Sir James Paul McCartney,
MBE (born 18 June
1942), is an English
singer-songwriter,
poet,
composer,
multi-instrumentalist,
entrepreneur,
record and
film
producer,
painter, and
animal rights and
peace activist. Formerly of
The Beatles and
Wings, McCartney is the most successful
songwriter in the history of
popular
music. McCartney gained worldwide fame as a member of The
Beatles, alongside
John Lennon,
George Harrison, and
Ringo Starr. McCartney and Lennon formed one of
the most influential and successful
songwriting partnerships and wrote some of
the most popular songs in the history of
rock
music. After leaving The Beatles, McCartney launched a
successful solo career and formed the band Wings with his first
wife,
Linda Eastman, and
singer-songwriter
Denny Laine. He has
worked on film scores and classical and electronic music, released
a large catalogue of songs as a solo artist, and taken part in
projects to help international charities.
McCartney is listed in
Guinness World Records as the
most successful musician and composer in popular music history,
with 60
gold
discs and sales of 100 million
singles. His song "
Yesterday" (credited to Lennon/McCartney,
as all songs written by either Lennon or McCartney during their
partnership as Beatles were, but composed entirely by McCartney) is
listed as the most
covered song in
history—by over 3,500 artists so far—and has been played more than
7,000,000 times on American television and radio. Wings' 1977
single "
Mull of Kintyre"
became the first single to sell more than two million copies in the
UK, and remains the UK's top selling non-charity single. According
to britishhitsongwriters.com he is the most successful songwriter
in UK singles chart history, based on weeks that his compositions
have spent on the chart. As a performer or songwriter, McCartney
was responsible for 30 number one singles on the U.S.
Hot 100 chart.
Following the death of his first wife Linda in 1998, McCartney
married
Heather Mills in 2002. They
divorced in 2008. McCartney is now partners with Nancy Shevell.
McCartney practices meditation, using the
mantra that the
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi gave him when
The Beatles went to a
TM
seminar in 1967. McCartney is an advocate for
animal rights,
vegetarianism, and
music education; he is active in campaigns
against
landmines,
seal hunting, and
Third World debt. He is a keen
football fan, supporting both
Everton and
Liverpool football clubs. His company
MPL Communications owns the
copyrights to more than 3,000 songs, including all of the songs
written by
Buddy Holly, along with the
publishing rights to such musicals as
Guys and Dolls,
A Chorus Line, and
Grease. McCartney is one of Britain's
wealthiest men, with an estimated fortune of £750 million ($1.2
billion) in 2009.
Childhood
Paul
McCartney was born in Walton Hospital in Liverpool
, England, where his mother, Mary (née Mohan), had
worked as a nurse in the maternity ward. He has one brother,
Michael, born 7 January 1944.
McCartney was baptised Roman Catholic but was raised
non-denominationally: his mother was
Roman Catholic, and his father, James "Jim" McCartney, was a
Protestant turned agnostic.
In 1947, he began attending Stockton Wood Road Primary school.
He then
attended the Joseph Williams Junior School, and passed the 11-plus exam in 1953 with three others out of the 90
examinees and thus gained admission to the Liverpool
Institute
. In 1954, while riding on the bus, from the
suburb of Speke
, where he
lived, to the Institute, he met George
Harrison, who lived nearby. Passing the exam meant that
McCartney and Harrison could go to a
Grammar school rather than a
secondary modern school, which the majority
of pupils attended until they were eligible to work, but as Grammar
school pupils they had to find new friends.
In 1955,
the McCartney family moved to 20 Forthlin Road
in Allerton
. Mary McCartney rode a bicycle to houses
where she was needed as a midwife, and an early McCartney memory is
of her leaving when it was snowing heavily. On 31 October 1956,
Mary McCartney, a heavy smoker, died of an embolism after a
mastectomy operation to stop the spread of her breast cancer. The
early loss of his mother later connected McCartney with
John Lennon, whose mother,
Julia, died after being struck by a car when
Lennon was 17.
McCartney's father was a trumpet player and pianist who had led Jim
Mac's Jazz Band in the 1920s and encouraged his two sons to be
musical. Jim had an
upright piano in
the front room that he had bought from
Brian Epstein's store. McCartney's
grandfather, Joe McCartney, played an E-flat
tuba. Jim McCartney used to point out the different
instruments in songs on the radio, and often took McCartney to
local brass band concerts. McCartney's father gave him a
nickel-plated trumpet, but when
skiffle
music became popular, McCartney swapped the trumpet for a £15
Framus Zenith (model 17)
acoustic guitar. As he was left-handed,
McCartney found the guitar difficult to play, but when he saw a
poster advertising a
Slim Whitman
concert, he realised that Whitman played left-handed with his
guitar strung the opposite way to a right-handed player. McCartney
wrote his first song ("
I Lost My
Little Girl") on the Zenith, and also played his father's
Framus
Spanish guitar when writing
early songs with Lennon. He later learned to play the piano and
wrote his second song, "
When I'm
Sixty-Four". On his father's advice, he took music lessons, but
since he preferred to learn 'by ear' he never paid much attention
to them.
McCartney was heavily influenced by American
Rhythm and Blues music. He has stated that
Little Richard was his idol when he
was in school and that the first song he ever sang in public was
"
Long Tall Sally," at a Butlins
holiday camp talent competition.
Musical career
1957–1960
At the age
of 15, McCartney met John Lennon and
The Quarrymen at the St. Peter's
Church Hall fête in Woolton
on 6 July
1957. He formed a close working relationship with Lennon and
they collaborated on many songs. Harrison joined the group as
lead guitarist, followed by Lennon's
art school friend,
Stuart
Sutcliffe, on bass, and
Pete Best on
the drums. By May 1960, they had tried several new names, including
"The Silver Beetles", playing a tour of Scotland under that name
with
Johnny Gentle. They finally
changed the name of the group to The Beatles.
1960–1970: The Beatles
From May
1960, The Beatles were managed by
Allan Williams, who booked them to
perform at a club in Hamburg
. For
the next two years,
The Beatles
remained in Hamburg for much of the time, performing as a
resident group in a number of Hamburg clubs.
During their two-year
Hamburg residency they returned to Liverpool from time to time,
performing at the Cavern
club
. Prior to the end of the residency,
Sutcliffe left the band, so McCartney, reluctantly, became The
Beatles'
bass player. The Beatles
recorded their first published musical material in Hamburg,
performing as the backing group for
Tony
Sheridan on the single "
My Bonnie".
This recording later brought The Beatles to the attention of a key
figure in their subsequent development and commercial success,
Brian Epstein, who became their next
manager. Epstein eventually negotiated a record contract for the
group with
Parlophone in May 1962. After
replacing Best with
Ringo Starr on
drums, The Beatles became popular
in the UK in 1963 and
in the US in 1964.
In 1965, they were each appointed
Members of the Order of the British
Empire (MBE). After performing concerts, plays, and tours
almost non-stop for a period of nearly four years, and giving more
than one thousand four hundred live performances internationally,
The Beatles gave their last commercial concert at the end of their
1966 US tour. They continued to work in the recording studio from
1966 until their breakup in 1970. In the eight years from 1962 to
1970, the group had released twenty-four UK singles and twelve
studio albums, along with further US releases (see
discography).
Since 1970
After
the breakup of The
Beatles, McCartney continued his musical career, in solo work
as well as in collaborations with other musicians. After releasing
his solo album
McCartney
in 1970, he worked with
Linda
McCartney to record the album
Ram in 1971. Later the same year, the pair
were joined by guitarist
Denny Laine and
drummer
Denny Seiwell to form the
group
Wings, which was active between
1971 and 1981 and released numerous successful singles and albums
(see
discography). McCartney also
collaborated with a number of other popular artists including
Stevie Wonder,
Michael Jackson,
Eric Stewart, and
Elvis Costello.
In 1985, McCartney
played "Let It Be" at the Live Aid concert
in London
, backed by
Bob Geldof, Pete Townshend, David
Bowie, and Alison Moyet. The
1990s saw McCartney venture into
orchestral music, and in 1991 the
Royal Liverpool
Philharmonic Society commissioned a musical piece by McCartney
to celebrate its
sesquicentennial.
He
collaborated with Carl Davis to release
Liverpool Oratorio;
involving the opera singers Dame
Kiri Te Kanawa, Sally Burgess, Jerry
Hadley and Willard White, with the
Royal Liverpool
Philharmonic Orchestra and the choir of Liverpool
Cathedral
. The Prince of Wales later honoured McCartney
as a Fellow of The Royal
College of Music
and Honorary Member of the Royal
Academy of Music
(2008). Other forays into classical music
included
Standing
Stone (1997),
Working
Classical (1999), and
Ecce
Cor Meum (2006). It was announced in the 1997
New Year Honours that McCartney was to be
knighted for services to music,
becoming Sir Paul McCartney.
In 1999,
McCartney was inducted into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame
as a solo artist and in May 2000, he was awarded a
Fellowship by the British Academy of Composers and
Songwriters. The 1990s also saw McCartney, Harrison and
Starr working together on
Apple's
The Beatles Anthology
documentary series.
Having
witnessed the 11
September 2001 terrorist attacks from the JFK airport
tarmac, McCartney took a lead role in organising
The Concert for New York
City. In November 2002, on the first anniversary of
George Harrison's death, McCartney performed at the
Concert for George. He has also
participated in the
National
Football League's
Super Bowl,
performing in the pre-game show for
Super Bowl XXXVI and headlining the
halftime show at
Super Bowl
XXXIX.
McCartney has continued to work in the realms of popular and
classical music, touring the world and performing at a large number
of concerts and events; on more than one occasion he has performed
again with
Ringo Starr.
In 2008, he received
a BRIT award for Outstanding
Contribution to Music and an honourary
degree, Doctor of Music, from
Yale
University
. The
same year, he performed at a concert in Liverpool to celebrate the
city's year as
European
Capital of Culture. In 2009, he received two nominations for
the 51st annual Grammy awards, while in October of the same year he
was named songwriter of the year at The American Society of
Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) Awards.
On 15 July 2009, more than 45 years after The Beatles first
appeared on American television on
The Ed Sullivan Show,
McCartney returned to the Ed Sullivan Theater and performed atop
the marquee of
Late Show with David Letterman.
In May 2009, it was announced McCartney and
Bob Dylan will collaborate with
Ringo Starr to record a few songs for release in
2010.
Creative outlets
During
the 1960s, McCartney was often seen at major cultural events, such
as the launch party for The International Times and at The
Roundhouse
(28 January
and 4 February 1967 respectively). He also delved into the
visual arts, becoming a close friend of leading art dealers and
gallery owners, explored experimental film, and regularly attended
movie, theatrical and classical music performances.His first
contact with the London avant-garde scene was through
John Dunbar, who introduced him to the art
dealer
Robert Fraser, who in turn
introduced McCartney to an array of writers and artists. McCartney
later became involved in the renovation and publicising of the
Indica Gallery in Mason's Yard,
London—John Lennon first met
Yoko Ono at
the Indica. The Indica Gallery brought McCartney into contact with
Barry Miles, whose underground
newspaper, The
International
Times, McCartney helped to start. Miles would become
de facto manager of the Apple's
short-lived
Zapple Records label, and
wrote McCartney's official biography,
Many Years From Now (1997).
While living at the Asher house, McCartney took piano lessons at
the
Guildhall School
of Music and Drama, which The Beatles' producer Martin had
previously attended. McCartney studied composers like
Karlheinz Stockhausen, and
Luciano Berio. McCartney later wrote and
released several pieces of modern classical music and ambient
electronica, besides writing poetry and painting.
McCartney is lead
patron of the Liverpool Institute for Performing
Arts
, an arts school in the building formerly occupied
by the Liverpool Institute for Boys
. The 1837 building, which McCartney attended
during his schooldays, had become derelict by the mid-1980s. On 7
June 1996,
Queen
Elizabeth II officially opened the redeveloped building.
Electronic music
After the
recording of "Yesterday" in 1965,
McCartney contacted the BBC
Radiophonic Workshop in Maida Vale
, London, to see if they could record an electronic
version of the song, but never followed it up. When visiting
John Dunbar's flat in London, McCartney
would take along tapes he had compiled at Jane Asher's house. The
tapes were mixes of various songs, musical pieces and comments made
by McCartney that he had
Dick James make
into a
demo record for him. Heavily
influenced by
John Cage, he made
tape loops by recording voices, guitars and
bongoes on a
Brenell
tape recorder, and
splicing the various loops together. He reversed the tapes, sped
them up, and slowed them down to create the effects he wanted, some
of which were later used on Beatles' recordings, such as "
Tomorrow Never Knows". McCartney
referred to the tapes as "electronic symphonies".
In the
spring of 1966 McCartney rented a ground floor and basement flat
from Ringo Starr at 34 Montagu
Square
, to be used as a small demo studio for spoken-word recordings by
poets, writers (including William
Burroughs) and avant-garde
musicians. The Beatles' Apple Records then launched a
sub-label,
Zapple with Miles as its manager,
ostensibly to release recordings of a similar aesthetic, although
few releases would ultimately result as Apple and The Beatles slid
into business and personal difficulties.
In 1995, McCartney recorded a radio series called "
Oobu Joobu" for the American network
Westwood One, which he described as being
"wide-screen radio". During the 1990s, McCartney collaborated with
Youth of
Killing Joke under the name of
the Fireman, and released two
ambient electronic albums:
Strawberries Oceans Ships
Forest (1993) and
Rushes (1998). In 2000, he released an
album titled
Liverpool Sound
Collage with
Super Furry
Animals and Youth, utilizing the sound collage and
musique concrete techniques that fascinated
him in the mid-1960s. In 2005, he worked on a project with
bootleg producer
and
remixer Freelance Hellraiser, consisting of
remixed versions of songs from throughout his solo career which
were released under the title
Twin
Freaks. The Fireman's third album
Electric Arguments was released on
November 25, 2008..
In January 2009 interview with
L.A. Weekly
newspaper, McCartney explained what he saw as the most significant
difference between the music he creates as The Fireman and the rest
of his catalogue. "Fireman is improvisational theatre," McCartney
said. "When I sit down to write a song, it’s a kind of
improvisation, but I formalise it a bit to get it into the studio,
and when I step up to a microphone, I have a vague idea of what I’m
about to do. I usually have a song, and I know the melody and
lyrics, and my performance is the only unknown. In this case, I had
neither lyrics nor melody to go on—and it felt great."
Film
McCartney was interested in
animated
films as a child, and later had the financial resources to ask
Geoff Dunbar to direct a short
animated
film called
Rupert and the
Frog Song, in 1981. McCartney was the producer, he wrote
the music and the script, and also added some of the characters
voices. McCartney wrote and starred in the 1984 film
Give My Regards to Broad
Street. The film and soundtrack featured the popular hit
"
No More Lonely Nights", and
the album reached #1 in the UK, but the film did not do well
commercially or critically.
Roger Ebert
awarded the film a single star and wrote, "You can safely skip the
movie and proceed directly to the sound track". Dunbar worked again
with McCartney on an animated film about the work of French artist
Honore Daumier, in 1992, which won
both of them a
Bafta award. They also worked
on
Tropic Island Hum, in 1997. In
1995, McCartney directed a short documentary about
The Grateful Dead. He is rumored to be
doing the voice of the fantasy character
Rumpelstiltskin in the
fourth Shrek movie, and maybe
having a hand in writing music for the soundtrack.
In May 2000, McCartney released
Wingspan: An Intimate
Portrait, a retrospective documentary that features
behind-the-scenes films and photographs that Paul and Linda
McCartney (who had died in 1998) took of their family and bands.
Interspersed throughout the 88 minute film is an interview by
Mary McCartney with her father. Mary
was the baby photographed inside McCartney's jacket on the back
cover of his first solo album,
McCartney, and was one of the
producers of the documentary.
Painting
In 1966, McCartney met art gallery-owner
Robert Fraser, whose flat was visited by many
well-known artists. McCartney met
Andy
Warhol,
Claes Oldenburg,
Peter Blake, and
Richard Hamilton there, and
learned about art appreciation. McCartney later started buying
paintings by
Magritte, and used Magritte's
painting of an apple for the Apple Records logo. He now owns
Magritte's easel and spectacles.
McCartney's love of painting surfaced after
watching artist Willem de Kooning
paint, in Kooning's Long
Island
studio. McCartney took up painting in 1983.
In 1999, he exhibited his paintings (featuring McCartney's
portraits of
John Lennon,
Andy Warhol, and
David
Bowie) for the first time in Siegen, Germany, and included
photographs by
Linda. He chose the
gallery because Wolfgang Suttner (local events organiser) was
genuinely interested in his art, and the positive reaction led to
McCartney showing his work in UK galleries.
The first UK
exhibition of McCartney's work was opened in Bristol
, England with more than 500 paintings on
display. McCartney had previously believed that "only people
that had been to art school were allowed to paint"—as Lennon
had.
In October 2000,
Yoko Ono and McCartney
presented art exhibitions in New York and London. McCartney said,
"I've been offered an exhibition of my paintings at the Walker Art
Gallery in Liverpool where John and I used to spend many a pleasant
afternoon. So I'm really excited about it. I didn't tell anybody I
painted for 15 years but now I'm out of the closet."
As an artist, Paul McCartney designed a series of six postage
stamps issued by the
Isle of Man
Post on 1 July 2002. According to
BBC
News, McCartney seems to be the first major rock star in the
world who is also known as a stamp designer.
Writing and poetry
When McCartney was young, his mother read him poems and encouraged
him to read books. McCartney's father was interested in
crosswords and invited the two young McCartneys
(Paul and his brother Michael) to solve them with him, so as to
increase their "word power". McCartney was later inspired—in his
school years—by
Alan Durband, who was
McCartney's English literature teacher at the Liverpool Institute.
Durband
was a co-founder and fund-raiser at the Everyman Theatre
in Liverpool, where Willy
Russell also worked, and introduced McCartney to Geoffrey Chaucer's works. McCartney later
took his
A-level exams, but
passed only one subject—Art.
In 2001 McCartney published 'Blackbird Singing', a volume of poems,
some of which were lyrics to his songs, and gave readings in
Liverpool and New York City. Some of them were serious: "Here
Today" (about Lennon) and some humorous ("
Maxwell's Silver Hammer"). In the
foreword of the book, McCartney explained that when he was a
teenager, he had "an overwhelming desire" to have a poem of his
published in the school magazine. He wrote something "deep and
meaningful", but it was rejected, and he feels that he has been
trying to get some kind of revenge ever since. His first "real
poem" was about the death of his childhood friend,
Ivan Vaughan.
In October 2005, McCartney released a children's book called
High In The Clouds: An Urban Furry Tail. In a press
release publicizing the book, McCartney said, "I have loved reading
for as long as I can remember," singling out
Treasure Island as a childhood
favourite. McCartney collaborated with author
Philip Ardagh and animator Geoff Dunbar to
write the book.
Contact with fellow ex-Beatles
John Lennon
Although McCartney's relationship with Lennon was troubled, they
became close again in 1974 and even played together for the only
time since the Beatles split (see
A Toot and a Snore in '74). In
later years, the two grew apart again.. McCartney would often call
Lennon, but was never sure of what sort of reception he would get,
such as when McCartney once called Lennon and was told, "You're all
pizza and fairytales!" McCartney understood that he could not just
phone Lennon and only talk about business, so they often talked
about cats, baking bread, or babies. According to
May Pang, during Lennon's "Lost Weekend" with her
they planned to visit McCartney in New Orleans, where McCartney was
recording the
Venus and Mars
album, but Lennon went back to Ono the day before the planned visit
after Ono said she had a new cure for Lennon's smoking habit.
In a 1980 interview, Lennon said that the last time he had seen
McCartney was when they had watched the episode of
Saturday Night Live (May 1976) in
which
Lorne Michaels had made his
$3,000 cash offer to get Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, and Starr to
reunite on the show. McCartney and Lennon had seriously considered
going to the studio, but were too tired. This event was
fictionalised in the 2000 television film
Two of Us.
Reaction to Lennon's murder
On the
morning of 9 December 1980, McCartney awoke to the news that
Lennon had
been murdered
outside his home in the Dakota
building in New York. Lennon's death created
a media frenzy around the surviving members of The Beatles.
On the
evening of 9 December, as McCartney was leaving an Oxford Street
recording studio,
he was surrounded by reporters and asked for his reaction to
Lennon's death. He replied, "I was very shocked, you
know—this is terrible news," and said that he had spent the day in
the studio listening to some material because he "just didn't want
to sit at home." When asked why, he replied, "I didn't feel like
it." He was then asked when he first heard the news, McCartney
replied "This morning sometime," and one of the reporters asked
"Very early?" McCartney said "yeah" and then asked the reporters if
they all knew, they added "yeah." McCartney then said, "It's a
drag, isn't it?" When published, his "drag" remark was criticised,
and McCartney later regretted it. He furthermore stated that he had
intended no disrespect but had just been at a loss for words, after
the shock and sadness he felt over his friend's murder. He was also
to recall:
In 1983 McCartney said:
In a
Playboy interview in 1984,
McCartney said that he went home that night and watched the news on
television—while sitting with all his children—and cried all
evening. His last telephone call to Lennon, which was just before
Lennon and Yoko released
Double
Fantasy, was friendly. During the call, Lennon said
(laughing) to McCartney, "This housewife wants a career!" which
referred to Lennon's househusband years, while looking after
Sean Lennon.
McCartney carried on recording after the death of Lennon but did
not play any live concerts for some time. He explained that this
was because he was nervous that he would be "the next" to be
murdered. This led to a disagreement with
Denny Laine, who wanted to continue touring and
subsequently left Wings, which McCartney disbanded in 1981. Also in
June 1981, six months after Lennon's death, McCartney sang backup
on George Harrison's tribute to Lennon, "
All Those Years Ago," which also
featured Ringo Starr on drums. McCartney would go on to record
"Here Today", a tribute song to Lennon.
George Harrison
In late 2001, McCartney learned that his former classmate,
neighbour and bandmate, and friend of over 45 years,
George Harrison, was losing his battle with
cancer. Upon Harrison's death on 29 November,
McCartney told
Entertainment
Tonight,
Access
Hollywood,
Extra,
Good Morning America,
The Early Show,
MTV,
VH-1 and
Today that George was
like his "baby brother". Harrison spent his last days in a
Hollywood Hills mansion that was once leased by McCartney.
McCartney said in many interviews after Harrison's passing that
George was, "still laughing and joking" to the very end. He also
said, "We just sat there stroking hands. And you know, you don't
stroke hands with guys. But it was just beautiful. It's just a
favourite memory of mine." On 29 November 2002, the first
anniversary of George Harrison's death, McCartney played Harrison’s
"
Something" on a
ukulele at the
Concert
for George.
Relationships and marriages
Dot Rhone
One of McCartney's first girlfriends, in 1959, was called Layla, a
name he remembers being unusual in Liverpool at the time. Layla was
slightly older than McCartney and used to ask him to
baby-sit with her. Julie Arthur, another
girlfriend, was
Ted Ray's niece.
McCartney's first serious girlfriend in
Liverpool was Dot Rhone, whom he met at the Casbah
club
in 1959. McCartney chose clothes and make-up
for Rhone, and he paid for her to have her hair styled like
Brigitte Bardot's. When McCartney
first went to Hamburg with The Beatles, he wrote regularly, and she
accompanied
Cynthia Lennon to Hamburg
when The Beatles played there again in 1962. The couple had a
three-year relationship, and were due to marry until Rhone lost the
baby she was expecting.
Jane Asher
McCartney
first met the British actress Jane Asher
on 18 April 1963, when a photographer asked them to pose together
at a Beatles' performance at the Royal Albert Hall
in London. The two began a relationship, and
McCartney took up residence with Asher at her parents' house at 57
Wimpole Street, London, where he lived for nearly three years
before the couple moved to McCartney's own house in St. John's
Wood
. McCartney wrote several songs while at the
Ashers', including "
Yesterday" and
several inspired by Asher, among them "
And I Love Her", "
You Won't See Me", and "
I'm Looking Through You". McCartney
and Asher had a five-year relationship, and they planned to marry,
but Asher broke off the engagement when she discovered McCartney
had become involved with another woman,
Francie Schwartz.
Linda McCartney
In 1969, McCartney married American photographer
Linda Eastman, whom he described as the
woman who gave him "the strength and courage to work again" after
the breakup of The Beatles.
The pair had met previously at a 1967
Georgie Fame concert at The Bag
O'Nails
club, during her UK assignment to take photographs
of "Swinging Sixties" musicians in London. Paul and Linda
were both vegetarian and supported the animal rights organisation
People for
the Ethical Treatment of Animals. They had four children
(Linda's daughter
Heather who was
adopted by Paul, followed by three more children,
Mary,
Stella
and
James) and remained married
until Linda's death from breast cancer in 1998.
Heather Mills
In 2002, McCartney married
Heather
Mills, a former model and anti-
landmines campaigner. The couple had a child,
Beatrice, in 2003. They separated in May 2006 and were divorced in
May 2008. Widespread animosity towards McCartney's wives was
reported in 2004. "They [the British public] didn't like me giving
up on Jane Asher," McCartney said. "I married a New York divorcee
with a child, and at the time they didn't like that."
Nancy Shevell
McCartney has been dating Nancy Shevell since November, 2007. She
is a member of the board of the
New York
Metropolitan Transportation Authority as well as vice president
of a family-owned transportation conglomerate which includes
New England Motor
Freight.
Lifestyle
Recreational drug use
McCartney's introduction to drugs started in
Hamburg
,
Germany. The Beatles had to play for hours, and they were
often given "Prellies" (
Preludin) by German
customers or by
Astrid Kirchherr
(whose mother bought them). McCartney would usually take one, but
Lennon would often take four or five.
McCartney remembered getting "very high" and giggling when The
Beatles were introduced to cannabis by
Bob
Dylan in New York, in 1964. McCartney's use of cannabis became
regular, and he was quoted as saying that any future Beatles'
lyrics containing the words "high", or "grass" were written
specifically as a reference to cannabis, as was the phrase "another
kind of mind" in "
Got to Get
You into My Life".
John Dunbar's
flat at 29 Lennox Gardens, in London, became a regular hang-out for
McCartney, where he talked to musicians, writers and artists, and
smoked cannabis. In 1965, Miles introduced McCartney to
hash brownies by using a recipe for
hash fudge he found in the
Alice B. Toklas Cookbook. During the filming of
Help!, he and the other
Beatles occasionally smoked a
spliff in the car on the way to the studio
during filming, which often made them forget their lines.
Help! director
Dick Lester said
that he overheard "two beautiful women" trying to cajole McCartney
into taking heroin, but he refused.
McCartney's attitude about cannabis was made public in the 1960s,
when he added his name to an advertisement in
The Times, on 24 July 1967, which asked for
the legalisation of cannabis, the release of all prisoners
imprisoned because of possession, and research into marijuana's
medical uses. The
advertisement was
sponsored by a group called Soma and was signed by 65 people,
including The Beatles, Epstein,
RD
Laing, 15 doctors, and two
MPs.
McCartney was introduced to cocaine by
Robert Fraser, and it was available during the
recording of
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club
Band. He admitted that he used the drug multiple times for
about a year but stopped because of the unpleasant come down.
In 1967,
on a sailing trip to Greece
(with the
idea of buying an island for the whole group) McCartney said
everybody sat around and took LSD, although
McCartney had first taken it with Tara
Browne, in 1966. He took his second "
acid trip" with Lennon on 21 March
1967 after a studio session. McCartney was the first British pop
star to openly admit using LSD, in an interview in the now-defunct
"Queen" magazine. His admission was followed by a TV interview in
the UK on
Independent
Television News on 19 June 1967, when McCartney was asked about
his admission of LSD use, he said:
In spite of his statements then, and his admission (in 2004) that
he had used cocaine, McCartney was not arrested by
Norman Pilcher's Drug Squad, as had been
Lennon, Harrison,
Donovan, and several
members of
the Rolling Stones. In
1972, however, police found
cannabis plants
growing on his Scottish farm.
On 16
January 1980, Wings went to Tokyo
for 11
concerts in Japan. As McCartney was going through customs,
officials found 7.7 ounces (218.3 g) of cannabis in his
luggage. He was arrested and taken to a Tokyo prison while the
Japanese government decided what to do. McCartney had been
previously denied a visa to Japan (in 1975) because he had been
convicted twice in Europe for possession of cannabis. Public
figures called for McCartney to be put on
trial for drug-smuggling. Had he been convicted,
he would have faced up to seven years in prison. The members of
Wings cancelled the tour and left Japan. After ten days in jail,
McCartney was released and deported. He was told that he would not
be welcome in Japan again, although a decade later he played a
concert in Tokyo. In 1984, Paul and Linda McCartney were both
arrested for possession of cannabis.
Meditation
On 24
August 1967, McCartney met the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi at the London
Hilton
, and later went to Bangor
, in North
Wales
, to attend a weekend 'initiation'
conference. McCartney said that although he does not
meditate daily, he still uses the mantra that the
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi gave him in
Bangor. The time McCartney later spent in India at the Maharishi's
ashram was highly productive, as practically
all of the songs that would later be recorded for
The White Album and
Abbey Road were composed there by McCartney,
Lennon, or both together. Although McCartney was told that he was
never to repeat the mantra to anyone else, he did tell Linda
McCartney, and said he meditated a lot while he was in jail in
Japan.
In
2009, McCartney, along with Ringo Starr,
headlined a benefit concert at Radio City Music Hall
, raising three million dollars for the David Lynch Foundation to fund
instruction in Transcendental
Meditation for at-risk
youth.
Activism
Paul and Linda McCartney became outspoken vegetarians and
animal-rights activists. They said that their vegetarianism was
realised when they happened to see lambs in a field as they ate a
meal of lamb. McCartney has also credited the 1942
Disney film
Bambi—in
which the young deer's mother is shot by a hunter—as the original
inspiration for him to take an interest in
animal rights. In his first interview after
Linda's death, he promised to continue working for animal
rights.
In 1999, McCartney spent £3,000,000 to make sure Linda McCartney's
food range remained free of
GM
ingredients. In 2002, McCartney gave his support to a campaign
against a proposed ban on the sale of certain vitamins, herbs and
mineral products in the European Union. Following his marriage to
Heather Mills, McCartney joined with her to campaign against
landmines; both McCartney and Mills are
patrons of
Adopt-A-Minefield. In
2003, he played a personal concert for the wife of a wealthy banker
and donated his one million dollars to the charity. He also wore an
anti-landmines t-shirt on the
Back in
the World tour.

McCartney’s campaign against
landmines
In 2006,
the McCartneys travelled to Prince Edward Island
to bring international attention to the seal hunt (their final public appearance
together). Their arrival sparked attention in Newfoundland
and Labrador
where the hunt is of economic significance.
The couple also debated with Newfoundland's Premier
Danny Williams on the
CNN show
Larry King
Live. They further stated that the fishermen should quit
hunting seals and begin a seal watching business. McCartney has
also criticised China's fur trade, and supports the
Make Poverty History campaign.
McCartney has been involved with a number of charity recordings and
performances.
In 2004, he donated a song to an album to
aid the "US Campaign for Burma
", in
support of Burmese Nobel Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, and he had previously
been involved in the Concerts for the People of
Kampuchea, Ferry Aid,
Band Aid, Live
Aid, and the recording of "Ferry Cross the Mersey" (released 8
May 1989) following the Hillsborough disaster.
In a December 2008 interview with
Prospect Magazine, McCartney mentioned
that he tried to convince the
Dalai Lama
to become a vegetarian. In a letter to the Dalai Lama, McCartney
took issue with Buddhism and meat-eating being considered
compatible, saying, "Forgive me for pointing this out, but if you
eat animals then there is some suffering somewhere along the line."
The Dalai Lama replied to McCartney by saying his doctors advised
him to eat meat for health reasons. In the interview McCartney
said, "I wrote back saying they were wrong."
Football
The Beatles were advised by Epstein to make no comments about the
football clubs they supported, in case they alienated fans of the
group, although McCartney was known as a supporter of
Everton Football Club, because his father and
relatives used to take him to matches. His allegiance later
encompassed
Liverpool F.C., as on 28
July 1968, The Beatles were photographed in a photographer's studio
at 192-212 Gray's Inn Road, with McCartney wearing a Liverpool F.C.
rosette. Linda McCartney later
said: "We spent last night listening to Liverpool football team on
the radio, wanting them to win so badly. Paul supports
Everton.."
Lennon and McCartney were present to watch
the 1966 FA Cup Final at Wembley
, between Everton and Sheffield Wednesday, and McCartney
attended the 1968 FA Cup Final (18
May 1968) which was played by West
Bromwich Albion against Everton. After the end of the
match, McCartney shared cigarettes and whisky with other football
fans. The ex-Liverpool player,
Albert
Stubbins, was the only footballer shown on the
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts
Club Band cover.
McCartney tried to listen (on a radio) to the Liverpool v
Manchester United 1977 FA Cup Final, while sailing in the
Caribbean, and the video for McCartney's
Pipes of Peace (in 1983) recreated
the 1915 football game played
between German and British troops during World War I, at Christmas.
At the end of the live version of
Coming Up recorded in Glasgow in 1979
(later to become a US number one single) the crowd begins to sing
"Paul McCartney!" until McCartney takes over and changes
the chant to
"Kenny
Dalglish!", referring to the current Liverpool and
Scotland striker. At the same concert,
Gordon Smith, former
football player who played for
Rangers and
Brighton & Hove Albion,
met the McCartneys, and later accepted an invitation to visit their
home in East Sussex, in 1980. Smith later said that McCartney was
"thrilled I knew
Kenny Dalglish”, to
which Linda added: "I like
Gordon
McQueen of Man United", and Smith replied, "I know him
too."
McCartney was seen at the
1986 FA Cup
Final between Liverpool and Everton, and in 1989, McCartney
contributed to the "Ferry Cross the Mersey" charity single that was
recorded to aid victims of the
Hillsborough Disaster, which happened
during a match between Liverpool and
Nottingham Forest. McCartney
performed at the
Liverpool F.C.
Anfield
stadium on 1 June 2008, as a part of Liverpool's
European Capital of
Culture year. Dave Grohl from
the
Foo Fighters sang with McCartney on
Band on the Run, and played drums on
Back in the USSR. Ono and
Olivia Harrison attended the concert, along
with
Ken Dodd, and the Liverpool F.C.
football manager
Rafael
Benítez.
Business
McCartney is today one of Britain's wealthiest musicians, with an
estimated fortune of £750 million ($1.2 billion) in 2009, although
Justice Bennett, in his judgment on McCartney's divorce case found
no evidence that McCartney was worth more than £400 million. In
addition to his interest in
Apple Corps,
McCartney's
MPL Communications
owns a significant
music
publishing catalogue, with access to over 25,000 copyrights.
McCartney earned £40 million in 2003, making him Britain's highest
media earner. This rose to £48.5 million by 2005. In the same year
he joined the top American talent agency Grabow Associates, who
arrange private performances for their richest clients.
Northern Songs was established in 1963, by
Dick James, to publish the songs of
Lennon/McCartney. The Beatles' partnership was replaced in 1968 by
a jointly held company,
Apple Corps,
which continues to control Apple's commercial interests.
Northern Songs was purchased by
Associated TeleVision (ATV) in 1969,
and was sold in 1985 to
Michael
Jackson. For many years McCartney was unhappy about Jackson's
purchase and handling of Northern Songs.
MPL Communications is an umbrella
company for McCartney's business interests, which owns a wide range
of copyrights, as well as the publishing rights to musicals. In
2006, the
Trademarks Registry reported
that
MPL had started a process to
secure the protections associated with registering the name "Paul
McCartney" as a
trademark. The 2005 films,
Brokeback Mountain and
Good Night and Good
Luck, feature
MPL
copyrights.
In April 2009, it was revealed that McCartney, in common with other
wealthy musicians, had seen a significant decline in his net worth
over the preceding year. It was estimated that his fortune had
fallen by some £60m, from £238m to £175m. The losses were
attributed to the ongoing
global recession, and
the resultant decline in value of property and
stock market holdings.
Critique, recognition and achievements
McCartney is listed in
The Guinness Book Of
Records as the most successful musician and composer in
popular music history, with sales of 100 million singles and 60
gold discs. McCartney has achieved twenty-nine number-one singles
in the US, twenty of them with The Beatles, the rest with Wings and
as a solo artist. McCartney has been involved in more number-one
singles in the United Kingdom than any other artist under a variety
of credits, although
Elvis Presley has
achieved more as a solo artist. McCartney has achieved 24
number-ones in the UK: solo (1), Wings (1), with
Stevie Wonder (1),
Ferry Aid (1),
Band Aid (1),
Band
Aid 20 (1) and The Beatles (17). McCartney is the only artist
to reach the UK number one as a
soloist
("Pipes of Peace"), duo ("Ebony and Ivory" with Stevie Wonder),
trio ("Mull of Kintyre", Wings),
quartet ("She Loves You", The Beatles), quintet ("Get Back", The
Beatles with
Billy Preston) and as
part of a musical ensemble for charity (
Ferry Aid). In America, McCartney
reached number-one with 29 singles: solo (1), Wings (5), with
Stevie Wonder (1), with
Michael Jackson (1), with
Linda McCartney (1), with the Beatles (20);
he was also the composer of "
A
World Without Love," a #1 single for
Peter and Gordon. McCartney's song
"
Yesterday" is the most covered
song in history with more than 3,500 recorded versions and has been
played more than 7,000,000 times on American TV and radio, for
which McCartney was given an award. After its 1977 release the
Wings single "Mull of Kintyre" became the highest-selling record in
British chart history, and remained so until 1984. (Three charity
singles have since surpassed it in sales; the first to do so, in
1984, was
Band Aid's "
Do They Know It's Christmas?",
whose participants included McCartney.)
The minor planet
4148, discovered in
1983, was named 'McCartney' in his honour.
On 2 July 2005, he was involved with the fastest-released single in
history. His performance of "
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band" with
U2 at
Live 8 was released only 45 minutes after it was
performed, before the end of the concert. The single reached number
six on the Billboard charts, just hours after the single's release,
and hit number one on numerous online download charts across the
world.
McCartney played for the largest stadium
audience in history when 184,000 people paid to see him perform at
Maracanã
Stadium
in Rio de
Janeiro
, Brazil
on 21 April
1990.
McCartney's scheduled concert in St Petersburg
, Russia was his 3,000th concert and took place in
front of 60,000 fans in Russia, on 20 June 2004. Over his
career, McCartney has played 2,523 gigs with The Beatles, 140 with
Wings, and 325 as a solo artist. however, the outlook on the
upcoming concert looked dim, after several days of rain.
Only his
second concert in Russia, with the first just the year before on
Moscow's Red
Square
as the former Communist
U.S.S.R.
had previously banned music from the Beatles as a
"corrupting influence", McCartney hired 3 jet, at a reported cost of $36,000 (€29,800)
(£28,000), to spray dry ice in the clouds
above Saint Petersburg's Winter Palace Square
in a successful attempt to prevent rain. The
day McCartney flew into the former Soviet country, he celebrated
his 62nd birthday, and after the concert, according to
RIA Novosti news agency, he received a
phone call from a fan; then-President
Vladimir Putin, who telephoned him after the
concert to wish him a happy birthday.
In the concert programme for his 1989 world tour, McCartney wrote
that Lennon received all the credit for being the
avant-garde Beatle, and McCartney was known as
'baby-faced', which he disagreed with. People also assumed that
Lennon was the 'hard-edged one', and McCartney was the 'soft-edged'
Beatle, although McCartney admitted to 'bossing Lennon around.'
Linda McCartney said that McCartney had a 'hard-edge'—and not just
on the surface—which she knew about after all the years she had
spent living with him. McCartney seemed to confirm this edge when
he commented that he sometimes meditates, which he said is better
than "sleeping, eating, or shouting at someone".
On 18 June 2006, McCartney celebrated his 64th birthday, the human
milestone that was the subject of one of the first songs he ever
wrote, at the age of sixteen, the Beatles song "
When I'm Sixty-Four."
Paul Vallely noted in
The Independent:
Discography
Tours
Notes
- —John Lennon
- Spitz (2005) p75
- Miles (1997) p4
- Miles (1997) p9
- Spitz (2005) p125
- Spitz (2005) pp82-83
- Miles (1997) p6
- Miles (1997) p20
- Miles (1997) p31
- Miles (1997) p22
- Spitz (2005) p71
- Miles (1997) pp23-24
- Spitz (2005) p86
- Miles (1997) p21
- Larkin, Colin. The Guinness Who's Who Of Country
Music: Slim
Whitman entry, Guinness Publishing, 1993. ISBN 0851127266
- Miles (1997) pp22-23
- White, Charles, p.114-115 (2003). The Life and Times of
Little Richard: The Authorised Biography. Omnibus Press.
- Spitz (2005) p93
- Miles (1997) pp47-50
- Cynthia Lennon (2006) p94
- Cynthia Lennon (2006) p67
- Coleman (1984) p212
- Miles (1997) pp57-8
- Miles (1997) p74
- Cynthia Lennon (2006) p97
- Pawlowski (1990) pp39-40
- Spitz (2005) p330
- Gould (2008) p347
- Miles (1997) pp293-95
- Contemporary Authors Online, Thomson Gale (2006)
- "Paul McCartney." Encyclopedia of World Biography Supplement,
Vol. 24. Thomson Gale, 2005.
- The Concert For New York City
web site "concertfornyc.com" has been established to remember the
concert and features photos of McCartney both on stage and
backstage at Madison Square Garden. Various
Artists, The Concert for New York City, 01/29/2002, Columbia/SME CK
54205 (1C2D54205 Discs: 2
- The Concert for George, Cat. No: 0349702412
- http://www.nme.com/news/thebeatles/45038
- www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7015354604
-
www.pastemagazine.com/.../paul-bob-and-ringo-the-new-fab-three-supergroup.html
-
- The Unknown Paul McCartney, by Ian Peel, Paperback, Reynolds
& Hearn Ltd, 7 November 2002 ISBN 1-903111-36-6
- Miles (1997) p232
- Miles (1997) p106
- Miles (1997) p108
- Miles (1997) p254
- Spitz (2005) p597
- Miles (1997) p207
- Miles (1997) p218
- Miles (1997) p217
- Miles (1997) pp219-20
- Miles (1997) pp238-39
- Miles (1997) pp218-219.
- Liverpool Sound Collage (CD) Capitol, 26 September 2000
- www.thefireman.com
- Wingspan, DVD, Catalogue number: 4779109, 19 November 2001
- Lewisohn (2002) p21
- Miles (1997) p243
- Miles (1997) pp256-67
- Miles (1997) pp266-67
- Spitz (2005) p84
- Miles (1997) p266
- Spitz (2005), p82
- Miles (1997) p40
- Miles (1997) p41
- Spitz (2005) p205
- Miles (1997) p42
- Blackbird Singing - Poems and Lyrics 1965-1999, Paul McCartney,
Faber and Faber, 4 March 2002, ISBN 0-571-20992-0
- Miles (1997) p587
- Miles (1997) p588
- Miles (1997) p590
- Miles (1997) p592
- Bresler, Fenton (1990). Who Killed John Lennon?
reprinted. St. Martin's Press, ISBN
0-312-92367-8
- Miles (1997) p593
- Miles (1997) p594
- Lewisohn (2002) p168
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5Tl9sBcNrg
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9jKLiVjok4
- George’s last daysbbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment
- Retrieved 29 January 2007
- Miles (1997) p29
- Spitz (2005) p163
- Miles (1997) p69
- Spitz (2005) p171
- Spitz (2005) pp239-240
- Spitz (2005) p348
- Miles (1997) p101
- Miles (1997) p102
- Miles (1997) p106
- Miles (1997) p108
- Miles (1997) p452
- Harry (2000) p403
- "McCartney's lament: I can't buy your love", Sydney
Morning Herald, 12 June 2004.
- The Beatles Anthology DVD 2003 (Episode 1: 44:28)
Starr and Harrison talking about Preludins in Hamburg.
- Miles (1997) pp66-67
- Miles (1997) pp188-89
- Miles (1997) p190
- Miles (1997) p233
- Miles (1997) pp67-68
- Miles (1997) p247
- Miles (1997) p191
- Miles (1998). The Beatles Diary, p244
- Miles, Badman (2001) p272
- Miles (1997) p379.
- Miles (1997) p380
- The Beatles Anthology DVD 2003 (Episode 6 - 1:06:18)
Harrison talking about the trip to Greece to buy an island.
- Miles (1997) p382
- Miles (1997) p393
- Miles (1997) p395
- Miles (1997) p396
- Miles (1997) p397
- Miles (1997) p404
- Linda McCartney, by Danny Fields, Time Warner Paperbacks, 1
February 2001, ISBN 0-7515-2985-0
- passim
- Tennant (2002) p274
- Spitz (2005), p365.
- Live 8 (DVD) Various Artists, 7 November 2005, Cat. No:
ANGELDVD5
- Miles (1997) pXI
- Miles (1997) p32
- Miles (1997) p319
References
External links