Im Never Gonna Dance Again Paul Mccartney

1973 unmarried past Paul McCartney and Wings

"My Love"
"My Love" 1973 Italian picture sleeve.jpg

Italian picture sleeve for the single

Single past Paul McCartney and Wings
from the album Red Rose Speedway
B-side "The Mess"
Released 23 March 1973 (1973-03-23)
Recorded January 1973
Studio Abbey Road, London
Genre Soft stone,[one] [2] lounge[3]
Length 4:07
Label Apple
Songwriter(southward) Paul McCartney, Linda McCartney[4]
Producer(s) Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney and Wings singles chronology
"Hi, Hi, Hi"
(1972)
"My Love"
(1973)
"Live and Let Die"
(1973)
Sound video
"My Love" on YouTube

"My Dearest" is a vocal by the British–American band Paul McCartney and Wings that was first released as the lead single from their 1973 album Cerise Rose Speedway. It was written by Paul McCartney as a dear vocal to his wife and Wings bandmate Linda. The unmarried marked the outset time that McCartney's proper noun appeared in the artist credit for a Wings record, later on their previous releases had been credited to Wings lonely. Released on 23 March 1973, the song topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the U.s. for four weeks and peaked at number 9 on the UK Singles Nautical chart. The single was viewed equally Wings' first significant success in the United states and helped Red Rose Speedway reach commercial success.

Wings recorded "My Love" at Abbey Road Studios in London in January 1973. The song is a piano ballad and features an orchestral organization by Richard Hewson that was recorded live with the primary track. The recording too includes a guitar solo by Henry McCullough that some commentators view as a highlight of the track. In his improvised playing, McCullough imposed his own style on a Wings vocal for the first fourth dimension, countering the more regimented approach favoured by McCartney.

Despite its commercial success, "My Love" was given an unfavourable reception past many music critics, some of whom considered information technology overly sentimental and lyrically inconsequential. A live version of the vocal was included on Wings' 1976 album Wings over America, and McCartney has continued to perform it in concert every bit a tribute to Linda following her death in 1998. He included the vocal in the musical program for Linda's memorial services in London and New York City, where it was performed by a string quartet. Tony Bennett, Nancy Wilson, Brenda Lee, Andy Williams and Harry Connick Jr are among the many artists who have covered the song.

Background and composition [edit]

Paul McCartney began writing "My Love" on piano as a love song to his married woman Linda.[5] [6] He said he wrote it early in their relationship; McCartney biographer Luca Perasi dates the composition to 1969 or 1970.[7] The song is a piano ballad in the style of McCartney's Beatles vocal "The Long and Winding Route".[8] [ix]

After forming the band Wings with Linda in the summertime of 1971,[10] McCartney included "My Love" in the set lists for the group's two concert tours in 1972.[11] [12] When they performed information technology at Nottingham University on 9 Feb for Wings' public debut, the vocal included Linda singing lines in response to McCartney'southward lead vocal. According to Perasi, the performance was otherwise "almost identical" to the version that the band afterwards recorded for official release.[13]

The vocal is in the central of F major.[14] It opens with an extended ambient annotation before the song enters.[9] The composition has an AABAA structure followed past an outro, with the A sections comprising verse-choruses and the B section containing a bridge.[14] According to musicologist Vincent Benitez, the verses establish a "sense of instability" through lyrics such as "And when I go away" and "And when the cupboard'southward bare", implying distance and textile emptiness, respectively, and this mood is supported by the inclusion of chords such as B maj7 and D9 that suggest a departure from the home key. He says the choruses and the bridge and then convey the emotional security provided by the vocaliser's lover – lyrically, and through the incorporation of a plagal progression (in the chorus) and other chords that correspond with F major.[14] The outro consists of the first part of the bridge;[fourteen] McCartney sings "Only my love does it good to" earlier pausing and and then returning with a prolonged vocalisation of the word "me".[15]

Recording [edit]

McCartney invited Richard Hewson, with whom he had worked before while with the Beatles, to arrange the orchestral accompaniment for "My Dearest".[16] The song was recorded live at Abbey Road Studios in London[17] with a 50-piece orchestra accompanying the ring.[xviii] The session took place in January 1973, late in the recording for Wings' second album, Red Rose Speedway.[19] McCartney played Fender Rhodes electrical piano on the track,[20] while Denny Laine substituted for McCartney on bass guitar. The idea to tape the basic track and the orchestral organisation simultaneously went confronting music industry convention, since the session musicians were paid by the hour.[21] Hewson recalled that he recruited "the best jazz musicians I knew ... They had this particular warm sound" and that the reason for the live recording was because McCartney wanted to capture "a certain feeling".[nine] In music journalist Tom Breihan'south description, although the song appears to lack a formal structure, "Information technology chugs and twinkles with the slow confidence of an old torch vocal, while the orchestra ... swells and contracts."[18]

According to Hewson, effectually 20 takes were performed over iii hours, leaving the musicians tired and having to assure McCartney that their playing could not be improved on.[9] The song contains a guitar solo past Northern Irish guitarist Henry McCullough,[22] who took the opportunity to express himself in his playing[23] and depart from what he saw every bit McCartney's regimented approach to recording.[24] McCullough later said, "it had got to the point where I achingly wanted to exist the guitar actor in the ring", rather than a sideman playing lines dictated by McCartney.[24] McCartney recalled in a 2010 interview:[25]

I'd sort of written the solo, equally I frequently did write our solos. And he walked up to me correct before the take and said, "Hey, would it be alright if I try something else?" And I said, "Er ... yeah." It was like, "Do I believe in this guy?" And he played the solo on "My Love", which came correct out of the blue. And I just thought, Fucking great. And so in that location were enough of moments like that where somebody'south skill or feeling would overtake my wishes.[26]

According to McCullough, it was the outset time that anyone in Wings had challenged McCartney, and information technology was an arroyo that others in the band encouraged, in an effort to make Wings a genuine ring and better McCartney'south image.[27] He described the stop result on "My Love" every bit "a stroke of luck, a gift from God really, and you lot get that in music".[28] [nb ane]

Release [edit]

Apple tree Records issued "My Dearest" as a single on 23 March 1973, with the US release post-obit on nine April.[thirty] [31] The B-side was "The Mess",[32] recorded alive at the Netherlands Congresgebouw in The Hague on 21 August 1972.[33] [34] [nb 2] For the first time in the grouping'south career, the release was credited to "Paul McCartney & Wings", rather than Wings alone.[36] The name change was made in the belief that the disappointing sales of Wings' 1971 debut, Wild Life, were due to the public being unaware of McCartney'south involvement.[37] [38] Reddish Rose Speedway was released on 30 Apr 1973[39] and was similarly credited to Paul McCartney & Wings.[forty] [41] "My Love" was sequenced as the album's second rail, betwixt "Big Barn Bed" and "Get on the Correct Thing".[42]

The unmarried's release marked the starting time of a highly active catamenia for Wings.[43] [44] The band filmed a promotional clip for the vocal, which used an alternating McCartney lead vocal.[45] They also promoted the unmarried on the James Paul McCartney TV special.[ix] McCartney had agreed to do the special in render for Lew Course, whose company ATV owned the Northern Songs publishing catalogue,[8] dropping his legal objections to Linda being credited as a co-writer on many of his songs since 1971.[46] [47] The ring filmed a performance of "My Love" for Top of the Pops, which was shown on the 4 and eleven April editions of the show.[48] Immediately after completing this operation, McCullough vomited on the stage;[49] drunk beforehand,[28] [50] he had become nauseated by the studio smoke effects.[51] The incident had an adverse consequence on his already fractious relationship with McCartney.[28] [49] Wings played "My Dearest" throughout their 1973 UK bout.[52] These live performances were the source of frustration for McCullough, who was denied the freedom to improvise when playing the solo.[37] Adhering to a populist approach over McCullough'southward blues sensibilities, McCartney insisted that he reproduce the solo exactly equally heard on the studio recording.[45] [53]

The single topped the US Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks[36] and peaked at number nine on the Britain Singles Chart.[54] The song also went to number ane on Billboard 'due south Easy Listening nautical chart for three weeks.[55] On the Billboard Hot 100, it was demoted past George Harrison's "Requite Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)" in late June,[37] [56] mark the showtime time since 25 Apr 1964 that the Beatles had occupied the peak two positions on the chart,[57] and the only occasion that any of its old members have washed and then equally solo artists.[58] The popularity of "My Beloved" also contributed to the commercial success of Red Rose Speedway,[44] which became the offset of five consecutive Wings albums to top the Billboard LPs nautical chart;[59] according to author Bruce Spizer, it was "the song that sold the album".[60] The single was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America on 9 July,[61] for sales of over 1 meg copies.[62] Billboard ranked "My Love" at number five on its Year-Cease Hot 100 singles of 1973 nautical chart.[63]

The song was subsequently included on the 1978 Wings compilation album Wings Greatest.[64] It has likewise appeared on the McCartney compilations All the Best! (1987), Wingspan: Hits and History (2001)[9] and Pure McCartney (2016).[65] A alive version from Wings' 1976 US bout, with McCullough's replacement, Jimmy McCulloch, on lead guitar, was released on the Wings over America triple album.[66] McCartney has since included live performances of the song on his albums Paul Is Live (1993), Back in the World (2002) and Proficient Evening New York City (2009).[9]

Critical reception [edit]

Gimmicky reviews [edit]

Cash Box 'southward single reviewer described "My Love as a "fine ballad" and said that, although it was lacking in melody, McCartney'southward "added sentiment & crooning volition soon make this a archetype".[67] Chris Welch of Tune Maker wrote: "A 1000 ballad from Paul, rather in the tradition of songs that turned on the troops in the days of the Cyprus Crisis and other manifestations of the '50s. In a style its appeal is timeless, and it certainly rates amidst his seemingly unstoppable flow of classics." Welch highlighted the "excellent gutty guitar solo" and predicted: "Much fluttering of wings and handkerchiefs as this sails up the charts."[68] [69]

When "My Love" came out, John Lennon actually said, "If only everything was as simple and unaffected as McCartney's new single, and then perchance Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis would reunite with the Marx Brothers." We were going through a slagging off period with each other ... He called me Engelbert, and Engelbert Humperdinck started getting annoyed with me.[70]

– Paul McCartney

Other critics ridiculed the song.[71] To writers in the countercultural press, it furthered McCartney'southward continuing as an artist of lilliputian consequence, a perception that was increased by his decision to supply the theme vocal for the 1973 James Bond film Live and Let Die.[72] According to Beatles biographer Nicholas Schaffner, the inclusion of lyrics such as "Wo wo wo wo, only my love does it good" in the packaging for Red Rose Speedway "didn't help McCartney'south dissolving reputation" as a lyricist.[72] Schaffner said that the James Paul McCartney special was fifty-fifty more damaging to McCartney's image and that, amongst the show's worst moments, "Paul tried to make passionate faces while crooning 'My Dearest,' looking instead as if he'd merely sucked a lemon."[73]

In his "Consumer Guide" review for The Hamlet Vocalization, Robert Christgau wrote that "[McCartney's] new love carol meanders hopelessly where 'Yesterday' shifted enticingly" and he described Red Rose Speedway every bit "Quite perhaps the worst anthology always made by a rock and roller of the first rank".[74] Five years later, in his review of Wings Greatest, Christgau wished for "a stylus-width scratch beyond 'My Dearest'".[75] NME critics Roy Carr and Tony Tyler said the song was among the "dreamy weepies" that were a signature of McCartney's songwriting and, with all the former Beatles' artist royalties frozen due to ongoing litigation over Apple, an important source of income as material for other artists to comprehend. They described the song every bit "positively oozing Manciniesque strings and the kind of sentimentality that i finds either cloying or soothing".[76]

Retrospective assessments [edit]

Writing in the 2004 edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide, Greg Kot described "My Love" as McCartney'due south "soggiest hitting" and "over-orchestrated".[77] Quondam Mojo editor Mat Snow calls it a "slow-trip the light fantastic toe single" that, although commercially successful, suffered unfavourable comparison with the Beatles' 1962–1966 and 1967–1970 compilation albums, which were released around the aforementioned fourth dimension in 1973 and "reminded everyone of just how proficient Paul'south old ring was".[78] Writing in 2017, Rolling Rock critic Rob Sheffield dismissed it every bit "the worst song any of the Beatles had anything to practise with".[79] In Sheffield's opinion, McCartney was seeking to emulate the Beatles' 1969 ballad "Something", written past Harrison, merely he missed the artful significance of the six-note guitar "hook" that precedes the poesy of Harrison's composition, instead inserting the "Wo-wo-wo-wo" refrain that sinks "My Love".[80] Sheffield says the catastrophe provides a "whopper of unintentional comedy", as McCartney dramatically draws out the word "me" to get "Meeeeeee-wo-wo-wo-wo-wo-ho, wo-ho, whooooa!"[3] [nb 3] In his song review for Stereogum, Tom Breihan gives the track a score of v out of ten and concludes: "So 'My Love,' like a lot of McCartney songs, is a pretty and fluffy and sincere and meaningless thing – a song that would probably work as a prom ballad if it had the subject field to striking the big prom-ballad moments. It's nice enough, and I'll never sympathize, beyond unproblematic proper noun recognition, how information technology was as big as it was."[eighteen]

Biographer Philip Norman pairs the song with "Maybe I'grand Amazed" as "ode[s] to Linda" that, in the context of McCartney's songwriting in 1973, were "so far across his usual Wingspan that the dream-voices which had whispered 'Yesterday' and 'Permit It Be' into his ear might take returned".[82] In his book on McCartney for the Praeger Singer-Songwriter Series, Vincent Benitez describes "My Love" as "an outstanding song highlighted past equally outstanding ensemble playing", particularly the "sublime solo" contributed past McCullough.[v] Robert Rodriguez, writing in his book on the Beatles' start decade as solo artists, says that McCullough'due south playing redeemed a "potentially mawkish McCartney valentine" and he considers the track to be the highlight of a mediocre anthology.[53] Old Record Collector editor Peter Doggett calls the song "sickly" and says that even after EMI had persuaded McCartney non to release Red Rose Speedway as a double LP, it remained an unimpressive drove of songs.[83]

Cover versions [edit]

By the late 1970s, "My Love" was the second well-nigh-covered song written and released by a one-time Beatle since the band's break-upwards, after Harrison's "My Sweet Lord".[38] Tony Bennett, Nancy Wilson and Cass Elliot are among the many singers who recorded the song.[9] Others include Johnny Gill, Cher, Brenda Lee, Margie Joseph, Salena Jones, Mina, Shinehead, Andy Williams, Juice Newton, Warren Hill and Dottie West. There have as well been three jazz instrumental versions, by Ivan "Boogaloo Joe" Jones, Pieces of a Dream (from their 1996 anthology The Best of Pieces of a Dream),[84] and Michael Lington (from the 2004 album Stay with Me).[85] [86]

An instrumental of the song can be heard during Monica and Chandler's wedding in the American sitcom Friends.[87] Corinne Bailey Rae released a cover of the song on The Love EP (2011).[88] Harry Connick Jr covered "My Beloved" on the 2014 album The Art of McCartney, a tribute album to McCartney.[89]

Legacy [edit]

Rodriguez describes "My Love" as McCartney's "first mail service-Beatles evergreen" and a standard, due to its instant popularity among other recording artists.[xc] In 1976, Linda reflected that Red Rose Speedway was "such a non-confident record" made during a "terribly unsure menstruation", yet it still contained "beautiful songs" such as "My Love".[91] [92] In 1986, McCartney selected it as his favourite track from the Wings era and recalled the time as "a romantic menstruation, folks!"[93] McCullough, whose post-Wings career included playing with Joe Cocker and Donovan, and recording albums under his own name,[94] considered the guitar solo on "My Love" to be the all-time of his career.[60]

Following Linda's death in 1998, "My Love" was among the songs McCartney chose for the musical program at the two memorial services held in her retentivity, in London and New York City.[95] McCartney was highly public in his expression of grief[96] and organised the services with what biographer Howard Sounes describes as "the same professionalism he brought to his concert performances".[97] Arranged for strings, the vocal was the closing piece[95] performed by the Brodsky Quartet[98] at St Martin-in-the-Fields church in London's Trafalgar Square on 8 June.[97] At the New York service, held at Riverside Church building in Upper Manhattan on 22 June,[99] information technology was performed past the Loma Mar Quartet.[100] Both events were given heavy coverage by news media.[101] McCartney also included the song amid the Linda-inspired compositions recorded for his 1999 classical music anthology Working Classical,[102] where it was again performed by the Colina Mar Quartet.[103]

McCartney included "My Love" in the ready list for his Driving World Tour in 2002,[104] when, bolstered by the support of his second wife, Heather Mills, he returned to touring for the first time since 1993.[105] McCartney performed the song in Linda's memory, as his renditions of "Something" and "Here Today" were tributes to his one-time Beatles bandmates Harrison and John Lennon, respectively.[104] [106] [nb 4] Following his acrimonious divorce from Mills in 2008, he again performed the vocal in concert every bit a tribute to Linda. According to Sounes, whereas the live renditions of "My Dearest" had "seemingly irritated" Mills on the 2002 tour, McCartney's performances in 2008 were accompanied past pictures of Linda projected onto "huge screens" with "all images of Heather excised".[109]

Personnel [edit]

According to authors Luca Perasi[110] and Howard Elson:[111]

Paul McCartney and Wings

  • Paul McCartney – lead vocal, electric pianoforte
  • Linda McCartney – backing song
  • Denny Laine – bass guitar, backing vocal
  • Henry McCullough – lead guitar
  • Denny Seiwell – drums

Additional musicians

  • Richard Hewson – orchestral arrangement, conducting
  • unnamed session players – strings, brass

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

See also [edit]

  • List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 1973
  • List of number-one developed contemporary singles of 1973 (U.Southward.)

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ In 2010, McCullough told The Irish News that he had fatigued inspiration from "the power of the orchestra, the electric guitar slung round my neck and knowing that if I didn't come with something I'd have to slink away with my caput bowed".[29]
  2. ^ Although essentially a live recording, "The Mess" was subjected to heavy editing and some overdubbing in the studio.[35] Portions of up to 45 seconds were excised to reduce the song'southward length and the vocals were heavily processed.[33]
  3. ^ This portion of the Wings recording was used in comedian Dickie Goodman'southward 1973 unmarried "Watergrate", a satire of the Watergate scandal. At the end of the vocal, Goodman asks Vice-President Spiro Agnew who volition succeed Richard Nixon every bit U.s. president, to which the answer comes as McCartney singing the final "me" from "My Dear".[81]
  4. ^ McCartney's 2001 album Driving Pelting included "Well-nigh You", in which he expressed his gratitude to Mills for her help when grieving Linda's decease.[107] Norman describes the album'south primal theme equally "how Heather had rescued him from tempests of grief".[108]

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Sources [edit]

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  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2010). The Words and Music of Paul McCartney: The Solo Years. Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger. ISBN978-0-313-34969-0.
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  • Doyle, Tom (2013). Man on the Run: Paul McCartney in the 1970s. New York, NY: Ballantine Books. ISBN978-0-8041-7914-0.
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External links [edit]

  • Paul McCartney and Wings' "My Love" on YouTube

kernmostan.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/My_Love_%28Paul_McCartney_and_Wings_song%29

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