Man On The Run Paul
McCartney In The 70’s
Tom Doyle
Polygon Publishing
Ahh! I know what you are thinking….”Not another Paul
McCartney book?”
Well yes, but this is a book with a difference. This book
concentrates on the seventies a period that many Beatle fans think that Paul
lost the plot with the formation of Wings and some slightly odd albums. Well
the truth is Yes Paul did form Wings and a bloody fine band they were in all
their various incarnations although apart from the Wingspan DVD and CD a few
years ago the seventies are sometimes brushed over in favour of Paul’s Beatle
years or the late eighties when he made his live re appearance and became a
touring phenomenon. Whilst Paul started
the decade off as a solo artist quickly becoming a duo with Linda on the Ram
album Wings grew out of Paul’s desire to get back to a “Group” rather than just
be a solo performer as the other ex-Beatles had opted for bearing in mind that
Lennon’s Plastic Ono Band was more a concept than a real band.
So having laid out his table with the title, Tom Doyle has
chosen possibly one of the mist divisive periods of Paul’s career to focus on
for a book. On the one hand there was much success both critically and
commercially although some of the critical brickbats must still hurt when read
in the cold light of day and throughout the seventies it seemed that every
critic was measuring his success alongside the success of his previous
band a band that McCartney himself
admitted was a “Tough act to follow”. Tom Doyle as not written a whitewash
account of the period he has been honest and thorough in his research and for
people like me who have read a great many Paul McCartney books over the years
it is refreshing to go back over what I personally consider a quite exciting
period in Paul McCartney’s career. In fact I will nail my colours firmly to the
mast and admit my favourite period of Paul’s career was the period from Ram
through to Wings Over America and of course as a teenager I would devour
everything I could find on Wings even though unlike some fans I did remember
the Beatles, I wasn't old enough to have seen them live so the first time I saw
Paul in the flesh as it were was during the 1972 tour of Europe.
I have seen Paul every time he has toured since then but for
me it will always be the early seventies and the early days of Wings. Tom Doyle
goes into great detail concerning the members of the band and the band politics
talking to most of the members of the band through its many incarnations.
Whilst musically there is much to talk about there is of course the high profile drugs busts which
was pretty much par for the course for many musicians of the time although
bagging a "Beatle" would have proved to be a bigger feather in the cap of certain
Police Officers I am sure and Paul and Linda certainly seemed to be targeted due
to his well-known comments and high profile advocating of marijuana . That
aside what does come across is the fact that Wings despite many of the problems
both brought to bear inside and outside the band always managed to deliver the
goods and while it seemed that it was
sometimes one step forward two steps back the band’s batting average was pretty
high
The book covers all the relevant line ups of Wings and all
those involved and in actual fact Paul Linda and all the other members of Wings
do come out of this really well. The background story, and let’s face it it is
a big one is the then on-going story of Paul’s relationship with the other
ex-Beatles throughout the seventies, all of it fascinating but not nearly as
interesting to me as the in group
politics of Wings between 1971 and 1981.
For me it really is the story of Wings and again if I am
honest I doubt anyone will write a better book on this period of Paul
McCartney’s long career making this particular tome almost definitive if there
ever could be such a thing. This book as I have said does cover possibly the
most interesting part of Paul McCartney’s life as a musician he had everything
to gain and really nothing to lose following the Beatles. True many more people
will probably wait for the definitive Beatles story or life story, if it ever
comes along that is but this book will certainly find a large and willing fan
base who will love the contents.
The book includes some excellent photographs from the period
many rarely seen before and as a whole I can highly recommend this to anyone
with a passing interest in Paul McCartney’s life during the seventies. Paul
certainly may have seemed a “Man On The Run” but in spite of all the odds the
seventies actually turned out to be pretty good for Paul McCartney and reading
this book you get a better idea of what has now become Paul McCartney’s “Middle
Period” a period all too readily overlooked.
"The seventies actually turned out to be pretty good for Paul McCartney and reading this book you get a better idea of what has now become Paul McCartney’s “Middle Period” a period all too readily overlooked".
Jon Kirkman Classic Rock Radio
Purchase Man On The Run Paul McCartney In The 70's Here:
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Purchase Man On The Run Paul McCartney In The 70's Here:
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