Showing posts with label paul mccartney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paul mccartney. Show all posts

Friday, September 12, 2025

a new wings compilation!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

'WINGS is the ultimate anthology of the band that defined the sound of the 1970s. Personally overseen by Paul, WINGS is available in an impressive array of beautifully designed formats -- all including the timeless international hits 'Band on the Run', 'Live and Let Die', 'Jet' and 'Let 'Em In' -- songs that still feature in Paul’s live shows to this day.' So said an email I received a couple of days ago from the Wings Fun Club. 

I just don't know why - since there are obviously great things in the vaults - the Wings repackaging is so constantly just (almost completely) stuff that's been released before, and the canon generally concentrates heavily on the very commercially successful mid-period of Band on the Run - Venus and Mars - Speed of Sound. I mean of course I do know why but I don't like it. So, this new collection does cover a few, well, I suppose deep cuts though that's a weird phrase to use for records which have been heard by millions if not billions. Still, some brave moves. 

I mean, I wouldn't buy any iteration of this new collection* because I've got it all anyway, but here's the tracklisting of the 3LP-2CD collection, I guess PMcC's idea of what constitutes the 'best' of Wings. I've bolded the songs I also think fit this category:

Band on the Run (2010 Remaster) ⁠Hi, Hi, Hi (2018 Remaster)  ⁠Silly Love Songs (2014 Remaster) ⁠Letting Go (2014 Remaster)  ⁠Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five (2010 Remaster)     Live and Let Die (2018 Remaster)  ⁠Mamunia (2010 Remaster)  ⁠Junior’s Farm (2014 Remaster)  ⁠Helen Wheels (2022 Remaster)  ⁠Some People Never Know (2018 Remaster)   Let ’Em In (2014 Remaster)  ⁠Get on the Right Thing (2018 Remaster)  ⁠Jet (2010 Remaster)  ⁠My Love (2018 Remaster)  ⁠Call Me Back Again (2014 Remaster)   Getting Closer (2022 Remaster)  ⁠Listen to What the Man Said (2014 Remaster) ⁠I’ve Had Enough (2022 Remaster)  ⁠Love Is Strange (2018 Remaster)  ⁠London Town (2022 Remaster)  ⁠Arrow Through Me (2016 Remaster)  Venus and Mars/Rock Show (2022 Remaster)  ⁠She’s My Baby (2014 Remaster)  ⁠Bluebird (2010 Remaster)  ⁠Deliver Your Children (2022 Remaster)  ⁠Let Me Roll It (2010 Remaster)  ⁠Mull of Kintyre (2016 Remaster)   Wild Life (2018 Remaster)  ⁠C Moon (2018 Remaster)  ⁠With a Little Luck (2018 Remaster)  ⁠Soily (One Hand Clapping Sessions) ⁠Goodnight Tonight (2016 Remaster) 

So, we do agree on quite a few (12) tracks, but where we disagree, we really disagree. 'Soily'?! 'She's My Baby'?!!! 'MAMUNIA'!!!??? Puh-leese. What it looks like to me is that he has tried hard to bring in something from every era, to help us understand the spread, mass and consistency of the ten years of Wings ('71-'81). But I don't think he knows what was good. 

This is my alternative best of wings which I shared only with Laura but I suppose in a manner of speaking I'm sharing it with you too now, and you could easily recreate it if you wanted to, and you could put Red Hot Chili Peppers' 'Under the Bridge' slap bang in the middle of it too if you felt like it. 


So it starts with a lie: 'Message to Joe' is not anywhere near a best thing of Wings or even a good anything, though it's entirely fine I suppose mainly because it's over in a split second. I just thought it was a good way to start. 

'Oriental Nightfish' is Linda-Paul-Denny Wings, doing a Linda composition, and I can totally imagine Paul and Linda being like 'people are already saying Linda shouldn't be in a band with men, what would they say if an actual Linda McCartney composition got on a Wings record', but it's so much better than so much stuff that did come out under Wings' name, and I don't just mean 'Mary Had a Little Lamb' etc. 'Some People Never Know' is masterful and, yes, deserves to be on the real best of collection (the 3-LP version at least, I haven't looked at the one-LP version but I assume that's just things you'll hear on classic rock radio every day of the year). 

I have already whinged everywhere I could about how much I love 'Must Do Something About It'. This is the official Joe English version, not the Paul singing version which appears on the CD/extended Speed of Sound, but to be honest they're pretty similar, but I think any variety in voices is good. 'Getting Closer' and 'Silly Love Songs' are no-brainers. 'When the Wind is Blowing' is, like 'Rode All Night' from the Ram outtakes, one of those songs where you're like... (some of) PMcC's throwaways are things other people could have based whole careers on! I'm not saying anything new or exciting here, but I'm saying it anyway. 


At this point in my life I can do without anything from Red Rose Speedway, an album which apart from anything else irritates me because I always have to stop myself calling it Red Rose Speedwagon. But 'I Would Only Smile' and 'Tragedy' are two songs which would really have lifted the whole of that LP a hell of a lot. They were both on the originally conceived double album version, which PMcC was forced to distill to a single LP and still no-one liked it (this isn't true). 'I Would Only Smile' is a Denny Laine song and he deserved to be there, and it's great. 'Tragedy' is just remarkable, a cover of someone or other. Not the Bee Gees. 'Tomorrow' and 'Junior's Farm' from One Hand Clapping just sound fresh. 'Dear Friend' is definitely exceptional. 'Coming Up' live I'm not sure about tbh and if I was going to lose anything it might be that, but it's a tremendous song even if it's not the best version but the best version isn't by Wings. 
Maybe it's cheesy to end with 'Goodnight Tonight' so perhaps something should be done about that. Swap it with 'Helen Wheels'? Still, two really impressive pop hits of very different varieties, right at the end is bound to make you want to start all over again. Isn't it? 

Mainly I'm just really pleased with what I left off. I hope Paul sees this. I bet he sits up at night to see if anyone's writing about him on the internet... 

*Technically the third I think if you don't count the 'McCartney solo' compilations, but really it's the first to be 100% pure Wings, whereas Wings Greatest and Wingspan erroneously included bits off McCartney and Ram and maybe more I can't remember. 



Tuesday, January 07, 2025

why do i do this to myself


The intricacies of PMcC in the 70s continue to fascinate me but the hours I've spent listening to the back and forth over the making of Venus and Fucking Mars (that's what it's called right?) including the completely unfair sacking of Geoff Britton and the surprising recruitment of the excellent Joe English as his replacement and Jimmy McCulloch just being an absolute prize prick at all times and Denny being a sad loser (and of course, people hating Linda but that's par for the course) would have been hours wasted if it wasn't just a matter of keeping my mind distracted while performing menial tasks. That said, it might ultimately be bad for me to listen to this tosh.

'You Gave Me the Answer' is the hot topic where I'm up to at the moment, and it has given me to think a lot about McCartney's sinister attraction to composing music in the vein of 1930s-40s show tunes. I gather 'When I'm 64' was one of the first songs he wrote, so it obviously goes a long way back, and of course as he only got into writing and performing music after his mother's death, it has a certain poignance to it, being about living a long life with your partner, etc. 

I suppose the recording of that song comes next in the history. The next one is 'Your Mother Should Know', then 'Honey Pie', then... um I'm not sure what's next, he kind of got himself together for a while. Those are horrifying though. There are probably some other crimes in there which I've blocked out. It's a horrible tendency, I gather the reputedly grotesque 'Kisses on the Bottom' album is the culmination of all of it, but I haven't heard that record and I also, I can't stand people who judge things without seeing, hearing, knowing them etc. 

I note from the internet that a lot of people think there's a connection between this and Lennon's critique of McCartney's 'granny music' because that's the kind of music 1960s grannies would remember from their youth but I don't think this is 'granny music' exactly, surely that's more just 'easy listening' music, maybe 'My Love' or something like that? Actually I don't know. It was another catchy putdown along the line of 'your granny on bongos'. Just put 'granny' in a critique, everyone hates grannies. 


Sunday, June 11, 2023

mccartney book again

 

AI-generated 'Paul McCartney on a unicycle frying tofu'

So I finished the McCartney book, it ends with the release and positive response to Band on the Run which even Rolling Stone magazine thinks was good, great, whatever. I am not a big fan of Band on the Run myself so overall the whole narrative arc ended with a bit of a whimper for me, but I'll live. I suppose it was kind of vindicating for PMcC. I don't quite understand why Linda's song 'Oriental Nightfish' didn't make it onto Band on the Run because it's a better song than most of the songs on that record, I always liked it - it was the real standout on a horrible Beatles bootleg I once had, called Indian Rope Trick, I didn't even realise it was Linda singing it! Anyway is that important? No. The book is ultimately yeah OK but you know, am I wiser or stupider for having 'read' it? The question you always have to ask on finishing any book. I think I am not wiser so I am probably stupider.

Oh, I will say this: as per my gripe about the way the authors dealt with Europe - they also are I think a bit dismissive of the Lagos period (I don't know where they got their information from but I don't think they spoke with any Nigerians) and also considering Paul and Linda apparently consider Jamaica their holiday destination of preference, we get very little information about Jamaica. I'm not going to say I could have done better though. Meanwhile, here are some guinea pigs and eggs, from an alternative universe. 





Thursday, June 08, 2023

the mccartney legacy vol 1


At the same time I downloaded the Lewisohn book mentioned recently I also downloaded Kozinn and Sinclair's The McCartney Legacy read by Simon Vance, a seasoned audio book narrator with over a thousand titles to his credit. Vance has a touch of the Stephen Toasts about him but I suspect if there's been any influence it's by Vance on Matt Berry not the other way around. 

As has been all-too-extensively documented on this blog I have an outright fetish for championing the early 70s McCartney and this book does stoke those fires somewhat (at the same time - just getting this out of the way here - it has to be said the authors pander to their audience with silly jokes and coy allusions when talking about marijuana etc). 

Like the Lewisohn book (which they defer/refer to often enough) part of the appeal of this work is the context(s). Context #1 is the wider British (usually) context (when Wings go to Europe for instance we get only the most bland, 'foreigners innit' take on the countries they visit - most important seems to be dealing which German venues were built by the Nazis) of coal strikes and television shows. Context #2 is PMcC's battle with the other ex-Beatles and Allen Klein, which I have to say is still kind of fascinating and it is not revealed either why the others loved Klein or why PMcC immediately hated him (although he soon had reason enough). If there's anyone out there who still thinks McC broke up the Beatles, here's the final nail in the coffin of that myth - Harrison and Lennon were such entitled pricks. But PMcC could be an entitled prick himself, of course, and he knows it, particularly when it comes to his two-faced insistence that Wings was a band but also commandeering control wherever he deemed it necessary, and also, not paying Seiwell, Laine and McCullough (that's the line-up we're at) properly and not understanding why they needed to be paid properly - it wasn't just a matter of fairness but also an actual matter of paying their bills. At the same time, he seemed to expect them to be on call 24-7. At the same, same time, they could occasionally be a part of some amazing records so I don't know - what would you opt for if you were them? 

The press, particularly the shitful British music press, hate McCartney, Ram, Wild Life and indeed Wings generally, for the most grotesquely idiotic reasons, and it obviously does McC's head in quite a bit, as he keeps trying to pander to them. I've just go to the bit where he forces the group to do umpteen (like, not a hundred but nearly) versions of 'Hi, Hi, Hi' to get a groove it's never going to get because let's be fair - it's a shit song. It made me tired hearing all about this constant recording, re-recording and overdubbing of 'Hi, Hi, Hi' that it was actually the first song discussed in this book that I stopped the book to listen to, just trying to figure out what it could or should have been. It's so pedestrian, a chugging bore, I can't believe this was deemed the best version. Anyway, I also can believe it, because I know that people who fuss over things too long lose perspective. I have a feeling that Red Rose Speedway is 'Hi, Hi, Hi' writ large - too much angst-ridden trying to please people who hate you. I know from the expanded RRS that some of the best songs ('Tragedy', 'I Would Only Smile') were left off, and the result is possibly my least favourite Wings album - don't know London Town well enough (saving it for a rainy day). 

Oh, and by the way, big surprise, the first incarnation of Wings aside from Denny Laine were jerks to Linda, in fact, almost everyone was a jerk to Linda, and kudos to Linda for hanging in there, not many would have. There's a gross story, told without comment, about Linda coming into a hotel room backstage and asking what the smell was and Henry McCullough says something in the vein of it's fucking rock and roll feet darling fuck off if you don't like it, though I don't think he calls her darling because after all she's someone else's old lady. 

Saturday, January 22, 2022

just one more thing about wild life

I recognise I have become the one thing I said I would never be, a Wild Life bore. So I'll keep this short, really just 'putting it out there' on the off chance, message in a bottle style, that someone who can answer my curiosity sees it and lets me know wtf. 

So. Wild Life is often panned for being scrappy, in fact (as my post from late last year showed) it was disliked by 'the critics' from the outset. Whatever it might seem like, I actually don't think that Paul McCartney needs me to defend his work and he can generally speaking look after himself. But Wild Life fascinates me, not just because I really like it, but also because of strangeness. 

Wild Life is notoriously a bit of a slapdash affair, and it's up to you whether you find this appealing or disgusting; most people seemed to think it was the latter. One of the strangest things about it is the song 'Some People Never Know', which I really like, but which is mixed in such a way that in one section of the song (for instance) a whole vocal section (around 4:05) is knocked down in volume in a manner that really sounds like an error. 

If it's an error, it's been replicated through at least 154 versions of the album (alright, I admit I haven't listened to them all). A recent remaster neither restores nor eliminates this 20 seconds of ghost vocal, just pushes it even further down in the mix, which makes it even stranger when the vocal comes back in solidly at 4:33. 

A few months ago, to celebrate the 50th anniversary, I purchased the Wild Life box set which alongside the remastered album and a short DVD of not very exciting footage etc and the track with PMcC later recycled into his hit with Kanye in 2014, has a disc called the 'Rough Mixes'. What is weird about these (finally I'm getting to it!) is that these rough mixes are, by and large, much more robust and thought-through than what was released. For instance, not only is the full vocal present in 'Some People Never Know' but there's also trumpet in it (no bullroarer though). I just don't understand what happened and that's all I have to say. 





Saturday, August 21, 2021

fab


So as you can see I am fairly well advanced in this, my most recent audiobook experience, and yet another that proves that when it comes to me and audiobooks, it's all one big bedtime story (things like this - where I basically know the story already and only want a little remix or a few easter eggs - or crime fiction, which is similarly affirming, for some reason). 

I know you don't care but I'll just tell you, and I am the author of some pretty lazy, shitty opinionated twaddle which apparently at one time I allowed to go on the market with my name on and I probably thought 'this'll show 'em', but this has its fair share of that, full of schoolboys' pencil case bravado 'the best record he ever made', etc kind of stuff. The wikipedia entry on Sounes, which is unreliable reportage, claims that in an (unsourced) podcast Sounes conceded he had let his opinion of McCartney's music dominate this book and it does. That's one thing, but his opinions are so boring (and I note that his books have either been about true crime or white renegades of the 60s). 

Linda McCartney (79 years and 11 months old today except she died 25 years ago) doesn't need me to defend her by the way but Sounes is a prick about her (and Yoko) surprise surprise, and rather than have an interesting take on her, he has the same dull as ditchwater take on her as all the hoary musos who didn't understand why Paul McC didn't want to play with them but did want to play with her. However, Sounes does say that Linda had a good figure. 

So a lot jumps out at me from this but the thing that really shitted me the most was Sounes' description of the Maharishi as knowing which side of the pappadum his curry was on.* But I am sure there'll be more as I go. I was similarly surprised he said that Wild Life only had two good songs on it, as I assumed he would follow the tired line on this (eg that it has none). He gives Red Rose Speedway 3/5 as well which is surprising, because he clearly doesn't get Wings, generally speaking. 

On the plus side, he scrapes the sides of the barrel and actually does find a few people who no-one has spoken to yet from the late 60s/early 70s who have some kind of minor bystander stories to tell, though usually you end up thinking, there's a reason why these stories haven't been heard before. Fifty years on, let's be fair, people are mainly going to tell the story 'everyone knows' - with perhaps a tiny frisson of their own experience. I don't even really see the point of interviewing people decades later about things everyone knows about. 

Update: another thing about this particular production - the narrator's capacity with accents - well, there's nothing terrible about the accents I suppose at least they are fairly alright as accents (the Frank Ifield sucks a big turd in the mud). I dread Denny Laine's comments, of which there are many, because of the Birmingham accent, which is a bit of an abomination as executed here.

* The British tendency to typify people by the food they eat is as rank as the American tendency to describe people from 'foreign' countries by dint of the native animals. I don't know what kind of psychology this reveals but fuck both. 

Update final assessment: Look, I made to the end, so that's a thing. Once PMcC and LMcC became vegetarian (I really thought this happened earlier than the 80s but Sounes says nah) he cannot bear to avoid mentioning it constantly, it's like the man (Sounes) has a problem. Every time PMcC plays a show, he can't go on stage without 'sitting down to his usual vegetarian meal', etc. Heather Mills gets a lambasting of course and I suppose it's nice for Sounes to find a woman he can actually legitimately savage but I don't think it's necessary to non-ironically refer to her as a 'whore'. Well, anyway, I enjoyed the life, to the degree I would even listen to/read another PMcC biography, particularly one that was written by someone with some takes more interesting than the conventional ones (whether I agreed with them or not). 

Monday, July 05, 2021

a scritti politti record review from fifteen years ago. not sure where (or if) published.

Scritti Politti
White Bread and Black Beer
Rough Trade/Shock

I never set much store by record labels, although I suppose there might be something in the notion that a certain culture at certain record labels give a certain something to certain artists. And this could perhaps explain why the new Scritti Politti album – the group’s umpteenth but their first back on their basically-original label Rough Trade – is their best since their first album, Songs to Remember.

The above paragraph was so freakin’ complicated, I didn’t want to have to add in the additional information that the group is not really a group, just a guy, or perhaps the guy, Green Gartside, this just-pretty-much-a genius, at home doing some recording on equipment that, if it doesn’t exactly constitute a home studio, is at least enough recording equipment to fit into his home. The album is sparse, fragile, slipperier’n an oily rag, and glows like a gold brick. I think it’s a masterpiece.

Scritti last bothered the charts in 1984 with ‘Wood Beez’, a song that was surely a hit because it was an early example of a record no-one, including its perpetrators probably, could ever sing along to (so you had to buy it). T(he)y had a pretty prominent near-hit in the ‘91 with a minor Beatles song, ‘She’s a Woman’, in which Shabba Ranks often popped in and said ‘Shabba!’ (or did I dream that?). And then there was a decent album called Anomie and Bonhomie a few years ago which I haven’t listened to since it came out.

Now, Green appears to have a beard and has become funnier than ever. Even as slight a slice of funk as ‘Throw’ is a hoot (‘you could throw a party and maybe I’ll be there’, he sings, which amuses me, anyway). Green, like Jon Michell, likes Marc Bolan, and like Jon Michell, it shows (just listen to ‘After Six’, forget the strange godbotherer references, and imagine it speeded up – it’s Jesus in a Jeepster). He also – you’ll remember he once covered the Beatles – likes, or likes to sound like, Paul McCartney; that final track, ‘Robin Hood’, one of the best, would have fit perfectly on any McCartney album except, um, Run Devil Run. There’s a crazy, slightly creepy song called ‘Mrs Hughes’ which is kind of Simon and Garfunkel and scary but totally brilliant.

Can’t recommend this record highly enough.

By the way (this is me in 2021 now), I still stand by this review, uninterestingly written as it may be. I see that in the original I slightly erred in the record's title - it's White Bread Black Beer, that's not particularly important. I would like to hear this album again because who knows what's happened to my CD of it. I think it might have come out on vinyl but I'm trying to keep a lid on my vinyl purchases if at all possible. Instead I'm spending all my dosh on books and films, what a prat. And ornaments and car repair. And food. And, you know, bills. 

Saturday, May 08, 2021

great mysteries

How on earth are decisions like this made? Neither Ram nor Venus and Mars are PmcC solo albums, but if 'solo album' means 'since the Beatles', why no Band on the Run? Not that I rank that particularly highly. As I bragged to Laura the other week, my Wings most favourite-least favourite list is Speed of Sound, Back to the Egg, Wild Life, Red Rose Speedway (2LP vers), V&M, BOTR, London Town. Although TBH I expect to revise my opinion of London Town someday, so watch out BOTR. Carmel gave me a copy of V&M for my birthday which is nice to have, with the cool posters (and sticker!). So I went to sleep before 9, woke up at 2 and have been awake hanging with cats and reading. It's been good.  Should get a copy of McCartney III.
 

Saturday, November 07, 2015

my opening chapter for proposed 33 1/3 on Paul & Linda McCartney's Ram, 2015 (rejected)


RAM

‘Piss off.’

How many albums (let alone books) start with those words? How likely would anyone be to imagine, for that matter, that an album – a cheery, funny, lively multiplatinum album – by one of the world’s most beloved pop stars would start with those words? Unframed, unattached to anything else, conceptually adrift, nothing at all to do with the rest of the song that kicks off the album (‘Too Many People’), but undeniably there – undeniably except to those billions of people who heard the words, but chose not to hear them. Because that’s not what someone like Paul McCartney would think, say or sing.

It’s just one little beserk component of Paul and Linda McCartney’s Ram. But there are a lot more sides to Ram, few mystical, but many mysterious. It’s a multilayered record.  The duo – he the most commercially successful pop composer of his generation, she a completely untested and indeed hitherto unambitious novice – were experimenting with how to write their lives, how to project as role models, which they were whether they wanted it or not, and how to produce pop that was satisfying to them and also their, or rather his, fans. 

Even more than many albums with a life beyond their original few months of initial release, Ram has had a few lives and iterations. There are also (at least) two whole-album covers compilations from the 21st century, which indicate the resilience of the concept. But it’s a lot more than just a wild card LP with an extensive half-life. It’s a multifaceted document that can give the sensitive listener insight into the world of the Beatles, particularly in their post-breakup public trainwreck but also the world of pop in the early 70s as it consolidated its breakthrough from kids’ trivial entertainment to ‘rock’: social commentary and mirror of the counterculture. The album was produced in the context of the Kent State shootings, Ohio’s state guard response to student protests against the invasion of Cambodia; the trial of Charles Manson, who claimed his killing spree was sanctioned through a Paul McCartney song. During its recording, 14 US Army officers were charged over the Mai Lai massacre; an earthquake killed 50 000 in Peru and the painter Mark Rothko killed himself. Elvis Presley met Richard Nixon in the middle of the Ram recordings: a stark illustration of the establishment taking pop music seriously (fifteen years after Elvis was anything like a threat) but also of the co-option of youth rebellion into the conservative heartland. All recaps of 1970 include another crucial, defining moment: the official breakup of the Beatles.  

Ram first came into my life in 1978. I was thirteen, and assiduously gathering a Beatles record collection largely through the purchase of secondhand albums, grabbing what I could on the assumption that (a) I would eventually have them all, so it didn’t really matter the order I acquired them; (b) although Roy Carr and Tony Tyler’s book The Beatles: An Illustrated Record – which introduced me to the idea that popular music writing did not always have to be swooning fandom or respectful chin-stroking nods of approval but could also occasionally call out a dud – was broadly a good guide to value in Beatle releases and also often funny, an adolescent schoolboy in Melbourne, Australia did not need or want the same taste as a couple of late twenties New Musical Express writers who’d seen it all a hundred times over; and (c) while you might want Lennon on your side in an argument, Paul McCartney was more fun. I had a materially adequate middle-class life and I was comfortable, too, with what no-one then would have called my feminine side to not feel in any way threatened by syrupy ballads or heavy sensitivity. I saw that McCartney could wear his heart on his sleeve, and that was gutsy. I liked punk and would come to love what we now call postpunk - that was really the music of my generation – but I recognized a spirit of artistic inquiry when I saw it. I felt then, as I feel now, that McCartney was trying for, and often getting to, that sweet spot where he could be artistically fulfilled and connect with much of the rest of the world, too. That was admirable.

Ram ticked all the boxes, on quite a few levels (Carr and Tyler hated it, but then, they also hated Yoko Ono). It was a pop album and who’s worth knowing who doesn’t love pop? It was so riddled with ideas that no fewer than four tracks morphed into variations or new songs before your very ears. It had the requisite number of weird noises, strange notions and, of course, like many of the ex-Beatles’ records, it was part of the long strange unresolvable mess of largely antipathetic communications amongst themselves which made you feel half like you were privy to juicy scandal and half like you were on the other side of a thin wall.

But what Ram has which could not be in dispute (except for those who could not hear it, like that ‘piss off’) was amazing songwriting. ‘Dear Boy’, sonically a tribute to the Beach Boys but lyrically the most extraordinary tightrope walk between sensitivity and schadenfreude imaginable: addressed to Linda’s first husband, Joseph Melville See (not, as some thought, to John Ono Lennon) it finds Paul commiserating, but perhaps also just slightly berating, See for failing to… sorry but it has to be said… see the value of Linda. In 1963 he’d effectively abandoned Linda and their young daughter Heather to travel and study in Africa for a year, his negligence killing the marriage. The story goes that he never forgave himself – but that he maintained a cordial relationship with the McCartneys ever after.

It has the spectacular ‘Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey’, psychedelia’s last gasp and Paul McCartney’s first number one hit, in a post-Beatles incarnation; almost an album’s worth of musical ideas in itself this track, clashing concepts and references, some of them harsh and troublesome, some of them high camp, all inventive and effective; it’s a patchwork of melodies and silliness that works because of its own crash or crash through exuberance. That line about the butter not melting, so the singer put it in a pie still raises the hairs on the back of my neck, largely because I find it so silly – indeed, I might almost say ‘stupid’. But that doesn’t mean it doesn’t work, and that Herb Alpert-esque trumpet line cures anything.

Those were Paul and Linda compositions. Of Paul’s own, there’s ‘Back Seat of My Car’ – a paean to teenage sex and driving, a theme he would return to a few years later on one of the more raucous Wings singles, ‘Helen Wheels.’ Here, Paul and his date – you can’t help but imagine it as him and Linda half their lives ago, even though they’d only known each other three years – are triumphant against the grim forebodings of a conservative, fearful world who tell them in voices that sound like someone’s put their finger on the record to drag it down slower and more stentorian – ‘making love is wrong.’ As if!

Those are three of today’s favourites. But there is, in fact, not a dud track anywhere on Ram. Perhaps, in a way, it’s self-indulgent, but it’s self-indulgence by people who not only accept their fame and celebrity – unavoidable – but also the good fortune they have, to be welcomed into a million homes as entertainers and, in some strange way, role models. If the whole world really only wanted the Beatles to reform, well, that wasn’t going to happen in a hurry (forty-five years later, we know it was never going to happen at all) and in the meantime, the McCartneys welcomed the world – ‘piss off’ or no ‘piss off’ – into (a version of) their partnership. There was some arrogance to this album, and its stance, but then – if you know something’s great, how arrogant are you really being by acknowledging that mere fact?

When I began working on this study of Ram and the way it fits into the story of the western world’s political, social and cultural 1970s, I suddenly found myself surrounded by messages from my own universe that confirmed that the McCartneys and their story continue to be relevant. I had to wonder whether these were ubiquitous but I was just suddenly spotting them now, because I was thinking about Ram.  One night on facebook two friends – people I don’t know terribly well, from different spheres of my life, and who certainly don’t know each other – spontaneously posted on Paul McCartney within an hour of each other. One simply posted Paul’s 2013 song with the surviving members of Nirvana, ‘Cut Me Some Slack’, and suggested that anyone who thought McCartney was irrelevant in the 21st century had to listen to this (I agree). Another was apparently moved by the spirit of the times to proclaim:

Excuse me, but why do so many "hate" Paul McCartney??? I don't get it. WHY??? It is the same as people who hate Yoko ... WHY??? I love them both.. and they are supposedly responsible for breaking the Beatles up.. even though it is NOT true.. . That only meant the Beatles all brought out great solo records..!!!
So WHY the hatred to Paul ... and YOKO??
But that energy into something more constructive..
PS George is my favourite Beatle.
just saying.

Facebook is, of course, a dynamic thing that panders to any hints you give it. So, unmysteriously, these posts (and my benign responses to them) dislodged a piece of detritus I’d forgotten about from a few months earlier when my friend Barry had posted an image of the cover of the Ram album with my face over Paul’s and one of my beagles’ – also Barry, no relation – over the ram in question. This also suddenly appeared in my timeline again. The universe, it seems, was coming together to celebrate a venerable septuagenarian whose past still resonated for many, and whose current work still struck a chord for new fans; and the labour of love he created with a genuine soul mate whose worth he never underestimated or took for granted (and, from all reports, vice-versa).

1971 was a good year for diversity and adventure in popular music: the beginnings of decades often are, particularly once the grip of the old recedes, hyperbole drops away and society looks forward to how to encapsulate or typify the spirit of the new. But the 70s themselves were also an extraordinary and wonderful (in the sense of: full of wonder) decade; the era seemed, to many at the time, to be a shallow echo of the revolutionary 60s, two steps forward, six steps back – to purloin from the Gang of 4’s own caustic song from the other end of the 70s, ‘At Home He’s a Tourist’. History is not, however, about how people were wrong or where they ended up. It’s also about what they thought, felt, believed, did and how they responded. Ram is an early seventies album, British-written, New York-recorded; like the McCartneys themselves, it’s a blend of two cultures (each culture itself a hybrid, multifaceted culture). The album can reveal volumes about the time it was made in, and its own creation to that time can be tracked in numerous ways.

The ‘piss off’, by the way, was Paul saying it was easy as pie, a deliberate non-sequiteur. The joke – such as it was – was, it seems, ‘Piss off, cake.’ He explained, long after the fact, ‘a piece of cake becomes piss off cake, and it's nothing.’[i] But Ram is a lot more than that: memoir, philosophy, diarizing, satire, surrealism, retribution, commentary; all to freewheeling, esoteric music often evoking the past (be it Buddy Holly, the Beach Boys or even the Beatles) but aiming squarely at being a part of 1971 and into the future. It only looked like a piss off cake.




[i] http://www.beatlesbible.com/people/paul-mccartney/albums/ram/

a new wings compilation!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

'WINGS is the ultimate anthology of the band that defined the sound of the 1970s. Personally overseen by Paul, WINGS is available in an ...