Paul McCartney
So how can you be 'normal' when you've left the parameters of 'normal' far far behind? You can't. The rules that exist for you and I don't apply here. You can try and lead a 'normal' life and that is what Macca has done but if you can 'try' and lead a normal life you also have the option to 'not try' so 'normal' is not applicable.
Fame shapes a man whether you like it or not. It may be the wildest dreams of a nobody but it can imprison those it touches. And few have been 'touched up'
by fame quite as much as James Paul McCartney. So how has it effected him? What do we really know about him?
I would say we know next to nothing other than the great auses he espouses. He hides behind his way-hey thumbs up persona and reveals very little else. But there is a hard streak: there has to be. You don't survive for as long as he has without it. And we see it in glimpses: the row over whether some songs should be 'McCartney-Lennon' rather than the usual 'Lennon-McCartney'; the Denny Laine-co-publishing-rights-ofMull of Kintyre business...these are just little things in a course of a life but reveal the other side.
There is nothing wrong with these things. But as a fan it frustrates when you know so little about the great man. What does he really think? What does he really feel?
And I think you will never know the man as the wall of fame between him and the rest of us is a wall he will never want breeched.
Iconography.
Below are the facts that most of us know.
But they won't take you any nearer the man.
© Paul Page, 2011
He was born in Liverpool on June 18, 1942 and was educated at The Liverpool Institute. He
wrote his first song at 14, I Lost My Little Girl.
Within a year, two more musicians had been brought in, the
15-year-old guitarist
George Harrison (b. 25 February 1943, Liverpool, England, d. 29 November 2001,
Los Angeles, California, USA) and an art school friend of Lennon's,
Stuart Sutcliffe
(b. 23 June 1940, Edinburgh, Scotland, d. 10 April 1962, Hamburg, Germany).
After a brief spell as Johnny And The Moondogs, the band rechristened
themselves the Silver Beetles, and, in April 1960, played
before impresario Larry Parnes, winning the dubious distinction of a
support slot on an arduous tour of Scotland with autumnal idol Johnny Gentle. By the
summer of 1960 the group had a new name, the Beatles, dreamed up by Lennon who
said "a man in a flaming pie appeared and said you shall be Beetles with an a".
The image
of the group was changing, most noticeably with their fringed haircuts or, as
they were later known, the "mop-tops', the creation of Sutcliffe's German fiancée
Astrid Kirchherr.
The first German trip ended when the
under-age Harrison was deported in December 1960 and the others lost
their work permits. During this turbulent period, they also parted
company with manager Allan Williams, who had arranged many of their early gigs.
Following a couple of months" recuperation, the group reassembled
for regular performances at the Cavern Club in Liverpool and briefly returned to
Germany where they performed at the Top Ten club and
backed Tony Sheridan on the single
My Bonnie.
Meanwhile, Sutcliffe decided to leave the group and stay in Germany as a
painter. The more accomplished McCartney then took up the bass guitar.
This part of their career is well documented in the 1994 feature film
Backbeat.
His replacement was Ringo Starr (b. Richard Starkey,
7 July 1940, Dingle, Liverpool, England), the extrovert and locally popular
drummer from Rory Storm And The Hurricanes. Towards the end of
1962, the Beatles broke through to the UK charts with their
debut single,
Love Me Do,
and played the Star Club for the final time. The debut was important,
as it was far removed from the traditional "beat combo" sound, and Lennon's use of a
harmonica made the song stand out. At this time,
Epstein
signed a contract with the music publisher Dick James, which led to the
formation of Northern Songs.
On 13 February 1963 the Beatles appeared on
UK television's Thank Your Lucky Stars to promote their new single,
Please Please
Me,
and were seen by six million viewers. It was a pivotal moment in their career, at the start
of a year in which they would spearhead a working-class assault on music, fashion and
the peripheral arts. Please Please Me, with its distinctive harmonies and
infectious group beat, soon topped the UK charts. It signalled the
imminent overthrow of the solo singer in favour of an irresistible wave of Mersey
talent.
It was at this point that the
Beatles became a household name. She Loves You was replaced by
I Want To Hold Your Hand, which had UK advance sales of over one million and
entered the charts at number 1. The photographer for the album sleeve of
Please Please
Me was the celebrated surrealist
& theatre specialist,
Angus McBean (more on his life
here).
Beatles badges, dolls, chewing gum and even cans of Beatle breath
showed the huge rewards that could be earned with the sale of merchandising
goods. Perhaps most importantly of all, however, they broke the
Tin Pan Alley monopoly of songwriting by steadfastly composing their own
material. From the moment they rejected Mitch Murray's How Do You Do It? in
favour of their own
Please Please Me, Lennon and McCartney set in motion revolutionary
changes in the music publishing industry.
They even had sufficient surplus material to provide hits for fellow
artists such as
Billy J.
Kramer,
Cilla Black,
the Fourmost and
Peter And Gordon. As well as providing the
Rolling Stones
with their second single,
I Wanna Be Your Man, the Beatles encouraged the Stones to start
writing their own songs in order to earn themselves composers' royalties.
Their
first two films,
A Hard Day's Night (buy:
dvd us -
dvd uk)
and
Help!
(buy:
dvd us -
video us), were not the usual pop celluloid cash-ins but were witty and
inventive, and achieved critical acclaim as well as box office
success. The national affection bestowed upon the loveable mop-tops was
best exemplified in 1965, when they were awarded MBEs for services to British industry. The
year ended with the release of their first double-sided
number 1 single, We Can Work It Out/Day Tripper, the coupling indicating
how
difficult it had become to choose between a- and b-sides.
During 1966, the Beatles continued performing their increasingly complex
arrangements before scarcely controllable screaming fans, but the novelty of
fandom was wearing frustratingly thin. In Tokyo, the group incurred the
wrath of militant students who objected to their performance at
Budokan. Several death threats followed and the group left Japan in
poor spirits, unaware that worse was to follow. A visit to Manila ended in a
near riot when , the Beatles did not attend a party thrown by President
Ferdinand Marcos, and before leaving the country they were set
upon by angry patriots.
A few weeks later Beatles records were being burned in
the redneck southern states of America because of Lennon's flippant remark that:
"We are more popular than Jesus now". Although his words passed unnoticed in
Britain, their reproduction in an American magazine instigated
assassination threats and a massed campaign by members of the
Ku Klux Klan to stamp out the Beatle menace. By the summer of 1966, the group were
exhausted and defeated and played their last official performance at
Candlestick Park, San Francisco, USA, on 29 August.
The attendant album,
Revolver, was equally varied, with Harrison's caustic Taxman,
McCartney's plaintive For No One and Here, There And Everywhere, and
Lennon's drug-influenced I'm Only Sleeping, She Said She Said and
the mantric Tomorrow Never Knows. The latter has been
described as the most effective evocation of a LSD experience ever
recorded. After 1966, the Beatles retreated into the studio, no longer
bound by the restriction of having to perform live. Their image
as pin-up pop stars was also undergoing a metamorphosis and when they next
appeared in photographs, all four had moustaches, and Lennon even boasted glasses,
his short-sightedness previously concealed by contact lenses.
Musically, the songs were similarly intriguing, with Penny Lane including a
piccolo trumpet and shimmering percussive fade-out, while Strawberry Fields Forever
fused two different versions of the same song and used reverse-taped
cellos to eerie effect.
The album
closed with the epic A Day In The Life, the Beatles most ambitious work to
date, featuring what Lennon described as "a sound building up from
nothing to the end of the world". As a final gimmick, the orchestra
was recorded beyond a 20,000 hertz frequency, meaning that the final note was audible
only to dogs. Even the phonogram was not
allowed to interfere with the proceedings, for a record
groove was cut back to repeat slices of backwards-recorded tape that played
on into infinity.
While Sgt.
Peppers Lonely
Hearts Club Band topped the album charts, the group
appeared on a live worldwide television broadcast, playing their
anthem of the period, All You Need Is Love. The following week it
entered many of the world's charts at number 1, echoing the
old days of Beatlemania.
The first
fruit of their post-Epstein labour was the film
Magical Mystery Tour
(buy:
dvd us -
cd uk), first screened on national television on Boxing Day 1967. While the
phantasmagorical movie received mixed reviews, nobody could
complain about the music, initially released in the unique form of a
double EP, featuring six well-crafted songs. The EPs
reached number 2 in the UK, making chart history in the process. Ironically,
the package was robbed of the top spot by the traditional Beatles
Christmas single, this time in the form of Hello Goodbye.
Harrison contributed While My Guitar Gently Weeps, which
featured Eric Clapton
on guitar. Marmalade
took Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da to number 1 in the UK, while Helter Skelter took on symbolic
force in the mind of the mass murderer
Charles Manson.
There were also a number of average songs that seemed still to require work, plus
some ill-advised doodlings such as Revolution No. 9 and Goodnight.
The Beatles revealed that the four musicians were already working in isolated
neutrality, although the passage of time has now made this work a
critics' favourite.
The return-to-roots minimalism
was spearheaded by the appropriately titled number 1 single Get Back, which
featured
Billy Preston
(essential Billy Preston cd:
Ultimate Collection)
on organ. Cameras were present at their next recording sessions, as they ran
through dozens of songs, many of which they had not played since
Hamburg. When the sessions ended, there were countless spools of tape
that were not reassembled until the following year.
In the meantime, a select few
witnessed the band's last "public" performance on the rooftop of the Apple headquarters
in Savile Row, London. Amid the uncertainty of 1969, the Beatles
enjoyed their final UK number 1 with The Ballad Of John And Yoko, on which only
Lennon and McCartney performed.
With various solo projects on the horizon, the Beatles stumbled through 1970, their
disunity betrayed to the world in the depressing film
Let It Be,
which shows Harrison and Lennon
clearly unhappy about McCartney's attitude towards the band. The
subsequent album, finally pieced together by producer
Phil
Spector,
was a controversial and bitty affair, initially housed in a
cardboard box containing a lavish paperback book, which increased the
retail price to a prohibitive level.
There was also the aptly titled last official single, Let It Be,
which entered the UK charts at number 2, only to drop to number 3 the following week. For
many it was the final, sad anti-climax before the inevitable, yet still
unexpected, split. The acrimonious dissolution of the Beatles, like that of no
other group before or since, symbolized the end of an era that
they had dominated and helped to create.
The first
volume of
Anthology,
released in November 1995,
collected 52 previously unreleased out-takes and demo versions recorded
between 1958 and 1964, plus eight spoken tracks taken from
interviews. The album was accompanied by an excellent six-part
television series that told the complete story of the band, made with the
help of the three remaining Beatles, and by the single
release of Free As A Bird, the first song recorded by the band since
their break-up. This consisted of a 1977 track sung by Lennon into a tape
recorder, and backed vocally and instrumentally in 1995 by the other three Beatles
and produced by
Jeff Lynne. It
narrowly failed to reach number 1 on both sides of the Atlantic, as did the
slightly inferior Real Love in March 1996.
The reaction to
Anthology 2 was ecstatic. While it was expected that
older journalists would write favourably about their generation, it was
encouraging to see younger writers offering some fresh views. David Quantick of the
New Musical Express offered one of the best comments in
recent years:
Anthology 3 could not improve
upon the previous collection but there were gems to be found. The acoustic
While My Guitar Gently Weeps from Harrison is stunning.
Because, never an outstanding track when it appeared on
Abbey Road,
is given a stripped a cappella treatment. The McCartney demo of
Come And Get It for
Badfinger
begs
the question of why the Beatles chose not to release this classic pop
song themselves.
After the Beatles Paul formed Wings with his wife Linda and Denny Laine. The band lasted a decade and produced the seminal album Band on the Run (1973)and the monster number-1 Mull of Kintyre (though, interestingly it did not do well in the US).
He has been writing poetry seriously for the past decade. His poems are collected for the first time, along with his legendary lyrics, in Blackbird Singing, to be published in the United States by W.W. Norton & Company on April 23, 2001. A Freeman of the City of Liverpool and Lead Patron of The Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts, Paul McCartney is a Fellow of The Royal College of Music and a Fellow of The British Academy of Composers and Songwriters. In 1996, he was knighted for his services to music.
He adopted Heather, Linda Eastman's first-born, then they had Mary in 1969, Stella
in 1971 and James in 1977. With Heather Mills came Beatrice in October 2003.
Paul McCartney Store @ Amazon.com
© - Paul Page (2011)
Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney
If you're writing to Paul McCartney or to a member of his team reuesting an autograph then you will be disppointed. Over the years he has got wise to the fact that his signature is worth a great deal of money. You know he just has to sign his name in a moment and he's making at least £200.00 appear as if by magic. He's up there with someone like David Hockney when it coms to the value of his signature.
Thus the best you can hope for (and be grateful for) when writing to MPL is a photograph.
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