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  • American Songwriter

    Behind the Meaning of Steely Dan’s Response to John Lennon, “Only a Fool Would Say That”

    By Alex Hopper,

    2024-07-31
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0dPcxN_0ujKivnD00

    I heard it was you / Talking ’bout a world where all is free / It just couldn’t be / And only a fool would say that are the titular lyrics in Steely Dan‘s “Only a Fool Would Say That.” Based on the title alone, one could likely guess that this song is somewhat cutting. But just who are Steely Dan pointing a finger at? Well, as it turns out, another musical icon: John Lennon. Uncover the meaning behind this track, below.

    [RELATED: Ranking the 5 Best Songs on ‘Pretzel Logic,’ Steely Dan’s Quirky Standout of an Album]

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    Behind the Meaning of Steely Dan’s Response to John Lennon, “Only a Fool Would Say That”

    Lennon famously bared his desires for the world to know peace. Many would scoff at that idea. Lennon even acknowledged that in the lyrics in “Imagine”: You may say I’m a dreamer / But I’m not the only one. Steely Dan certainly thought the Beatle was dreaming.

    The duo wrote “Only a Fool Would Say That” in response to Lennon’s tour for peace, in which he and Yoko Ono staged peaceful protests. The “Bed-Ins” shared a similar sentiment to “Imagine.” Lennon and Ono fought to end wars and close social divides. To Steely Dan, however, that idea seemed almost impossible.

    You do his nine to five

    Drag yourself home half alive

    And there on the screen

    A man with a dream

    In “Only a Fool Would Say That,” they chide Lennon for being out of touch with reality. In the lines above, they shine a light on the fact that Lennon can spend his day dreaming of a better world, while the everyman has to live in it and muddle through. It’s certainly a strong opposition to Lennon’s peace-forward mentality.

    Everyone will have their own opinions on the subject. What do you think? Do you agree with Steely Dan and believe Lennon had his head in the clouds? Or are you in Lennon’s camp, dreaming up a better world?

    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Bush/UPI/Shutterstock

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    Betty Sanchez-Mallory
    08-13
    I agree with Steely Dan. JL preached to us that all we needed was love, but all he needed was a do-over family and a luxury apartment in NYC. It’s easy to sit up there and wax poetic, but Lorenzo, the bus driver from the Bronx once said, “let’s see him go to work every day for a living. The working man is the hero!” JL ignored his firstborn son, but couldn’t stop fawning over his son with Yoko, writing a song for him even, called “Beautiful Boy.” That must’ve been such a slap in the face for Julian. He wasn’t a good father to Julian, he and Yoko didn’t “fight” for anything except attention. He wanted to clean up the world, but not his own house, so to speak. I’ve never cared for him. He didn’t deserve what happened to him, tho.
    William White
    08-01
    Lennon was nazi. some say Marxist but his Jew hate made him nazi. "Imagine, there's no Heaven..." Lennon was an amazing musician who happened to be nazi.
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