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The poem inspired Lennon’s title and hook: I am the walrus, koo-koo-kachoo. “To me, it was a beautiful poem,” Lennon told Playboy in 1980.
“I Am the Walrus” became a modest hit in the United States — if that. It reached No. 56 on the Billboard Hot 100 and stayed on the chart for four weeks.
The Beatles’ “I Am the Walrus” became a very modest hit. It peaked at No. 56 on the Billboard Hot 100, remaining on the chart for four weeks.
It’s one of the strangest songs The Beatles ever released, and over half a century later, 'I Am the Walrus' is still confusing people.. A kaleidoscope of sirens, surrealism and nonsense poetry ...
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 ...
The false walrus, which Dr. Boisville and his colleagues named Ontocetus posti, belongs to a group of marine mammals that first appeared around five million years ago on the Pacific Coast of North ...
Watch Oasis Play ‘I Am The Walrus’ at Final Show Before Bitter Breakup The Gallagher brothers haven't played a note of music in public since walking off-stage of England's V Festival on August ...
The Beatles ended as a rock band in 1970, the year John Lennon sang that “the dream is over” on his first solo album. Yet the Beatle business rolls on, revising the history of the band’s ...
Beatles songwriter and musician John Lennon opened up about the lyrics that had many fans confused - famously admitting Glass Onion was a 'throwaway song' ...