💖 About the Song
If Imagine is Lennon’s global peace prayer, Beautiful Boy is his whispered love letter to his son. Released in 1980 on Double Fantasy, it’s one of his last songs before his death that December, and it shows a softer, utterly human Lennon — the dad, not the rock icon.
Written for his son Sean, who was five at the time, it’s gentle, intimate, and full of that late-70s domestic calm he found with Yoko after years of madness. The song’s tone is tender without tipping into schmaltz — a lullaby for grown-ups. You can feel the maturity in lines like “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans” — the kind of truth that sneaks up and punches you right in the philosophy.
The track’s tropical steel-drum flourishes nod to Lennon’s newfound obsession with family life and island relaxation. It’s not a protest anthem or a revolution; it’s one man finally content with his lot — and telling his kid to take it easy, because the world will get there when it’s ready.
🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips
- Chords: It sits nicely in C major with shapes like C – G – Am – F – Dm – G7. Add a cheeky Cmaj7 now and then for the dreamier vibe.
- Strumming pattern: Try D D U U D U with a light swing. Keep it lullaby-smooth — imagine you’re rocking a baby to sleep, not busking for rent.
- Tempo: About 78–80 bpm. Don’t rush — this one breathes.
- Tone: Finger-pick the verses with thumb-index-middle for that rolling warmth, then strum the choruses softly.
- Dynamics: Start almost whisper-quiet, and swell just a little in “Close your eyes, have no fear…”. Let the emotion sneak in rather than belt out.
- Little flourish: On the line “Life is what happens…”, throw in a C → Cmaj7 → F walk-down; it matches the sigh in his voice.
- Sing-along tip: If you can manage the whistle that fades the song out — congrats, you’ve hit certified uke-dad level.
🧠 Trivia You Can Drop Casually
- The line “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans” wasn’t originally Lennon’s — he borrowed it from a 1957 Reader’s Digest quote. Still, he made it immortal.
- Lennon wrote the song while staying in Bermuda, recording a demo under the working title “Darling Boy.”
- The gentle Caribbean percussion came from producer Jack Douglas layering multiple island instruments — Lennon called it “calypso nursery music.”
- When Sean Lennon turned 40, he said he still can’t hear it without crying — same, mate, same.
🌈 Final Word
This one’s all heart — no politics, no anger, just a bloke utterly besotted with his kid. Play it soft, play it honest, and don’t over-polish it. Beautiful Boy reminds you that sometimes, being content is the most radical thing of all.