"Instant Karma!" ranks as one of the fastest-released songs in pop music history,
Apple Records' tagline in trade advertisements for the single read: "Ritten, Recorded, Remixed 27th Jan 1970." Lennon remarked to the press that he "wrote it for breakfast, recorded it for lunch, and we're putting it out for dinner." Apple issued the single on 6 February 1970 in Britain – credited to the Plastic Ono Band – and on 20 February in America, where the
A-side was retitled "Instant Karma! (We All Shine On)" and credited to John Ono Lennon. Spector remixed "Instant Karma!" for the US release without Lennon's knowledge. Continuing the approach of the Plastic Ono Band's previous singles, "Give Peace a Chance" and "
Cold Turkey", the
B-side was an Ono composition, in this case "
Who Has Seen the Wind?" As with "Cold Turkey", the single's standard Apple Records A-side face label carried the words "PLAY LOUD", in both the UK and America. Reflecting the tender sound of "Who Has Seen the Wind?", the B-side label read "PLAY QUIET" On 4 February 1970, Lennon and Ono staged a publicity stunt at the Black Centre in north London, The "final proof" of the Lennons' "overexpose[ure]", according to Taylor, was that there was a large press turnout for the event, yet "nobody printed anything." It was the first appearance on the program by any member of the Beatles since 1966, as well as the public unveiling of the Lennons' new cropped look. '' in February 1970 The clips differ in terms of Lennon's attire and the nature of Ono's role as, in author Robert Rodriguez's description, "an onstage focal point around which all activity was staged." In addition, for the 19 February broadcast, Lennon's vocal was treated with echo. In the "knitting" clip, Lennon is wearing a black
polo-neck jumper as Ono sits beside his piano, In "cue card", Lennon wears a flower-pattern shirt under a denim jacket, while Ono, seated on a stool, holds up a series of cryptically worded
cue cards In the view of media analyst Michael Frontani, Lennon's and Ono's untidy, cropped hairstyle befitted the couple's "new agenda" for 1970 – a year in which Lennon, still mistrusted by the political left for his rejection of their principles in the Beatles' 1968 single "
Revolution", sought "greater confrontation with the system." Frontani writes of Lennon's appearance on
Top of the Pops, that it "was a stark picture, one at odds with his Beatles past. For Lennon, ragged and ugly in comparison to the Beatle image, it was a means of breaking even more fully with his pop star past."
Commercial success and aftermath "Instant Karma!" was commercially successful, peaking at number 3 on America's
Billboard Hot 100 chart, number 2 in Canada, "Instant Karma!" went on to become the first single by a solo Beatle to achieve US sales of 1 million, Until
Lennon's death in December 1980, "Instant Karma!" remained his sole RIAA-certified gold single. Despite the stated intentions for Lennon's and Ono's Year 1 AP, the proceeds from the auctioning of their hair benefited Michael X's Black House commune according to
Beatles Diary author
Barry Miles, the pledge to donate their royalties was also "discreetly forgotten." In March 1970, Lennon publicly split with the organisers of the planned Toronto Peace Festival, as he and Ono began treatment under
Arthur Janov's
Primal Therapy. Before heading to California in April for intensive therapy through the summer, Lennon accused McCartney of using the Beatles' break-up to sell his album
McCartney, and admitted that he wished that he himself had announced the break-up months before to promote his own solo release. ==Critical reception==