Also, Paul is a family man-married in 1969 to the former Linda Eastman. He doesn't exactly flaunt her, but there she is on the album covers and there she is onstage. The kids (Heather, 13-by her first marriage-Mary, 6, and Stella, 4) are taken along on most Wings tours, and this one is set up partly around the family situation. The McCartneys, band members and closest aides are in four base cities (Dallas, New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles) and commute to and from concerts (thirty-one shows, twenty-one cities) by private jet. This saves on hotels, airports and general wear and tear, and it keeps the family together. But a photographer on the tour finds the daily commute limiting. "So far," he says, "I'm shooting an architectural book, mostly buildings. They don't exactly hang out a lot."
And, finally, nothing-no new band he can concoct-can compare with the Beatles. This he knows well and, as he patiently counseled a young reporter from NBC- TV: "It may not be the sixties, but nothing's the sixties anymore except the history books. It's the seventies and it's hip and it's happening. And it's just.. .enjoy it."
McCartney and his wife and band have weathered six years of criticism and misunderstanding. They are consoled only by the record buyers and have sold millions of records like "Hi Hi Hi," "My Love," "Helen Wheels," "Jet," "Band on the Run," "Junior's Farm," "Listen to What the Man Said" and "Letting Go." Not to mention seven albums, five under the name Wings.
But commercial success-the greatest, most consistent success of any of the former Beatles-is not enough. Paul says he ignores criticism-for every putdown, he says, there's someone else who loves his stuff. He relishes reminding reporters how critic Richard Goldstein panned Sgt. Pepper. But he is thin-skinned to the point of writing "Silly Love Songs," an answer to the dismissal of his music as pop puffery. And Linda has long been abused, written off as a particularly successful groupie in her days as a rock photographer in New York's Village and Fillmore scenes. As a musician and a member of Wings, she has been written off as a particularly successful, etc.... and she is, you can understand, very defensive.
At the sound check before the first of the two concerts in Detroit, Linda is showing me around her keyboards, instruments she learned to play after marrying McCartney. Atop the electric piano are an ARP synthesizer and a Mini-Moog, which she plays for the opening of "Venus and Mars." Buttons are labeled "controllers," "oscillator," "bank," "mixer," "decay time" and "modifiers for attack time." And if that's not confusing enough, here, facing the audience, is the Mellotron, which is loaded with tape loops that are activated by depressing keys. There are tapes of Paul singing a line-"Till you go down"-and of a laughing hyena, a pig and a bull. Here, too, is the chorale behind McCulloch's number, "Medicine jar," and the robot/chain saw/moog/drum sound that opens "Silly Love Songs." And the sounds of frying bacon and chips that appeared on Linda's "Cook of the House," her first solo vocal outing on the most recent album, Wings at the Speed of Sound. I mention the criticism that has already built over her celebration of her place in the kitchen. She swivels on her electric piano bench. "My answer," she says, "is always `Fuck off!"' She continues, in a weird hybrid of accents from England, New York, and finishing school. "Look, we had a great loon in the studios that night. All the hung up people don't have to buy it, don't have to listen to it. It's like having parents on your back, this criticizing. I've grown up. I had a great night last night, this is a great band, and this is great fun. And that's all we care about."
Offstage, heading toward the dressing room, Linda asks that I forget her outburst. But a few minutes later, in conversation with Denny Laine, her hostility wells up again. We are talking about "Silly Love Songs" as a reaction to criticism.
"You respond to it," she says, "but I'd rather have life without it. I had life without it before and found it quite nice. You have criticism in school. When you get out of school, you want to be free."
Laine adds: "We're pretty good critics of ourselves. We don't need all these bums coming along and telling us, `Hey, man...."'
"We always know what's wrong," says Linda. "We know with every album what's gone wrong." She soon turns away to talk with Paul, who's just returned from the sound check.
Laine speaks with us for a minute more about the remains of Beatlemania. "The main thing about us," he says, "is we want to be able to work on the stage without too much adoration, if you know what I mean. We'd rather work for it." A lot of the audience, he says, still respond out of reverence for a Beatle. "They're in awe, you know, of Paul. And that's a bit of a drag."
Sunday, May 9th: Paul McCartney has just flown into Toronto from New York and sped, in one of the customary five limousines, into the backstage area of the Maple Leaf Gardens. It is 6:20; the show has a scheduled 8 P.M. starting time and he's been booked into a gold-record presentation with Capitol Records/EMI of Canada, interviews with CBC-TV, two radio stations, one Toronto paper, and Rolling Stone. And he should have dinner. He is running late. But a rushed sound check in Detroit spoiled the first concert there, and he isn't about to let it happen again. He steps out of the Fleetwood, looks around, asks the closest person where the stage is and heads off.
Dressed in his usual offstage clothing-loud Hawaiian print shirt, tails hanging out of a short leather jacket, unfaded jeans and rubber-soled shoes-he jumps from bass to keyboards to guitars to drums, pumping frantically until he loses a stick. Then he occupies himself behind the sound board to check other mikes and instruments. He works meticulously and by the time he's finished, it's 7:20. Capitol and all the interviewers have been waiting since five, but Paul seems positively casual. After a tenminute break and a huddle with his manager, Brian Brolly, he signals us into the dressing room for a double-speed interview that takes us up to the minute he has to switch to his stage outfit, a black suit with sequined shoulders. He gnaws at a fried-chicken drumstick, waving his hands expressively and freely to emphasize points.
We begin with Laine's complaint-about the audience responding more out of awe for Paul than from appreciation of the music.
"I don't think that's happening so much now," he says. "I think that's what this tour is doing. Maybe they came a bit like that-which can't be helped-but on this tour, everyone is saying backstage afterward, `We came and expected one thing, but it's very different, really.'
"In the sixties, or the main Beatle time, there was screaming all the time. And I liked that then because that was that kind of time. I used to feel that that was kind of like a football match. They came just to cheer; the cheering turned into screaming when it translated into young girls. People used to say, 'Well, isn't that a drag, 'cause no one listens to your music.' But some of the time it was good they didn't because... you know, some of the time we were playing pretty rough there, as almost any band from that time will know." McCartney eases into his answers, gets comfortable, stretches them out, seemingly unconscious of the rush around him.
"I thought when I came out on tour again, it might be very embarrassing if they were listening instead of screaming. David Essex was talking excitedly about the British audience. 'They're still screaming, you know.' Well, for him they are, and that's his kind of audience, but when we went out, we just got up there and started playing like we were a new group. So everyone just took us like that. Sat there. 'Yeah, that's all right.' And they got up and danced when we did dancing numbers. It's perfect: you can have your cake and eat it, because they roar when you need them to roar and they listen when you're hoping they might be listening."
McCartney opens a fresh pack of cigarettes-the brand, Senior Service-lights up and continues:
"There is this feeling that I should mind if they come to see me as a Beatle. But I really don't mind. They're coming to see me; I don't knock it. It doesn't matter why, they came, it's what they think when they go home. I don't know for sure, but I've got a feeling that they go away thinking, 'Oh, well, it's a band.' It lets them catch up. I think the press, the media is a bit behind the times, thinking about the Beatles a lot. And I think the kids go away from the show a lot hipper than ev
en the review they're going to read the next day."
The press, however, seems to be catching up. On numerous next mornings, reviews have told about the reviewers' discovery-that Wings is a rock and roll band. The New York Times attended the first show, in Fort Worth, and called it "impressively polished yet vital" and "harder-edged" than expected. Newsweek, apparently forgetting Wings' six-year stack of golden wax, declared, "Paul McCartney had proved that he could make it on his own."
"The whole idea behind Wings," says McCartney, "is to get a touring band. So that we are just like a band, instead of the whole Beatles myth."
But no matter how much he wants to be just a member of a band, and no matter how good the band is, most of the audience is there to see one man. You can tell by the explosion of strobes and flashes from cameras around the auditorium when the moment occurs that McCartney is by himself on the stage. And by the subsequent explosion set off by people who want to capture the actual moment McCartney is singing "Yesterday."
Wings is a talented group of musicians, especially with Laine and McCulloch. But the Beatles came to be considered geniuses in the studios. I wonder whether Paul misses the other three as sounding boards. Or were Linda and Denny right in their assertion that they always knew "what's gone wrong" with every album.
He does miss the Beatles, he says. "I don't know about the genius bit, but yeah, I think the Beatles was a very equal thing.. .yeah, I used to worry a little more about that, kind of saying to Linda, 'Look, I know Denny's good, but he's not used to me enough. Will I dare offer him this riff: what if he turns it down?' This standoffishness. But again, you consult your inner oracle and it tells you, well, it's time that does all of that. You can't take a baby and make him 14 overnight. Everyone is coming forward a bit more now. So I just thank me lucky stars that I hung in there."
But democracy, as McCartney knows, has its price. "You're opening the door to other possibilities, and that's sort of what broke the Beatles up, really. The freedom for the personalities to do it. I started a group, I've got my wife in, took the kids on the road, just because it was all part of the way I feel."
The McCartney family image does not seem to bother or affect any of the other band members, but McCartney seems sensitive about its effects on Wings' audience and on the band's image.
"I used to think of that, when we first got together and had Linda in the group'Oh, oh, we've had it with the groupies now! Everyone's gonna think we're real old squares-blimey! Married! God, at least we could have just lived together or something-that would have been a bit hip.' Then you realize it doesn't matter. They really come for the music. At first it did seem funny to be up there with a wife instead of just friends or people associated with the game. But I think the nice thing that's happened is it seems to be part of a trend anyway, where women are getting in a bit more, families are a bit cooler than they were. Things change."
It is past eight now: the show, it was decided, would start around 8: 30. Capitol and local press are still waiting. Paul waves all that aside with a hand. He had told a publicist that he wanted to do this interview right.
Being a family man, he is saying now, has not affected his songwriting. McCartney, after all, was always the softer side of the Beatles. "I still think basically the same kind of things I used to; the only difference is I'll do a tune like `Mary Had a Little Lamb' [an early Wings single], but that's the kind of thing kids request. Limitations? Maybe. The only kind I can think of is not wanting to be maybe too...far out. But I write songs basically the same way, which is any way. It's mainly just when I've got a minute, but that can come in any different form. Just sit around... if I feel like playing my guitar, a song comes out. That's the same as it's always been."
Onstage, Linda McCartney stays discreetly in the shadows, behind her keyboards, for the first few numbers, leaving Paul looking unattached at least for a while. When he introduces her as "my better half." she gets a roar of approval. In Detroit, with Paul on piano, she steps up to a vocal mike in front of the keyboards only after the 19th song has passed. Number 20 is "My Love," and she places her hands, rather dramatically, on her hips, as if to show the crowd just who "does it good." But for the most part, she is there to lend able support to the band. And she has developed into a capable backup vocalist, and a spirited rock and roll cheerleader.
WINGS I S A Yoh M A C H I N E that has produced five albums in five years, with singles filling in the occasional lags. And now, as McCartney had hoped before the most recent personnel were affixed, it is a traveling band as well, with annual U.S. tours a real possibility.
A year and a winter ago, another former Beatle went on tour and, to put it mildly. flopped. George Harrison had maturity, sincerity, and the best intentions on his side. He appreciated the Beatles and his role in the phenomenon, he said, but he had grown up, changed, and did not care to dwell in the past. And to let everyone know how'firmly he felt, he did a two-and-a-half-hour show dominated by Indian music. He did four Beatles songs, and this only after active encouragement from fellow musicians on the tour. He changed lyrics in three of the four Beatles songs, and rearrangements (along with George's overworked, hoarse voice) turned them into hardly reasonable facsimiles of the songs many in the audiences had wanted to hear.
Paul and Linda attended Harrison's Madison Square Garden show, Paul disguised in Afro wig, shades, and walrus mustache, "and we loved it," he says. He agrees that George had the right, at whatever critical cost, to say, "This is me, now."
People, says McCartney, have this... attitude about the Beatles. "There was some girl on holiday and we were talking to her. She's a real average British girl and she sort of summed up her view of the Beatles: these lads from Liverpool, lovely, cheery and singing lovely songs.. .and then, drugs! And they all went crazy on drugs. And that was the end of the story for her. Well, that's kind of silly. And I think there's a lot of people approaching the new shows like that. `Oh, well, can they actually stand up there when they were once the Beatles.' You just have to say, `Well, this is me now, sorry, folks.' Sgt. Pepper's a big change from the record before it. That was us then. So I think George is just taking it very naturally and saying, `This is me."'
McCartney has said he doesn't want to get into criticizing Harrison, but the producer in him finally wins out: "If I'd been producing him and if I'd been his impresario on that tour," he says, "I would have asked him to do a few more songs he was known for. And also to stick to the arrangement a little bit." McCartney puts on a goodnatured look. "To which he'd probably say, `Piss off,' and good luck to him."
But, he adds, "I can see his attitude totally. On the first Wings tours-a limited, bus-hopping affair to British universities in 1972, a larger European swing in ' 73-We did the same thing; just no Beatles whatsoever. I'll tell you the truth: It was too painful. It was too much of a trauma. It was like reliving a sort of a weird dream, doing a Beatles tune. One of the guys promoting us on that European tour said, At the end, you should just come on with a guitar and do "Yesterday."' I thought, `Oh God, I couldn't face it.' Because there was a lot of rubbish on, you know. We were into fighting for a while, we were being poisoned against each other by various people, mainly by one man who shall remain anonymous."
The man, of course, was Allen Klein, who became the manager of John, George, and Ringo in May 1969, over McCartney's protests. As tension in the studios mounted, as Apple teetered, and as Ringo, John, and Paul announced separate threats to split, McCartney suspected Klein of taking more than his share of Apple's money. In the spring of 19 70, in order to take action against Klein, he was forced to sue Apple-and the other Beatles-for dissolution of the group. After several difficult years, the years of the rubbish, Lennon, Harrison, and Starr, along with others involved in Apple, filed suit in London against Klein, for "fraud," for taking "excessive commissions" and for "otherwise mismanag[ing]" his clients. Klein turned around and filed a suit, in New York, against the three ex-Beatles, Yoko Ono, and Apple for more than $63 million in damages and fu
ture earnings; Klein enjoined McCartney as part of a "conspiracy" to damage or injure him and his company, seeking damages of $34 million plus interest. The London case against Klein is scheduled to go to court next January.
McCartney hopes to steer clear of the trial, he says, but will cooperate with testi- mony-"anything that can help. I just want everyone's head to be clear, to get on with what they do." Klein's countersuit, McCartney says, "is an old manager's trick; the best form of defense being attack. It's ridiculous what he's doing. Even for himself. He should just get on with his business and think, 'Well, Christ, I got the Stones' old masters, I got this'-he had a half million out of the company, so he's had a bit, you know. But he's just trying to hang in there, to prove a point. It's a bit...to me it's very like the Nixon thing, of 'I said I was a goodie and I'm damn well going to prove it."'
W I T 11 T i I E P R F S S I I R r s between him and the others off, McCartney found the songs coming back. "You think, well, they're great tunes, I like the tunes. When we played them we'd get a bit nostalgic, think, 'Oh, this is nice, isn't it.' So I just decided in the end, this wasn't such a big deal. I'd do them."
McCartney, in fact, is doing only one more Beatles song than George did on his tour. He, too, wanted to play down the Beatle identity (the tour is billed "Wings over America" and McCartney's name does not appear on tickets or advertising). He selected the songs at random, he says, rejecting "Hey Jude" as a closer simply because "it didn't feel right," and choosing instead a song played on previous tours but never recorded, an all-out jam rocker called "Soily."
But the difference between Harrison and McCartney is in the faithfulness of Paul's arrangements, so that the horn section does a credible impression of a cello on "Yesterday," and "Lady Madonna" is churned out happily, and "The Long and Winding Road" and "Blackbird" are almost straight off the records. Only on "I've Just Seen a Face," played on amplified 12-string Ovation guitar, with the McCartneys' and Laine's voices blending together in a folky. Rooftop Singers style, does he wander.
Not Fade Away: A Backstage Pass to 20 Years of Rock & Roll Page 38