News

N E W   Y O R K, May 1 -- The famous pop lyric "Ob-la-di, ob-la-da, life goes on …" didn't come to Paul McCartney in dream. It came to him in a nightclub. "'Ob-la-di' came from a guy in a ...
Paul McCartney reveals the one Beatles album he believes stands above the rest and calls it irreplaceable in the band’s ...
It’s ironic that Paul McCartney’s latest studio album is titled “New,” because the whole album is a reach for the past dipped in the musical tones of the modern age. If you were to strip ...
In 1971, McCartney released Ram, his second post-Beatles album. Though the album initially received a poor critical reception , many have reviewed it significantly more favorably in retrospect.
In that sense, 'New' is a perfect Paul McCartney album. It's filled with songs that are without meaning but not meaningless. Whether in the wonderfully eerie 'Appreciate,' the lovely, ...
Barring any more surprise releases from Taylor Swift, Paul McCartney has the last major album of 2020. Fortunately for music fans, he ends this dismal year on a high note with "McCartney III," out ...
Paul McCartney’s first solo album, McCartney (1970), ... You end up with one of the most distinctive songs in the Paul McCartney catalog. Nah, there’s no meaning in “Monkberry Moon Delight.” ...
If Paul McCartney had decided he was done with music following the disbandment of the Beatles, he still would have gone down in history as one of music’s greatest songwriters. Of course, Sir ...
Paul McCartney and Jack White’s Third Man Records detail the story behind their "333" edition of 'McCartney III' in a new mini-documentary.
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook It goes without saying that the name “Paul McCartney” is the name of a legend. Over the last six ...
Paul McCartney released "Take It Away" as the second single from his Tug of War album in 1982. The song soared into the Top 10, which wasn't bad at all considering that it was one that McCartney ...
Paul McCartney said it's his favorite song he’s written, and John Lennon called "Here, There and Everywhere" his favorite Beatles song, too.