Yoko Ono – It´s Alright (I See Rainbows) (1982)

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Its´s Alright (I See Rainbows) is the sixth solo album by Yoko Ono, and her second release after the death of husband John Lennon. As a variation of a theme concerning its predecessor, the back cover features a transparent image of Lennon in a then-contemporary photo of Yoko and Sean, depicted in Central Park. This album marks her first foray into new wave sounds and 1980s pop production. It charted at #98 in the US.

All songs were written, composed, arranged, produced, and sung by Ono.

Although still mourning the death of John Lennon, Yoko found herself looking toward the future with It’s Alright. With a more upbeat pop approach, Yoko found herself played on some radio stations with the cut “Never Say Goodbye,” even if it contained soundbites from John calling out her name. She’d gone through hell and now was finding her own place in the world of rock music.

Here we have a fifty-year-old Japanese woman performing synthesizer-based pop that’s more adventurous than much of the music currently being ground out by Europersons half her age. Indeed, “Dream Love,” the most aurally striking of the ten songs on Yoko Ono’s second solo album since John Lennon’s death, is a lush, electro-seaside chant that puts one in mind of those masters of British lunar elegance, Ultravox. And the eerie electronics concocted for such cuts as “Never Say Goodbye,” “Let the Tears Dry” and “Spec of Dust” sometimes suggest Kraftwerk in their most spectral mode.

This committed and convincing avant-gardism is all the more intriguing when considered alongside Ono’s ongoing affinity for the American girl-group sound of the early Sixties. Inasmuch as her precariously pitched voice — which is not unattractive — does tend at times to drift into “Angel Baby” territory, this predilection for simple hooks and light, bouncy harmonies may be instinctive.
Whatever the case, it’s genuinely charming, and “My Man,” the album’s single, is as forthright and engaging in its woozy sentimentality as, say, “Bobby’s Girl.”

This is not to denigrate Ono’s latest batch of lyrics, the bulk of which deal with her unabated feelings of loss over Lennon. But as that senseless event recedes in time — along with the bad old buzz about her being “the woman who broke up the Beatles” — we may begin at last to see Ono as an artist of unique resources in her own right.
Ono could hasten this perception by assembling her own recording band: the array of studio pros she currently employs are certainly slick, but they add no saving grace to such marginal tracks as the tuneless sub-reggae “Wake Up” and the equally anemic “Tomorrow May Never Come.” Ono’s quirky gift for melody, her engaging experimentalism and her refreshing optimism are qualities that could win her an audience well beyond the hard-core Lennon cult.

 

Tracklist

1.  “My Man” – 3:56
2.  “Never Say Goodbye” – 4:25
3.  “Spec of Dust” – 3:31
4.  “Loneliness” – 3:47
5.  “Tomorrow May Never Come” – 2:26
6.  “It’s Alright” – 4:23
7.  “Wake Up” – 3:47
8.  “Let the Tears Dry” – 2:24
9.  “Dream Love” – 4:53
10.  “I See Rainbows” – 3:15

All songs written by Yoko Ono.

Personnel

Technical
  • Brian McGee, John Davenport, Jon Smith – engineer
  • Bob Gruen – photography

Notes
Released:  29 November 1982
Recorded  at: Studio The Hit Factory, New York City
Genre:  Pop, New Wave
Length:  36:43

Label – Polygram Records

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