The release of this deluxe, two-CD version of McCartney's latest,
originally put out last fall, gives me the opportunity to revisit it,
and see if it holds up. I originally felt it was a very strong album,
apart from the choices of singles, and that it gets better as it goes
on. That still holds, but I find that those singles, "Come On To Me" and
"Fuh You," bug me even more. And while I find lots on the latter half
of the album to enjoy, the first half proves disappointed more often
than enjoyable. These are the songs where you can feel him trying too
hard to write and produce a hit. The lyrics are forced and foolish at
times. "Come On To Me" is intended as a look at the romance dance, but
it seems emotionless, a description of a one-night stand. The less said
about the bad joke that is "Fuh You" the better. And more attempts at
writing catchy numbers, "Who Cares," "Confidante" and "People Want
Peace," are technically proficient but soulless.
Then
everything chances in part two, as suddenly it sounds like he's simply
making music to enjoy, always his greatest strength. Piles and piles of
hooks, great chord changes, excellent melodies and cool productions
remind us once again that he's at his best letting it flow, not trying
to be Paul McCartney, but simply being Paul McCartney. To put it in
Beatle terms, the first half of this set is the guy who wrote "Let It
Be," while the back half is the guy who wrote much of the medley on the
Abbey Road album.
The extra stuff on this
expanded edition is a 33-minute, 10-track second disc. This includes
bonus tracks recorded for the album, some appearing here for the first
time, and some live cuts at the various special shows he did to hype the
album. It's no surprise that the leftover cuts from the album sessions
are really quite good, as they are more of the relaxed, experimental
stuff he mistakenly thinks don't make the grade. "Get Started" and
"Nothing For Free" beat any of the first eight cuts on the original
album. The intriguingly named "Frank Sinatra's Party" is sadly
lightweight but not bad for a bonus. As for the live material, guess
what? It's the tracks he felt were the strong ones, those contrived
singles again, plus "Who Cares" and "Confidante," interesting only
because they were recorded at special venues, the Abbey Road Studios,
The (rebuilt) Cavern Club, and Grand Central Station.
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