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The McCartney Legacy, Volume 2

1974 – 80

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The follow-up to The McCartney Legacy, Volume 1, the most complete work on the life and work of Paul McCartney ever published. Volume 2 continues to paint the portrait of one of the world's greatest musicians, his work post-Beatles, and his life from 1974 to 1980.

This second installment of the groundbreaking multivolume set, THE McCARTNEY LEGACY, VOLUME 2: 1974-80 finds Paul McCartney in the afterglow of Band on the Run, an album that topped the Billboard 200 three times in 1974, and won him his best reviews since his time in the Beatles. But he also faced rebuilding his band Wings, and getting it into shape not only for the studio work that would follow his most successful album to date, but also to tour Britain, Europe and Australia before conquering the USA with the groundbreaking Wings Over America tour. This intensely creative time in McCartney's life saw him writing and recording four studio albums with Wings (Venus and Mars, Wings at the Speed of Sound, London Town and Back to the Egg), the biggest selling British single of the 1970s, 'Mull of Kintyre,' and a solo album packed with electronic experimentalism, McCartney II. During a period of diverse musical evolution, McCartney melded his own melody-driven approach with in-vogue styles like disco, punk and new wave.

Away from Wings, McCartney dabbled in music publishing, science fiction writing, semi-autobiographical filmmaking, animation, viral marketing, journalist boycotting, and smuggling cannabis past authority figures with mixed success. McGear, an album Paul co-wrote with his brother, Mike, tops a long list of lesser known projects and collaborations – some of which never saw the light of day – that kept McCartney busy between hit records.

For the second half of this decade, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr remained ever present in McCartney's life. Collaborations were mooted, and multi-million dollar offers for one-off reunion concerts were plentiful, but the scars of the Beatles' bitter separation, and their complex, hard to untangle business ties complicated their private and public relationships.

THE McCARTNEY LEGACY series is the first truly comprehensive biography, and the most finely detailed exploration of McCartney's creative life beyond the Beatles, ever undertaken. As well as thousands of never-before-seen documents, this volume is informed by hundreds of interviews, including exclusive collaborations with all four surviving members of Wings – Geoff Britton, Joe English, Steve Holley and Laurence Juber – plus countless other including producers, musicians, recording engineers, designers and architects who worked with McCartney between 1974-80.

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    • Kirkus

      November 1, 2022
      A fulsome biography set during a crucial period of the iconic musician's life. Drawing on hundreds of interviews, theirs and others, Kozinn and Sinclair create a thorough narrative seeking to show a "deeper sense of how (and why) McCartney...created the music of the period we cover." Covering five years in more than 700 pages, the book is extremely detail-laden, probably more than some readers will want. The authors begin at the end, with the dissolution of the Beatles in 1969, something McCartney didn't want but John Lennon did. McCartney said he "really was done in for the first time in my life." He was also worried about the fate of Apple Records, which put him up against the others and contributed mightily to the band's breakup. As things fell apart, McCartney was living on his Scottish farm, writing and recording songs with his own equipment. Kozinn and Sinclair include numerous informational callouts--"Recording Sessions"--throughout the book alongside deep dives into the composition of the songs, giving insights into McCartney's creative process. The authors also explore how Linda Eastman helped McCartney in many ways and how he composed a song about her, "Maybe I'm Amazed," for a solo, reboot album he was working on, McCartney, which the authors see as a counterpoint to Lennon and Yoko Ono's Wedding Album. The authors devote a lot of space to record-business machinations and legal matters. They describe how McCartney hand-picked musicians to record with as he released a single and worked on a new album, Ram, which received tepid reviews. They chronicle the formation of Wings with Linda and Wild Life, another album, which George Harrison viciously panned as "crummy." Volume 1 ends with the highly successful Band on the Run album. To be continued. A gold mine for avid fans.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2022

      Former New York Times music critic Kozinn (The Beatles: From the Cavern to the Rooftop) and Sinclair, a film documentarian, expertly chronicle the life and music of Paul McCartney beyond the Beatles. In the first half, they deal with the acrimonious split of the Fab Four over business affairs, which pitted McCartney and his manager/father-in-law Lee Eastman against the other three Beatles, who favored the aggressive but somewhat disreputable entrepreneur Allen Klein. They also recount the creative process behind McCartney's two solo efforts--1970's McCartney and 1971's Ram--and his pastoral life with his new wife, Linda. In the final sections, Kozinn and Sinclair document in painstaking detail the formation, recordings, and touring of the band Wings, which produced the 1973 commercial blockbuster and McCartney's most well-known, post-Beatles album, Band on the Run. VERDICT Meticulously researching the topic and writing in a lively, conversational style, the coauthors have delivered the definitive work about the immediate post-Beatles times of Paul McCartney. It is likely to be too detailed for general readers but represents a treasure trove of information for Beatlemaniacs.--Dr. Dave Szatmary

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 18, 2024
      Music critics Kozinn and Sinclair follow up The McCartney Legacy, Vol. 1 with another kaleidoscopic account of the musician’s post-Beatles career. Drawing on meticulous research, the authors highlight the challenges McCartney faced after forming Wings in 1971, such as finding a workable lineup (band members’ departures were frequent), determining the group’s marketing and stylistic direction, and maintaining his signature “sonic style” while integrating new trends. Even as Wings found listeners with such albums as 1973’s Band on the Run, the larger-than-life Beatles legacy loomed over the group. Critics made less-than-favorable comparisons, and inquiries about a possible reunion were incessant (McCartney developed a rhyming response for those who asked: “The Beatles split in ’69/ And since then, they’ve been doin’ fine./ But if that question doesn’t cease/ Ain’t no-one gonna get no peace”). The authors dive deep into Wings’ catalog and paint a detailed portrait of McCartney as a perfectionistic whose star power belied a surprising vulnerability to criticism. “I think anything people say influences me a bit,” he once admitted, and lackluster reviews for Wings at the Speed of Sound and other albums stung “like vinegar in a paper cut,” according to Kozinn and Sinclair. McCartney fans couldn’t ask for a more comprehensive and colorful treatment of this period in his life. Photos.

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  • English

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