27 January 1970 Recording: Instant Karma! by Plastic Ono Band - TopicsExpress



          

27 January 1970 Recording: Instant Karma! by Plastic Ono Band The third single by Plastic Ono Band, Instant Karma!, was written, recorded and mixed on this day. John Lennon wrote the song on the morning of 27 January 1970, on an upright piano at Tittenhurst Park, his mansion in Ascot, Berkshire. It just came to me. Everybody was going on about karma, especially in the Sixties. But it occurred to me that karma is instant as well as it influences your past life or your future life. There really is a reaction to what you do now. Thats what people ought to be concerned about. Also, Im fascinated by commercials and promotion as an art form. I enjoy them. So the idea of instant karma was like the idea of instant coffee: presenting something in a new form. I just liked it. John Lennon, 1980 All We Are Saying, David Sheff Keen to record the song as soon as possible, Abbey Roads Studio Two was hastily booked. The session began at 7pm. Eric Clapton, who had played on the previous Plastic Ono Band single Cold Turkey, was unable to attend the session at such short notice, so Lennon invited his Beatle bandmate George Harrison instead. Harrison suggested to Lennon that Phil Spector produce the session. John phoned me up one morning in January and said, Ive written this tune and Im going to record it tonight and have it pressed up and out tomorrow - thats the whole point: Instant Karma, you know. So I was in. I said, OK, Ill see you in town. I was in town with Phil Spector and I said to Phil, Why dont you come to the session? There were just four people: John played piano, I played acoustic guitar, there was Klaus Voormann on bass, and Alan White on drums. We recorded the song and brought it out that week, mixed - instantly - by Phil Spector. Instant Karma was recorded in 10 takes between 7pm and midnight. The basic track featured Lennon on acoustic guitar, Harrison on electric guitar, Voormann playing bass, Alan White on drums and Billy Preston playing electric piano. From midnight until 3am a number of overdubs were added. Spector decided to omit the guitars, and instead added heavy reverberation to the drums, and various extra keyboard parts. These included Lennon and Voormann on electric piano, Harrison and White on a grand piano, and an additional Hammond organ part. Mal Evans also added chimes during the chorus. Considerable echo was also added to Lennons lead vocals. It was then decided that a choir was needed for the chorus. Evans and Preston rounded up volunteers from Hatchetts nightclub in London, and three tracks of backing vocals and handclaps were recorded. The singers were conducted by Harrison; Allen Klein was reportedly one of the performers. From 3-4am the song was mixed four times in stereo. Geoff Emerick had been the balance engineer until Spector decided his presence was making him edgy and he was asked to leave. Emerick later claimed that the final version, the fourth attempt, was a rough mix which Spector had marked Do not use, but Lennons haste to release the song meant it was issued on the UK single regardless. https://youtube/watch?v=1GGCfjWmgrQ
Posted on: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 09:22:36 +0000

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