Koncert

Imagine (a collective performance)

Participate in a collective performance of John Lennon’s iconic song ‘Imagine’ performed on a selection of music boxes.
Dato
12.5.23
Tid
15:30-16:30
Adresse

A118, RMC
Leo Mathisens Vej 1
Kbh K 1437
Danmark

Entré
Free entrance

As part of his ongoing artistic research project titled ‘Sound Art as Perceptive Performance’, assistant professor at RMC Anders Mathiasen invites the audience to participate in a collective performance of John Lennon’s iconic song 'Imagine' on a selection of music boxes.

Everyone is welcome to participate, but the number of participants is limited to the available number of music boxes

You can read more about Anders Mathiasen’s ongoing research project here

About the song ‘Imagine’

John Lennon has said about the song that it is "anti-religious, anti-nationalistic, anti-conventional, anti-capitalistic, but because it is sugarcoated it is accepted ... Now I understand what you have to do. Put your political message across with a little honey." 
This performance is an invitation to look at the consequences of this sugarcoating - of putting your political message across “with a little honey.”

The song has featured in countless events of mass attendance, often in times of crises. For instance, Madonna performed a version of it in a benefit concert for tsunami-victims in 2007, and Neil Young performed it as a commemoration of the victims of 9/11. It was performed at the opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympics and the 2022 Winter Olympics, and has been covered by artists such as Queen, David Bowie, Stevie Wonder, Elton John, Joan Baez, Lady Gaga, Diana Ross and Peter Gabriel. As such, it has become part of the collective cultural heritage of a great number of people, and a symbol of hope.

From the political right, the song is interpreted as a communist/socialist anthem, whereas the intellectually sophisticated branches of the radical left see it as a cliché of the naïve utopias of the late-sixties counter-culture movement. To me, it seems naïve to believe that there is any possibility for creating a sustainable world without doing some collective imagining. This is an invitation to do so, in the light of the legacy of a celebrated sugarcoated pop song.

Yoko Ono described the lyrical statement of Imagine as "just what John believed: that we are all one country, one world, one people.” This makes sense to me - is it still possible to imagine “all the people sharing all the world”? (And where do other beings fit in this world?)

NB: The performance will be filmed and audio documented.