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Memory Almost FullPaul McCartneyA lot of people I talk to don’t understand why someone like Paul McCartney still makes records. “He peaked with the Beatles,” they say. Or: “His last great record was Band On The Run…” Or the more sympathetic and forgiving might say: “It’s been a rocky road since Tug Of War,” while the truly insane emphatically state: “Chaos & Creation In The Backyard was the best thing he’s done since Sgt. Pepper.” OK, first of all, I don’t begrudge other’s opinions about what kind of records Paul McCartney should make, or if in fact, he should continue making them. Personally, I don’t have a problem with new McCartney music, whether it’s good, bad, or inconsequential. I admire anyone who carries on in the face of adversity — be it their age, their history, or their general malaise in the scheme of preservation. McCartney’s latest, the out-of-left-field Memory Almost Full, is certainly subject to scrutiny. And while it has its highpoints, it conjures up questions of what the former Beatle, newly single and on a record label owned by Starbucks, is out to prove. Whatever the motivation behind McCartney’s move from Capitol to Hear
Music was, there is no doubt that all the promotion, money and ego they're putting
into Memory Almost Full is substantial. That being said, McCartney
claims this is the album he was working on when he got with producer Nigel Godrich
to make Chaos And Creation In The Backyard, a far superior
album. Which begs the question: Where was Godrich when McCartney really needed
him? Memory Almost Full starts off innocently enough with the
rather impish and simple, “Dance Tonight,” perpetuated by a bass
drum, a mandolin and a rampant chant that losses its steam about halfway in:
“Everybody gonna dance tonight…” One has to wonder if the
multimillionaire ex-Beatle was watching his soon-to-be ex-wife on Dancing
With The Stars, and felt inspired to write this ditty because, clearly,
Heather Mills isn’t exactly someone who can go out and dance tonight or
any other time without extensive and rigorous planning. Well, at least, that’s
my theory. ~ Shawn Perry
©Copyright 1997, 2008 Vintage Rock
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