Is It Snowing In Your Neck Of The Woods?
ChatterBank1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by donegal. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It isn't 'about' anything - it's just Lennon indulging in his love of word-play as evidenced by his books such as A Spaniard In The Works.
Lennon loved to use words simply for the pleasure of their sound, not because they connected to each other, or even made coherent sentences - and this is a good example. Listen to Lennon rolling the words around his mouth as he sings - it's just the sound he's after - meaning is secondary, or in this case, irrerlavent.
Timothy Leary was a psychologist who became famous for experimenting with LSD When the government cracked down on LSD, Leary's experiments were stopped and he was arrested on drug charges. In 1969, Leary decided to run for Governor of California, and asked John Lennon to write a song for him. "Come Together, Join The Party" was Leary's campaign slogan (a reference to the drug culture he supported) and was the original title of the song. Leary never had much of a campaign, but the slogan gave Lennon the idea for this song.
The first line was lifted, sort of, from an old Chuck Berry song called "You Can't Catch Me." The lyric in Berry's song was:
"Here come a flat-top, he was movin' up with me"
Lennon was ultimately sued and settled out of court - recording the "Rock and Roll" album was part of that settlement, I believe.