The Beatles Enter the Scene
” And while Lenin read a book on Marx
The quartet practiced in the park
And we sang dirges in the dark
The day the music died”
In the final four lines of the third verse, The Beatles arrive on the music scene (“ the quartet practiced in the park ”). Lenin here is often believed to be a play on Lennon, but it is not clear what the correlation to Marx is. It has been speculated that it is a reference to Lennon and his song revolution because Marx is generally associated with the communist revolution. The dirges mentioned at the end are a possible reference to the tragic death of Kennedy, but may also be mourning for the good old days.
Lenin reading a book on Marx can also be interpreted as the rise of communism in Eastern Europe and across the globe. If that is the case, Lenin is not a play on Lennon, but referring to the Russian political figure himself, who based most of his thinking on the writings of Marx.
The idea of a cultural revolution in the works is poignant at this point, and as The Beatles grew more and more experimental, they changed the shape of rock and roll just as Bob Dylan did before them. The park reference is mostly related to the famous 1966 farewell concert at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park when The Beatles retired from the public eye and began to create more “straightforward” music.