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"The
Plastic Ono Band is a conceptual band," said
John Lennon to writer David Sheff in 1980. "There is no
Plastic Ono Band. It's just an idea...there is no
Plastic Ono Band like there is a
Beatles or another group. That's why there's never the same musicians twice." While
Lennon coined the phrase
Plastic Ono Band on a whim, he stuck with the moniker through most of his solo career, applying it to whoever was backing him up at a given moment, and his wife and creative partner
Yoko Ono also used the name, and continues to use it into the 21st century.
The
Plastic Ono Band rubric made its debut with the release of
John Lennon's single "Give Peace a Chance," which was recorded during
Lennon and
Ono's "Bed-In for Peace" in Montreal, Canada following their marriage in June of 1969. With a handful of well-known friends in attendance (and
Tommy Smothers joining
Lennon on acoustic guitar), the performance was captured on a portable recording rig and
Lennon opted to release it under the name
the Plastic Ono Band, inspired by a set of plastic music stands he was using. (One of
Yoko Ono's compositions, "Remember Love," appeared on the flip side.) In September,
Lennon and
Ono performed at the Toronto Rock & Roll Revival Festival, where the couple's quickly assembled backing band (
Eric Clapton on guitar,
Klaus Voormann on bass, and
Alan White on drums) was again billed as
the Plastic Ono Band, and their performance was released on the LP
Live Peace in Toronto 1969. (An expanded version of the band from
Live Peace in Toronto, including
George Harrison,
Delaney & Bonnie, and
Bobby Keys, appeared at a UNICEF benefit in London the following December.) And
Lennon would release a handful of singles under the
Plastic Ono Band banner between 1969 and 1971, including "Cold Turkey," "Instant Karma," "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)," and "Power to the People."
In December 1970,
Lennon and
Ono reminded the world
the Plastic Ono Band was a joint project by simultaneously releasing
John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band and Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band, two albums that were recorded with the same set of musicians during the same set of recording sessions. For the 1972 album
Some Time in New York City,
Lennon and
Ono used the
Plastic Ono Band moniker while also crediting
Elephant's Memory, the New York-based band who were collaborating with the couple at the time, essentially giving the musicians two identities on one album. In 1973,
Ono would release two more albums as
Plastic Ono Band projects,
Approximate Infinite Universe and Feeling the Space, while
Lennon began playing with the band name in the '70s; 1973's
Mind Games introduced the Plastic U.F.Ono Band, and 1974's Walls & Bridges featured a credit for the Plastic Ono Nuclear Band. When
Lennon and
Ono returned to the music scene in 1980 after several years away from the spotlight, they opted to simply use their given names, and the
Plastic Ono Band label was retired until 2009, when
Yoko Ono released her album Between My Head and the Sky as
Yoko Ono/
Plastic Ono Band (with
Sean Lennon as part of the group).
Ono used the same billing for 2013's
Take Me to the Land of Hell, and she's used the moniker to credit her backing musicians at a number of live performances from 2009 onward. ~ Mark Deming