Product Details
Live Peace in Toronto

Live Peace in Toronto
John Lennon

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Track Listing

  1. Blue Suede Shoes
  2. Money (That's What I Want)
  3. Dizzy Miss Lizzy
  4. Yer Blues
  5. Cold Turkey
  6. Give Peace A Chance
  7. Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking For Her Hand In TheSnow)
  8. John John Let's Hope For Peace

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #111537 in Music
  • Released on: 1995-05-01
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Live

Customer Reviews

A Real Mixed Bag (no pun)3
In the LP days, when I originally bought this, it made sense.

You could play the raucous, raw rock n roll of the first side and never need to listen to the screeching of a nameless band member on Side Two. This person also makes some noise on side one, but it's mainly drowned out by John and Eric's guitars.

Seriously, you have to have the first six songs because John's in fine voice, the songs are great and the (un-rehearsed!) band is just right. I love Eric's 'Yer Blues' solo when he suddenly runs out of ideas and fretboard!

If it was released as a six track CD, with the 'deletion bonus' of no **** tracks, this would get five and a half!

Half Brilliant3
Let’s be honest. Side One (Lennon) is superb. Side 2 (Yoko) is at best of historical interest. Yoko has done far better than this. This is Yoko at her most violently avant garde and it grates on the ears. She would find her mark with later albums, in particular on ’Approximately Infinite Universe’ (1972) and ’Feeling The Space’ (1973) and of course later on the wonderful ’Double Fantasy’ sessions. But here she is just annoying I am afraid.
But so to Side One. Here we hear Lennon in front of a live audience for the first time since the Beatles’ last tour of 1966. He is altogether a different animal. He sings a riveting version of Carl Perkins’ ’Blue Suede Shoes’, a really heavy and magnificent version of ’Money’ so that it is a different song altogether. There follows loud and slightly ragged versions of ’Dizzy Miss Lizzy’, ’Cold Turkey’ and the White album track ’Yer Blues’. They had after all only rehearsed for this concert on the plane on the way over to Toronto. There is also a spirited version of ’Give Peace A Chance’. So most of all this is historical document. Lennon…in concert….without the Beatles. Quite an event in itself.
But it is this Side One from Lennon which makes this album memorable. And even then we have to put up with intrusive yelps and screams for Yoko on these Lennon numbers. Which are completely misjudged. Don’t get me wrong. I am a big Yoko fan both of her music and her spirit. But here she is just intruding. And is seemingly completely unoblivious to the fact.
So this album is somewhat frustrating. To either buy or to listen to. But, at its best, for me for example on the heavy version of ’Money’ which runs rings around its 1963 Beatles’ recording, it is utterly brilliant. Almost worth 4 stars, but reduced to 3 on account of Side 2 I am afraid.
And what happened to the free calendar?

historical recording better viewed than heard3
'Live Peace in Toronto' features the famous august 1969 show given by Lennon and an ad hoc Plastic Ono Band including Eric Clapton, Klaus Voorman and Alan White, notable as being the first solo performance by one of the Beatles before their break up. This is also the only one of the four early Lennon albums you're likely to play more than once. Given they hadn't rehearsed much the band play well, especially on the oldies ('Blue suede shoes', 'Money', 'Dizzy Miss Lizzy'), which are enjoyable. The then-new Lennon numbers ('Cold turkey' and 'Give peace a chance') sound half-finished, however, and don't add much to the single versions you may know - hearing GPAC on this concert makes you realise it's only a fragment of a song really. The Yoko numbers, originally conveniently tucked away on the B-side of the album, aren't really songs but noise manifestations. The extensive CD booklet is a 1995 calendar with nice photos and John and Yoko quotes. Altogether, this is only a half-enjoyable album with mainly historical value. But, since it starts out agreeably, this album is ideal for subtly letting your guests know it's time to go home: by the time they have sat through a couple of minutes of the first Yoko track, they'll probably reach for their coat. If you're truly interested in what this show was like, the Lennon DVD 'Sweet Toronto' is a much better bargain: it's much cheaper than this album, includes footage of the whole POB show PLUS some good rock 'n' roll tracks by Bo Diddley, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Little Richard, and a small Yoko documentary.