Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for Her Hand in the Snow)

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"Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for a Hand in the Snow)"
Single by Yoko Ono and Plastic Ono Band
from the album Fly
A-side"Cold Turkey"
Released20 October 1969 (US)
24 October 1969 (UK)
Recorded3 October 1969
StudioStudio A, Lansdowne Studios, London, England
GenreExperimental rock
Length4:52
LabelApple
Songwriter(s)Yoko Ono
Producer(s)
  • John Lennon
  • Yoko Ono
Yoko Ono and Plastic Ono Band singles chronology
"Give Peace a Chance/Remember Love"
(1969)
"Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for a Hand in the Snow)"
(1969)
"Instant Karma!/Who Has Seen the Wind"
(1970)
Some Time in New York City track listing
16 tracks
Side one
  1. "Woman Is the Nigger of the World"
  2. "Sisters, O Sisters"
  3. "Attica State"
  4. "Born in a Prison"
  5. "New York City"
Side two
  1. "Sunday Bloody Sunday"
  2. "The Luck of the Irish"
  3. "John Sinclair"
  4. "Angela"
  5. "We're All Water"
Side three
  1. "Cold Turkey"
  2. "Don't Worry Kyoko"
Side four
  1. "Well (Baby Please Don't Go)"
  2. "Jamrag"
  3. "Scumbag"
  4. "Au"

"Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for A Hand in the Snow)" is a song by Yoko Ono that was originally released by Plastic Ono Band in October 1969 as the B-side of the "Cold Turkey" single, and was later released on Ono's 1971 album Fly. Several live versions have been released, including on Plastic Ono Band's Live Peace in Toronto 1969 and the John & Yoko/Plastic Ono Band With Elephant's Memory album Some Time in New York City in 1972. An early version was titled "Mum's Only Looking for Her Hand in the Snow". It has been covered by several other artists.

Lyrics and music

"Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for a Hand in the Snow)" was inspired by Lennon and Ono's custody fight with Ono's ex-husband Anthony Cox over Cox and Ono's daughter Kyoko, representing Ono's attempt to communicate with her daughter.[1][2][3] Ono and Kyoko were finally reunited in the 1990s when Kyoko was in her thirties.[2]

Though "Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for a Hand in the Snow)" is credited as written solely by Ono, the music is derived from the unreleased

rock 'n' roll records ever made."[8]

Rolling Stone Magazine contributor John Lewis describes it as a "mournful caterwaul of despair."[11]

The earliest recorded version of the song, titled "Mum's Only Looking for Her Hand in the Snow" was sung by Ono at

CD reissue of the couple's Wedding Album.[6][12] The studio version released as a single and on Fly was recorded on October 3, 1969, at Lansdowne Studios in London.[13] The single has the words "PLAY LOUD" written on the label, as does "Cold Turkey" on the other side.[13]

Live versions

The version of "Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for a Hand in the Snow)" included on Live Peace in Toronto 1969 was recorded at Varsity Stadium in Toronto, Canada on September 13, 1969.[12] The Plastic Ono Band for that performance was assembled on short notice and included Ono, Lennon, Clapton, Voormann and Alan White on drums.[12] After Lennon played some of his recent songs and rock 'n' roll classics, Ono sang a two-song set consisting of "Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for a Hand in the Snow)" followed by "John John (Let's Hope for Peace)."[6][12] Audience reaction to her set was muted, and some booing was reported, more directed at "John John" than "Don't Worry Kyoko."[6][12] John Blaney explains that the audience "had come to listen to good ol' rock 'n' roll, not a Japanese woman screaming at the top of her voice," but "one could at least get into the groove of 'Don't Worry Kyoko.'"[6] Chip Madinger and Mark Easter claim that despite the audience's cold reception, the band "did an admirable job" backing Ono on the song.[12] Ken Bielen and Ben Urish claim that the audience may have been startled by "Ono's full-throttle vocals and Lennon and Clapton's hard core guitar sounds.[7]

The version on Some Time in New York City was recorded at the

Delaney & Bonnie & Friends also performed.[12][14][15][16] This version reportedly lasted 40 minutes, as the musicians became "locked in the hypnotic riff," and was edited down to 15 minutes for the album release.[6][15][17] Drummer Alan White recalls finally bringing the song to its conclusion by speeding up to the point where the other musicians couldn't keep up, and then slowing the tempo down, allowing the song to end.[6] Lennon claimed that the musicians on this version were "inspired out of their skulls" and that it was "the most fantastic music [he'd] ever heard."[8]

Bielen and Urish describe this performance as "vibrant", enhanced by the call and response between Ono's vocal and the horn section, and claim that the finale was so "hyped-up" that even Ono had trouble keeping up.[7] Lennon biographer Geoffery Giuliano and Moon biographer Tony Fletcher claim that half the audience walked out during the performance.[15][18]

The Lennons played the song, backed by Jim Keltner on drums and Elephant's Memory, at the matinee performance of the One to One benefit concerts at Madison Square Garden in New York City on August 30, 1972.[12] These concerts were released as the Live in New York City album and video, but "Don't Worry Kyoko" was not performed for the evening concert and was not included on either the album or video versions of Live in New York City.[12]

In September 2005, Ono performed the song as an

encore to her performance at ArthurFest.[19] Ono's and Lennon's son Sean Lennon led the band for that performance.[19] Reviewing that performance, Los Angeles Times critic Steve Hochman claimed that "the bleats and squalls for which Ono became famous/infamous were now expressions of a wide range of emotions as her band, led by her son Sean Lennon, pounded out primal art-blues."[19]

Reception

Music critic Johnny Rogan considers "Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for a Hand in the Snow)" to be "arguably Yoko Ono's finest recorded moment."[5]

Authors Ken Bielen and Ben Urish praise the studio version as "the standout inclusion on Fly," calling it "an amazing achievement," particularly the guitar work of Lennon and Clapton, Starr's "slowly varying drum work" and Ono's vocal, which they call "one of her most effective."[7] The New York Times' Kozinn calls the song a "searing rocker."[10] The Los Angeles Times' Hochman describes the song as "a raw, anguished cry from the soul."[19] Author Bruce Pollock describes it as having "frenzied glory."[20]

The live version included on Some Time in New York City, Bielen and Urish call "a stunning masterwork."[7] Lewis finds this version to be "astonishing," stating that Ono "sounds remarkable: screaming, yelping, howling and ululating over a blues-funk jam.[11]

Personnel

Cover versions

"Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking for a Hand in the Snow)" has been recorded by other artists.

Tater Totz released a 17-minute live version, recorded in San Francisco in 1989, on their 1993 album, Tater Comes Alive.[22] A 27-minute version, recorded live in Los Angeles in 1988, was included as a bonus track on the CD version of the album.[22] They also released it on their 1988 album, Alien Sleestacks from Brazil.[23] Alan Decotes covered the song on his 2007 album Don't Worry Rock N' Roll.[24] Donny Who Loved Bowling covered it on the 2005 album Tree Fort.[25] Yo La Tengo covered it live on the radio in New Jersey and released it in 2006 on their album, Yo La Tengo Is Murdering the Classics, a compilation of live impromptu cover-song performances on the New Jersey freeform radio station WFMU.[citation needed] A version of the song was recorded by John Flansburgh and John Linnell, two high school friends that would later form the alt rock duo They Might Be Giants in Flansburgh’s basement in around 1975. It has often been cited by the band as their first recording together.[citation needed
]

References

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    New York Magazine
    . p. 11. Retrieved 24 December 2012.
  3. ^ Mann, M. "Taken: Five Kidnapping Cases That Made History". Meredith Corporation. Archived from the original on 9 December 2012. Retrieved 25 December 2012.
  4. ^ Garcia, Gilbert (27 January 2003). "The Ballad of Paul and Yoko". Salon.com. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
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  9. Allmusic
    . Retrieved 24 December 2012.
  10. ^ a b Kozinn, A. (March 15, 1992). "RECORDINGS VIEW; Yoko Ono, Anew". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 December 2012.
  11. ^ a b Lewis, John (2017). "Some Time in New York City". The Ultimate Music Guide: Lennon. Uncut. p. 49.
  12. ^ .
  13. ^ .
  14. ^ "FLASHBACK: JOHN & YOKO, GEORGE HARRISON, ERIC CLAPTON & KEITH MOON JAM FOR UNICEF". Greater Media - WMMR. December 15, 2011. Archived from the original on 9 February 2013. Retrieved 25 December 2012.
  15. ^ .
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  19. ^ a b c d Hochman, S. (September 7, 2005). "POP MUSIC REVIEW; Underground, properly tilled; ArthurFest yields an eclectic and bountiful crop, with Yoko Ono particularly vibrant". Los Angeles Times. p. E6. Retrieved 25 December 2012.
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