertainment. .... Anyway, Team Yoko here, personally I love when she makes those crazy f*cking sounds.
Chuck Berry video with John and Yoko singing is priceless!
So is the video of Eric Clapton reacting to her singing.
My singing voice is very similar to yoko and when someone makes me really mad, ill sing and make them hear it.
Now that's wicked......I approve,
as another Yoko-infused 'singer'
Me as well. I get lots of requests when I sing, but it's mostly for two songs that I don't know, they are "Shut up and go away" and "Stop that or I'll hurt you".
😂Sorry Yoko, Like nails on a chalkboard!! 😱
Her last name is "O-NO" for a reason!! 😂
Fil has got a heart of gold, and ears of steel!! ❤💋
Fil lol Bro what a great view! Appreciate you covering this one,what a excellent job Ty .
Cheers! To continued success friend!
What a blast it has been friend watching you Grow. It means alot to me (us) as I spent years teaching and sharing the knowledge of music, Absolutely the best content on this subject on RUclips & that's a fact! Ty, Luv&Peace 💛✌🏼💫
There is no way this Woman can sing......My Cat holds a note more accurately
😂😂😂
A bit of an accent there
I thought she sounded like Ethel Merman also.
She does sing accurately though...
She's not singing, she's shouting, more or less in key.
While I do understand Fil is only looking for her abilities as a singer, I must say there is more than hitting the notes. She has not the timbre to sing this song suitably, and also not the right feel which this song requires. If it was meant as a try to dare a different interpretation, then it fails on me.
It is the similar to shouting PEACE AND LOVE!
@9:32 Fine tuning dynamics. I think that's the biggest issue here.
John didn't always hit the right notes either. However, he was an expert in dynamics, expression, nuance, and feel of his vocals. And he intrinsically knew when, where, why, and how to apply them.
Absolutely. And he could sing in a very soft but perfectly controlled voice. It was all about expression. Yoko has one register only. Some of her records are listenable because she uses double-tracked voices and reverb and other production tools (I like Season of Glass, in fact), but as a rule she tramples over the melodies like the proverbial elephant. Yes, I do have almost all of her records.
All your points are well taken, but her point as an artist was always to challenge the audience to think differently about what we accept as everyday normal so her point was never to be a good singer. I believe if she wanted to, she could have been a more conventional singer, but that wasn't something she wanted to do, she wanted to sing this way and basically make us all say 'what the...' However, as you point out, she is able to sing in tune, so it is the presentation that is the message...it isn't about singing like garbage as some did in the Punk movement to prove a different point. I saw her in Battery Park in the early 2000s with DJ Spooky and it was unlike anything I have ever heard, especially when she really got going with the primal noises, screams and sensual sounds. As with most art of this type, I don't like it per se, but I am glad that someone found expression through it and that it exists. In effect, you listen to Yoko Ono because it is so strange and different, not because it is good singing.
It's kind of like looking at the work of avant garde painters. Some people think Picasso, just as an example, didn't have conventional skill in drawing, etc. He did, but his vision took him in a different direction. My point being that Yoko could sing well by traditional standards, when she chose. Someone in comments here mentioned The Death of Samantha. I went and listened, and was really impressed.
Hi Fil,
Oh My… if Tiny Tim and Ethel Merman had a baby I think it would be YOKO Ono! Lol… You are truly the Master of The Video Analysis Illusion… cuz this was painful! Kudos to you for trying to find anything good about this woman’s singing! Good to look at: NO, pleasant to listen to: NO, Singing technique: ZERO! Oh please let them autotune and pitch correct her! Great job sitting through this nonsense and trying to find a silver lining…!! You Are The Best, love ya’ Debbie☮️
She planned every sound she made. The avant garde style is all worked out. Her third album, Approximately Infinite Universe, is all sung without sounding like......well Yoko. I rather like it. Not the avant garde stuff.
Yoko has a dynamically emotional voice reminiscent of Ethel Merman.
😂😂😂
That’s exactly what I said… too funny!
I'll join you all in thinking this and not in a bad way. Just is what it is.
After reading your comment, I heard what you are referencing. However, I would much rather listen to Ethel singing this with all due respect to Yoko for trying.
hahaha
Maybe better react to a studio version not a live version, she isn't used to that. She can soud very soft like in "I Have A Woman Inside My Soul" and "Listen The Snow Is Falling"
In some places Yoko reminds me of Ethel Merman. As usual, your analysis is thorough and well thought out.
Yes! That's who she reminds me of!
Yes, I knew she reminded me of someone. Definitely Ethel Merman. Only Ethel was better.
Kind of sounds like Edith Bunker.
Bravo, Fil for your open-minded approach in your analysis of Yoko Ono's vocal performance. I was surprised to hear that her voice was accurate pitch wise and used vibrato--as you mentioned, she was consistent. I'm more used to hearing her making these Tarzan-like sounds. Just my opinion--I thought she sounded like Ethel Merman, maybe a rock version of her. Thanks Fil for maintaining a constructive perspective in your analyses. It's always a true pleasure to learn from you!
I also thought of Merman, lol!! Giggles
Oh no no no no. I listened to a little bit and just couldn't take any more.
It may be worth looking at why John Lennon liked the way she "sang", he had an idea about a new way of singing, which is why he liked the B-52's Rock Lobster. It's complicated. Listen to his interview about the B-52's. There is a video of Fred Schneider explaining it.
Rock Lobster was actually in tune, and with good harmony. Just saying.
Can’t say that I’m a fan of Yoko Ono’s singing but I certainly appreciate your professionalism, Fil. Hard to listen to her but you were heaven on the ears. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
I love the diplomatic intro 😃
I think so much of singing is finding the right kind of music that fits your voice and style (there are some great versatile singers who can sound great in multiple styles, but I believe that's a rare breed!). So to be fair, I went back and listened to Yoko's songs on John and Yoko's "Double Fantasy" album. It seems a bit unfair for me to listen to it with John's songs interspersed, because it's putting one of the world's greatest songwriters (and beyond that, some of his greatest work) back-to-back with Yoko's new wave dance-oriented tracks. But, if you're willing to disconnect momentarily from that context of John's outstanding songwriting and judge Yoko's singing and songwriting against other new wave/alternative music, it's actually not too bad (esp if one considers it as ambient/dance/mood music, and not music intended to last for all time), and she is capable of carrying a tune. I think if she had had a bit less reverb and maybe a little chorus or something on her voice, it might have softened the effect into something a bit closer to what subsequent new wave artists were doing (with the rather neutral delivery and quirkiness of it being the point). When John Lennon talks about Yoko Ono being a precursor (if not an influence) to the B52's, I think there's actually some merit to that. Anyhow, I think your assessment is more than fair- pity she didn't have a vocal coach because I do believe she had some potential (within a sort of new-wave/artsy genre).
She had vocal training as a teenager in Japan
While I don't care for Yoko's vocals, it is interesting to hear the tone of her voice like this. Thank you for this piece of musical history Fil❤❤❤❤❤❤
I’m more impressed with her voice than I thought I would be tbh. I’ve seen footage of her wailing away and assumed she couldn’t hold a note!
But, TBH, I also lost all respect-love for John, too, after hearing him try to sing along with the protesters on the street below their apt. (Im referring to that 1st? documentary about them).
I liked her vocals on Oh Sisters and several songs on the last album John recorded with her. Double Fantasy LP. It’s her screaming that sometimes irritates me. But they call it art. She’s expressing herself. Good analysis here. Thank you. 🫶🏼
@AdamSmith - It was only last night that I'd come across a clip with a live performance of her doing her famous 'Rock Lobster' noises while on stage together with John, Chuck Berry and some others - and that's kinda also what I'd expected to hear in this video and am pleasantly surprised by being wrong! 😀
@@mightyV444 it was the Chuck Berry concert I was thinking of, and also some of the Live in New York 1969 music.
@@AdamSmith-wq2cj- Ah! 😄 Maybe check out Yoko's song lauraallen55 had pointed me to meanwhile, 'The Death Of Samantha'! You may be just as surprised as I was! 😊
Uses her chest voice and even high notes in her range, pretty good. She doesn't want to have a light, trained sound, she wants to convey words.
Very true. It's got to be deliberate here to express the pain and anger at her husband being murdered. She can sing in a pleasing manner when she wants to.
God bless you, Fil. I couldn't make it to the end......
This was such a respectful and unbiased analysis. Thank you for doing this one!!
Thanks for the fascinating analysis. For me Yoko Ono isn't the easiest listen, but at least uses her own voice. I don't think it could be mistaken for anyone else!
Have you heard her songs where she's actually intending to sound pleasing? She was trying to sound harsh here I think.
On the Double Fantasy album she sang on “Yes, I’m Your Angel” and it was lovely, she is also an accomplished pianist.
Fil you're an amazing person with great patience to do this analysis. Although I listened to the entire video, it's still a 'no' for me. This is like trying to do an analysis on Ethyl Merman's grating singing voice😵💫
I enjoyed the parts where you tried to imitate Yoko's voice....all I can say is you definitely have skill Fil, I don't think anyone else could have done it as kindly as you did.❤
We would have had a different John Lennon if he hadn't gotten together with Yoko Ono and he seemed to have been happy with her. I was and am not a fan of Yoko Ono, but I think she deserves more respect. Thank you, Fil.
Yoko oh no! You are such a professional, Fil to analyze this objectively. I can only imagine the outtakes, though😅
Eeek, do you think there were out takes 😱
All I hear are the emotions of a woman grieving the brutal slaying of her love.
It isn't sadness, it is "you'll never break me", rebellion. She is pleading and pushing on every note.
Screaming into the heavens "WHY!".
Wow, I shouldn't have read so many comments. Ridiculing the woman seems to be the order of the day.
Different cultures sing differently. There's a reason she sang this song as she did. Performance art is lost on a lot of people. Cultural differences in art (and otherwise) are not widely appreciated or even accepted, it seems.
Yoko Ono influenced other musicians and certain genres of music. She also influenced and loved her husband, helped him start to understand that how he'd spent his life up until then thinking about and treating women was wrong. She did a lot of good.
She did not break up the Beatles, but she did treat John's first son, Julian deplorably. Ftr, I am not a fan of her music for the most part, but I have heard some songs from her with a much softer/different style of delivery.
All the ridicule-filled comments aside, reading so many stating she had no expression in her voice just floors me... I really don't know what to think of so many people commenting just to say she screeches/sounds like a cat/banshee/etc. are a little disappointing but, well, there we have it I suppose.
I appreciate that you did the analysis Fil, very much
I commented something similar to you, in that she was an avant garde performance artist above all else. But haters wanna hate, I guess.
Right? I was pretty disappointed to read a lot of the comment as it seemed they were intent of being 'funny'. I was disappointed for Fil, as well. I'm happy to know someone else gets it. A lot of people here seem to think she was a big nobody before meeting John, but that's not true either. *Sigh.@@buddyneher9359
Thank you for your thoughtful, and accurate analysis. ❤
Thank you as well. I couldn't believe all that I was reading from people. Very saddened that people are so shallow and out for a laugh, and mostly seemingly disinterested in learning. They seemed to have said 'oh, thus is about Yoko Ono, so time to diss her woo hoo!' How disappointed I would be if I was Fil.@@sherrybirchall8677
Have you heard the expression someone is their funniest when they are not trying to be funny? I've watched lots of your videos and they are very informative but I've probably never laughed out loud in a couple spots like I did with this one. When you were explaining about her shouting with her voice in the kindest way possible by imitating her technique, I was catching a look in your eye every time you would pause a second and say to yourself what's the nicest way possible that I can say this. I was grinning all way. Anyway, thanks for this. I never paid much attention to her music but at least you've educated me enough to know that she definitely can carry a tune. It's just a total lack of finesse. And I just finished your Barbra video of Evergreen before watching this one so this was great.
I'm glad you took a look at Yoko. I take a lot of razzing for actually (running and hiding) liking Yoko's music. Not all of it mind you but when she is good she is quite good. I don't think this is one of her better performances. Have a listen to some of the early 70s stuff, Death of Samantha for instance. And her stuff on Double Fantasy is not bad/listenable. . Funny thing, I listen to Yoko when I'm at the gym hehe. Also I'd be interested to hear your thoughts on her vocalizations for which she is well known. She's not everyones cup of tea. She does have a very abrupt chest voicey delivery but I think a listen to Death of Samantha can show another dynamic. The studo remixes are great, there is a video out there as well but the audio isn't as good.
Finally, a comment that isn't saying how awful she is! She is not a singer I listen to but I do appreciate that she can sing. Her cultural influence to her singing is a turn off to many, including to me, but I don't find that a reason to diss her singing.
Agree. Her singing here seems to be about making this more of a militant protest song. It's a different interpretation; of a song she co-wrote. She has a wide variety of voices, and can imagine Patti Smith and Tom Verlaine and maybe even Lyndsey Buckingham having been influenced by her more or less radical singing styles in the early 70s. Her song-writing, too, has been innovative, can be very simple or cryptic, but touching and meaningful, and you can hear her influence there in Lennon's writing, as he acknowledged. One of my favourite American artists
Nice to read a few comments that aren't all about being 'funny' talking about how horrible she sounds.@@rotagorretni
Fil, you're the only person on this planet who could have gotten me to watch a "Yoko Sings John" video. But that's what friends are for. You walked between the raindrops very nicely. And I agree that Yoko isn't the worst singer I've ever heard either. But let's just say she's not on my playlist.
I just don't understand why she belted the damn thing out like that. It's a wishful, wistful, longing feel. Not Ethel Merman belting out to the back of the house for God's Sake. Isn't Yoko an artist? What the heck kind of interpretation was that? Fil being as complimentary and diplomatic as a person can be listening to Yoko. Very well done Fil 👍
'Imagine' is inherently a song of protest, but Lennon knew he could slide it past those who were thick because he sang it sweetly. Dig it?
@@JanMike9 Yes, but her interpretation was garbage. You can protest without screaming and warbling off key. Give Peace a chance is a protest song too, but it’s not just screamed out. There’s a melodic structure. You Dig?
Her singing scares me! Not my cup of tea.
Yeah, I don't really care for all her choices here, but I can appreciate that she can sing and that she is singing according to what she to wants to do musically. She just doesn't want to do the things I would do in this song, and she shouldn't do anything other than what she wants to do. To me it sounds very hard, very aggressive, very stark. But considering that the songwriter for this song, her husband, was shot dead at the entrance of their home, maybe that's how she feels about that song. Maybe she doesn't want it to feel as gentle and 'easy' as the way John Lennon sang it. It's also a clear signal that the original isn't a sacred cow to her, she is more than willing to change the key, change the dynamics, and give it her own personal stamp. If anyone has the right to do that, she certainly does.
I just think of her as an artist who is much more experimental, much more about abstraction than someone who just wants to 'sound pretty' or whatever. I would characterize myself as a 'sound pretty' singer, but I can at least appreciate the more abstract approach to music as well, even if I don't always "like" it in the conventional sense.
Coincidentally, the pitch wave looks like ear daggers.
Bless your heart for enduring hours of listening to Yoko Ono to create this video and for being so kind and generous in your analysis. I hope you gift yourself with a good singer for your next video. I only listened to this because I respect you so greatly. BTW, I can't top the Dalek comment. It was spot on, unlike her performance of this beautiful Beatles song.
It's a John Lennon song that she helped him write. She's on the credits. This performance was probably performance art because that's what she did. I suspect it was purposely done in a harsh manner for a very personal reason; one that impacted the world. She does know how to sing less forcefully and harshly as I've heard several songs where she is very light and soft, pretty even.
Also reminds me of a movie I saw recently Meryl Streep as Florence Foster Jenkins, a New York heiress known for her generosity and poor singing.
😂Haha yeah, great movie actually.
@@MissJensk1oh...yes, it's a very touching performance from the incomparable Meryl...
Yes! I love that movie!
Seriously, I'm only a little bit in, but she is hitting the notes, she has a full tone. She has vibrato. I think when people hear someone sing something in a style they don't like, they go overboard, and make false criticisms concerning being off pitch, and anything else they can think of. I realize she has done performance art that has involved screaming, and that has caused people to react negatively on everything she does, even things like this, where the problem is just stylistic. She does have the vocal capability to be a good singer.
The difference is that poor Florence actually could not hit pitches accurately, and Yoko does.
I actually love the way she sings Luck of the Irish with John. It's a folksy sound. Doesn't even sound like the same woman.
I like that one too! She has several I like. She sounds different on different occasions depending on what she wants to convey due to her performance art background I suspect. In this one, I think the intention was anger and pain.
I hope you analyse that clip of her singing with John Lennon and Chuck Berry
Good lord..NO! 😂 that’s the worst thing I’ve ever heard in my life!
Ooh!!
@A.Briggs628 did you hear her on the R. Stones RnR Circus 1968 ?
@@jimfritz2087
I’m not sure if I had or not..but I have heard her scream into microphones like a complete nutjob! I don’t know what she was thinking to act so ignorant. I was disgusted by it, honestly.
@@A.Briggs628 if you heard it , you would remember it ! The violinist , Eric Clapton putting his guitar down + walking off. I don't recommend it late at night though. Audio nightmare
I am an individual who cannot sing on my own, I am consistently flat and have no range. I have always been prejudiced against Yoko's singing, primarily because of her yelling and screaming, which may just be part of her performance art, and because I resented her relationship with John.
However, with your analysis I recognize that she does indeed have certain talents I have overlooked. Although I may (will) not rush out to buy any Yoko Ono albums, I have a better understanding of her abilities and must change my opinions of her.
Thank you again for your unbiased evaluation of peoples" abilities. I continually gain a better understanding of music and its intricacies from watching your videos.
This was really interesting! Thanks for explaining what it is about her voice that people find so off-putting, and that it isn't that she "can't sing at all". Since she has "the hard part" down of hitting pitch, do you think it is an artistic choice she is making to always sing this way? I mean, I don't know why she would, especially for a song like this, to sing so forcefully seems bizarre. But if it is technically easier to accomplish the dynamic range part than it is to get the pitch accuracy down, why not do it?
Even you can't guess exactly what this is...
@@roryblake7311 🤣
Yoko Ono was sharing an intense emotional experience with a crowd of thousands at Giants Stadium. Let's see the people making critical comments here try to pull that off. And while she doesn't have the most pleasant tone to her voice, she can sing in tune. But the thing is -- with all good singing -- emotion is what it's all about.
I believe she was expressing her emotions by singing it the way she sang it, tbh.
@@lauraallen55, I agree. Yoko may have what we would call a beautiful voice. I am not sure that she wishes to please our ears. She wants to disturb and disrupt and make you think differently about things in our world. Performing in a traditional way in order to better get her point across is exactly what she does not want to do. She wants to challenge, not bow to convention.
Very well said and describes her personality very well too!@@Silverhaired59
this is going to be painful.
Bless your heart, Fil! Bless your heart!😅 I want you to be my lawyer, should I ever need one! You'd make me look great if I committed the most heinous crimes! Love you!
Thanks for doing this. She has a lot of haters. And this is obviously ammunition for them.
I understand she is a pretty good classical pianist.
Okay I’m not a fan but I have enjoyed a few of her pieces like … It Happened and Skating on Thin Ice.
I’d be interested to see your analyses of those.
Analyze Ethel Merman's singing. Many find her voice shrill but I like it.
no amount of pitch control nor being in tune can salvage her rendition of this song. The only thing I’m imagining is fingernails on a chalkboard
Yoko was never a singer. In her day, she was one of the movers and shakers in the London avant-garde art scene and one of the original avant-garde performance art artists. She is singing it like a protest anthem. To me, she is a very interesting woman. I think she sang it how she wanted to sing it. And I doubt she ever cared what anyone else thought. Thanks so much Fil. Now if you could tell people that John said she wrote most of this song.......
Yes Yoko has her own keys and notes😊
She sings in key. She hits the notes accurately. Those critiques are inaccurate. Don't go overboard just because you don't like her artistic choices
You really are a nice person Fil.
A really nice person.
I thought this would be off one of Johns first solo album.
Who has seen the wind.
She was suffering from beginners jitters. Maybe.
Did I mention that you really are a nice guy Fil?