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Browsing Category Book Excerpts

Solo Beatles #1 Singles

March 12, 2012 · by solobeatles

In 2000, the Beatles released the album 1, which gathered every single by the band that had topped the charts in either the U.S. or the U.K. The collection itself went on to top the chart across the globe and became the best selling CD of the 21st century, to date having sold over 31 million copies.  It is the seventh best-selling album since 1991, the year Billboard revised its chart system.

In 2002, Elvis’ estate followed suit with Elv1s 30 #1 Hits, noting on the liner notes that “Before anyone did anything, Elvis did everything!”  Indeed, Elvis had 30 number ones, whereas the Beatles had 27.

The Solo Beatles had 20 number ones on either the U.S. or U.K. charts, bookended by Harrison’s “My Sweet Lord,” which topped the charts in 1970 and then returned to the number one position after his death in 2002.

McCartney had eleven number ones, Lennon four, Harrison three, and Starr two.   Of Lennon’s four, only “Whatever Gets You Through the Night” was number one in his lifetime.  “Imagine” topped the charts ten years after its initial release in 1971.

Technically, McCartney is tied with Starr for only two number one singles in his own name (“Coming Up” and “Pipes of Peace”), because his others were either credited to Paul & Linda McCartney (“Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey”), Paul McCartney & Wings (“My Love,” “Band on the Run”), Wings (“Listen to What the Man Said,” “Silly Love Songs,” “With a Little Luck,” “Mull of Kintyre”), Paul McCartney & Stevie Wonder (“Ebony and Ivory”) or Paul McCartney & Michael Jackson (“Say, Say, Say”).

Three of the hits in this compilation (“Ebony and Ivory,” “Say Say Say,” and “Pipes of Peace”) I did not profile in the book because they epitomize the McCartney stereotype I have tried to provide a corrective to: soft, slick, synth-tinged, and borderline-saccharine. But on their own, the songs themselves are fine – affecting even, if you’re in the right mood.  Two of them reflect his attempt to veer away from “Silly Love Songs” and get back to “Let It Be” statements in the aftermath of Lennon’s murder, and represent the last time he was on top of the singles charts (and thus a part of the young generation’s zeitgeist).

To play the singles continuously, go to this You Tube link and select “Play All”.

http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8BFA3E3536D13E46&feature=mh_lolz

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81AsPshMKxo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MubU8qHutY

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBX2dySWGew

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcZVRiB9AQk&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XViNAoCq-k

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63VH1_MUi84

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f-x1FsvOAz4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4ZkRdkCPc0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7ErrZ-ipoE&feature=fvsr

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GdeU0ww4zY&feature=related

Run Devil Run Vs. Backbeat

March 11, 2012 · by solobeatles

When McCartney’s mother died from breast cancer in 1956, he buried himself in the distraction of rock and roll. When his wife Linda passed away from the same disease in 1998, he returned to the music of the ‘50s. He got the album title Run Devil Run from a brand of bath salts used to ward off evil he saw being sold at an herbal medicine shop on  in Atlanta. Rock and roll was always his balm.

“Party” was a deep cut from the 1957 Elvis movie Lovin’ You. Wanda Jackson later covered it and her version can be heard in the 1989 film classic Dead Poet’s Society. The tune was also included in the 2010 Broadway show Million Dollar Quartet, based on the day Elvis, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, and Jerry Lee Lewis all recorded together at Sun Studios. McCartney used the song as his tool to correct some infuriating revisionism that had been going around about him.

Backbeat is a very good 1994 film about the Beatles’ early days. (That is to say, it’s good for Beatles fans; it’s hard to say if non-fans would be bored or not.) Like Dick Clark’s 1979 telefilm The Birth of the Beatles, it spotlighted their stint in Hamburg, the Vegas of Europe, in their raw early days when they all wore Gene Vincent leather suits. Forced to play for six to eight hours a day to drunken sailors and strippers, they were turned on to over-the-counter speed to keep going and it welded them into an incendiary tight unit. (Pete Best didn’t do amphetamines, though.  It was one of the things that kept him at a distance from the others — like not adopting the Beatle cut — which eventually led to his replacement by Starr.) The movie tells the story through the eyes of Stuart Sutcliffe, Lennon’s painter best friend whom Lennon drafted to play bass, even though he couldn’t play. His musical ineptitude led to serious tension between Stu and perfectionist McCartney, who could play bass better. It was a precursor to the John-Yoko-Paul triangle, but luckily for Western civilization, Stu hooked up with German artist Astrid Kirchherr and graciously stepped aside.

While the audiences back in early ‘60s Hamburg experienced the Beatles’ music as intense hard rock, the creators of Backbeat believed that kids in the mid-‘90s would not, since they were accustomed to the likes of Nirvana and Metallica. So the producers enlisted hot rockers of the era to reinterpret the music for modern kids, and the actors lip-synched to it. Dave Pirner of Soul Asylum and Greg Dulli of the Afghan Whigs did the vocals, Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore did guitar with Gumball’s Don Fleming, Mike Mills of R.E.M. took bass, and Dave Grohl (Nirvana/Foo Fighters) played drums. A very hip band, but neither vocalist sounded anything like Lennon or McCartney.

The film also fell prey to the same fallacy that almost all Beatles movies do, that Lennon was primarily a vulnerable, mixed-up softy and not, as often as not, a prickly asshole. The movie also portrays Harrison as an innocent little boy afraid of the groupies, when by all accounts he was as big a player as any of them.

And it showed McCartney as preppy, aloof, and snobby. McCartney complained, “One of my annoyances about the film Backbeat is that they’ve actually taken my rock ‘n’ rollness off me. They give John the song “Long Tall Sally” to sing and he never sang it in his life. But now it’s set in cement. It’s like The Buddy Holly and Glenn Miller stories. The Buddy Holly Story does not even mention Norman Petty, and The Glenn Miller Story is a sugarcoated version of his life. Now Backbeat has done the same thing to the story of The Beatles.”

Ironically, the same year Backbeat was released, the fantastic missing link Live at the BBC was issued. It was a two CD set that consisted of live in-studio performances by the Beatles culled from their 52 appearances on the BBC between 1962 and 1965. Here with perfect clarity you can hear how tight they were, and the amazing revelation was what a fiend Ringo was on the drums back then, when they were touring and performing almost every day.

It’s true their early guitar sound pre-dated the use of hard rock distortion (which the Beatles had inaugurated with “I Feel Fine,” along with the Kinks), so to kids who thought Soundgarden defined rock, the Beatles would sound un-tough. Thus Backbeat is what it is, and it does a good job of capturing a milieu that was important to their evolution.

The interesting thing is, in his return to roots on Run Devil Run, McCartney does not sound like the Beatles from the BBC (which was presumably, what they sounded like in Hamburg, only drunk), but he sounds like the band in Backbeat. Showing up with his own gang including Pink Floyd’s Dave Gilmour and Deep Purple’s drummer Ian Paice, he scorches with the clear goal of wiping the Backbeat band and everybody else off the map. With the hellhounds of Linda’s death on his trail, he does.

(See 2:28 in the Backbeat clip below …)

As had been his trend with Off the Ground and Flaming Pie, McCartney recorded the Run Devil Run album as fast as possible to capture the excitement of live performances.  He enlisted the Sex Pistols’ producer Chris Thomas, who had done Wings’ Back to the Egg album in 1979.  Thomas had also filled in for George Martin when Martin went on vacation during The White Album, when Thomas was 22.  He went on to mix Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon (of course, featuring Dave Gilmour) and produce Badfinger albums.

Linda had wanted McCartney to record a second album of ‘50s rock covers (his first had been 1988’s Russian Album/ Back in the USSR, originally recorded in an epic two-day session for sale in the Soviet Union only), though she would not live to see it.  For the ‘50s songs, McCartney would listen to them and write down the lyrics (even if he didn’t quite understand them).  In the studio, he’d ask the band if they knew the tune. If not, he’d play it to them a couple times, and then bang, they’d lay it down.  The majority of the album was done within a week; they would do three or four a day with no advance warning of what songs they were doing.

Of all the songs on Run Devil Run, the one that most clearly expressed McCartney’s grief was “No Other Baby.”[1] Dickie Bishop wrote it in 1957 with Bob Watson and performed it with his band The Sidekicks. It was one of the first quasi-rock tunes written by a Brit to be covered by an American (Bobby Helms). At that point, Brit rock was considered a pale imitation of the original.

The version that made an impression on McCartney was The Vipers’ 1958 skiffle version, produced by no less than George Martin. It actually sounds a bit like a peppy number on Live at the BBC called “Lonesome Tears in my Eyes.” McCartney had recorded “No Other Baby” for the earlier covers album, but on Run Devil Run, he recasts the song as a slow and grieving epic, highlighted by Gilmour’s piercing guitar.

The video perfectly captures McCartney’s desolation after Linda’s death. Gorgeously shot in black and white, it features him stranded in the middle of the ocean in a lifeboat. Rowing through ice flows and through storms in the blackest night, he wakes in the morning with sharks circling the boat. Some bloggers commented that the sharks were eerily prescient of Heather Mills.

Another highlight from the album was his fierce rendition of “Shake a Hand.”  Back in 1953, when the Orioles went to No. 1 on the R&B chart with “Crying in the Chapel,” Joe Morris wrote “Shake a Hand” in clear emulation of “Chapel”’s phrasing and inflection, and Faye Adams recorded it fast enough to knock the Orioles out of the No. 1 spot. In 1958, Little Richard did his own take.  Of course, McCartney was Little Richard’s No. 1 disciple, save perhaps for Prince, one of the few people who can match McCartney in his prolific output and ability to do entire albums by himself. (Check out Live at the BBC to hear McCartney doing more Little Richard like “Lucille” and “Ooh! My Soul!”) Macca recalled, “I have this image of being in Hamburg, there was one bar that had a pool table and a great jukebox. And that was the only place I ever heard “Shake A Hand.” Every time we went there, I put it on. I never had the record, but I knew I wanted to do it. It always takes me back to that bar …”

Along with Gilmour, McCartney brought in guitarist Mick Green, who had been in Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas, which Brian Epstein managed. On “Shake a Hand” both Gilmour and Green take their turns doing distinct solos. Green called his “rough and ready” while Gilmour’s was “Smooth and tasteful.”

Shake a Hand is at 3:51 in the clip below …

It’s interesting to compare McCartney’s Little Richard voice in 1999 with his take on “Long Tall Sally” in 1964. It’s deeper but amazingly intact and strong, compared to the voices of Dylan and Jagger — the former now a croak of its former self, the other overly mannered. In this clip from ’64, McCartney’s voice is a little shot, but check out Ringo in the second half.

The (almost) Saturday Night Live Reunion

March 11, 2012 · by solobeatles

In 1976, promoter Bill Sargent offered the Beatles $50 million for one reunion show. Then Sid Bernstein, the promoter of the Beatles’ Shea Stadium concerts Sid Bernstein, asked them to reunite for a benefit concert for Cambodian refugees, which he estimated would raise $230 million.

So on April 24, 1976, Saturday Night Live producer Lorne Michaels appeared on the live show to offer the Beatles $3,000.00 to reunite. “Divide [the money] up any way you want,” he said. “If you want to give less to Ringo, that’s up to you.”

Lennon told Playboy, “Paul and I were together watching that show. He was visiting us at our place in the Dakota. We were watching it and almost went down to the studio, just as a gag … He and Linda walked in, and he and I were just sitting there, watching the show, and we went, ‘Ha-ha, wouldn’t it be funny if we went down?’”

McCartney later recalled, “[John] said, ‘We should go down there. We should go down now and just do it.’ It was one of those moments where we said, ‘Let’s not and say we did.’ “[i]

Lennon said, “We nearly got into a cab, but we were actually too tired …”

The SNL night was the last time Lennon saw McCartney. “That was a period when Paul just kept turning up at our door with a guitar. I would let him in, but finally I said to him, ‘Please call before you come over. It’s not 1956 and turning up at the door isn’t the same anymore. You know, just give me a ring.’ He was upset by that, but I didn’t mean it badly. I just meant that I was taking care of a baby all day and some guy turns up at the door.”[ii]

In 2000, VH-1 made a good movie about the SNL evening called The Two of Us, written by long-time fan Mark Stanfield. The movie was primarily one long conversation between Lennon and McCartney over the course of the day as they hang out at the Dakota then wander around New York and return in time for the show. (Linda and Ono are not present.)

It was directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg, who had done the Beatles film Let It Be. As he actually knew Lennon, he was able to help Jared Harris in probably the most convincing portrait of the prickly Lennon yet to appear on film. Aidan Quinn did well as Paul McCartney, and McCartney later told him that he liked the film. (A 2000 British TV movie called In His Life: The John Lennon Story starring Philip McQuillen also did a good job of showing all facets of his personality.)

Here’s a clip of the ending.  (As I got it off You Tube, it starts in the middle of the prior scene …)

Though they no longer hung out in person, the ex-partners still spoke on the phone about cats and babies, though their relations could be rocky. After one heated conversation, McCartney thought Lennon was affecting a “tough American” pose, so Macca snapped, “Fuck off, Kojak!” and slammed down the receiver.

One Beatle did make it to SNL in 1976, however – George Harrison, who did beautiful duets of “Here Comes the Sun” and “Homeward Bound” with Paul Simon.

Here’s an interesting fan clip from You Tube:

“This is how I think it would have sounded if they went forward that fateful moment.  I took John Lennon’s original track from 1975’s “Rock and Roll” album and Paul McCartney’s live performance from the 1991 “Unplugged” bootleg. I had to speed up Paul’s track to match John’s as he had performed it significantly slower.”


Notes

1. “And in the End …” Vh1.com 2000, http://www.vh1.com/artists/news/1436073/20000201/beatles.jhtml (10 Oct. 2011).

2. David Sheff, “January 1981 Playboy Interview,” John-Lennon.com, http://www.john-lennon.com/playboyinterviewwithjohnlennonandyokoono.htm (10 Oct. 2011).

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