Back to the Egg | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 8 June 1979 | |||
Recorded | 29 June 1978 – February 1979 | |||
Studio | Spirit of Ranachan, Campbeltown; Lympne Castle, Kent; Abbey Road and Replica, London | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 42:01 | |||
Label | Parlophone (UK) Columbia (US) | |||
Producer | ||||
Wings chronology | ||||
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Paul McCartney chronology | ||||
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Singles from Back to the Egg | ||||
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Back to the Egg is the seventh and final studio album by the British-American rock band Wings,released in June 1979 on Parlophone in the UK and Columbia Records in North America (their first for the label). Co-produced by Chris Thomas,the album reflects band leader Paul McCartney's embracing of contemporary musical trends such as new wave and punk,and marked the arrival of new Wings members Laurence Juber and Steve Holley. Back to the Egg adopts a loose conceptual theme around the idea of a working band,and its creation coincided with a period of considerable activity for the group,which included making a return to touring and work on several television and film projects.
Recording for the album began in June 1978 and lasted for almost a year. The sessions took place at Spirit of Ranachan Studios in Campbeltown,Scotland;Lympne Castle in Kent,London's Abbey Road Studios,and Replica Studio –the last of which McCartney built as an exact replica of Abbey Road's Studio Two when the latter became unavailable. Wings returned to Abbey Road in March 1979 to complete the album,before filming a series of promotional videos in Lympne and elsewhere,for what became the Back to the Egg TV special.
Back to the Egg received unfavourable reviews from the majority of critics,with Rolling Stone magazine deriding it as "the sorriest grab bag of dreck in recent memory". [1] Although the album charted in the top ten around the world and was certified platinum in the United States,it was viewed as a commercial failure relative to previous Wings releases,particularly in light of the generous financial terms under which McCartney had signed with CBS-owned Columbia Records. Of its singles –"Old Siam,Sir","Getting Closer" and "Arrow Through Me" –only "Getting Closer" made the top 20 in Britain or America. The song "Rockestra Theme",recorded with a cast of guest musicians from bands such as the Who,Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd,won a Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance in 1980.
Wings toured the UK in support of the album,but the planned world tour ended in January 1980,when McCartney was arrested in Japan for possession of marijuana,spending nine days in jail. The group disbanded early the following year after the departure of Laine. Back to the Egg was reissued in 1993,with bonus tracks,and in 2007 for iTunes,with the addition of Wings' 1979 non-album single "Goodnight Tonight",in its extended form.
After the release of the album London Town (1978),Wings band leader Paul McCartney hired two session musicians,drummer Steve Holley and lead guitarist Laurence Juber,to replace former members Joe English and Jimmy McCulloch. [2] With the new line-up –Wings' sixth since its formation in 1971 [3] –McCartney intended to record a raw rock and roll album and return to touring,for the band's first concerts since their successful Wings Over the World tour of 1975–76. [4] McCartney also hoped to realise his longstanding plan of making a film adaptation of the Rupert the Bear cartoon series, [5] for which he owned the commercial rights, [6] and commissioned English playwright Willy Russell to write a feature film starring Wings. [7] [nb 1]
Holley and Juber were recruited by Wings co-founder and guitarist Denny Laine, [13] who had appeared as a guest on The David Essex Show in 1977 when Juber was working as a guitarist in the house band. [14] Holley,a neighbour of Laine's,joined Wings in time to appear in the promotional video for London Town's lead single,"With a Little Luck", [15] having turned down a position with Elton John's band. [16] According to Wings biographer Garry McGee,Juber and Holley were each paid a weekly sum less than one-fifth of that paid to McCartney,his wife Linda (the band's keyboard player) and Laine. [15]
For the new album,Back to the Egg,McCartney collaborated in the studio with producer Chris Thomas, [17] with whom he had begun working on the audio for two films documenting Wings' last world tour: Wings Over the World ,a television documentary, [18] and the cinema release Rockshow (1980). [19] This was the first time Wings recorded with an outside producer since their 1973 single "Live and Let Die",which George Martin had produced. [20] After working with the Pretenders and the Sex Pistols,Thomas brought a punk rock and new wave influence to Wings' sound, [21] [22] matching McCartney's desire to reflect contemporary musical trends. [23] [24]
The new wave thing was happening and ... I sort of realized, "Well, so what's wrong with us doing an uptempo [album]?" ... Back to the Egg was influenced just as what I had wanted to do at the time, the direction I felt I hadn't been in for a while ... [25]
Although London Town had featured a significant level of contribution from Laine as a songwriter, [17] [26] all but one of the songs on Back to the Egg are credited to McCartney alone. [27] The album was originally planned around a loose conceptual theme, [28] about which authors Chip Madinger and Mark Easter write in their book Eight Arms to Hold You: "The idea was to have a theme of a working band, getting back on the road ... or 'back to the egg' (or protective shell) of touring." [23] In the original LP format, the two album sides were labelled with the egg-related titles "Sunny Side Up" and "Over Easy". [29]
The album's opening song is "Reception", an instrumental, in which McCartney attempted to capture the effect of turning a radio dial and finding "about four stations at once". [30] The track features a guitar-controlled synthesizer (played by Juber) over a funk-inspired bassline, and spoken voices, including a reading of part of "The Poodle and the Pug", from Vivian Ellis's opera Big Ben (1946). [31] A brief segment from the track "The Broadcast", which appears later on Back to the Egg, is previewed in this opening piece. [30] The next three songs – "Getting Closer", "We're Open Tonight" and "Spin It On" – adhere to the proposed album-wide concept. [23] Writing in Melody Maker in June 1979, Mark Williams interpreted "Reception" as representing a radio being tuned in a car, whereby "the occupant is on his way to a gig, hence 'Getting Closer' [to the venue] and, upon arrival, 'We're Open Tonight'". [32] The notion of live performance is then reflected in the sequencing of what Madinger and Easter term "heavier rock tracks such as 'Spin It On'". [23]
McCartney had recorded a piano demo for "Getting Closer" in 1974, at which point the song had a slower tempo. [33] Author and Mojo contributor Tom Doyle describes Wings' version as "power-popping" and reminiscent of the English band Squeeze. [34] The mellow "We're Open Tonight" was written at the McCartneys' farm in Campbeltown, Scotland, and was the album's title track until Linda suggested Back to the Egg. [35]
Another song composed in Scotland, [36] the fast-tempo [32] "Spin It On" was an obvious acknowledgment of punk and new wave; [37] author Vincent Benitez terms it "McCartney-esque whimsy on punk steroids". [27] Laine's composition "Again and Again and Again" similarly has "echoes of the Clash", according to McCartney biographer Howard Sounes. [37] This song was originally two separate pieces, which Laine combined on McCartney's recommendation. [36]
Although credited to McCartney alone, "Old Siam, Sir" marked "the most collective band involvement" as regards songwriting, Madinger and Easter suggest. [36] Similar in style to "Spin It On", the song features a keyboard riff written by Linda [36] and a Holley-composed middle eight; [38] in addition, Laine helped McCartney complete the composition, [27] an early version of which the previous incarnation of Wings had demoed in July 1976. [39] [nb 2] "Arrow Through Me", a track more in keeping with McCartney's melodic pop style, [41] is a song written from the perspective of a rejected lover. [42] With a musical arrangement that eschews guitar backing for synthesizer, Fender Rhodes piano and horns, Benitez views it as "reminiscent of the techno-pop style of Stevie Wonder". [27]
Opening side two, "Rockestra Theme" was a composition that McCartney had first recorded in 1974, on the same piano demo tape as "Getting Closer". [43] "Rockestra Theme" is an instrumental – except for the shouted line "Why haven't I had any dinner?", which author Robert Rodriguez describes as a "deliberate evocation" of Glenn Miller's 1940 single "Pennsylvania 6-5000". [24] Another rock track, [44] "To You" includes a lyric aimed at a lover who has wronged the singer. [45] The guitar solo on the recording provides an unusual aspect for a Wings song, [44] in that Juber played the part through an Eventide harmonizer while McCartney simultaneously altered the harmonizer's settings from the studio's control room. [46]
McCartney deemed the two gospel-influenced pieces making up "After the Ball/Million Miles" as being of insufficient quality to merit inclusion as separate tracks; [47] "After the Ball" ends with a guitar solo, [47] edited from parts played by McCartney, Laine and Juber, after which "Million Miles" consists of a performance by McCartney alone, on concertina. [48] This is followed by another medley, "Winter Rose/Love Awake", both portions of which McCartney had demoed at Rude Studio, his home studio at Campbeltown, in 1977. [49] [nb 3]
"The Broadcast" is another instrumental, [51] designed to give the impression of several radio signals interlaced, and bringing full-circle the concept established in the album's opening track, "Reception". [48] Over a musical backing of piano, mellotron and gizmotron, [48] it features readings taken from the plays The Sport of Kings by Ian Hay and The Little Man by John Galsworthy. [52] As a return to the proposed working-band concept, "So Glad to See You Here", Rodriguez writes, "[evokes] the anticipation of a live act guaranteed to 'knock 'em dead'" and so recalls Wings' 1975–76 show-opening medley "Venus and Mars/Rock Show". [53] During the outro, the band reprise a line from "We're Open Tonight". [45] The album ends with a jazz-inflected [37] ballad, "Baby's Request", which McCartney wrote for American vocal group the Mills Brothers, after seeing them perform in the South of France during the summer of 1978. [48]
The band first rehearsed material for Back to the Egg in London, at the offices of McCartney's company MPL Communications in Soho Square, before carrying out further rehearsals in Scotland, in June 1978. [23] As on his other Wings recordings over 1978–79, Thomas worked with Phil McDonald as his recording engineer, at McCartney's insistence, rather than Bill Price, who was the producer's preferred engineer. [54] [nb 4]
The recording sessions for Back to the Egg began on 29 June 1978 at Spirit of Ranachan Studios [56] – another, larger recording facility on the McCartneys' Campbeltown farm – using equipment loaned from Mickie Most's RAK Studio in London. [57] The basic tracks were recorded with a spontaneity that had been absent in Wings' past work, [35] employing an approach that Juber has described as a "back-to-basics, garage band kind of feel". [21]
Sessions at Spirit of Ranachan lasted until 27 July, during which the band taped and added overdubs to "Arrow Through Me", "Again and Again and Again", "To You", "Winter Rose", "Old Siam, Sir" and "Spin It On". [23] Basic tracks were also completed for "Cage", a song that remained in the proposed running order for the album until early in 1979, "Crawl of the Wild", "Weep for Love", "Ballroom Dancing" and "Maisie". [56] These last three compositions would all appear on solo albums by members of Wings between 1980 and 1982. [58] [nb 5]
In addition, the band filmed a promotional video for the London Town single "I've Had Enough" while in Scotland [38] [61] and, in early July, recorded demos of twelve pieces intended for the Rupert the Bear film soundtrack. [18] In the case of the latter activity, none of these compositions were revisited for what became Rupert and the Frog Song (1984). [62] [nb 6]
After a break to allow for school summer holidays, [64] recording recommenced on 11 September at Lympne Castle in Kent, using the RAK mobile recording equipment, as before. [23] The choice of location was partly due to the castle's proximity to the McCartneys' property "Waterfall", in Peasmarsh, East Sussex. [65] [66] During sessions lasting through to 29 September, [67] the band recorded "We're Open Tonight", "Love Awake", "After the Ball", "Million Miles", "Reception" and "The Broadcast". [23]
Recording took place mainly in the castle's great hall, with Holly's drum kit positioned in the fireplace. [23] McCartney and Juber taped their acoustic guitar parts for "We're Open Tonight" in a stairwell. [36] Excerpted from books found in the library, the readings for "Reception" and "The Broadcast" were overdubbed in the kitchen and performed by the owners of Lympne Castle, [48] Harold and Dierdre Margary. [68]
Sessions moved to Abbey Road Studios in London on 3 October. [69] That day, Wings joined with a supergroup of guest musicians, collectively known as "Rockestra", [42] to record the tracks "Rockestra Theme" and "So Glad to See You Here". [69] A camera crew led by Barry Chattington filmed the proceedings, [40] and a 40-minute documentary, titled Rockestra, was later compiled from the footage. [69] Equipment used for this session included 60 microphones, a pair of mixing consoles and a 16-track recording desk. [40] James Honeyman-Scott of the Pretenders, Hank Marvin of the Shadows, the Who's Pete Townshend, Pink Floyd's David Gilmour, Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones and John Bonham, and the Attractions' Bruce Thomas all took part. [69] Also among the line-up was the horn section from Wings' 1975–76 world tour, consisting of Howie Casey, Tony Dorsey, Thaddeus Richard and Steve Howard. [40] Keith Moon was meant to participate, but he had died shortly before the session; Jeff Beck and Eric Clapton were also scheduled to appear. [70]
On 10 October, Wings taped "Getting Closer" at Abbey Road, along with a demo [48] of "Baby's Request". [69] McCartney had intended this recording of "Baby's Request" for the Mills Brothers to use as a guide, but after they asked to be paid for recording the song, [71] he instead included the demo on Back to the Egg. [72] The band then continued with overdubs on these and other songs intermittently through October and November, finishing at Abbey Road on 1 December. [73]
Towards the end of the year, Wings also carried out overdubs at the newly built Replica Studio, located at MPL's Soho Square offices. [73] Frustrated at the impending unavailability of Abbey Road's Studio Two [30] – which studio owner and record company EMI needed for its other acts, besides Wings [74] – McCartney had constructed an exact replica of Studio Two in the basement at MPL. [75] [nb 7] Among the work done on Back to the Egg at Replica, the band replaced the final twenty seconds of "So Glad to See You Here" with what Madinger and Easter describe as "a reggae-styled coda", containing the "We're Open Tonight" reprise. [77]
Sessions continued there in January and February 1979. [78] During that time, the band recorded a non-album single – the disco-styled "Goodnight Tonight", backed with "Daytime Nighttime Suffering" – as a release to coincide with the airing of the long-delayed [79] Wings Over the World special. [80] While noting that McCartney and Laine's relationship was beginning to unravel at this point, Sounes compares the freshness of these new recordings with the drawn-out sessions for Back to the Egg and writes that the album "was now so overworked it might more aptly have been titled Over-Egged". [81] Impatient at the amount of time being spent in the recording studio, Laine publicly admitted that he was "desperate" to go out on tour. [82]
In March, Wings moved back to Abbey Road Studios to complete the album. [30] Vocal overdubs were then added to "Winter Rose/Love Awake" [83] and an orchestral-sounding mellotron part to the end of "Getting Closer". [36] Having worked with the Black Dyke Mills Band in the 1960s, when he produced their 1968 single "Thingumybob" for Apple Records, [84] McCartney invited the band down from Yorkshire to overdub brass accompaniment on "Winter Rose/Love Awake". [85]
While mixing the album during March, Wings finally discarded the song "Cage", which had been sequenced as the second track, following "Reception". [86] The same alternative running order paired the Rockestra recordings at the end of side two, so that the album closed with the "We're Open Tonight" coda. [30] Holly later recalled that whereas beforehand the band had been confident that Back to the Egg would be a strong album, during the final mixing process "[it] dawned on us there might be problems". [87] At the last minute, "Baby's Request" replaced "Cage" and the running order was revised, with the result that the working-band concept became less pronounced. [88]
The design for the album's artwork was by Hipgnosis, [89] the company responsible for previous Wings album covers such as Venus and Mars (1975) [90] and the recent Wings Greatest compilation (1978). [69] The front cover depicts the five members of Wings in a room, looking down through space at Planet Earth through an open hatchway in the floor; the statuette above the mantlepiece behind them is the same that appears in the Wings Greatest artwork. The picture was taken by photographer John Shaw [25] at his London studio. [30] Photos of the individual band members appeared on the back cover, credited to Linda and Paul McCartney. [89]
Working with film company Keef & Co., Wings filmed seven promotional videos for the album, which would later be compiled into the Back to the Egg TV special. [91] Filming took place between 4 and 13 June, at locations including Lympne Castle's main hall, a private airfield at Lympne, Camber Sands in East Sussex, and Keef & Co.'s London studios. [92] [nb 8] "Old Siam, Sir", "Getting Closer", "Spin It On" and "Arrow Through Me" were among the tracks for which videos were made. [91]
"Goodnight Tonight" had been issued on Columbia Records in America, [94] marking McCartney's break from EMI-affiliated Capitol Records, [95] although he and Wings remained with EMI's Parlophone label in the UK. [96] McCartney's contract with Columbia made him the highest-paid recording artist in the world. [83] [97] [nb 9] As an incentive for McCartney, Columbia's parent company, CBS, had added to his publishing portfolio by giving him the highly profitable [99] Frank Music catalogue [74] – making McCartney the copyright holder to Guys and Dolls and other popular musicals by Frank Loesser. [100] [101]
Back to the Egg was released on 24 May 1979 in the US [102] (as Columbia FC-36057), and on 8 June in the UK (as Parlophone PCTC 257). [25] [29] [nb 10] In Britain, "Old Siam, Sir" was the album's first single, whereas "Getting Closer" was the choice in America; in both cases, "Spin It On" was the B-side. [104] On 11 June, an album launch party took place inside Abbey Road's Studio Two, which had been blacked-out like a large frying pan, while tables carrying yellow parasols represented fried eggs sitting in the pan. [105] Part of Chattington's Rockestra documentary was screened during the event, [106] the only public airing the film received. [107]
The follow-up singles, issued in August, were "Arrow Through Me" in the US and "Getting Closer" in the UK, [108] the latter release a double A-side with "Baby's Request". [70] In some European countries, "Rockestra Theme" was released as a single. [44]
Compared to the major commercial success of previous Wings albums, sales of Back to the Egg were disappointing, [109] [110] and none of its singles became significant hits. [70] [111] In the UK, "Old Siam, Sir" and "Getting Closer" climbed to number 35 and number 60, respectively. [112] On America's Billboard Hot 100 chart, "Getting Closer" peaked at number 20, and "Arrow Through Me" at number 29. [113] [114] Back to the Egg reached number 6 in the UK [112] and number 8 on the Billboard 200, [114] although US chart compilers Cashbox and Record World both listed it at number 7. [115] With heavy promotion from Columbia, the album sold over 1 million copies in America; [116] in Britain, retail outlets soon slashed its price in an attempt to dispense with their surplus of stock. [117]
McCartney later reflected that for an act other than Wings, sales such as those for Back to the Egg would have been considered "very healthy". [25] Given CBS's substantial investment in their new signing, Madinger and Easter write, the album's apparent failure led to a period of "mutual finger-pointing between Paul and Columbia Records", lasting until his contract expired in 1985. [30] [nb 11]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [119] |
Christgau's Record Guide | C [120] |
The Essential Rock Discography | 5/10 [121] |
MusicHound Rock | [122] |
Q | [123] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [124] |
Smash Hits | 6/10 [125] |
Back to the Egg received predominantly negative reviews on release; [21] author Alan Clayson writes of the album receiving "a critical mauling as vicious as that for London Town". [70] In an especially unfavourable critique for Rolling Stone magazine, [126] Timothy White described it as "the sorriest grab bag of dreck in recent memory" and lamented that none of the songs were "the least bit fleshed out", with the listener instead given "an irritating display of disjointed images and unfocused musical snapshots". [1] After opining that, since 1970, "this ex-Beatle has been lending his truly prodigious talents ... to some of the laziest records in the history of rock & roll", White wrote: "Who, one felt compelled to ask, is in charge here? Back to the Egg provides the final, obvious answer: no one." [1]
Village Voice critic Robert Christgau said of McCartney and the new Wings album: "When he's on, Paulie's abundant tunefulness passes for generosity. Here he's just hoping something will stick." [120] In Melody Maker, Ray Coleman wrote that McCartney "seems to be on a treadmill of banality". [127] Coleman described "Rockestra Theme" and "So Glad to See You Here" as "creditable, rolling, raunchy and at least efficient, with Paul's voice at its rocking best on the last named track", but concluded: "This album gets Wings nowhere ..." [127] Billboard 's reviewer gave Back to the Egg "Spotlight" status (meaning "the most outstanding new product of the week's releases and that with the greatest potential for top of the chart placement") and commented: "The music features typical McCartney fare of late with nothing here that will distinguish it as one of his classics. The arrangements, though, are interesting, encompassing a variety of styles." [128]
In a more positive assessment, for Creem magazine, Mitchell Cohen highlighted the album's second side as "a collection of McCartney performances that string together like abbey roadwork", and praised McCartney's vocals relative to his past work, writing: "all of the current tracks are terser, sung better, have less of what I suppose would be called the recording artist's equivalent of camera consciousness." [129] To NME critic Bob Woffinden, the attempt at an album-wide concept was "a pretty half-baked one" and Hipgnosis' cover photo was "easily the album's strongest point". [52] While identifying the songs as "particularly weak lyrically", Woffinden concluded: "It was the familiar McCartney problem. He had every essential creative requirement, except the discipline required to knead the parts into a perfect whole." [117]
AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine views Back to the Egg as "a set of [McCartney's] most undistinguished songs" that "have no spark whatsoever", and bemoans "the weak sound of the record and Wings' faceless performances". [119] Among McCartney biographers, Vincent Benitez writes that the songs are "uneven in quality", [21] and Howard Sounes describes the album as "a curate's egg, good in parts, with token attempts at sounding contemporary". [110] Tom Doyle views "the new wave-ish rockers" like "Spin It On" as "too smoothed out to be truly edgy" and the two spoken-word tracks as "weird – and not in a good way". [34] Doyle considers that while Back to the Egg has its "moments of inspiration", "There was too much material [recorded during the sessions], and yet not enough of it to gel into a cohesive album." [130]
These days you talk to some young people and it's really cool if you don't make the charts. It's very alien to my way of thinking ... [But] in a way it's quite cool to have a few albums that didn't make it. I didn't mean [Back to the Egg] to be underground, but it's nice. [131]
With the album falling well short of Columbia's and McCartney's expectations commercially, McCartney spent the remainder of summer 1979 recording in Peasmarsh and Campbeltown, without Wings, [132] creating his solo album McCartney II (1980). [116] During November and December 1979, US TV stations aired the 31-minute Back to the Egg special, as Wings undertook a nineteen-show UK tour, [133] the first leg of the proposed world tour. [4] Among the songs in the setlist, they performed several tracks from Back to the Egg: "Getting Closer", "Again and Again and Again", "Old Siam, Sir", "Spin It On" and "Arrow Through Me". [134]
The band were scheduled to tour Japan during January and February 1980, [4] but the concerts, together with their tour dates elsewhere in the world, [135] were cancelled after McCartney was arrested for possession of drugs when entering the country. [136] Around this time, "Rockestra Theme" won the Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance. [42] Wings regrouped in October 1980 to finish off songs for the planned Cold Cuts album, [137] a compilation that McCartney had suggested when CBS sought to recover part of its financial losses from Back to the Egg. [138] [nb 12] The reunion with Wings was short-lived and the band discontinued upon Laine's departure in April 1981. [140]
On 20 June 1989, by which time McCartney had returned to Capitol Records, [141] Back to the Egg was released on CD in America [142] with three bonus tracks: [51] "Daytime Nighttime Suffering", [143] McCartney's 1979 Christmas single "Wonderful Christmastime", and the latter's B-side, "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reggae". [144] In August 1993, [145] Parlophone reissued the album as part of The Paul McCartney Collection with the same three bonus tracks. Samples of "Reception" and "The Broadcast" appeared on the Fireman's Strawberries Oceans Ships Forest (1993) album, a collaboration between McCartney and Youth. [146] In 2007, Back to the Egg was released on iTunes, with a remix of "Goodnight Tonight" as a bonus track. [51]
All songs written by Paul McCartney, except where noted.
Side one: Sunny Side Up
Side two: Over Easy
Wings and additional personnel per Benitez. [147] Rockestra line-up and production per sleeve. [89]
Wings
Additional personnel
Rockestra line-up on "Rockestra Theme" and "So Glad to See You Here"
Production
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1980 | "Rockestra Theme" | Best Rock Instrumental Performance [149] | Won |
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
Certifications and sales
|
Paul McCartney and Wings, often billed simply as Wings, were an English-American rock band formed in 1971 in London by former Beatle Paul McCartney; his wife Linda McCartney on keyboards; session drummer Denny Seiwell; and former Moody Blues guitarist Denny Laine. They were noted for their commercial successes, musical eclecticism, and frequent personnel changes. They went through three lead guitarists and four drummers. The core trio of the McCartneys and Laine, however, remained intact throughout the group's existence.
Band on the Run is the third studio album by the British–American rock band Paul McCartney and Wings, released on 30 November 1973. It was McCartney's fifth album after leaving the Beatles in April 1970 and his final album on Apple Records. Although sales were modest initially, its commercial performance was aided by two hit singles – "Jet" and "Band on the Run" – such that it became the top-selling studio album of 1974 in the United Kingdom and Australia, in addition to revitalising McCartney's critical standing. It remains McCartney's most successful album and the most celebrated of his post-Beatles works.
McCartney is the debut solo studio album by the English rock musician Paul McCartney, released on 17 April 1970 by Apple Records. McCartney recorded it in secrecy, mostly using basic home-recording equipment at his house in St John's Wood. Mixing and some recording took place at professional London studios. In its loosely arranged performances, McCartney eschewed the polish of the Beatles' past records in favour of a lo-fi style. Apart from occasional contributions by his wife, Linda, McCartney performed the entire album alone by overdubbing on four-track tape.
Red Rose Speedway is the second studio album by the English-American rock band Wings, although credited to "Paul McCartney and Wings". It was released through Apple Records on 4 May 1973, preceded by its lead single, the ballad "My Love". By including McCartney's name in the artist credit, the single and album broke with the tradition of Wings' previous records. The change was made in the belief that the public's unfamiliarity with the band had been responsible for the weak commercial performance of the group's 1971 debut album Wild Life.
Concerts for the People of Kampuchea is a double album credited to Various Artists and released in March 1981. It contains live performances by Wings, the Who, Queen, Elvis Costello, Pretenders, the Clash, the Specials and other artists from the Concerts for the People of Kampuchea, held at London's Hammersmith Odeon in December 1979 to raise money for the victims of war-torn Cambodia. The event was organised by Paul McCartney and Kurt Waldheim.
"Give Ireland Back to the Irish" is the debut single by the British–American rock band Wings that was released in February 1972. It was written by Paul McCartney and his wife Linda in response to the events of Bloody Sunday, on 30 January that year, when British troops in Northern Ireland shot dead thirteen civil rights protestors. Keen to voice their outrage at the killings, Wings recorded the track two days later at EMI Studios in London. It was the band's first song to include Northern Irish guitarist Henry McCullough.
"My Love" is a song by the British–American band Paul McCartney and Wings that was first released as the lead single from their 1973 album Red Rose Speedway. It was written by Paul McCartney as a love song to his wife and Wings bandmate Linda. The single marked the first time that McCartney's name appeared in the artist credit for a Wings record, after their previous releases had been credited to Wings alone. Released on 23 March 1973, the song topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the US for four weeks and peaked at number 9 on the UK Singles Chart. The single was viewed as Wings' first significant success in the US and helped Red Rose Speedway achieve commercial success.
"Rockestra Theme" is the fourth and final single on Wings' final studio album Back to the Egg.
"Goodnight Tonight" is a song by the British–American rock band Wings. Written and produced by Paul McCartney, it was released as a non-album single on 23 March 1979 by Parlophone in the UK and Columbia Records in the US. It was recorded during the sessions for the band's 1979 album Back to the Egg and is notable for its disco-inflected sound and spirited flamenco guitar break.
"Sue Me, Sue You Blues" is a song written by English musician George Harrison, released on his 1973 album Living in the Material World. Harrison initially let American guitarist Jesse Ed Davis record it for the latter's Ululu album (1972), in gratitude to Davis for his participation in the Concert for Bangladesh. When writing the song, Harrison drew inspiration from the legal issues surrounding the Beatles during the early months of 1971, particularly the lawsuit that Paul McCartney initiated in an effort to dissolve the band's business partnership, Apple Corps.
Back to the Egg is a TV special containing music videos to promote the band Wings' 1979 album Back to the Egg. The program was first broadcast on US television stations in November 1979, but its UK airing, on BBC1, was delayed until June 1981, two months after the band disbanded. The locations used for filming include Lympne Castle and Camber Sands, both on the south-east coast of England.
"Daytime Nighttime Suffering" is a song written by Paul McCartney and recorded by Wings. It was the B-side to the 1979 single "Goodnight Tonight," which was a top-five hit in both the UK and USA. It was released on CD in 1993 as part of the release of The Paul McCartney Collection, and can be found as a bonus track on the album Back to the Egg. It is also included on the CD collection Wingspan: Hits and History. It was also included on The 7" Singles Box in 2022.
The discography of the British-American rock band Wings, also known as Paul McCartney and Wings, consisted of seven studio albums, one live album, two compilation albums, 29 singles and 19 music videos. Founded in 1971 by former Beatle Paul McCartney, his wife Linda McCartney, Denny Laine and Denny Seiwell after the release of the McCartneys' album Ram, the band made their debut with Wild Life, released in December that year. The album garnered minimal commercial success and received generally poor reviews. In 1972, the band added Henry McCullough to the lineup and released several non-album singles, including "Give Ireland Back to the Irish", "Mary Had a Little Lamb", and "Hi, Hi, Hi", before releasing their second album, Red Rose Speedway, in 1973. While receiving mixed reviews, the album and its lead single, "My Love" were huge commercial successes, both reaching number one in the US charts. Wings' continued their commercial success with the title track to the James Bond film Live and Let Die. At the beginning of the recording sessions for their next album, McCullough and Seiwell left the band prompting the McCartneys and Laine to record their next album as a trio. Backed by the successful singles, "Jet" and the title track, the album, Band on the Run, became Wings' most successful album, reaching number one in both the US and the UK. The album also garnered highly positive reviews from critics and significantly restored McCartney's tarnished post-Beatles reputation.
James Paul McCartney is the title of a 1973 television special produced by ATV, starring English musician Paul McCartney and his then-current rock group, Wings. It was first broadcast on 16 April 1973 in the United States on the ABC network, and later broadcast in the United Kingdom on 10 May 1973. It was issued on DVD for the first time as part of the super-deluxe Red Rose Speedway box set in December 2018.
Wings Over the World is a 1979 television music documentary film featuring the rock band Wings. It consists of concert performances from their acclaimed Wings Over the World tour of 1975-1976, together with behind-the-scenes footage. Also included is a short excerpt of Wings rehearsing at London's Institute of Contemporary Arts before their 1972 UK university tour. Problems with the audio from the 1976 live performances delayed the film's release until 16 March 1979 in the United States and 8 April 1979 in the United Kingdom, by which time, band members Jimmy McCulloch and Joe English had left the group and been replaced.
"Tomorrow" is a song by the British–American band Wings from their debut album Wild Life, released in December 1971. It was written by band members Paul McCartney and Linda McCartney. In 1976, American singer David Cassidy had a hit with his cover version of the song.
"Cook of the House" is a song written by Paul and Linda McCartney that was first released on Wings' 1976 album Wings at the Speed of Sound. It was also released as the B-side to the number 1 single "Silly Love Songs." The song was included on Linda McCartney's posthumous 1998 solo album Wide Prairie.
"Six O'Clock" is a song by the English rock musician Ringo Starr from his 1973 album Ringo. It was written by Starr's former Beatles bandmate Paul McCartney and the latter's wife, Linda, who also participated in the recording of the song. It was the first time McCartney and Starr had worked together since the Beatles' break-up in 1970. Their collaboration reflected an easing of the tensions that had existed between the two musicians for much of that period.
"You and Me (Babe)" is a song by the English musician Ringo Starr, released as the final track on his 1973 album Ringo. Starr's fellow ex-Beatle George Harrison wrote the song along with Mal Evans, the Beatles' longtime aide and a personal assistant to Starr during the making of Ringo. The track serves as a farewell from Starr to his audience in the manner of a show-closing finale, by lyrically referring to the completion of the album. During the extended fadeout, Starr delivers a spoken message in which he thanks the musicians and studio personnel who helped with the recording of Ringo – among them, Harrison, John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and his producer, Richard Perry.
"Backwards Traveller"/"Cuff Link" is a medley of two short songs written by Paul McCartney that was first released on Wings' 1978 album London Town. The medley was also released as the B-side of Wings' US No. 1 single "With a Little Luck". Both "Backwards Traveller" and "Cuff Link" were recorded in October 1977 and completed in January 1978. By this point in the London Town recording sessions, guitarist Jimmy McCulloch and drummer Joe English had left the band, so the songs were recorded by only McCartney, Linda McCartney and Denny Laine.
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