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  1. As on the latter album, Ono used the New York band Elephant's Memory as her backing musicians. Mick Jagger dropped into the studio for some of the sessions. He recalled playing guitar very loudly with Lennon.

  2. Approximately Infinite Universe ‘Dream you dream alone is only a dream But dream we dream together is reality’ Plastic Ono Band with Elephant’s Memory, endless strings and choir boys Produced by Yoko & John

  3. One of Yoko's most mainstream, musically accessible releases, with the distinctive boogie of Elephant's Memory Band that graced her and Lennon's recordings and shows during 1972. It's worth sampling Death of Samantha or the title song if you are skeptical.

    • (245)
    • Rock
    • 260
    • Rock & Roll, Avantgarde, Experimental
  4. Elephant's Memory (also billed as Elephants Memory, without the apostrophe) was an American rock band formed in New York City in the late 1960s, known primarily for backing John Lennon and Yoko Ono from late 1971 to 1973.

  5. It is indeed a shame that the vocals on this album have been allowed to dominate the music, for the boys from Elephant’s Memory have rarely sounded better. Yoko, however, in her role as...

  6. Jul 14, 2017 · Approximately Infinite Universe is an essential and progressive piece of Ono’s output, both in the advancements she made as a songwriter/conceptualist, and as a solidified statement of her staunch feminist role within the very male-dominated mainstream rock ghetto of the mid-1970's.

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  8. Jul 14, 2017 · The somber ballads on Approximately Infinite Universe are mixed with slow rockers, funky workouts, and show-tune style numbers (all played mostly by New York band Elephant’s Memory; Lennon...