John Lennon discography

John Lennon discography
Lennon being interviewed by Tom Snyder in 1975
Studio albums11
Live albums3
Compilation albums15
Singles23
Video albums14
Music videos64
Box sets5

John Lennon was a British singer-songwriter and peace activist, best known as the co-founder of the Beatles. After three experimental albums with Yoko Ono, using tape loops, interviews, musique concrète, and other avant-garde performance techniques, Lennon's solo career properly began with the 1969 single "Give Peace a Chance". Lennon then released two more singles, "Cold Turkey" (1969) and "Instant Karma!" (1970), and a live album, Live Peace in Toronto (1969),[1] before the official break-up of the Beatles.

Lennon's first solo album after the Beatles' break-up was Plastic Ono Band, released simultaneously with Ono's album of the same name. He released the album Imagine the following year, which became his most critical and commercial success. His 1972 political themed album Some Time in New York City received scathing reviews and performed poorly commercially. Lennon's next two albums, Mind Games (1973) and Walls and Bridges (1974) were better received and had more commercial success. In 1975, Lennon released his covers album Rock 'n' Roll before retiring from music to focus on raising his newborn son Sean. He returned to the music industry in 1980 with the album Double Fantasy, but was murdered three weeks after its release. Following his death, the 1984 album Milk and Honey was posthumously released.

In 2020, to celebrate what would have been Lennon's 80th birthday, Ono and her son Sean released the box set Gimme Some Truth. The Ultimate Mixes, which contained newly remixed versions of 36 of Lennon's songs.[2] In 2018, 2021 and 2024, super deluxe box-sets of Imagine, John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band and Mind Games were released.

He had 25 number-one singles on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart as a writer, co-writer or performer.

  1. ^ Live Peace in Toronto, 1969; "Give Peace a Chance", 1969; "Cold Turkey", 1969; "Instant Karma!", 1970.
  2. ^ Grow, Kory (26 August 2020). "John Lennon's Solo Work Gets Upgraded for New Box Set". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 12 October 2020. Retrieved 13 October 2020.