Coming Up (song)

Last updated

11 tracks
Side one
  1. "Coming Up"
  2. "Temporary Secretary"
  3. "On the Way"
  4. "Waterfalls"
  5. "Nobody Knows"
Side two
  1. "Front Parlour"
  2. "Summer's Day Song"
  3. "Frozen Jap"
  4. "Bogey Music"
  5. "Darkroom"
  6. "One of These Days"

I originally cut it on my farm in Scotland. I went into the studio each day and just started with a drum track. Then I built it up bit by bit without any idea of how the song was going to turn out. After laying down the drum track, I added guitars and bass, building up the backing track.

Then I thought, 'Well, OK, what am I going to do for the voice?' I was working with a vari-speed machine with which you can speed up your voice, or take it down a little bit. That's how the voice sound came about.

Paul McCartney

John Lennon, who was in the Beatles with McCartney, described "Coming Up" as "a good piece of work", and it prompted him to return to recording in 1980. [3] [4] [5] After hearing it on the radio for the first time, Lennon reportedly stated "Fuck a pig! It's Paul!" [6] Lennon later stated his preference for the studio version over the live version that was released as a single: "I thought that Coming Up was great and I like the freak version that he made in his barn better than that live Glasgow one. If I'd have been with him I would've said 'that's the one' too. And I thought that the record company had a nerve changing it round on him, and I know what they mean, they want to hear the real guy singing, but I like the freaky one." [7]

Critical reception

Cash Box called it an "unusually produced but cute track". [8] Record World said that "electronic keyboards, a dance beat and Paul's pop vocals give the contemporary sound." [9]

Live version

A live version of the song was recorded in Glasgow, Scotland, on 17 December 1979 by Wings during their tour of the UK. An edited version from the performance was included as one of two songs on the B-side; the other song on the B-side was "Lunchbox/Odd Sox", a Wings song that dated back to Venus and Mars (1975). Both songs were credited to Paul McCartney and Wings.

Columbia Records wanted to put the live version on McCartney II but McCartney resisted the change, wanting to keep it a solo studio album. Instead, a one-sided 7" white-label promotional copy of the Wings version was included with the album in North America.

"Coming Up (Live at Glasgow)" has since appeared on the US versions of the McCartney compilations All the Best! (1987) and Wingspan: Hits and History (2001), while the solo studio version is included on UK and international releases.

The full length version of the song with an additional verse from the 1979 Glasgow show was finally released as bonus track on the Paul McCartney Archive Collection reissue of McCartney II in 2011.

A different live Wings recording of "Coming Up" appears on the album Concerts for the People of Kampuchea (1981), also recorded in 1979.

Music video

The music video for "Coming Up", directed by Keith McMillan, features Paul McCartney playing ten roles (himself, two guitarists, a bassist, a drummer, a keyboardist, and four saxophonists) and Linda McCartney playing two (one female backing vocalist and one male backing vocalist). The "band" identified as "the Plastic Macs" on the drum kit (an homage to Lennon's conceptual Plastic Ono Band), features Paul and Linda's imitations of various rock musician stereotypes, as well as a few identifiable musicians.

In his audio commentary on the video collection The McCartney Years (2007), McCartney identified characters that were impersonations of specific artists: Hank Marvin (guitarist from the Shadows), Ron Mael of Sparks (keyboards), a 'Beatlemania-era' version of himself (bass), and a drummer vaguely inspired by John Bonham from Led Zeppelin. [10] Others, such as authors Fred Bronson and Kenneth Womack, have suggested that there are other identifiable impersonations in the video, such as Andy Mackay, Frank Zappa and Buddy Holly; [11] [12] McCartney said the other roles were simply comic relief. [13]

The video premiered in the UK on The Kenny Everett Video Show on 14 April 1980 and in the US on Saturday Night Live on 17 May 1980. [14]

Release

In the UK, the single was an immediate hit, reaching No.2 in its third week on the chart. [15]

In the US, Columbia Records promoted the live version, which subsequently received more airplay than the studio version. McCartney was unaware of Columbia's move; otherwise, he might have pushed for the A-side, which he thought was the stronger version. An executive from Columbia Records explained the switch by stating "Americans like the sound of Paul McCartney's real voice." [2] The live version reached No.1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America for sales of over one million copies. [16] Although the live version received more airplay and was considered to be the "hit", Billboard listed the A-side on the Hot 100 for the first 12 weeks on the chart, including three weeks at No.1, before switching to the more popular B-side for the remaining nine weeks on the chart. [17]

Chart performance

"Coming Up"
McCartneyComingUp.jpg
Single by Paul McCartney
from the album McCartney II
B-side
  • "Coming Up" (Live at Glasgow)
  • "Lunch Box/Odd Sox"
Released11 April 1980 (1980-04-11) [1]
RecordedJuly–August 1979
Genre Funk rock
Length3:49 (album/single edit)
5:35 (full length version)
4:10 ("Live at Glasgow" version)
Label Parlophone (UK)
Columbia (US)
Songwriter(s) Paul McCartney
Producer(s) Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney singles chronology
"Wonderful Christmastime"
(1979)
"Coming Up"
(1980)
"Waterfalls"
(1980)
Wings singles chronology
"Rockestra Theme"
(1979)
"Coming Up"
(1980)
"My Carnival"
(1985)

Certifications

RegionCertification Certified units/sales
United States (RIAA) [29] Gold1,000,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

Track listing

7" single (R 6035)
  1. "Coming Up" – 3:49
  2. "Coming Up" (Live at Glasgow) – 3:51
    • Performed by Paul McCartney and Wings
  3. "Lunch Box/Odd Sox" – 3:54
    • Performed by Paul McCartney and Wings

Personnel

Studio version

Live version

"Lunch Box / Odd Sox"

See also

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