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List of Yoko Ono albums

Yoko Ono Album - Feeling the Space

Yoko Ono Album - Feeling the Space (Front side)
Album Information :
Customers rating: (10 ratings)
Release Date:1997-07-22
Type:Audio CD
Genre:Experimental, Experimental Rock, Pop, Pop/Rock Music, Popular Music, Rock, Rock/Pop
Label:Rykodisc
UPC:014431041921
Approx. Price:$11.98 (USD)
Track Listing :
1 . Growing Pain
2 . Yellow Girl (Stand By For Life)
3 . Coffin Car
4 . Woman Of Salem
5 . Run, Run, Run
6 . If Only
7 . Thousand Times Yes
8 . Straight Talk
9 . Angry Young Woman
10 . She Hits Back
11 . Woman Power
12 . Men, Men, Men
13 . I Learned to Stutter/Coffin Car [Live][#][*] - John Lennon, Yoko Ono
14 . Mildred, Mildred [#][*] - John Lennon, Yoko Ono
Customer review - 1999-05-15
- Very compelling and interesting - a favorite of mine
I treasured this record for years and now finally have it on CD. I love almost every song - especially Mildred, Mildred recorded at an impromptu session with John Lennon during the Bank Street period. Women Power is a classic as well as well Women of Salem. Wonderful and highly recommended!
Customer review - 1999-03-15
- Yoko's best pop/rock album
More so than any of their previous collaborations or dual releases, "Feeling The Space" could stand along with John's "Mind Games" (released the same year) as two halves of the whole. Here, Yoko shows she was paying attention to John's world, even while he was learning from her. This is the debut of Yoko Ono, pop songwriter. A great, great album from a woman who will always be under an unfair burden. While sadly her next great album would be "Season Of Glass", then the brilliant "Onobox", this is Yoko writing about difficult issues, but in a musically positive mood, with many clever melodic tricks obviously filtered through from her husband. This album (and Onobox), leaves you wishing she had done more in this vein.
Customer review - 2001-11-01
- Second Best Feminist Album from the 70's
First best is the album Yoko did right before this Approximately Infinite Universe. You want a picture of what the world was really like for women in the early-mid 1970's listen to Yoko.
Customer review - 2000-10-29
- Both pop and jazzy with a very articulate, directed Yoko
When you listen to "Feeling The Space" along with her cuts on "Sometime In New York City" you see a more articulate, directed energy emerging from Yoko. The womens' condition and movement is very much in the forefront of her thoughts as a woman and as an artist. You now see the primal sounds of yesterday turn to a very pronounced voice in need of a more structured form in which to communicate. I believe this contrast heightens and helps to reveal the deeper undertones Yoko uses when she creates and expresses her thoughts, feelings and experiences through her arts. Yoko's abstract and advant-garde work speaks very clearly to me, and sometimes the more structured and "coherent" form seems more distracting. However, the lyrics during this and her later periods are poignant and sometimes good poetry. The womens movement has greatly changed since the early seventies, so sometimes the lyrics seem a little dated, as women take ceo positions and show they are as ruthless, petty and blind as were some of their male predecessors they so loudly condemned. Equality and justice are surely "ideals" to strive for. Womens' equality and human rights must surely remain on the forefront of our individual and collective consciousness. It's just that too much and too narrow of a perspective (in this case woman) the message becomes dated and tiresome. That is not to say that this cd hasn't much to say and worth the effort. I would say that POB and Fly speak with a clearer and more universal voice than FTS. FST remains an important and very listenable collection. Take the time to sift through this collection, and you will find some gold nuggets. I especially liked the two bonus tracks, the live "talking" intro by Yoko is not dated.
Customer review - 1999-02-06
- Woman Power
This album, the last of the Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band period, is quite a different step from the direction Yoko had been heading with previous recordings. On this, her 4th solo LP, Yoko opted for a smoother, more jazzier style than the pre-alternative rock she had been venturing into on "Fly" and "AIU".

Here we find an album about women, for women and by a woman. Most songs deal with the stress and strain of women trying to survive in a male-dominated society, however you don't have to be a woman to enjoy this album. Songs like "Angry Young Woman", "She Hits Back", and the album's single "Woman Power" could have easily been anthems for the feminist movement. Others like "Yellow Girl", "Coffin Car", and "Woman of Salem" depict the damage done to woman by the ongoing oppression of the male society.

This album also features many other fine moments. The song "Run, Run, Run", a single in Europe and Japan, deals with drug addiction and a world passing you by without your knowledge. The key lyric of the song, "Feeling the room, Feeling the space, when suddenly I noticed it wasn't spring anymore", is quite a reality check in itself.

The highlight of the album though is it's closing track, a song titled "Men Men Men". Here Yoko turns the tables on men by depicting what she seeks in a man and not the other way around as was custom at the time. Yoko gives a hats off to Mae West in the songs final refrains when she breathfully beckons "Come up and hmm-hmm, come up and see me sometime." In probably one of the most clever lyrics of the time,Yoko announces "Ladies and Gents, I'd like to introduce you to...my lower half, without whom I won't be breathing so heavily!" This is concluded with "Honey juice, you can come out of your box now." then after the song fades you hear John's voice simply saying "Yes, Dear".

This album was definately a step in a different direction, but shows where Yoko was heading when she recorded the ill-fated "A Story". That album which was shelved after her reconciliation with Lennon, was not to see the light of day until almost 20 years later when several tracks were featured on disc 6 of Onobox.

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