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Audio
Format                                   : FLAC
Format/Info                              : Free Lossless Audio Codec
Duration                                 : 22 min 43 s
Bit rate mode                            : Variable
Bit rate                                 : 621 kb/s
Channel(s)                               : 2 channels
Channel layout                           : L R
Sampling rate                            : 44.1 kHz
Bit depth                                : 16 bits
Compression mode                         : Lossless
Stream size                              : 101 MiB (100%)
Writing library                          : libFLAC 1.3.0 (UTC 2013-05-26)


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Wedding Album commemorated their wedding in Gibraltar on 20 March 1969. Although it was the final instalment in their trilogy of avant garde and experimental recordings, the couple continued to document their lives on tape until Lennon’s death in 1980.

Wedding Album was credited simply to “John & Yoko”; their surnames did not appear anywhere on the sleeve or record labels.

The two sides of the vinyl disc each contained a single track. John And Yoko was a 22-minute recording of Lennon and Ono crying, whispering, speaking and screaming each others’ names, at varying volumes and tempos, over the sound of their heartbeats.

They had previously released the sound of their unborn child’s heartbeat on the Life With The Lions track Baby’s Heartbeat, but this was the first time they had used their own non-vocal bodily sounds in their recordings.

The couple first recorded John And Yoko at EMI Studios, Abbey Road, on 22 April 1969, in a session beginning at 11pm and finishing at 4.30am the following morning. Five days later they returned to remake the track, with recording and mixing completed between 3pm and 8pm.

The released version was a combination of the 22 and 27 April recordings. Lennon edited the two together on 1 May 1969.

The album’s second side was titled Amsterdam, and featured recordings made during their first bed-in for peace. The 25-minute track began with Ono singing John John (Let’s Hope For Peace), which was later performed at the Toronto Rock and Roll Revival festival and released on Live Peace In Toronto 1969.

Much of Amsterdam consisted of interviews given by Lennon and Ono, explaining their campaigns for peace, and discussions with each other. The speech was also interspersed with the sounds of seagulls, industrial noises, traffic, children playing and sitars.

Peace is only got by peaceful methods. The establishment knows how to play the game of violence. They can’t handle peaceful humour.
John Lennon
Amsterdam
As the bed-in was discussed in the past tense during the recording, it is likely that parts of the recording were made in London or elsewhere after the event.

Four other musical interludes were also included: Lennon performing a brief blues-style composition on an acoustic guitar, featuring the words “Goodbye Amsterdam Goodbye”; Ono singing Grow Your Hair, a song about peace and staying in bed, with Lennon on guitar; an a capella rendition of The Beatles’ song ‘Good Night’; and Bed Peace, a brief recitation of the words “Bed peace” and “Hair peace”.

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The third long player of experimental recordings by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Wedding Album was released by Apple in 1969.

It was like our sharing our wedding with whoever wanted to share it with us. We didn’t expect a hit record out of it. It was more of a… that’s why we called it Wedding Album. You know, people make a wedding album, show it to the relatives when they come round. Well, our relatives are the… what you call fans, or people that follow us outside. So that was our way of letting them join in on the wedding.
John Lennon, 1980
BBC
The couple’s first collaboration, Two Virgins, marked the beginning of their relationship and artistic partnership. The follow-up, Life With The Lions, mostly documented their 1968 stay in London’s Queen Charlotte Hospital, where Ono suffered a miscarriage.

Wedding Album commemorated their wedding in Gibraltar on 20 March 1969. Although it was the final instalment in their trilogy of avant garde and experimental recordings, the couple continued to document their lives on tape until Lennon’s death in 1980.

Wedding Album was credited simply to “John & Yoko”; their surnames did not appear anywhere on the sleeve or record labels.

The two sides of the vinyl disc each contained a single track. John And Yoko was a 22-minute recording of Lennon and Ono crying, whispering, speaking and screaming each others’ names, at varying volumes and tempos, over the sound of their heartbeats.

They had previously released the sound of their unborn child’s heartbeat on the Life With The Lions track Baby’s Heartbeat, but this was the first time they had used their own non-vocal bodily sounds in their recordings.

The couple first recorded John And Yoko at EMI Studios, Abbey Road, on 22 April 1969, in a session beginning at 11pm and finishing at 4.30am the following morning. Five days later they returned to remake the track, with recording and mixing completed between 3pm and 8pm.

The released version was a combination of the 22 and 27 April recordings. Lennon edited the two together on 1 May 1969.

The album’s second side was titled Amsterdam, and featured recordings made during their first bed-in for peace. The 25-minute track began with Ono singing John John (Let’s Hope For Peace), which was later performed at the Toronto Rock and Roll Revival festival and released on Live Peace In Toronto 1969.

Much of Amsterdam consisted of interviews given by Lennon and Ono, explaining their campaigns for peace, and discussions with each other. The speech was also interspersed with the sounds of seagulls, industrial noises, traffic, children playing and sitars.

Peace is only got by peaceful methods. The establishment knows how to play the game of violence. They can’t handle peaceful humour.
John Lennon
Amsterdam
As the bed-in was discussed in the past tense during the recording, it is likely that parts of the recording were made in London or elsewhere after the event.

Four other musical interludes were also included: Lennon performing a brief blues-style composition on an acoustic guitar, featuring the words “Goodbye Amsterdam Goodbye”; Ono singing Grow Your Hair, a song about peace and staying in bed, with Lennon on guitar; an a capella rendition of The Beatles’ song ‘Good Night’; and Bed Peace, a brief recitation of the words “Bed peace” and “Hair peace”.

Cover artwork
Unusually for the time, Apple released Wedding Album as a lavish box set. It included a reproduction of the marriage certificate, a 16-page booklet of press cuttings labelled ‘The Press’, a picture of a slice of wedding cake, a poster of black-and-white photos taken on their wedding day, a ‘Hair Peace/Bed Peace’ postcard, a PVC bag labelled ‘Bagism’, and a strip of four passport photographs of the happy couple.

The vinyl disc was housed in a plain white inner sleeve, inside a laminated gatefold picture sleeve. The package was designed by John Kosh, with photography by Mlle Daniau, Richard DiLello, John Kelly, Nico Koster, David Nutter and John and Yoko.

Wedding Album was available on vinyl, cassette tape and 8-track tape. The elaborate packaging led to a delay in the album being issued. It eventually appeared in the United States on 20 October 1969, and in the United Kingdom on 14 November.

The album was digitally remastered and reissued on compact disc by the Rykodisc label in 1997. It included three bonus tracks: Who Has Seen The Wind? was written by Yoko Ono and originally appeared as the b-side to ‘Instant Karma’; Listen, The Snow Is Falling was the b-side to Happy Xmas (War Is Over); and Don’t Worry Kyoko (Mummy’s Only Looking For Her Hand In The Snow) was a previously unreleased acoustic recording made at Queen Charlotte Hospital, London.

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Tracklist

1 John Lennon / Yoko Ono*– John And Yoko 22:41
2 John Lennon / Yoko Ono*– Amsterdam 25:54

Bonus Tracks

3 John Lennon / Yoko Ono* With Plastic Ono Band*– Who Has Seen The Wind
Lyrics By – Yoko Ono
Lyrics By [Original Lyrics By] – Christina Rossetti
2:03
4 John Lennon / Yoko Ono* With Plastic Ono Band*– Listen, The Snow Is Falling
Lyrics By – Plastic Ono Band*, Yoko Ono
3:22
5 John Lennon / Yoko Ono* With Plastic Ono Band*– Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking For Her Hand In The Snow)
Lyrics By – Yoko Ono
2:14

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