Another Day, Another Wings Compilation….

Announced yesterday out of the blue a new Wings “best of” compilation to accompany the forthcoming book, Wings – The Story of a Band on the Run (and possibly the new documentary film, Man On The Run):

WINGS – The Definitive Collection will contain purely Wings songs (in other words no Paul McCartney solo, or Paul and Linda McCartney releases) and it will come in the shape of a 3LP set, a 2CD set, a 1CD, and there’ll be a separate, exclusive Blu-Ray Audio Disc with Atmos mixes for the first time.

This 3LP set will also be offered as a McCartney Official Store limited edition coloured vinyl exclusive:

If you don’t want to pay US$20.00 for a lithograph and a sticker sheet then you can get a standard 3LP set without the trinkets:

And there’s a single LP on black vinyl containing 12 tracks in all:

The first “exclusive”, “limited edition” coloured vinyl release of the 1LP has been announced. It’ll be available on green vinyl through Target stores in the U.S., in FNAC stores in France, also from jpc in Germany and Austria, and at JB Hi Fi in Australia. In other words, it looks like one retailer per territory will get the “exclusive”. Will this be the first of many colour and cover art variations like we saw with McCartney III?

If CD is more your thing then the 2CD set has all the tracks from the 3LP sets, including the poster:

While the 1CD replicates the 1LP track running order:

The McCartney Store and the SuperDeluxeEdition site are offering an exclusive Blu-ray Audio disc which is likely to be the format that most excites McCartney fans. As site owner Paul Sinclair writes, “For the first time, tracks are available in Dolby Atmos on a physical product. The mixes are by Giles Martin and Steve Orchard. 14 of them have been available in recent times on streaming, but 17 of them are unheard in this format, including tracks from un-reissued latter albums, such as ‘With A Little Luck’, ‘London Town’ and ‘I’ve Had Enough’ (from 1978’s London Town) and ‘Getting Closer’ and ‘Arrow Through Me’ (from 1979’s Back to the Egg). 7 out of the 10 tracks from the US version of Band on the Run also feature on this compilation.

Blu-ray Audio audio streams summary:

  • Dolby Atmos Mix (48/24)
  • 5.1 Surround Mix (48/24)
  • Hi-Res Stereo Mixes (96/24)

This blu-ray audio contains 32 tracks and is presented as a ‘softpack’ with a 16-page booklet:

The  WINGS – The Definitive Collection packaging has been designed by Paul and Aubrey ‘Po’ Powell of the famous Hipgnosis design studio. The two have worked together extensively in the past, not only on album artwork but also the art direction for McCartney tours. The first thing that hit us though was that front cover with the word WINGS populated with a photo montage of the band, and the inner sleeve replicating that was a little bit derivative. Some other band from the past used a very similar idea way back when…..

For the full news story and background on this release see the official Paul McCartney page.

WINGS – The Definitive Collection is out on November 7.

Beatle Books, Books, Books!

Lots of Beatle book news around at the moment. We’re a little slow getting to this one, but Paul McCartney has flagged a big Wings book retrospective due later this year – November 4 to be precise. It’s called Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run.

Clearly this is still a work very much in production but the book promises over 100 black and white and colour photographs, many previously unseen, and will draw on over 500,000 words and dozens of hours of interviews with McCartney and numerous key players in and around the band. Most probably it is designed to tie in with Morgan Neville’s forthcoming documentary film Man on the Run, which will also tell the story of McCartney’s life following the breakup of The Beatles and the formation of Wings. That film (due later this year or early next) is also based on access to never-before-seen archives of Paul and Linda’s home videos and photos, as well as new interviews. (See The Paul McCartney Project for more on this).

Then, just this week, The Beatles Anthology (25th Anniversary) re-issue has quietly been announced.

25th anniversary? Didn’t The Beatles Anthology documentary series, CD’s and vinyl begin to come out back in 1995? Shouldn’t it be the 30th anniversary? Well no, not for the book which was first published as a hardback in the year 2000. This time it’s paperback only. Fans are already asking if the release might be associated with some sort of The Beatles Anthology CD/vinyl re-issue too? Or maybe the documentary series has been refreshed as is slated for streaming? Or re-issue on DVD or Blu-Ray. We don’t know as yet…..

And here’s another book we’ve been reading. We flagged this when it first hit the shelves in December last year, but have not yet reviewed it as it contains so much information! Luca Perasi has followed up his Paul McCartney Music Is Ideas The Stories Behind the Songs (Volume 1) 1970-1989 with a second installment – this time covering off the years 1990-2012.

Rather than being a biography, with each release this series is growing as the go-to reference place for detailed information on each and every Wings or solo Paul McCartney album or individual song. This second volume covers off a further 250 entries, including 26 previously unreleased songs. It is packed with technical info on the recordings, personnel and who-played-what, anecdotes and the background to how each song and album came about.

The book kicks off in 1990 with the triple LP live album Tripping the Live Fantastic, the record that launched McCartney into the Nineties, and ends with Complete Kisses, another foray into performing live – but this time a live streamed concert he gave in support of his jazz-influenced album Kisses on the Bottom from 2012. In between there is a wealth of information on Paul’s solo studio albums over this period, but also some much-needed analysis and detail on his many classical, operatic and experimental outings from the time – like his Liverpool Oratorio with Carl Davis, Standing Stone, Ecce Cor Meum, his Ocean’s Kingdom ballet music, plus Strawberries Oceans Ships Forest where he appears for the first time with collaborator Youth under the nom de plume, The Fireman. There’s also a chapter on the very experimental Liverpool Sound Collage with the Super Furry Animals, and another musical style departure called Twin Freaks, under yet another pseudonym, Twin Freaks. To date very little has been written about these eclectic but fascinating additions to his canon, so this book is immediately a very welcome research window into some of McCartney’s more obscure yet interesting musical moments. Bravo!

For how Perasi constructs each entry in the book see our review of Volume 1 because the same format is used here. As for information on what is coming next, Perasi says there will be a Volume 3 starting at 2013 with the album New and moving forward, then a Volume 4 looking at Paul McCartney’s many collaborations and appearances on other people’s records (fascinating!), and then a Volume 0 is promised as a mystery surprise finale. As to just what this contains we’ll have to wait and see.

For information on how to get hold of this essential book go to www.mccartney-musicisideas.it

Well, Luca Perasi is nothing if not prolific because today he’s announced yet another new book called Ringo Starr: I Play the Piano If It’s in C. The Stories Behind the Songs (Vol. 1) 1970-1997.

As the title suggests, this covers the first twenty-eight years of Ringo Starr’s solo career. Luca says, “The book is the first ever to explore in such depth Ringo’s post-Beatles production, from Sentimental Journey until his All-Starr Band tour in 1997.”

“The title recalls a verse from his song ‘Early 1970’ and is a half-joking reference to the fact that Ringo is not really a composer but is still capable of producing great music. He’s been defined as a drummer who plays melodically, as a guitarist, and it’s time to explore his production historically and critically.”

Like the McCartney volumes, this book tells the stories behind 157 of Ringo’s songs released between 1970 and 1997 – including songs written by other composers plus 23 unreleased tracks – each with detailed information on musicians and recording dates, anecdotes and contemporary interviews.

“During the period under consideration, Ringo goes through different phases of his career; he starts as an outsider, but he manages to achieve great success until 1974, first with the two singles ‘It Don’t Come Easy’ and ‘Back off Boogaloo’, and then with the albums Ringo and Goodnight Vienna,” explains Perasi. “During the second half of the seventies, he became increasingly marginalised in the music business, and the eighties opened amidst a thousand difficulties, with Ringo failing to revive his career through the project of an album in Memphis and his alcohol addiction.”

Out now, Ringo Starr: I Play the Piano If It’s in C. The Stories Behind the Songs (Vol. 1) 1970-1997 is available worldwide from Amazon in both hardcover and paperback. For the USA click here, and the UK click here.

A Volume 2 will follow in 2026. See what I mean about prolific?

McCartney – ‘Man On The Run’ Book

While in Sydney city to pick up the RSD Black Friday McCartney releases we called in to one of those pop-up discount bookshops – and found a hardback copy of Tom Doyle’s 2013 study called Man On The Run – Paul McCartney in the 1970s:

Haven’t read it yet, but it looks to be interesting. There’s a decent review of the book here from the Washington Post. If you’d like to have a sneak read here’s one of those “Look Inside” widgets.

There are some very good photos contained in a pictures section in the middle of the book, some “behind-the-scenes” shots we’ve not seen before:

If anyone has read this work and has some thoughts, let us know. Here’s the rear cover:

(click on images to see larger versions)