Of course when the dust settled, and the battle lines become less blurry, it was safe to not only bring your old Emerson Lake and Palmer albums out of hiding, but you could once again walk into record emporiums, politely ask for the new, say, UFO album (other second division English rock bands are available) and not be ridiculed by the punk police.
Yet still I never went back and bought the album Macca and Wings recorded in '77 and put out the following year: London Town was released hot on the heels of Mull of Kintyre which had occupied the number one slot seemingly forever (and alienated a lot of Macca fans to boot). In fact, he and the missus, together with Denny Laine, had recorded it in the same sessions but (thankfully?) never put it on the album.
But I digress; all this preamble comes on the back of a Tweet that caught my eye earlier in the week from Eoghan Lyng at the magnificent We are Cult, who had the audacity to claim that London Town was in his Top 5 Macca post Beatles albums. Surely not I thought. Better than Flaming Pie (which didn't feature) I fired back? Oh yes, came the the reply: the exchange went something like this:
Top five McCartney: 1) Band On The Run, 2) Tug of War, 3)Ram, 4) McCartney II, 5) London Town.— E.M.Lyng (@EoghanLyng) June 24, 2018
Too twee at points: Songs we Were Singing, Beautiful Night, world tonight.— E.M.Lyng (@EoghanLyng) June 25, 2018
So @wearecultonline , London Town is a better album than Flaming Pie, you say? I'm to be convinced; but, like last time https://t.co/b7YvzbZ0nT , leave it with me and I'll get back to you with the scores on the doors pic.twitter.com/okK8jyuGOJ— John Medd (@JohnMeddUK) June 25, 2018
But in the week that Macca came back to Liverpool (here's his visit condensed into 20 minutes) and, for once, appearing quite humble to be back in his hometown, I wasn't in the mood for a pointless slanging match. You know what, both albums stand up just fine in 2018 and Macca should be proud of both sets of work, bookended, funnily enough, by the birth of his son James and, twenty years on, the same young lad's first recorded guitar solo.
So in the end, I say to Eoghan and all at We are Cult, London Town is the perfect companion piece to Flaming Pie. And, here, to prove same I give you the two standout songs - one from each. The title track from London Town, here, in the form of a rough and ready promo film of Mr. & Mrs. McCartney and Denny Laine cruising down the Thames eating a bag of chips.
And here's Heaven on a Sunday from Flaming Pie, twenty one years later, with James providing *that* solo.
* I really must dig out the notebook I kept at the time that details all record shop purchases from the arse end of 1974 to, I think, mid 1979. And I can assure you that from 1st. January 1977 till the day the Pistols imploded, all my purchases were coated in a fine film of gob.
Nice to meet another McCartney fan. Better not tell CC. I hope you're sitting down. I wouldn't have Flaming Pie or London Town in my top 5. Chaos and Creation In The Backyard would be there. I'll get back to you.
ReplyDeleteWoaaah! Yes, you *had* better get back to me, Brian. And fast!
Delete'....Flaming Pie....the last time he was truly relevant...' I'd definitely go along with that assessment. But, wot? No love from anyone for 'McCartney'?
ReplyDeleteTS - Of course McCartney; McCartney is his tour de force. McCartney is what Macca will play in its entirety when he finally gets round to playing that house concert in my kitchen...
DeleteA great blog post - I also saw that return trip to Liverpool and was pleased that Paul seemed so humble. The looks on the faces of the people in that pub was a joy - If it was a total surprise, he made a lot of people very happy.
ReplyDeleteI have great love for Wings but am saddened by what I see written at times about them. He's in his late 70s now for goodness sake - Give the guy a break!
Alyson - there was a lot of love in the room, wasn’t there? I would love to meet the fella, I’d be lying if I said I didn’t.
Delete''Wings were the band the Beatles could have been'' - Alan Partridge.
ReplyDeletePartridge may have been on to something.
DeleteI always liked this from Radio Norwich at five o’clock In the morning: “Ladies and gentlemen, pray silence please for the Electric Light Orchestra.”
In no particular order, my five:
ReplyDeleteRAM
Tug of War
McCartney
Band on the Run
Chaos and Creation in the Backyard (just edging out Flowers in the Dirt)
Let the skewering begin!
That’s not a bad call Brian! No skewering from me! We like to play the ball, not the man at ‘Are WeThereYet?’
DeleteFor what its worth:
McCartney
Flaming Pie
Band on the Run
Wings Over America
Flowers in the Dirt
Grammar, bloody iPhones - for what it’s worth!
ReplyDeleteAlso, ‘Are We There Yet?’ is thinking of making a case for Pipes of Peace...
I like your style. I probably rank that one higher than I should. I think it has to do with being 14 when it came out. An absolute fanatic at that time. When Pipes is good, it's very good, but there are a few weak moments that keep it some distance from my top 5. When So Bad was out as a single, I would run home from school as fast as I could because if I got in the door by 3:00 I could catch the video at the top of the hour on MTV. The rotation was pretty stagnant at the time. Loved seeing Ringo and Paul together. I like a few unusual McCartney/Wings albums like Chaos... unusual meaning not ones most would rank highly. I actually pull out Back to the Egg with regularity. I know. I know.
DeleteI know what you mean Brian: I was *this* close to nominating Venus and Mars, but played safe and put Wings Over America in there instead - where they play a few selections from it (it was current at the time).
DeleteMacca is no stranger round here; and after the James Corden thing (which was brilliant btw) I've started to cut him a bit more slack!
If I could only save 5 from the flames they'd be...
ReplyDeleteMcCartney
Wild Life
Band on the Run
Venus & Mars
Flowers in the Dirt
TS - It looks like Band on the Run is everyone's banker, and why wouldn't it be? It's got everything - the shimmy, the nutmeg, and it contains my 2nd. favourite track Macca track (of all time?).
DeleteHave we done Top 5 Macca tracks yet?
DeleteNineteen Hundred & Eighty Five
DeleteC Moon
Vanilla Sky
My Brave Face
Maybe I'm Amazed
An impressively quick answer. You've obviously considered this long and hard. I couldn't even give you my Top 5 Clash or Dylan songs without weeks of tears, tantrums, cogitation and much nashing of teeth.
DeleteWhat I can tell you is that in my current line of work, totally random earworms are wont to get stuck in my head for hours at a time as I toil and Macca's tunes regularly feature. The most recent five examples are Queenie Eye, Figure of Eight, Press, You Gave Me the Answer and Ballroom Dancing. Honestly, when Ballroom Dancing gets stuck in your noggin, ain't nuthin' gonna shift it.
You may only have asked me yesterday, but I’ve been listening to Macca since, well, ‘Yesterday’.
DeleteYou know what my answer to this question is ;)
ReplyDeleteDoes that answer your question Eoghan?
Delete