, recording "
Give Peace a Chance" with guests including
Timothy Leary (foreground) Lennon was impatient to issue the single but its release was delayed by the Beatles' April 1969 single, "
Get Back". Backed with Harrison's "
Old Brown Shoe", "The Ballad of John and Yoko" was issued as a single in the UK on 30 May 1969. Lennon and Ono were performing a second bed-in at the
Queen Elizabeth Hotel in
Montreal at the time. The United States release followed on 4 June. In the UK and Europe, "The Ballad of John and Yoko" was the first Beatles single to be issued in stereo. It was their first release not given a mono mix. Lennon advised Tony Bramwell,
Apple Records' promotions manager, to limit pre-release previews of the record and not to give it any advance publicity, especially with regard to "the Christ! bit". In his
NME interview at the time, Lennon said that although the story had already emerged that Harrison and Starr did not play on the song, he would not have chosen to publicise this, adding, "It doesn't mean anything, it just so happened that there were only us two there." In the US, Apple issued the record in a picture sleeve containing two photos taken by
Linda McCartney of the Beatles and Ono in the garden of McCartney's London home. The front of the sleeve showed Lennon and Ono seated with Harrison, McCartney and Starr standing behind them. According to author
Bruce Spizer, Lennon's bandmates appeared uncomfortable ceding the spotlight to Ono and in better humour in the shot used for "Old Brown Shoe" on the reverse of the sleeve. The single was accompanied by two promotional clips assembled from footage of some of Lennon and Ono's public activities, all of which the couple routinely filmed, between July 1968 and April 1969. The first clip was broadcast three times on
Top of the Pops and contained footage from four events. When shown on the Australian TV show
Rage long afterwards, in black and white, this version had the word "Christ"
bleeped out in the choruses with an on-screen starburst effect. In the second film, broadcast on the US show
The Music Scene, a traffic sign containing an exclamation mark appears each time the word is heard. This film was made with footage from events featuring Lennon and Ono in London, Paris, Amsterdam and Vienna, among other locations. For this reason, according to author John Winn, it "illustrates the lyrics much more effectively" than the first clip. The song has been included on several compilation albums:
Hey Jude (US, 1970),
1967–1970 (1973),
20 Greatest Hits (UK, 1982),
Past Masters, Volume Two (1988) and
1 (2000). Apple's
electronic press kit for
1 included a new colour print of the US promo clip. ==Reception==