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Paul McCartney "Memory Almost Full" (2007)
Dance Tonight/Ever Present Past/See Your Sunshine/Only Mama
Knows/You Tell Me/Mr Bellamy/Gratitude/Vintage Clothes/That Was Me/Feet In The
Clouds/House Of Wax/The End Of The End/Nod Your Head
"I
think of everything to be discovered - I hope there's something to find"
Back in 1967 a twenty-five-year-old Paul McCartney,
at the height of his creative powers and arguably the hippest young man on the
planet was doing the most un-hip thing imaginable: wondering what his life
might be like he grew old. Encouraged by the warm reception to the song about a
lonely old widow in Eleanor Rigby the year before, Macca had spent much of late
1966 and 1967 openly discussing age. 'Sgt Peppers' starts with off with the
line that 'it was twenty years ago today' as if it's the single biggest
possible number he and his peers can contemplate (it was for him, after all,
nearly a lifetime at this point in his life), goes on to look back on childhood
memories of school as if they belong to a completely alien forgotten world of
distant memory (the Macca bits of 'A Day In The Life') and includes 'When I'm
64', a wry look at near-retirement age actually started as a joke when Paul was
fifteen but returned to with extra fascination now that an older McCartney
began to realise that he might actually reach that impossible-sounding age one
day. Sadly Macca seems to have then largely passed on his ideas of 'old age'
and won't write another 'oldie/memory' song until 'Footprints' in 1986, the yin
to Eleanor Rigby's 'yang'. It seemed that life for a young hip rock star was
simply too interesting and too full to live anywhere but the present, this
fascinating element of Macca's work being neatly side-stepped for nearly forty
years.
Suddenly in 2006 Paul really did turn sixty-four for
real and judging by the lyrics on this album it was a shock for a whole host of
reasons. The time that had seemed to move so slowly in his twenties had sped up
to ridiculous speeds and been filled up with so many life experiences that far
from seeming like some lost forgotten world long distant his Beatle-days seemed
tantalisingly close to the present, just slightly out of reach rather than
alien. Old age was also far from a time for slowing down either as heard on
'When I'm 64' with its dream of holidays and sunshine and relatives - the
mid-2000s was a particularly busy period for Paul who threw himself into both
pop and classical albums and spend an even larger amount of time than normal campaigning,
whilst simultaneously fiddling around with intended second animated feature
'Tropic Island Hum' (which became an over-long music video but an all too-brief
cartoon given away on a DVD and a book,
published as 'High In The Clouds' in October 2005 mere months before this
album). The jokey 'old armchair' on the album cover (a nod of the head, surely,
to 'When I'm 64' even if he's never admitted as much) is a pointed comment:
Paul must have never had time to sit in the cosy seat he'd once planned out for
himself. This was far from the restful days Paul had once jovially imagined for
his future, originally based on his dad's own experiences at a similar age when
ill health was slowing him down and his twenty-five year-old self would
probably have been shocked that Paul was back in Abbey Road making his 19th
album since leaving The Beatles, in a genre where no one had yet managed a
successful career past thirty. However there was another reason his future
hadn't quite turned out the way he'd planned it - Paul had found his soulmate
to share his holidays to the Isle of Wight and scrimp and save with (even if
the Isle of Wight had turned into the Isle of Mull and the scrimping and saving
became a 'moral' issue rather than a financial one) every bit as he'd carefully
planned out in his song (recorded, funnily enough, weeks after meeting future
wife Linda Eastman for the first time, even if he'd begun the song as a
schoolboy) but life had got in the way and things had gone wrong, with Linda no
longer by his side the way he'd once hoped. At 64 Paul didn't even have Heather
Mills anymore, their brief but fiery relationship having come undone officially
right at this milestone age, with an official divorce taking place two years
later. The character in 'When I'm 64' was also very much in the grandkid stage
of life - Paul was too after the birth of grandsons Arthur Donald in 1999 and
Elliott Donald in 2002 (both to daughter Mary) and new arrival Miller Willis
(born to daughter Stella in 2005). However he was also a new father himself,
with the birth of his and Heather's baby Beatrice in 2003 - born right between
her uncles' birthdates - and the nappy
changing toddler stage of both children and grandchildren at the same time must
have seemed so right and yet so wrong with how he imagined life at sixty-four.
As usual when things get tough in his personal life,
Paul's sub-conscious shuts up shop and you won't get much sense of the drama
unfolding around Paul in this record (that's in the next record 'Electric
Arguments') which is a shame in many ways (Lennon would have got a 'Walls and
Bridges' style concept confessional out of the whole Heather Mills affair, but
then Paul isn't John - one of their few differences being their approach to
their personal and private lives). However what you do get overwhelmingly is a
sense of things being at once so right and yet so wrong, of a planned future
that's in so many ways so overwhelmingly better than expected (who'd have
guessed in 1967 that Paul would still be recording this well this often in
2006?) and in other ways much much worse. Part of the record has Macca looking
back on his pre-Beatle days in disbelief ('That Was Me'), thanking the powers
that be for his amazing life ('Gratitude') and rather sweetly telling fans and
those who loves him that he's had a wonderful life and can march on into his
twilight years perfectly happily, with all the boxes ticked and a life well
lived, his inevitable funeral full of songs and jokes and spirit rather than
the sad and lonely death he once feared in 'Eleanor Rigby'. And yet at other
places Paul seems to grimly holding on by the skin of his teeth: 'House Of Wax'
is one of his all-time saddest songs, with a career of belief and love and joy
falling around him while he's powerless to do anything except tell us that his
life is suddenly 'very very very very very hard'. Other songs too hint at
defiance and an upset aggression that's unusual for Macca: 'Me Bellamy' turns
all the annoyance and frustration and anger Paul has ever felt into one
imaginary bureaucratic character - the 21st century incarnation of the pompous
war veterans on the 'A Hard Day's Night' train, still looking down their noses
at him after all he's achieved. 'Vintage Clothes' looks on with half-amusement
half-spite as youngsters dismiss him and his type for not being 'cool' whole
oblivious that half of their wardrobe is pinched from his own generation. 'Only
Mama Knows' may be a character song - a tale of a man abandoned at an airport
as a baby and coming to terms with not knowing the full story (which sounds
suspiciously similar to John Lennon's in many ways but has nothing whatsoever
in common with Paul's own life) - and yet the sense of abandonment sounds
'real' in way that previous whimsical songs like 'Maxwell's Silver Hammer' and
'Uncle Albert' never could. Paul simultaneously seems to be grateful for how
the majority of his life turned out and ungrateful for how his current
situation seems to be, with his records ignored and low-selling even to his own
long-term fans and a marital debacle that left him seeming foolish to the press
(who never liked Heather) and his own family (ditto). In many ways this record
is about 'My Ever Present Present' - the past is escapism on this record for
the most part, a memory of a time when Paul was loved by the world in general
and one woman in particular; perhaps it should have been titled 'When I was
25'?!
This could have gone oh so wrong. There have been
too many AAA albums reviewed recently that spent precious time discussing some
petty grievances from times long past and yet how much worse life is in the
modern era. This record even sounds at time like one of them, with the rather
ill-fitting 'Vintage Clothes' ticking us off by saying 'Don't live in the past'
even though the album does precious little else. However this record avoids
most of those traps. The jokey title 'Memory Almost Full' is clever, taking
into account the very retro and yet very modern contrast of this album which as
usual with McCartney's solo work mines every contemporary production cliché
going and yet still turns out unmistakably 'him' with its take on old age and
full banks but with a very modern phrase. Though this album is as 'escapist' as
they come and even more unhelpfully unrevealing than most McCartney records,
it's not as 'empty' as other Macca records from the most painful periods in his
life when records are made through auto-pilot rather than inspiration ('Flaming
Pie' written when Linda was dying and 'Chaos and Creation' in 2003 when the
Heather Mills affair was first going wrong). The much-discussed 'closing
trilogy' (actually a suite of four songs towards the end, with the noisy song
of frustration 'Nod Your Head' to finish) about Paul's memories and reaction to
growing older was seized upon as his best work in years - it isn't quite
(though 'House Of Wax' is his best song in six years) and 'That Was Me' from
earlier in the album is actually a better take on the same idea than three of
these songs, which are a little too self-aware and one-layered (certainly
compared to what Paul's younger 25-year-old self might have written). No matter
though: Paul is at least trying on these songs - largely successfully - and
it's hard for anyone whose shared that forty-five year journey with him up to
this stage not to shed a tear at the thought of our hero not being here one
day, of the 'old stories' being told by us 'children' at the foot of our
master-storyteller as he pre-warns us to be brave (though people think of
McCartney as a 'light' writer he's often at his beat writing about the bigger
subjects, especially death: 'Eleanor Rigby' 'Footprints' and 'This One' are all
amongst his best work with only 'Little Willow' letting the side down). No, you
won't learn what it really feels like to be sixty-four across this album (Paul
doesn't seem to quite know himself, but then his 64th year probably wasn't like
most other people's) and there's certainly nothing more about McCartney that
you won't have already learnt from his previous albums, but it's heartfelt this
time (a major plus after 'Chaos and Creation') and full of just enough
character and pathos to get through. You sense his 25-year-old self would have
been decently impressed at the second half of this album and bits and pieces
from the first, which makes no bones about being old and yet does so in such a
way that goes head-to-head with the youngsters moving into The Beatles spot as
the nation's darlings (even the fact that this was the first ever McCartney mainstream
record not to be released by some variation of EMI - and by a coffee-chain of
all things! - shows modern commercial daring; well of a sort given that
Starbucks are about the least hip modern brand around and - much like their
coffees actually - their record releases to date have all promised from the
outside much but turned out to be mainly froth and way too pricey for what they
are; have you seen the Lennon compilation they've got out? Shoddy! However most
fans got o hear this album first as part of an ill-fated short-lived craze of
giving full albums away free with papers, spare copies of which were clogging
up charity shops for months to come; Macca's old rivals Brian Wilson and Ray
Davies did the same around this time, with similarly mixed success).
However, unfortunately the drippier 'McCartney' aspects
of 'When I'm 64' seem to have informed major parts of this album's creation
too. There have always been those odd lines that crop up in a McCartney album
that make you cringe because of their gauchness or stupidity or both -
sometimes if you're unlucky there'll be whole songs that suffer from this.
'Memory Almost Full' suffers from this problem more than most: 'Dance Tonight'
is by far the poorest lead-off single Paul has ever released, as trite and
empty as anything in his back catalogue and a song that put off so many people
unnecessarily who might have actually liked this slightly deeper, darker album
whether they heard it as a single or as the bizarre out-of-sequence first track
(yes the story about writing it at an instrument shop and his toddler daughter
dancing to it and claiming it her 'favourite' is sweet, but toddler's are
looking for different things in songs to enjoy than most music fans and Macca
traditionally doesn't do well when asking for his offspring for advice - see
Wings single 'Mary Had A Little Lamb' if you feel brave enough). 'Mr Bellamy'
is one of 'those' McCartney songs - you know the sort, the 'character' songs
with quirky people doing quirky things to a quirky tune that would have had
John Lennon or Elvis Costello growling and reaching for the red pen; 'Feet In
The Clouds' includes some of all the all-time crass singalong McCartney words:
'My hidden treasure, made to measure, for my pleasure' is the tip of a
particularly slippery iceberg waiting to sink what should be a truly lovely
track; 'Nod Your Head' is a far more interesting song to read than it is to
listen to, a quasi-punk song that - like 'Boil Crisis' and the 'Back To The
Egg' album before it - is dad rock (make that grandad rock), someone who
genuinely thinks they're down with the kids and doing what they do for the same
reasons and coming up woefully short. Even the best songs on this album are
marred by mistakes, dodgy word rhymings and curious decisions that make what
should be great songs coming out sounding average sound like great songs with
bad bits stuck to them, like the perfect mash potato suddenly containing lumps
in it (talking of which, perhaps the ultimate example of Paul's 64th birthday
year is the weird 'cookery' section he uploaded to his website where he teaches
us how to make the perfect potato dish - which is probably also something he
wasn't expecting to be doing forty years earlier when he wrote 'When I'm 64'!)
'Ever Present Past' rhymes 'late' with 'plate'; Macca's already overused the
rhyme of 'glad with 'bad' for a whole song in 1983 and charming as 'So Bad' was
'See Your Sunshine' doesn't have the same excuse of innocence and sweetness to
get it by; 'You Tell Me' comes oh so close to being a genuine nostalgic
lookback a la Ray Davies with a sense of past memories that surely couldn't be
as great as they were, but sacrifices it's nugget of heartfelt wistfulness for
cliché and filler; 'Don't Live In The Past' gets a black mark from the opening
couplet 'don't live in the past, don't live on to something that's changing so
fast' (an easy rhyme and a line that doesn't scan in one!); Vintage Rack's 'A
little more, a little tall, check the rack - what was out is coming back!' sung
with curious emphasis and glee a line that excruciating truly doesn't deserve!;
the inevitable 'by the sea' that appears like clockwork in 'That Was Me'. If
this was a new writer I'd be frowning - someone with that much history, that
much 'ever present past' - really should have got past these clunky mistakes by
now and oddly even though there's less 'mistakes' here than on 'Chaos and
Creation' they're harder to forgive because they crop up on such promising
songs. We've often said on this site that Paul is at his best working with a
collaborator where his worst ideas tend to get knocked out - here that's truer
than ever (so an even bigger round of applause to his next collaborator
'Youth'...)
Unfortunately these lapses mean that even many of
the best songs quite come alive and no album containing 'Dance Tonight' - where
Paul's multi-layered multi-directional creativity becomes its dullest
one-dimensional thud - can ever be a 'classic'. However these are molehills on
a mountain that's actually larger and more luscious than Paul had made in quite
a time. The lighter songs like 'That Was Me' and 'Ever Present Past' cover a
lot of ground for twinkling three minute pop songs, while the deeper songs are
much more deserving of Paul's reputation and talent than most of his modern
compositions, stretching his palette again after some twenty years of playing
safe and consolidating past territories (in the pop world at least - it's the
classical stuff that gets 'daring', some of the time anyway). 'The House Of
Wax' is an atmospheric haiku, full of poetic fragments and imagery that sees a
future of suffering about to be lit by a fuse
the narrator is powerless to stop; if Yoko ever decides to make a second
collaboration with her ex's 'previous partner' (see 1990's 'Hiroshima Sky Is
Always Blue' - if you can find it!) I pray it sounds like this and people can
stop jumping on the backs of both of them. 'Mr Bellamy' may annoy the heck out
of me, but I'd rather Macca was annoying me with an off-the-wall rule-breaking
structured song like this one (with a lyric about rebellion that's a perfect
fit) than with a recycled hack song like 'Dance Tonight'. 'Only Mama Knows' may
not tell Macca's story exactly, but he's always been a good study for empathy
and sympathy and really 'gets' his abandoned character (plus it's unusual for
his down-trodden persona to be a male for once - usually it's downtrodden
rising-above-it females when Macca tries this sort of thing, from 'Lady
Madonna' to 'Another Day'). 'Ever Present Past' may not live up to its title or
opening line (a weary sigh of 'I've got too much on my plate') but is a step in
the right direction. The 'memory quartet' (which isn't most people's idea of
the 'memory quintet' by the way - for me it's 'Ever Present Past' 'You Tell Me'
'That Was Me' 'Feet In The Clouds' and 'The End Of The End' that share the same
theme, with 'Vintage Clothes' as a sort of snarky counter-attack) is also a
staggeringly perfect idea for a writer whose seen so much and shared so much of
that with us, a reflection on past, present and future that gets more right
than it gets wrong and is genuinely moving more often than its clunky. 'End'
especially gets the tone just right, Paul plotting the perfect funeral that so
many of his friends and loved ones like Lennon and Linda never had a chance to plan
because they died too young and it's typically down-to-earth yet still ever so
slightly pompous (the deluxe edition of the album includes a not-that-revealing
audio interview where Paul adds 'I thought I'd like jokes, a wake, music,
rather than everyone sitting around feeling glum and saying 'what a great guy
he was' - although I'd quite like a bit of that too!) 'That Was Me' gets by on
laughs, though this list of memories that lead right up to the 'People and
Places' TV show of the fab four at the Cavern in 1962 ('Sweating cobwebs, in a
cellar, on TV') also has the depth and width of being an equally moving song
had Paul chose to do it that way. 'You Tell Me' and 'Clouds' are the two that
really got away, both songs starting out as moments of heartfelt poignancy
('When was that summer when skies were blue?' and 'The teacher said I always
had my head in the clouds' respectively) before becoming mere cliché and shared
memories not different enough to care about. A shame, because the former, with
its gloomy melody and overhanging clouds (not unlike 'Summer's Day Song' from
'McCartney II') and 'Clouds' with its ha-ha-look-at-me-now teacher-baiting
nicked from 'Getting Better' both feel as if they should be better, deeper
songs than this, as if Paul started writing from the heart but got bored and
finished these songs off writing from the head.
A typically mixed bag of McCartney then, with more
interesting places to go than 'Chaos' but a shorter journey through these
interesting doors than 'Driving Rain', the other McCartney albums of the
decade. However, 'Full's trump hand over both albums comes from the performance
and production. Compared to both albums there's a swing in Paul's voice, a very
audible passion to be in the studio making this stuff rather than simply
filling in time again that surprised many (usually when Paul's distracted it
shows in his performances as much as his songs - suggesting 2006, when the
Heather split had been finalised, was a much happier year than the precarious
2005; Paul's always been good at moving on from bad times at speed and reading
between the lines may have already been dating third wife Nancy Shovell, a
family McCartney friend dating back to at least the 1990s). There's a glorious
moment on 'That Was Me' where Paul, spontaneously moved by his own memories
into a yelled grin, like a naughty schoolboy given the biggest sweet-shop to
play with, suddenly bursts into pure passion and energy; though we've heard him
this passionate with anger recently he hasn't sounded this madly happy since,
ooh, 'Stranglehold' in 1986.
However it's not all down to Paul - his still
un-named backing band are easily the best set of players he's had since the
'middle' Wings partnership of 1975-78. The band had been together six years by
now and whilst they'd played cameos on other McCartney albums (the band formed
during sessions for 'Driving Rain' in fact before old partner Wix got added to
the mix!) this is the first and - to date - still the only album that features
them more or less all the way through. Unlike the less stable eras of Wings the
band really 'nail' that distinctive McCartney sound - and yet unlike the
80s/90s band (also un-named) they don't restrict themselves to it lavishly.
There are many guitar solos, vocal harmonies, mellotron licks distinctive bass
and drum parts on this record that sound just so instantly McCartney in a way
that he only has recently on songs that are direct and pointless sequels
(Blackbird's ugly much younger sister 'Jennry Wren' for instance). The trick
comes from giving us combinations of old recognisable sounds we've not heard in
new settings before and the sound and textures of this album is a delight for
the long-term Macca collector: 'That Was Me' for instance, features the Beach
Boysy scat singing from 'Dear Boy' of 1971, with the bass riff from 'Name and
Address' in 1978 and the modern grungy sound of 'Driving Rain' whilst 'See Your
Sunshine' combines the 80s powerpop vocals of the 'Tug Of War/Pipes Of Peace'
period with the 80s technology of 'McCartney II' and a fully exploratory
bassline straight out of 'Sgt Peppers'). My favourite production moment though
is the unexpected false ending to 'Mr Bellamy', which mixes Brian Wilson
'smile' with Macca's own Ram big-band remake 'Thrillington' and simply revels
in the song for a further minute despite having nothing left to say - something
Paul hasn't done since the Wings days. Macca has finally found the perfect
balance: Wings could never have worked as a democratic band when one member's
fame and output eclipsed the others' so (see 'Wings At The Speed Of Sound' for
the best evidence why) and yet the autocratic note-for-note reproduction
arrangements on the 1989 and 1993 tours robbed the later band(s) of their
fuller potential. This is perfect, Paul as the head poncho whose still
welcoming to new ideas (hence the return of the old days' jokey sleevenotes:
'His Royal Highness The King of Cosmania and Surrounding Regions deigns to give
his thanks to the following people...' It couldn't have been more Wings-like if
it had been signed by 'Clint Harrigan'!) The worst songs on this album,
typically, are the ones Macca did alone: 'Dance Tonight' 'Mr Bellamy'
'Gratitude' and 'Nod Your Head'. The
production too turns a patchy album into a classy one, a record which unlike
most AAA 21st century albums ('Chaos' included) probably won't sound dated and
of-it's-time in thirty years (the way that 'Pipes Of Peace' and 'Press To Play'
now very much do, however great passages of both albums are).
Most producers
take one look at McCartney and give in or at least try to make him sound the
way he's always sounded, but producer David Kahne is a better find than most,
adding suitable modern tricks that really enhance the form and style without
getting in the way of the song or doing something Macca wouldn't have done
years before had the technology been available (the return of the wine-glasses,
synthetically this time, at the start of 'You Tell Me'; the woolly digital
sampling on 'Gratitude' which works better than it has any right to and 'See
Your Sunshine', which somehow manages to come out sounding pure Wings 1973
whilst sounding very much like a song from 2006).
Overall, then, I'm rather perplexed by 'Memory
Almost Full' - as you may have guessed. So much of it works so well - and yet
other parts barely work at all. If this was a set of tennis I'd be offering you
something along the lines of how 'the aces' ('House Of Wax') and 'double
faults' ('Dance Tonight') cancel each other out, how moments of brilliance and
chances of break-points got snuffed out in the end despite the hard work and
effort and how this game set and match can't match up to past glories when the
creator was in his prime. However it's not quite as simple as that: Macca's
given us uneven albums before and albums like 'Red Rose Speedway' 'Venus and
Mars' and 'Tug Of War' are just as equally split between moments of perfection
and moments of stupidity. Unlike those records though there's a sense of things
being back on track again, of having overcome the dark times when things went
wrong and the songs wouldn't form properly, with the album full of the sheer
joy of being able to make something this good again after such a difficult
time. It's just that those dark times and songwriting ruts haven't gone away
completely yet and though inspiration has returned, Macca's confidence has
taken such a beating from years of indifference and poor sales and shrinking
inspirational wells that he still can't quite tell his good ideas from his bad
ones. The end result is an album that would have both horrified and enchanted
anyone from 1967 with a time machine who wanted to see what their
twenty-five-year-old musical saviour really did sound like at sixty-four: the
mistakes that would so usually get ironed out by someone are here in all their
clunky glory and there's little here to match the past glory days when
everything worked just because it was being put together by the most perfect
band for their times who could do no wrong. However Macca is also far from the washed-up
money-gone toothless retired character he once half-dreamed for himself on
'When I'm 64', still - just about - in touch with all the musical twists and
turns down the decades (even if he's not quite setting the pace as he once did
back in the summer of love), still - just about - relevant and still very much
with something to say.
There was talk, back when Memory was a new album and
not yet overloaded, that many of the songs from the album were 'leftovers',
songs that weren't considered good enough to make the 'Chaos and Creation In
The Back Yard' album. If true then that surely proves once and for all that
Paul's biggest weakness has always been dividing between his best and weakest
songs because by and large there's no comparison between the two. Ironically
the one song we know that was most definitely new and apparently written in
something of a hurry is by far the worst song here. 'Dance Tonight' is one of
those gormless cheery McCartney pop songs that, like 'We All Stand Together'
and 'Ebony and Ivory', risks so much for seemingly so little, allowing Macca-haters
to say 'bah - he's always been a terrible writer' without allowing the Macca
lover anywhere to go ('yeah but this is just another silly love song that
happens to be about, erm, dancing' is not the best comeback I've ever made in
my years as a Beatles fan). The trouble is there's so little here to defend: a
loudly thudded stamp, a tinny ukulele phrase so irritating that even passionate
aficionado George Harrison wouldn't have unleashed it on an unsuspecting public
and a chorus that really does pass over the depths and mysteries of the
universe Macca is so utterly totally capable of for a chorus that runs
'Everybody gonna dance tonight, everybody gonna feel alright, everybody gonna
dance tonight'. As usual with the Macca songs that really don't work there's a
whole host of people out there ready to defend it on the grounds that anything
by an ex-Beatle can't be as bad as something bad by someone else, but even
compared to previous mistakes there's just nothing here, a dappy sappy lyric
about joining together for the thrill of the dance that's vague enough to be
embarrassing rather than cool even in 1966 rather than 2006. Only the sudden
unexpected lurch to a minor key for the all-too-brief middle eight ('Well you
can come round to my place if you want to') tries to appeal to something other
than the lowest common denominator but even that is flawed, sounding like it
belongs in an entirely different song. Fluffy pop singles used to come so
easily to McCartney once upon a time and - a few duff ideas aside - usually had
something about them that made them stand out from the crowd, whether it was an
actually-pretty-deep-message-if-you-think-about-it-hard-enough-underneath-all-the-catchyness
('Listen To What The Man Said' 'Coming Up' 'Pipes Of Peace'), provided
something no one else would ever think to say in quite that way ('With A Little
Luck' 'Another Day') or simply did this sort of stuff with more class than the
opposition ('Live and Let Die' 'Silly Love Songs' and one of the most
over-looked Macca singles 'No More Lonely Nights'). 'Dance Tonight' sounds like
a bad Beyonce B-side that never got made where dancing is the be all and end
all of life - that this was considered the highlight of an under-rated album by
a man who once brought the world to its emotional knees and held up one of the
largest mirrors to society in existence is a painful lesson in how the pop
world works in 2006 compared to forty years earlier. Thankfully, after bracing
myself for another 'Chaos and Creation' misfire, the album will never sink
quite so low as this again. Paul should choose what he decides to play on
instrument rental shops and interpret what his toddler daughter decides to
dance to do with more care, for all our sakes.
Luckily 'Ever Present Past' improves in every way -
including the distinctive beat that seems to have been the whole point of the
last song. A witty take on being reminded of his achievements as a young lad
throughout his middle and old age and having to live alongside his ghostly
reminder for the rest of his life, it's an interesting development for
McCartney's songwriting, starting with that angry biting opening line 'I've got
too much on my plate' that he said in interviews at the time fell out of
'nowhere' and encouraged him to think about what annoyed him the most in his
life. However Paul is more gracious than a lot of musicians who made fame and
fortune through the love of their fans (e.g. Ringo) and the song is delivered
with a cheeky wink and cheesy grin that makes you wonder if you've been reading
the song right. The lyric expands into a song that underlines the album message
about running out of time, angry not so much at having to live up to one's past
but that it has prevented Paul from doing so much other stuff he wanted to do
and his awareness that he's running out of time. Like much of the album, Paul
is still proud and slightly in awe of his past ('The things I think I did,
indeed I deed-a did!' is the silly chorus) and his gorgeous middle eight hangs
in the air with so much left unsaid about lost opportunities and growing old
('It went by, it flew by, in a flash'). It's a cheery pop song with muscle this
one, thanks to that slight ambiguity and one of the tightest performances on
the album - all the more impressive given that it's actually a 'solo'
performance a la 'McCartney' and 'McCartney II' with Paul showing off his excellent
bass, drum, keyboard and especially guitar skills in one excellent whole. One
of the album's better songs that fittingly uses most of the skills Paul has
learnt down the years, particularly his poppier 1980s albums which are full of
deep-songs-posing-as-fluffy-pop (this track is in many ways the slightly less
paranoid cousin of 'The Other Me' and even uses the same key from what I can
hear).
'See Your Sunshine' is one of those songs we've been
having a lot of recently on McCartney songs - the anonymous pop ballad. In
years gone by there wasn't a McCartney song I didn't have a strong opinion on,
whether it was for against or a song with unfulfilled potential that was a bit
of both. 'Sunshine' though - like so much of 'Flaming Pie' 'Driving Rain' and
'Chaos' - is instantly forgettable, full of some nice ideas that don't ever
coalesce and a melody you're guaranteed to forget once stronger ones have come
along on the album to wipe it out your head. In case you can't remember it too,
it's the cheery one with a summery feel and a mass block of backing vocals that
sound like a cross between George Michael and The Beach Boys which are easily
the highlight of the track, even if they sound slightly out of place here. The
lyric sounds like the last of the handful of love songs Paul wrote for Heather
(other than the 'experimental' albums - 'McCartney II' and 'Electric Arguments'
and the like - 'Memory' is perhaps the Macca album with the lowest quota of
'silly love songs' of them all, understandable given the impending divorce and
actually quite a refreshing change). Like 80s B-side 'It's Not True' people ask
Paul why he's in love with someone, but he can't explain with his head - he
just feels it in his heart. After five long heavy years of deflecting media
rumours and gossip about what Heather was really up to it could well be a
leftover song from those days with Paul vaguely putting the record straight.
However the character in the song doesn't always sound like the media-savvy and
the images of a carefree girl picking flowers to put in her hair as she dances
to the music lingering in her head after Paul has stopped singing sounds more
like a memory of Linda - or possibly an early love song for Nancy (maybe it's bits
of all three, perhaps with even a bit of Jane Asher in there?) Paul's gentle
urging that his loved one is ready to greet the world and is more than up to
the task sounds more like Nancy to me though. Whatever the inspiration, it's
good to hear Paul so happy and so far away from the days of 'Driving Rain',
even if his darker days do tend to inspire his better songs - this one is so-so
(as well as being a re-write of 'So-So Bad').
Back before this record's release the world's press
anticipated a McCartney howl similar to a 'John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band' primal
scream album - perhaps missing the point that this wasn't really Paul's style
(and that he'd got about as close as he probably will on the post-Linda songs
on 'Driving Rain'). Then again, the song that most assembled press and fans got
to hear first was 'Only Mama Knows', a live favourite that really should have
been picked as the single over 'Dance Tonight'. A groovy, tough rocker that
merges the tough open spaces of 'Jet!' (you can almost hear the ghostly backing
vocals going 'woo-hoo woo-hoo') with the aggression of 'Angry' and 'I've Had
Enough', it's one of Macca's better 21st century rockers. Paul really gets into
character as the baby abandoned at an airport terminal with no explanation
turned into a tortured, confused adult unable to deal with the pain of this
unpleasant 'ever present past'. It's good to hear a writer as empathetic as
McCartney going back to writing about people who sound real rather than just
'cipher' characters and you can almost hear the younger music journalists going
'gosh - I never knew he was abandoned at an airport terminal!' so convincing is
his half-screamed performance throughout the song. Really, though, this is a
song about abandonment - a feeling Paul was getting used to after a difficult
ten-year period - and his howl of pain that 'only mama knows' why she wasn't
there (Paul's mother Mary died of cancer when he was fourteen) is in its own
way as affecting as Lennon's on 'Mother' and as close as Paul has got to
putting that particular ghost from his past to rest. You sense Lennon would
have approved of the gritty approach too, where McCartney and band play with a
fire and drive and speed that would put bands thirty years their junior to
shame. Only a slight sense of fizzling out, with no real resolution or change
of direction (a middle eight would have made a strong song even better) and an
occasionally clumsy lyric ('I'm on my way, no road no ETA')prevents this from
being one of his very best songs. That said some of these lyrics are truly
excellent: the idea of a baby being abandoned at an airport full of people with
destinations makes him stand out even more and the contrast between the mother
laying the baby down and the weary adult laying himself down in exhaustion is
clever songwriting.
'You Tell Me' starts off with some lovely backwards
effects that already puts the listener in mind of the summer of love before
that oh so Ray Davies opening verse comes in about an old man looking back on
his past with wonder, unable to recall dates and names and convinced that in
the past it was always sunny and never ever rained (I never 'got' that old folk
story about memories always being set with sunshine - for me the best days were
the wet ones when I got to stay inside and play records - especially McCartney
ones; the outside world is for people too afraid to spend time in the superior
inner space - or have I just been listening to too much George Harrison?)
Anyway, the reason I bring up that hoary old cliché is that this song is full
of them: 'The air was buzzing with the sweet old honey bee' 'the bright red
cardinal flew down from his tree' (apparently this really happened while Paul
was in his London garden writing this song!) 'the butterflies and hummingbirds
flew free' - this lyric belongs in a David Attenborough nature programme, not a
song about memory and are too universal to have the real frisson of Paul
opening up to us that the gorgeous melody implies. Because this is another
gorgeous melody, another of those tunes that sound so obvious and perfect you
can't quite believe no one else has ever come up with them before in all those
decades of pop music (and millennias of music in one form or another). This
melody deserves a lyric as strong as it is and so does the performance, full of
ghostly 'Abbey Road' style backing vocals that sound flown in from another
dimension and another lovely band performance that merges acoustic and electric
guitars, sparse percussion and a shaky mellotron to great effect. Paul's lead
vocal, returning to that beautiful falsetto of his, is also right on the money
and it's all the more moving for the slightly aged wobble in his voice (artificially
'treated' to sound stronger than it is on most songs on the album but left
exquisitely fragile here, as it deserves to be on a song about aging).
'I just came up with the name 'Mr Bellamy' because
he sounded like someone who wanted to jump' - this is Paul's entire back story
explanation for one of his madder, confusing songs as reported in the tie-in
interview CD. Is this a nonsense song? Or is there something deep hidden within
this strange song? Ten years on and I still can't tell, a poignant brass band
teasing at us with its 'Family Way' style austerity and bleakness before the
noisy main song arrives, complete with 'Northern Voices' and daft lyrics that suggests it's just a bit
of fun. My guess is that Paul has been listening to much Simon and Garfunkel -
this song is a pretty close re-write of 'Save The Life Of My Child' (the first
track 'proper' from their 1968 LP 'Bookends') complete with impressionistic
visions and snatched half-heard conversations. While both songs treat something
that should be sad and serious as a joke (a man wanting to take his own life) the difference is whose
joking. Paul Simon's comment seems to be that a youth suffering from genuine
life-altering angst is being treated as just another over-reacting teenager by
the people below who seem even further away from him than the many feet below,
raised to some sort of a pedestal on his roof seeing the world from a much
higher, deeper pointy of view. Paul McCartney sees Mr Bellamy as playful,
treating the whole thing as a joke ('I like it up here!') while concerned
residents rally around below, slowly moving forward in order not to push him
over the edge (figuratively and literally). One take on this lyric and Macca's
delightfully cheeky performance would be that he's flipped and gone mad - or
that he was only ever up to a bit of mischief and never really meant to jump.
How you interpret this confusing song though really depends on what you think
happens at the end, with a minute-long coda of falling notes gradually
descending, but slowly and delicately in slow motion rather than with a cold
hard 'splat'. 'Come down, come down' Macca coos sweetly over the top - is this
the vision giving Bellamy peace and healing, offering him the privacy and
freedom he doesn't get in his real life? (Interestingly the lyric sheet throws
in an extra line I hadn't heard 'come back to me', hinting that Mr Bellamy's
life has been disrupted by loss and he's not thinking straight).Was his messing
around a deeper cry for help? (Was it born out of the poverty the opening colliery
brass band lick implies?) We never get an answer, which for once on this site
seems like a plus: Mr Bellamy has more dimensions to him than most McCartney
characters the production effects and effort put into this song make it one of
the longer-lasting of this album's songs in the memories, even if all the silly
voices and stop-start nature of the track do get on your nerves a bit.
'Gratitude' is the closest Macca has been to gospel
since the na-na-nas on 'Hey Jude'. Far from a universal singalong, though, this
is a personal confession sung by the most OTT Macca narrator in years (he says
he was 'doing a Little Richard' in the interview, but this is more Janis Joplin
than 'Long Tall Sally'). Though a nice idea, it's sadly taken a bit far and -
especially after the last track - simply sounds like Macca has flipped his wig
again. That's a shame because there's a decent song here, one where Paul
struggles to put into words what it means to be 'loved' - though the lyrics
hint that this is an artist-fan relationship rather than a 'silly love song'.
Paul returns to a few lyrics from his past that only true fans will get (an
interesting move on album that was initially given free to the general public
with The Mail On Sunday but never mind - oh and did anyone else notice that the
Daily Fail's 'McCartney exclusive interview' turned out to be the same one
heard tucked away at the end of the deluxe edition?!) with an end to 'lonely
nights' and a 'lonely' road. Macca sounds very much the converted believer and
the idea of faith is a neat twist on his usual love song themes. However
'gratitude' itself is an awkward song to rhyme and scan - it's a great big lump
of a word that suggests an awkward nod of the head or a muttered embarrassed
'thanks' which the rest of the song has to fit round and sounds odd coming out
of Macca's voice at its most full-throttle. The slowed down 'wish...and
hope...and pray' is another of this album's uncomfortable love affairs with
stop-start rhythms that are difficult to listen to other extended periods,
while the curio backing (which includes a brief snatch of bagpipes and one of
the shortest orchestral swirls of Macca's career) is one of the least
convincing on the album. Even so, it's good to hear Paul doing something a bit
different and this is certainly different!
'Vintage Clothes' is another of this album's
promising songs brought down by a careless attention to detail. The idea is
intriguing (clothes and material things can come back in and out of fashion in
an entirely non-linear way, which seems to work against this album's theme of
fading memories but makes a salient point about how the older we get the more
ways we seem to have of recorded our lives in detail), the arrangement nicely
inventive (with mellotrons on the 'flute' setting a la 'Strawberry Fields
Forever' and a terrific bass that utterly refuses to go anywhere you expect it
to, darting in and out of the song like a fashion-conscious yo-yo), the melody
so-so and the lyrics utterly dreadful. There's a great song to be made out of
these ingredients, but this isn't it - the repeated refrain about old clothes
from the wrack 'coming back' utterly misses the point it sounds as if Macca
started off making, the chaotic whistling and clumsy rhymes make what should be
a clever song by a talented songwriter sound like crass stupidity and we never
get to the real point of the song: it's the people in the clothes who matter,
not what they're wearing and talent should never go out of fashion. Presumably
deliberately, though, the song is treated with the urgency and box-of-tricks of
a song from the psychedelic era, as packed to the gunnels as anything from
'Revolver' 'Peppers' 'Mystery Tour' or 'The White Album' and the sheer dazzling
retro sound proves the point about old sounds coming back into fashion far
better than the lyrics do. Oh well - compared to even the best of 'Chaos and
Creation' this is a major step up so even with mistakes we have show our
gratitude I suppose.
'That Was Me' makes a similar point, a terrific
bustling retro rocker that somehow manages to combines the sounds of the 1950s
with 2006. Macca busks his way through the song with wild abandon, getting
increasingly loud and carried away with every verse on a whistlestop tour
through some of his earliest memories, dotting to and fro as something else
catches his mind's eye. Paul sounds both proud and slightly humbled that this
really was his life people go on and on about so much and even throws in a few
memories he hasn't spoken about on 'Anthology' et al: at scout camp, in the
school play, playing conkers at the bus stop... In a way it's the Macca bit
from 'A Day In The Life', the grounded bit in a life filled with colour and
excitement that would have caused other people in his position to go a bit
bonkers, hinting that for all his fame and fortune it was the little nuggets of
'real life' that Paul remembers best - 'sweating cobwebs in a cellar' known as
The Cavern Club rather than playing to screaming fans or perfecting number one
hits. What comes through from this song, which stops circa late 1962 before The
Beatles really take off, is that this early life could have been anyone's -
that back in the days before Paul was about twenty he was no one special, with
the same memories everyone else of his generation had. 'When I think that all
this stuff can make a life, it's pretty hard to take it in!' he screams,
returning to the sound of his youth in his search for answers in his old age to
life's mysteries. A special song.
'Feet In The Clouds' promises so much too. His
memory perhaps triggered by the last song, Paul remembers a time when everyone
assumed he had no future at all - never mind one as glittering as he had.
Traditionally Paul's interviews discussing his childhood have been bright and
sunny - certainly compared to John's and George's, with no venom, jealousy or
bitterness even at the all too premature death of his mum. This song though
hints that Paul was all too aware of the way his teachers wrote him off,
finding it 'very very very very very very hard' to engage with 'real life' and
dismissed as a dreamer who'll come to nothing. Those lines seem alien to Paul's
voice after fifty odd years of hearing the glass overflowing never mind
half-full and while less poetic and 'edgy' than Lennon's similar childhood
reminiscences they sound all the more remarkable for coming from Paul. He
remembers in the tie-in interview how dark his school was, how the old
Victorian building always looked threatening and cold and distant, how his
teachers were all war veterans still shell-shocked from fighting (yes - this is
the closest McCartney has come to writing his own version of Pink Floyd's 'The
Wall'!) and how nobody wanted to be there. No wonder he sounds disconnected,
off in a world of his own - the difference is that his imagination offered him
a future and a brightness that no one else in this bleak miserable building can
sense, a secret that's precious and will pay dividends just a few years later
when John and Paul meet for the first time. However what should be the
revelatory song on the album and the McCartney composition of the era to blow
all the others away loses out thanks to a trite chorus that again doesn't fit
('I know that I'm not a square as long as they're not around' is a C-Moon style
pun too far), a characteristically gauche verse that rhymes words endlessly
with emphasis even when they're very ill suited ('Stood Corrected. Well
Protected. Umm, Resurrected? As expected!') and some ridiculously overblown
modern technology messing about that's just too darn full of the present to
belong in a song about the past. I really do find it very very very very very
very very very hard to review these songs when Macca gets so close to
perfection and yet undoes all that good work with a few careless lines and
clumsy mistakes that could so easily have been straightened out had he still
been workin wqith some brave enough to stand up to him creatively.
Then again, they'd have probably told him not to
bother with the deeply unusual, rule-breaking uncharacteristic 'House Of Wax'
at all and we'd have been robbed of the one song on the album where everything
works. The closest Macca has come to fitting one of his impressionistic
paintings into a song, it's an operatic haiku where the stakes get getting
bigger and bigger with every verse. Lesser songwriters would have concentrated
on the moment in the metaphor that a house made of a flammable substance
catches alight and burns down mercilessly, but Macca instead pitches this song
just before the house he's built so carefully catches fire. It's a moment that
only he can see and everyone else is oblivious to, which just makes his
helplessness and fury all the worse. He's not quite alone - 'poets spill out
onto the street' suggesting that there's a whole place, possibly a whole world
of such houses about to go up in flames, tying this song up with his ecological
songs of yesteryears. This time however instead of the faintly cosy 'Wildlife'
and cuddly 'Ode To A Koala' the world is dying, ravaged and bent and right on
the verge of self-destruction, wonderfully summed up in song by a blistering
guitar solo by Rusty Andersen that's everything a good back-up musician should
be - right there with the song's creator, outraged and terrified as everything
mankind ever built up is destroyed in one quick go. Macca's lyrics are far more
poetically convincing than anything that made his 'Blackbird Singing'
collection of poems and he should write like this more often as his images are
much more arresting like this: 'To set alight the incomplete remainders of the
future' 'Poets scatter through the night but they can only dream of their
confusion'. Best of all is the revelation at the end that the Earth can yet
recover if mankind disappears, the planet dissected like one of those geography
text-book pictures of layers and with the latest man-made bit on the top taken
away: 'Buried deep below a thousand layers lay the answer to it all'. It's a
stunning song, delivered with one of the greatest McCartney vocals of them all
- you keep thinking he's gone as loud and as powerful as he can and then simply
keeps on going, set to a claustrophobic backing that's pure class. At five
minutes it's not that long by previous Macca standards (its 90 seconds shorter
than 'Silly Love Songs' for a start) but in the context of an album that prides
itself on its short snappy three-minute production wonders this track really
stands out in all its multi-faceted shining glory. More like this please,
Macca! If PETA (the animal preservation charity Macca has done so much for down
the years) doesn't use this as their theme song at some point in the next fifty
years something has gone very wrong.
The high drama continues with 'The End Of The End',
a lovely eulogy seemingly released here 'just in case' something happened to
Paul before the next album (which thankfully wasn't the case). In the context
of 2006 you can so see where this song is coming from - Paul's legacy was never
as damaged as it was in the Heather Mills years and after seeing the
over-eulogising for Lennon and the under-eulogising for Harrison may have been
very worried about his own legacy. The 2001-2003 world tours were full of
eulogies for lost loved ones: 'My Love' for Linda, 'Something' for George, 'Here
Today' for John - it seems the most natural thing in the world for the
ever-organised Paul to plan his own tribute song; if anything it's a surprise
this song isn't on 'Driving Rain' or 'Chaos' but had to wait this long to be written.
Even though this song steers close to saccharine with a Yesterday style string
quartet, it's a typical McCartney trick that isn't sorry for itself for a
minute. Trust Paul to comfort his fans, asking for warm smiles and old stories
to be 'rolled out like carpets' for his fans to sink into as they raise a glass
to him. There's no reason to cry because 'it's the start of a journey to a much
better place - and this wasn't bad, so a much better place would need to be
special'. However as much as Paul tries to be strong and asks for us to be
happy when the time comes, the melody is doing something quite different entirely,
one of Paul's loveliest sombre pieces than can't help but be sad. All in all
it's a much better take on life and death than 'Little Willow', his rather
trite song in tribute to Maureen Starkey in 1997, and easily the best McCartney
song about death since 'Eleanor Rigby'. Comparing the two makes for interesting
comparisons actually: Paul's biggest fear seems to be that he'll die as alone
and as unloved as his spinster character who never married and was buried in
the church where she dreamed of finding happiness, picking up rice in
congregations. But Paul's imagined own passing finds him surrounded by hordes
of people all come to bid their jovial farewells and wish him well - he's lived
a good and happy life that Eleanor Rigby could only have dreamed of and the McCartney
warmth shines through loud and clear in this song with another riveting lead
vocal, with only a couple of lyrical blunders preventing this from being
another out and out masterpiece.
Alas it's typical of this album that Paul should take
the perfect end song and give us an unwanted coda. 'Nod Your Head' is
apparently here because Paul didn't want his audience sobbing - but you have to
wonder why he wants our potential last memories of him to be painful instead.
'Head' is a deliberately ugly song, a primal rocker based around two
out-of-tune swirling guitar riffs drenched in feedback that's meant to sound
young and funky but like much of 'Back To The Egg' before it just misses the
point in every way. What's really ugly though is the lyric: we've had 'gee up'
lyrics from Paul before many times but few have been quite this, well, hurtful:
tired of looking after a depressed loved one Macca's narrator demands a change
in attitude and all but forces her to nod her head in approval at his plans to
get her out of bed. Suddenly that nodded head - the equivalent of the
thumbs-aloft pose caricaturists so love about Paul - doesn't seem quite so nice
or comforting as Paul whines 'well if
you really loved me baby - better than staying in bed...' Suddenly you begin to
wonder if Heather Mills didn't have just a teeny tint point that the abuse and
excesses in their relationship wasn't entirely one way (to be fair everybody's
allowed a bad day when they're grumpy and frustrated, but why turn it into a
song and release it on an album where it doesn't fit? At least make it a B-side
if you have to release it - I'd have swapped this song with 'Why So Blue' any
time!) Who votes to forget this song ever existed, nod your head!
Still, generally 'Memory Almost Full' if pretty good
- not 'Ram' or 'London Town' good of course or even 'Press To Play' or 'Flowers
In The Dirt' good and if I only had to save one 21st century McCartney album
from fire or flood it would be, umm, 'The Fireman' album or 'Driving Rain'
(what is it with Macca and the elements?!) However 'Memory' is a step in the
right direction, with perhaps half an album of very good to excellent material
and another half of what's left over
showing promise in between the mistakes. The songs don't turn up as effortlessly
as they once did and Paul's need to detach himself from his work during his
toughest personal times results in an album that isn't always that interesting,
but there's a lot of heart in this series of songs about age and memory and
lots of great touches right the way through from the compositional stage to the
recording and production process. Above all, Macca sounds as if he wants to
make this album, rather than the 'duty' albums of recent years released to fill
in the silences and keep busy more than anything else, and Macca is surrounded
by a team that for the first time in years really do have his best interests at
heart rather than making a quick buck out of everything. All in all, I think
the 25-year-old McCartney of 1967 would have happily signed up to having an
album this good out so soon after he turned sixty-four, still full of the same
visions, clever concepts, character portraits and emotional involvement as his
younger self even if a few of the natural gifts that once came with ease have
gone a tad Rusty (pun intended). Would that most songwriters that age were
still working with a tenth of that same fire - despite a memory filled with
more images and more discoveries than perhaps any other writer of his
generation.
A NOW COMPLETE LIST
OF PAUL McCARTNEY ARTICLES TO READ AT ALAN’S ALBUM ARCHIVES:
'McCartney' (1970) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2010/08/news-views-and-music-issue-73-paul.html
'Ram' (1971) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2008/07/review-47-paul-and-linda-mccartney-ram.html
‘Wildlife’ (1972) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/paul-mccartney-and-wings-wildlife-1972.html
'McCartney' (1970) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2010/08/news-views-and-music-issue-73-paul.html
'Ram' (1971) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2008/07/review-47-paul-and-linda-mccartney-ram.html
‘Wildlife’ (1972) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/paul-mccartney-and-wings-wildlife-1972.html
‘Red Rose Speedway’ (1973)
http://www.alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2013/04/paul-mccartney-and-wings-red-rose_2844.html
'Band On The Run' (1974) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2011/01/news-views-and-music-issue-87-paul.html
'Venus and Mars' (1975) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2008/07/review-64-paul-mccartney-and-wings.html
'Band On The Run' (1974) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2011/01/news-views-and-music-issue-87-paul.html
'Venus and Mars' (1975) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2008/07/review-64-paul-mccartney-and-wings.html
'Wings At The Speed Of
Sound' (1976) http://www.alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/paul-mccartney-and-wings-at-speed-of.html
'London Town' (1978) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2008/07/review-71-paul-mccartney-and-wings.html
'London Town' (1978) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2008/07/review-71-paul-mccartney-and-wings.html
'Back To The Egg' (1979) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/wings-back-to-egg-1979-revised-review.html
'McCartney II' (Original Double Album) (1980) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2011/07/news-views-and-music-issue-106-paul.html
'Tug Of War' (1982) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2011/11/news-views-and-music-issue-122-paul.html
'McCartney II' (Original Double Album) (1980) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2011/07/news-views-and-music-issue-106-paul.html
'Tug Of War' (1982) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2011/11/news-views-and-music-issue-122-paul.html
'Pipes Of Peace' (1983) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2014/08/paul-mccartney-pipes-of-peace-1983.html
'Press To Play' (1986) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2008/07/88-paul-mccartney-press-to-play-1986.html
'Flowers In The Dirt' (1989) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2009/08/news-views-and-music-issue-40-paul.html
'Press To Play' (1986) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2008/07/88-paul-mccartney-press-to-play-1986.html
'Flowers In The Dirt' (1989) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2009/08/news-views-and-music-issue-40-paul.html
'Off The Ground' (1993) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/paul-mccartney-off-ground-1993.html
‘Flaming Pie’ (1997) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2017/04/paul-mccartney-flaming-pie-1997.html
'Driving Rain' (2001) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/paul-mccartney-driving-rain-2001.html
'Chaos and Creation In The
Back Yard' (2005) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.nl/2016/08/paul-mccartney-chaos-and-creation-in.html
'Memory Almost Full'
(2006) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2015/08/paul-mccartney-memory-almost-full-2006.html
'Electric Arguments' (as 'The Fireman') (2008) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2008/11/news-views-and-music-issue-13a-paul.html
'Kisses On The Bottom'(2012) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/news-views-and-music-issue-141-paul.html
'New' (2013) http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.com/2013/11/paul-mccartney-new-2013-album-review.html
‘Egypt Station’ (2018) https://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.com/2018/09/paul-mccartney-egypt-station-2018.html
The Best Unreleased McCartney/Wings Recordings http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2014/07/the-best-unreleased-mccartney.html
Surviving TV and Film Footage http://www.alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2016/03/paul-mccartney-surviving-tv-appearances.html
Live/Wings Solo/Compilations/Classical
Albums Part One: 1967-1987
http://www.alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2016/03/paul-mccartney-and-bands.html
Live/Wings/Solo/Compilations/Classical/Unreleased
Albums Part Two: 1987-1997
http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2016/03/paul-mccartney-and-bands_21.html
Live/Wings
Solo/Compilations/Classical Albums Part Three: 1997-2015
http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2016/03/paul-mccartney-and-bands_28.html
Non-Album Recordings Part
One 1970-1984 http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2016/04/paul-mccartneywings-non-album-songs.html
Non-Album Recordings Part
Two 1985-2015 http://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.co.uk/2016/04/paul-mccartney-non-album-songs-part-two.html
Essay: Not So Silly Love Songs https://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.com/2018/03/essay-paul-mccartneys-not-so-silly-love.html
Key Concerts and Cover Versions https://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.com/2018/05/paul-mccartney-five-landmark-concerts.html
Essay: Not So Silly Love Songs https://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.com/2018/03/essay-paul-mccartneys-not-so-silly-love.html
Key Concerts and Cover Versions https://alansalbumarchives.blogspot.com/2018/05/paul-mccartney-five-landmark-concerts.html
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