Latest Release

- JUN 14, 2024
- 6 Songs
- Band On The Run (2010 Remaster) · 1973
- McCartney (Archive Collection Special Edition) [2011 Remaster] · 1970
- Red Rose Speedway (Archive Collection) [2018 Remaster] · 1973
- Wings At The Speed Of Sound (Archive Collection) [2014 Remaster] · 1976
- HIStory - PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE - BOOK I · 1982
- McCartney III Imagined · 2021
- Wings At The Speed Of Sound (Archive Collection) [2014 Remaster] · 1976
- Band on the Run (Archive Collection) [2010 Remaster] · 1973
- Red Rose Speedway (Archive Collection) [2018 Remaster] · 1973
- Pipes Of Peace (Archive Collection) [Remastered 2015] · 1983
Essential Albums
- Paul McCartney entered the '80s regaining his focus. He’d dissolved his group Wings and began figuring out where his melodic pop fit within the spectrum of the emerging era. McCartney II showed signs of pop life, with its new wave synths and effortless hooks. Tug of War, with Beatles producer George Martin, refines McCartney’s craft ever so slightly. The hits tell the story. “Take It Away” and “Ebony and Ivory,” one of two duets with Stevie Wonder, are highly melodic and catchy tunes that capture McCartney’s mainstream appeal at its least forced, enjoying their sweet, professional productions without sinking into cloying sentimentality. “Somebody Who Cares” pulses with the cautious melancholy of Paul Simon. The heartfelt ballad “Here Today” pays tribute to his dear friend John Lennon. “Ballroom Dancing” skirts a playful early rock 'n’ roll sensibility. The other (and less famous) duet with Stevie Wonder, “What’s That You’re Doing,” packs a bit more funk than the average McCartney track without turning into parody.
- Coming after Paul McCartney’s post-Beatles breakthrough album Band on the Run, 1975's Venus and Mars was met with great expectations. Notably, guitarist Jimmy McCulloch joined the group, while McCartney’s muse didn't abandon him; songs like “Rock Show,” “Magneto and Titanium Man,” “Letting Go,” and “Listen to What the Man Said” proved his knack for superior songwriting and musicianship. This remaster was done at Abbey Road studios with McCartney overseeing the team that worked on the exquisite 2009 Beatles remasters.
- Recorded under less than ideal circumstances in Lagos, Nigeria after two key members quit, Band on the Run was Wings' make-or-break moment. The rough-and-ready studio sound adds some welcome grit on rockers like "Jet" and the affectionate John Lennon tribute "Let Me Roll It." Elsewhere, the title track is one of McCartney's most soaring multi-part pop masterpieces, and "Bluebird" is a tender acoustic love song. Quirkier material, like the playful "Mrs. Vandebilt" and "Picasso's Last Words (Drink To Me)," adds even more depth.
Artist Playlists
- Sir Paul's best, including the new Ryan Tedder-produced "Get Enough."
- The camera has always loved the Beatle’s legendary charisma and smile.
- Playfully, silly, or sublime—this is the sound of Paul in love.
- Lean back and relax with some of the mellowest cuts.
- Hear some of the artists influenced by McCartney's monumental songbook.
- A collection of gorgeous songcraft from Sir Paul—as played by other artists.
- 2020
Appears On
- The Umoza Music Project
More To Hear
- Revisiting the Halftime Shows of rock legends.
- Revisiting legendary shows in Super Bowl Halftime history.
- The legend reveals his songwriting secrets to Nile Rodgers.
- Paul McCartney on his new album recorded during quarantine.
- For all the lovers out there...
- Annie shares Christmas memories and her family traditions.
- Music by Lauren Aquilina and Young Thug, plus rock classics.
More To See
About Paul McCartney
As Beatlemania was transforming rock ’n’ roll from passing teen fad to permanent pop-cultural movement, Paul McCartney (born in Liverpool in 1942) became the driving force behind the band’s rapid, dramatic maturation. In just two years, he had graduated from the Little Richard worship of 1963’s “I Saw Her Standing There” to the exquisite orchestral balladry of “Yesterday”—a shift that intensified the contrast between McCartney and his increasingly acerbic songwriting partner, John Lennon. But as The Beatles’ entered their late-’60s experimental phase—during which Lennon’s avant-garde impulses came to the fore—McCartney’s traditionalism constituted its own form of radicalism. Within the band’s psychedelic milieu, his embrace of pre-rock forms, like classical (“Eleanor Rigby”) and English music-hall serenades (“When I’m Sixty-Four”), felt no less surreal than The Beatles' use of tape-loop freak-outs and sitar drones. (And this is to say nothing of Paul's sublime bass playing, which elevated the four-string from rhythmic undercurrent to melodic focal point.) His post-Beatles albums have proven equally uncanny and influential: 1971’s art-folk opus Ram provided the lo-fi schematic for future generations of DIY home-recording artists, while the arena-rattling roar of “Jet,” from McCartney's subsequent band Wings’ 1973 LP Band on the Run, shows why he’s become a muse to hard rockers such as Dave Grohl. And by continually collaborating with the hitmakers of the day—from Michael Jackson in the 1980s to Rihanna and Kanye West in the 2010s—he has remained a voracious pop omnivore, as connected to music's past as its future.
- FROM
- Liverpool, United Kingdom
- BORN
- 1942
- GENRE
- Rock