The song was written during Lennon and Ono's "Bed-In" honeymoon in Montreal.[1] When asked by a reporter what he was trying to achieve by staying in bed, Lennon answered spontaneously "Just give peace a chance". He went on to say this several times during the Bed-In.[1] Lennon asked his press officer, Derek Taylor to find a recording engineer. On 1 June 1969, in Room 1742 at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal, André Perry, owner of a local recording studio, arrived and used a simple setup of four microphones and a four-track tape recorder he brought with him.[2][3]
The day after the recording, Perry engaged and recorded three professionnal singers from Montreal to add back vocals to the production, among them Mouffe and Robert Charlebois, who was a famous pop-star in Quebec and in France. [4]
Some years later, Perry recalled the occasion and spoke about the challenges of getting a good sound out of the recording. Because of the room's poor acoustics, he said, the raw recording could not have been released without help:
Originally there were no intentions to have any over-dubs done. But when I left John, he looked at me and I said, 'Well, I'll go back to the studio and listen to this and see what it's like.' And then I decided that the background was a bit too noisy and needed a little 'sweeping.' By this I mean, we kept all the original stuff, we just improved it a bit by adding if you like, some voices. So we called a bunch of people in the studio that night, I did, actually that was my decision. And that's probably why John gave me such a credit on the single.[5] And since it was multi-track I dubbed the original 4-track to an 8-track machine and then used the other 4-tracks to overdub some voices. The next day I went back to John [with the mix]. They moved everybody out of the room and it was just the three of us, with Yoko, and I played it for him and he thought it was wonderful. Kept it 'as is.' There's a story going around about overdubbing in London, England. Nothing was overdubbed in England. The only thing that was overdubbed, like I said, is some of these people, and the reason why I did it, is I wanted to give him some kind of option. You see the point of the matter, it's not that we wanted to cheat anything, it was a question of like, not usable, the condition was absolutely terrible. [We took] the original stuff that was there, and added a few voices in a cleaner recording environment.[6]
Songwriting credits
When initially released in 1969, the song was credited to Lennon–McCartney.[7]
John Lennon expressed his regrets about being "guilty enough to give McCartney credit as co-writer on my first independent single instead of giving it to Yoko, who had actually written it with me."[8]
"Give Peace a Chance", backed with Ono's "Remember Love" as the B-side, was released on 4 July 1969 in the UK,[nb 1] and a few days later on 7 July 1969 in the US.[nb 2][11] The song reached number 2 in the UK Singles Chart,[12] and number 14 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US.[13]Billboard described it as "an infectious rhythm ballad" with "clever arrangement and performance."[14]
A live concert performance of the song is included on Live Peace in Toronto 1969. (Source: Apple Records) John, Yoko, and the Elephant's Memory performed the song on the Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon in September 1972. (Source: YouTube)
After being issued as a single, it appeared on album in a truncated form for the singles compilation Shaved Fish in 1975. The track's first full-length album appearance was on the 1982 compilation The John Lennon Collection. Although technically the first "solo" single released by a member of The Beatles while the band was still active, the artist credit was to the Plastic Ono Band, not John Lennon.[19] Shortly after Lennon's 1980 murder, fans gathered outside the Dakota and sang "Give Peace a Chance".[7] The single re-charted in the UK in January 1981, peaking at number 33.[11] The song is one of three Lennon solo songs, along with "Instant Karma!" and "Imagine", in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.
On 4 March 2022 at 08:45 (CET), 150 European public radio stations broadcast this song for peace and against the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine[20]
and on 8 March at 12:00 (CET), 200 European private radio stations did the same.[21] The Rockin' 1000 performed this song for the opening of the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2022, also in reaction to the invasion.[22]
On 1 June 2008, the 39th anniversary of the song's recording, the first of three digital-only (and thus environmentally friendly) singles were released through Twisted Records exclusively on Beatport with remixes featuring a newly recorded vocal by Yoko Ono.[34] It reached number one on the BillboardHot Dance Club Play chart on 16 August 2008. These are not the first versions Ono has done of this song: in 2004, she did a new version for Wake Up Everybody; in 2005, a version recalling the events of the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks on Peace, Love & Truth; and one of the first remixes with the lyrics used in this mix was released on the Open Your Boxremix album. The last installment was released 18 February 2009, Yoko's birthday.
Track listings
Mindtrain/Twisted TW50066 (released 1 June 2008)
Dave Aude Club Mix (8:26)
Dave Aude Dub (8:26)
Johnny Vicious Warehouse Dub (8:23)
Mike Cruz Dub (8:40)
Tommie Sunshine Vocal Mix (6:41)
Morel's Pink Noise Vocal Mix (6:42)
Morel's Pink Noise Dub (7:09)
Double B Full Vocal Mix (6:57)
Mindtrain/Twisted TW50069 (released 1 July 2008)
Phunk Investigation Mix (7:45)
Eric Kupper Vocal Mix (8:50)
Mike Cruz Extended Vocal Mix (10:25)
DJ Dan Dub (8:53)
Tommie Sunshine Give Peace a Dub (6:40)
Morel's Canister Dub (7:23)
Mike Cruz Vocal Edit Mix (8:40)
Mindtrain/Twisted [TW50070] (released 18 February 2009) [The International Remixes]
Blow-Up Popism Mix (5:00)
Blow-Up Electrono Mix (6:44)
Kimbar Vocal Mix (8:11)
Kimbar Dub Mix (6:54)
Tszpun Remix (8:17)
Tszpun Dub Mix (8:11)
Alex Santer Peaceful Mix (6:11)
DJ Meme Club Mix (9:54)
Findo Gask Time for Action Dub (5:56)
CSS Mix (4:12)
Richard Fearless Reach Out Mix (7:05)
Karsh Kale Voices of the Tribal Massive Mix (5:55)
U2 have performed the song in concert at least 27 times in whole or as a snippet, the first time on 13 December 1980 at the Paradise, Boston, Massachusetts and the last time on 18 May 1998 at Waterfront Hall, Belfast, Northern Ireland.[37]
The song has been used in films, television shows and theatre as it has become a recognised semiotic to indicate protest; for example it was sung by students in the 1974 film The Trial of Billy Jack, and by peace activists in the 1996 film Pretty Village, Pretty Flame. The song was featured in an episode of the TV series Mad About You in 1995.
Hot Chocolate released the song as their debut single on the Apple label, Apple 18, as 'Hot Chocolate Band', in a reggae version in October 1969.
Elton John recorded the song as a B-side to his UK single "Club at the End of the Street" in 1990. He also performed the song live on his 1970 US tour with bassist Dee Murray and drummer Nigel Olsson, singing only the refrain "All we are saying is give peace a chance".
The refrain is sung in the background during the Your Move section of Yes' 1971 release "I've Seen All Good People". The song also references Lennon's "Instant Karma!".
Louis Armstrong recorded the song on 29 May 1970, for an LP entitled Louis Armstrong and Friends (aka What a Wonderful World). The 1970 Louis Armstrong recording was released as a Philips 7" 45 A side single in the UK, 6073 703.
The metal band Aftermath recorded and released the song as a single in 2020. The version was mentioned in both the official John LennonFacebook and Twitter pages.
A version of the song in Russian by Jackie-O, Sati Akura, Onsa Media and others was released March 26, 2022, after Secretary-General António Guterres' reference at the start of an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council on the Ukrainian War.[39]
^ abNoyer, Paul Du (2010). "John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band". John Lennon: The Stories Behind Every Song 1970–1980 (Rev. ed.). London: Carlton Books Ltd. p. 21. ISBN978-1-84732-665-2.
^ abDu Noyer, Paul (2010). "John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band". John Lennon: The Stories Behind Every Song 1970–1980 (Rev. ed.). London, England: Carlton Books Ltd. p. 25. ISBN978-1-84732-665-2.
^Norman, Philip (2008). John Lennon: The Life. Doubleday Canada. p. 608. ISBN978-0-385-66100-3.
^MacDonald, Ian (2005). Revolution in the Head (2nd revised ed.). Pimlico. p. 358. ISBN978-1-84413-828-9.
^Noyer, Paul Du (2010). "Shining On". John Lennon: The Stories Behind Every Song 1970–1980 (Rev. ed.). London: Carlton Books Ltd. p. 14. ISBN978-1-84732-665-2.