Thursday, February 14, 2008

Paul McCartney - Many Years From Now

If you think John Lennon was the smart, arty Beatle while Paul was an empty head twittering

prettily, this book will hip you to the facts. While John sat in the suburbs getting stoned to numb

the pain of his imminent divorce, bachelor Paul was feeding his head by immersion in the London

avant-garde. He pioneered the Beatles' experimental stuff, though his witty song-by-song

account proves that it really was a 50-50 partnership--and some of the best innovations, like the

snarling 1964 feedback intro to "I Feel Fine," happened by pure accident. Paul's insight into

John's genius, which sprang from howling paranoia and a stark childhood, is still deeper than his

insight into himself, but the book's true glory is its inside info on all those songs--the six tunes

about John's marriage on A Hard Day's Night; Paul's heist of the "I Saw Her Standing There"

bass line from Chuck Berry's "I'm Talking About You" (found on Berry's The Chess Box); the

true meanings of "Norwegian Wood" (pine paneling, which the song's narrator burns to avenge

the girl's refusal to have sex with him), "Got to Get You into My Life" ("you" is marijuana), and

"Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da" ("life goes on" in Yoruba). This book is even better than A Hard Day's

Write: The Stories Behind Every Beatles' Song and Revolution in the Head. Here is the last word

on the Beatles, inevitably slanted toward McCartney but generally more convincing than

Lennon's own recollections. --Tim Appelo


External Download Link1:

http://rapidshare.com/files/91491440/Barry_Miles_-_Paul_McCartney_-_Many_Years_From_Now.doc