This story originally appeared in GQ.com Aug. 4, 2020 Mary McCartney Cover story At home with Paul McCartney: His most candid interview yetByDylan Jones In the collective pause of pandemic, introspection finds fresh expression. And for Paul McCartney, who would have headlined Glastonbury this summer, 60 years on the world stage offers much on which to reflect. In this exclusive interview, with incredible images taken from lockdown by daughter Mary, we found him wistful, candid and contented as he recalled all the notes of a miraculous life. How four lads from Liverpool came together to change a great deal more than music. What it felt like to be blamed for the bandâs demise. How behind fame, adulation and wealth exists a normality he jealously protects. And why the work of a lifetime is still far, far from finished... In the 50 years since the break-up of The Beatles â reluctantly initiated by Paul McCartney as a way of extricating himself from the advancing clutches of John Lennonâs new manager, the awful Allen Klein â âPaulâ (McCartney has always refused to encourage any more formal appellations) has had various professional relationships with his own past. In the immediate aftermath of The Beatles, he was reluctant to acknowledge the importance of his previous existence (in his eyes he was a box-fresh performer, publicly spooning with his beloved wife, Linda, in Wings); he expected to be afforded the respect of his fans, without wanting to explain why. He was a Beatle, after all; he just didnât want to be reminded of the fact.
Later, as his fame escalated â and, for the record, let it be stated that McCartney very soon became more famous than he was during the seven years The Beatles were actually operational â he grew more accepting of his past, no longer bristling when pesky journalists brought up his mop-top achievements. And in the past 25 years or so, he has often talked about the band â or, more specifically, his friends John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr â with the same enthusiasm his fans always have. However, even I was surprised by how willingly he volunteered stories about The Beatles when I interviewed him recently. The success of Craig Brownâs recent (and highly entertaining) book One Two Three Four: The Beatles In Time demonstrates the continued fascination with the most important group in pop. And listening to Paul McCartney talk in 2020, it would be easy to believe that he is the biggest Beatles fan of them all. And why wouldnât he be? Come on, what could possibly top having five records in the American Top Ten at the same time? What could top playing Shea Stadium to the loudest crowd in history? Or making Sgt Pepper? Or âHey Judeâ? Or âLet It Beâ? What on earth could possibly top being revered by an entire generation? Or two. What could top being â along with David Bailey, The Rolling Stones and Michael Caine â pretty much responsible for the 1960s? What could top being a Beatle? Here is a man who gave his name to The Ramones (Paul Ramon being McCartneyâs old stage and hotel check-in name), whose âYesterdayâ is the most popular song of all time (2,400 mangled cover versions and counting) and who conjured up the bass part for John Lennonâs âCome Togetherâ in a jot. Never forget. This is a man who partied with Mick Jagger at the dawn of the 1960s, who met Elvis Presley, who has outlasted 15 British prime ministers and 13 American presidents, a man who has inspired everyone from Pete Townshend to Noel Gallagher, from Paul Weller to Ed Sheeran. McCartney was already famous when JFK was shot, already famous when men landed on the moon. This is a man who has lasted longer than Led Zeppelin, David Bowie, the Sex Pistols and Oasis, a man who at the age of 78 looks closer to 50.
If the most evocative pop music resembles Western movies â epic, grandiose, an assault on the senses â then McCartneyâs early solo records were more like home movies, overflowing with charm. Some of them were little more than doodles, but as the late, great New Yorker cartoonist Saul Steinberg once said, âThe doodle is the brooding of the human hand.â And, in McCartneyâs case, the human heart. McCartney once saw himself as a variety artist, a tinker able to knock off a ballad as well as a sweaty R&B workout, an all-round entertainer firmly rooted in the tradition of the music hall. Always a staunch traditionalist, the man responsible for some of the most far-reaching and influential music ever recorded has, in following years, often seemed tyrannically nostalgic for the early days of rockânâroll.
Yet his work has continued to pop and fizz and itâs possible to imagine lots of his solo work sitting quite happily next to Lennonâs abrasive psychedelia or Harrisonâs partially composed complaints on any number of Beatles LPs. Try replacing âGood Day Sunshineâ with âLet âEm Inâ (Wings At The Speed Of Sound, 1976), say, or âMartha My Dearâ with âGirlfriendâ (London Town, 1978). Imagine âMonkberry Moon Delightâ (Ram, 1971) on the White Album or âLetting Goâ (the 1975 single) on Abbey Road. Many, many things McCartneyâs written in the past 50 years are easily as good as anything he wrote in The Beatles: âMy Brave Faceâ (Flowers In The Dirt, 1989), âEvery Nightâ (McCartney, 1970), âYoung Boyâ (1997âs Flaming Pie) or âSome People Never Knowâ (Wild Life, 1971) or âEver Present Pastâ (Memory Almost Full, 2007). And thatâs just for starters. Donât forget âDear Friendâ, about which the Independent journalist Richard Williams once said, âIf âDear Friendâ had been the first track on the White Album instead of the last track on his least successful post-Beatles effort [Wild Life], it would be as well-known as âYesterdayâ.â Personally, I think he can be forgiven anything for writing the exultant brass coda at the end of his 1982 hit âTake It Awayâ, one of the most glorious, epiphanic 42 seconds youâll find on a record anywhere.
As he has proved time and time again, McCartney is a master at writing about domesticity. Exhibit A will always be âDistractionsâ, a deceptively clever song from 1989 about the joys of being housebound and a song that took on even greater resonance during the recent coronavirus lockdown. McCartney is having a busy year, even if he has spent several months cocooned in his East Sussex farm. Current projects include High In The Clouds (an animation project that has been bought by Netflix), a special reissue of Flaming Pie and a 50th anniversary limited-edition release of his first solo album, McCartney. Heâs also been making some of the final preparations for Itâs A Wonderful Life, the musical heâs been writing for the past three years based on the famous Frank Capra movie. He made demos of all the songs last year and heâs having them transposed into sheet music so a rehearsal pianist can accompany the actors in readiness for preproduction. âWhen we can start working again, at least weâll be ready to go,â he says. This autumn should have also seen the release of Peter Jacksonâs eagerly awaited The Beatles: Get Back (now expected in August 2021), a new documentary based on the bandâs final year together and a way of offsetting the profoundly depressing Michael Lindsay-Hogg film, Let It Be, from 1970. Culled from nearly 60 hours of footage shot in early 1969, as The Beatles were recording what would become the record Let It Be, Jacksonâs film includes never-before-seen footage from those sessions, including behind-the-scenes clips from the bandâs legendary rooftop concert on Londonâs Savile Row. Ringo Starr, for one, is pleased with the new film, as it shows them as genuine collaborators rather than adversaries. âThere were hours and hours of us just laughing and playing music, not at all like the [Lindsay-Hogg] version,â Starr says. âThere was a lot of joy and I think Peter will show that. I think this version will be a lot more âpeace and lovingâ, like we really were.â Dhani Harrison, Georgeâs son, said he was overwhelmed when he saw a screening of the film, comparing it to the way Jackson treated old First World War footage in They Shall Not Grow Old. âItâs so ridiculously amazing looking â I could see John Lennonâs fillings,â Harrison said. âI emailed Peter yesterday and said, âThis is one of the most amazing things Iâve ever seen.ââ Unsurprisingly, Beatle Paul loves it too. The weekend before our interview, I turned back into a McCartney fanboy myself, working my way, yet again, through his back catalogue, not in the hope of discovering anything new â like many Macca obsessives, I like to think I know everything about him, up and down and back to front â but just to reacquaint myself with things I hadnât heard for a while. I concentrated on Flaming Pie (now 23 years young and just re-released in a humongous new box set), Chaos And Creation In The Backyard (his 2005 album containing the beautiful âThis Never Happened Beforeâ) and London Town, his overlooked classic from 1978 (overlooked principally because at the time everyone was either listening to punk or disco).
âBlimey, are you fed up with me by now?â McCartney asked, not unreasonably, when I told him this. He may sport a dash more grey and his voice might be slightly more gravelly, but McCartney is still able to raise a metaphorical eyebrow if he thinks youâre being too cynical, or too nice, come to that. But, boy, does he like to chat. So, how was lockdown for you, Paul? I was very lucky, actually. At the beginning of the year we were on holiday and then the lockdown started just after we got back and so I flew to England and spent the time with my daughter, Mary, and her kids on the farm. So, suddenly, we were all locked down there. So itâs not been bad at all. In fact, I feel a bit guilty admitting that itâs not been bad, and a lot of people do. They donât want to admit that, actually, you know, [theyâre] enjoying it. Iâm very lucky. The weatherâs been brilliant and Mary and her kids are great, so Iâm seeing a lot of my grandkids and [wife] Nancy, so itâs been all right. I feel dreadfully sorry for all those who are less fortunate and obviously all those who have lost loved ones, but Iâve been lucky. Iâve been able to write and get into music, starting songs, finishing songs. Iâve had a few little things to write and itâs given me the time to finish some songs that I hadnât found the time to get around to, you know? Iâve been recording using lots of hand wipes and disinfectant and social distancing, which was good because I donât like not working. Did the lockdown afford you any time for reflection? Have your learned anything about yourself over the past few months? I suppose I learned that you canât take anything for granted and that itâs very difficult to predict the future now. In all honesty, I donât think I learned much. I knew the value of my family and itâs been great being able to spend more time with them, but it doesnât mean I want to do that all the time. I like working as well. But relationships are important. Family is important. Music is important. Like I say, Iâm lucky, because what I do, it all starts with writing, and I can pretty much do that anywhere, so long as Iâve got a guitar. I like having stuff to do, as it keeps the brain busy. And on top of all my projects, Iâve had the luxury of just being able to sit down and write songs for no reason, which is great. It keeps me off the streets.
Do you think peopleâs behaviour is going to change when we come out of this? I think in the short-term, yes, people will act differently, because itâs going to be difficult to just pop along to a football match or a concert or the theatre, so those things are going to change us all. But one thing is true: weâre going to value the NHS more. Thatâs great, because people certainly took that for granted. I hope nurses will be looked after a bit better now. People have really understood the value of our health service. I suppose Iâd like to think that people will simply be kinder. There will be a bit of that, of people thinking a bit harder about things, but at the back of it all is the thought that everyone just thinks, âOh, sod it,â and goes back to their old ways. What do you think the music industry is going to look like, in terms of performance and touring? I donât know. I donât think anyone knows. As you know, we were going to do Glastonbury this year and it started to look doubtful because no one knew if the crisis was going to be over by June or not and then obviously that was cancelled. But the summer is when we do concerts â thatâs pretty much what we do, you know? Playing to people gathering together. How you can socially distance that I do not know. The same with theatre, cinema, everything. Itâs just thrown everything into doubt. Does this mean the end of live concerts? I donât know. Have you ever considered doing a residency in Vegas, like Elton John, or doing what Bruce Springsteen did on Broadway? Not really. Some people would like me to do it, as they say Iâve got plenty of stories and plenty of songs, but one of the things thatâs holding me back at the moment is that Bruce has just done it, you know? It feels a bit like, âOh, suddenly Iâll do it now then!â So I think thatâs made me a little reluctant to follow in his footsteps or follow a trend. The idea is OK, but I think Iâd just prefer to play with the band to a bigger audience, or even smaller â I donât mind little clubs. I do a solo segment in the middle of my shows at the moment and to do a whole show like that, Iâm not sure I fancy it. It might be a little bit like too much hard work. As for playing Vegas, thatâs something Iâve been trying to avoid my whole life. Definitely nothing attracts me about the idea. Vegas is where you go to die, isnât it? Itâs the elephantâs graveyard. Whatâs the first thing you do when you go back to Liverpool? Most of the time I fly up. So Iâll get to Liverpool airport, the John Lennon Airport, and Iâll have a car [waiting for me] and Iâll drive myself from thereon. Iâm normally with someone, one of my mates... One time was with Bono, actually, and we drove together because we were both going to the same event at Liverpool Arena. He was with Jimmy Iovine, though I didnât know Jimmy then. I didnât know who he was. I thought he was Bonoâs roadie. Turns out heâs slightly more important than that. I like driving and I donât want to be driven around Liverpool. And I know all the routes, you know? Most of the time Iâm driving to Lipa [Liverpool Institute For Performing Arts, cofounded by McCartney in 1996] and on my way I pass all the old haunts and itâs like a guided tour, with me as the tour guide. Iâll say, âAnd this is where Johnâs mother, Julia, lived and we used to go round and visit her. And this is the street here where I had my first girlfriend.â So itâs all that. âThis is where I did this; this is where I took this girl out...â I can remember lots of stuff. âThis is where we did our first little gig, at a place called The Wilson Hall, and then over here me and John used to walk down this street with our guitars and then I would walk up there, to his house, across the golf course.â So I give the guided tour until I get into the city centre and I say, âThis is a little place where we used to play in the basement, a little illegal club run by this Liverpool black guy called Lord Woodbine. Thatâs when it was just me, John and George. I was drumming as we didnât have a drummer at the time.â Just millions and millions of memories all come flooding back. When I went back to Liverpool with James Corden for the âCarpool Karaokeâ special, he was very good, because he just kept me going, asking me questions, plus heâs someone who itâs cool to hang out with, you know? Heâs entertained as well as entertaining. I did the same thing: âThis is the church where I used to sing in the choir, this is Penny Lane and this is the barber.â Every time I go up there, itâs the same. The only difference with the thing I did with James is that Iâd never been inside my old house. I hadnât been back since I left it. James suggested doing it. I was always a little apprehensive about going back. I didnât know if it was going to be nice or whether I would get bad memories or whatever, although I donât really know what I was worried about. But it was fabulous â really great. I was happy to be able to tell him all the stories, of my dad, my brother and our time there. It brought back a lot of nice memories actually, so I loved it. Mary McCartney How much Scouse slang do you still use? A little bit here and there. When youâre not actually living there, you donât come up with much, but I still use a bit. If somethingâs a bit old you might say itâs kind of âantwackyâ or somebodyâs going âdoolallyâ. Theyâre good words, so they occasionally creep into your conversation, but obviously not as much as when I lived there. Someone reminded me not so long ago that Iâve actually lived longer down south than I had in Liverpool, as I only lived there for 20 years. But I love it. I love Liverpool. I love the history of it. I love my old school, which is now Lipa, and I go there a couple of times a year and take songwriting classes and for the graduation, which was cancelled this year unfortunately.
Tell me about your school. You loved it, didnât you? The memory of the school, I always think, is very important, because I say to people, âHalf The Beatles went there!â Me and George went to that school and John went to the art school next door, which is now part of Lipa, so three quarters of The Beatles, in one way or another, are connected to Lipa. That always hits me. Whenever I do a speech at the graduation, I always remember my mum and dad coming to events at the school when we were kids, like speech day, and your mum and dad would be there all proud of you and stuff, so when Iâm standing there, talking to all the parents and all the kids, I get quite emotional. Iâve got a million memories in that place and most of them are great, most of them are lovely. I was very lucky. I had a great family. I donât remember anyone ever getting divorced or anyone being weird. There were a few drunks, but outside of that, it seems to be a very loving family. So I have a lot of very affectionate memories of that time and of those people. Liverpool FC supporters often sing âAll You Need Is Kloppâ. Do you have any other favourite terrace appropriations of Beatles songs? Iâm not sure, really. Thereâs a great old piece of film from the 1960s of the Liverpool fans singing âShe Loves Youâ, with the Kop all singing, âOoooooh!â All the kids, everyone, itâs quite moving. The camera goes in on the crowd and there are all these young Beatles, all these kids with the hairstyle, and theyâre all singing âShe Loves Youâ. They know all the words. That piece of film was always a high spot for me. [Check it out on YouTube, as itâs magnificent.] I know a lot of crowds do âHey Judeâ and when we go on tour, especially in South America, the crowds are like football crowds anyway â âOlĂ©, olĂ©, olĂ©, olĂ©!â You get a lot of that. What we do is we quickly figure out what key itâs in and then we back the audience. We become their backing band. As a proud Evertonian, would you have been fine with the Premier League cancelling this season so Liverpool couldnât be named champions? Years ago I decided I was going to support Liverpool as well as Everton, even though Everton is the family team. A couple of my grandkids are Liverpool fans, so we are happy to see them win this yearâs Premier League. When people ask me how I can support them both I say I love both and I have special dispensation from the Pope. What many people donât know about you is that youâre a bit of a shredder. Whatâs your best guitar solo? What immediately comes to mind is the âTaxmanâ solo. I think thatâs pretty good. And then I actually did something on my Egypt Station album, which was a whole track of me playing guitar and that was pretty good.
Who was the best-dressed Beatle? Ha! We were all immaculate. I tell you what, I think we all dressed really good. That was one of the great things, you know, at that age, in your young twenties and youâve just come down from Liverpool to London and youâve just discovered Cecil Gee and all the shops on the Kingâs Road and the Fulham Road. Thatâs a large part of your life, finding the cool clothes and stuff. So I think we were all good at that. I think all of us were pretty smart, really. I wouldnât like to single out anyone, except me. Whatâs your second favourite James Bond theme? I think âGoldfingerâ. The thing about the Bond themes is theyâve got to capture the spirit of the film and be sort of super memorable, so I think [sings] âGold-fingeeeerâ. I thought the Billie Eilish song was good actually. I was wondering whether she and her brother were going to be able to pull it off, in their bedroom, but I thought she did really well. Iâm looking forward to seeing it in the film, but I thought she was good. I love the way, at the end of it, Finneas flings in a Bond chord. âDing!â â there it is. If you had the opportunity to ask Buddy Holly one question, what would it be? It would have been, âHow do you do the riff from âThatâll Be The Dayâ?â But we [The Beatles] worked that one out. Iâd probably ask him why he took that plane flight. Youâve got hundreds of guitars. Which one is your favourite? I have an Epiphone Casino, which is one of my favourites. Itâs not the best guitar, but I bought it in the 1960s. I went into a shop on Charing Cross Road and asked the guys if they had a guitar that would feed back, because I was very much into Jimi Hendrix and that kind of thing. I loved that kind of stuff and so I wanted a guitar that was going to give me feedback, as none of the others could. So they showed me the Casino. Because itâs got a hollow body, it feeds back easier. I had a lot of fun with that. Thatâs the guitar I played the âTaxmanâ solo on and itâs also the guitar I played the riff on âPaperback Writerâ with. Itâs still probably my favourite guitar. Youâve said in the past that youâve occasionally dreamed about John Lennon. When was the last time? I donât keep count, really, but it was probably about a month ago. The thing is, if youâre a performer, or me as a performer, I find that dreams are often related to a gig or getting ready for a gig or being in a recording studio and I think a lot of performers are like that. So, often, John or George will be in there. And the good thing is you donât really think anything of it, itâs just normal, like, âOh, yeah?â and youâre just chatting away, talking about what weâre going to do, as in making a record or something. So heâs often there, Iâm glad to say... And itâs normally very pleasant, you know? I love those boys. You saw a lot more of John in the years leading up to his death than people assume, didnât you? I was very lucky in that respect. We settled our family squabble and I was able to see him and to speak to him on a number of occasions, so we were friends till the end. Youâve always been a keen advocate of black music. What does the Black Lives Matter campaign mean to you? The BLM campaign matters to remind people of the bigotry that still exists in some places. Every time we think weâre over it, something happens that shows how much needs to be done to rid society of this ignorant cruelty. BLM does this. The record industry is probably one of the most diverse of the creative industries. But how does it need to change? We are very lucky these days in the music business because black artists, who have for so long been the backbone of good music, are recognised as such and consequently able to enjoy well-deserved success. Vegetarianism is a virtual orthodoxy these days. Do you somehow feel vindicated? It was difficult when we first became vegetarian, because in those days it was easy to laugh at vegetarians, but it really makes me happy now to see the fantastic food available all over the world and the cool people who are adopting the lifestyle.
Can you confirm that the reason Lisa Simpson is a vegetarian is because you only agreed to star in The Simpsons if she stopped eating meat in perpetuity? We were a bit worried that she would be a vegetarian for a week, then Homer would persuade her to eat a hot dog. The producers of the programme assured us that she would remain that way and they kept their word. Many of your immediate and extended family have achieved fame in their own right. What has been your perception of the concept of family dynasties? You donât start out with the idea to create a dynasty, but if your kids do well it makes you happy. Do you ever reflect on the uniqueness of your position? Do I ever! Like, always. Just give me a drink and sit me down and ask me questions. I tell you, Iâm sitting there and Iâm thinking, âMy God, what about that?â The Beatles. I mean, come on, there are so many things. Obviously a lot of other people say things [too]. I remember Keith Richards saying to me, âYou had four singers. We only had one!â Little things like that will set me off and I think, âWow.â That is pretty uncanny. And writers. Not just singers, but writers. So you had me and John as writers and then George was a hell of a writer and then Ringo comes up with âOctopusâs Gardenâ and a couple of others... I love to go on about it, because in going on about it, it brings back memories. I do think itâs uncanny. You know, number one: how did those four guys meet? OK, well I had a best friend, Ivan, who knew John, so thatâs how I met John. I used to go on the bus route to school and this little guy got on at the next stop and that was George. So that was kind of quite random. And then Ringo was some guy from the Dingle and we met him in Hamburg and just thought he was a great drummer.
But the idea that all these quite random people in Liverpool should come together and actually be able to make it work? I mean... the thing is, we were pretty bad at the beginning. I mean we [The Beatles] werenât that good. But with all the time we had in Hamburg, we just got good [through practising]. We became good. If somebody said, you know, âIâm gonna tell Aunt Mary âbout Uncle John,â we didnât all look at each other wondering what key it was in. It was, âBam!â Everyone knew. âBang! Itâs âLong Tall Sallyâ. Here we go.â We had a lot in common and thatâs just the musical aspect. Then you go into all the other aspects. One thing about The Beatles is that we were kind of like an art band. John went to art college, so with him and Stuart [Sutcliffe] there was that connection. I was very into art anyway and it wasnât just art, it was, like, culture, with a small âcâ. So we all liked stuff. We liked people such as Stanley Unwin; we liked mad things. Like there was a little film called The Running Jumping & Standing Still Film that Dick Lester did with Spike Milligan and we were attracted to those zany little things, which I think gave us a personality as a group. And we would have fun with this. The other groups were just not like that. They were like guys who might work in a factory or something. I remember once being in the dressing room in Hamburg and we knew that the sax player of the bands was coming in and I happened to have a poetry book with me, which my then girlfriend had sent me, and before he came in we all sat round looking like we were all in deep contemplation as I read this poem out. And the sax player came in, saw us all, with me reading this poem, and he said, âOh, sorry,â and very quietly put his sax away. When he left we all burst out laughing. We knew we were different. We knew we had something that all these other groups didnât have. It gelled. I often think of things like this, as there are a million of them. I remember making a guitar with George, going on hitchhiking holidays... I was a big hitchhiking fan, so I would persuade George and John, mainly, to come on holidays. So George and I hitchhiked one time to Wales. We went to Harlech and stayed in a little place there and played a little gig, just me and George. Then me and John went down to Reading, where my uncle had a pub. And we played a little gig there as The Nerk Twins. And then me and John hitchhiked to Paris... So all of these things, all these little things you might do as a kid, but when you start thinking about them in detail...
And Iâm thinking now, thereâs me and George, roadside, itâs a sunny day and weâve got a little camp thing, a little stove that Iâd brought with me, and weâve got our methylated spirits to put in it. And then we go to the shop to buy some Ambrosia Creamed Rice and we sit at the side of the road with this little stove, boiling it up, sharing it with each other and thumbing down lifts. Once weâd finished, weâd have sore thumbs. Just all of these memories, there are just so many of them... So I do like to go on about The Beatles, because it was magical. People say, âDo you believe in magic?â And I say, âIâve got to.â And I donât mean, you know, Gandalf or wizardry or that sort of thing necessarily. For me, itâs how life can be magical, these things that just came together. Me and John knowing each other, the fact that both of us independently had already started to write little songs... I said to him, âWhatâs your hobby?â I said, âI like songwriting,â and he said, âOh, so do I.â You know, no one Iâd ever met had ever said that as a reply. And we said, âWell, why donât you play me yours and Iâll play you mine.â That is most unusual and most fortuitous, the fact that we should meet and get together. And then when we got a recording contract and we were down in London and we realised that there were people down in Tin Pan Alley, near Charing Cross Road, who did this for a living and who wrote for people. And that got very exciting. So if we wrote something we werenât using, weâd give it to Billy J Kramer or Cilla Black. The whole thing was magical. And I think the whole Beatles story has elements of that every inch of the way.
How often do you listen to your own music? Is it ever a busmanâs holiday? I donât listen to it that often and Iâm happily surprised if I hear something of mine on the radio. And when I do listen to mine and The Beatlesâ remasters to check the quality, it always takes me on a happy trip down memory lane. When did you first realise that you were a gang? Hamburg. We were mates. Me and John knew each other beforehand, from when I joined his little group, The Quarrymen, so we were mates then, but not a gang. And me and George were mates, having done all this hitchhiking together, living close to each other... But it was only when, as a group, we got the Hamburg booking that we started thinking like that. We were living on top of each other, so we werenât socially distancing, letâs put it that way. It is socially crowding. Youâd be in a room, the four of us, trying to find a blanket, or youâd be in the back of van in the freezing British winter and the heatingâs gone, so you had to lie on top of each other... This is the kind of thing that makes friends of people. Iâve just read Craig Brownâs new book on The Beatles. I know you say you donât often read Beatles books, but have you engaged with this one? I havenât seen this one, but you are right. I donât often read them as there will be one mistake that will throw me. There is a great story in John Entwistleâs new biography, in which he recalls supporting The Beatles when he was in The Who. He said the screams drowned out the music so much that you used to sing âItâs been a hard dayâs cockâ. True? We often did mess around with the lyrics, but I think that this one is just some legend. It would be a good story, though. The Alan Partridge question: whatâs your favourite Beatles album, the red one or the blue one? The white one! Mary McCartney Whatâs the biggest misconception about you? Oh, God. There are so many. I suppose that when The Beatles broke up, perhaps there was a misconception that we all sort of hated each other. What I realise now is that, because it was a family, because it was a gang, families argue. And families have disputes. And some people want to do this and some people want to do that. So I think what came about after that... the only way for me to save The Beatles and Apple â and to release Get Back by Peter Jackson and which allowed us to release Anthology and all these great remasters of all the great Beatles records â was to sue the band. If I hadnât done that, it would have all belonged to Allen Klein. The only way I was given to get us out of that was to do what I did. I said, âWell, Iâll sue Allen Klein,â and I was told I couldnât because he wasnât party to it. âYouâve got to sue The Beatles.â Well, as you can imagine, that was horrendous and it gave me some terrible times. I drank way too much and did too much of everything. And it was crazy, but I knew that was the only thing to do, because there was no way I was going to save it for me, because there was no way I was going to work that hard for all my life and see it all vanish in a puff of smoke. I also knew that, if I managed to save it, I would be saving it for them [the rest of The Beatles] too. Because they were about to give it away. They loved this guy Klein. And I was saying, âHeâs a fucking idiot.â âWhat you talking about? Heâs great!â And John would say this classic thing: âAnyone whoâs that bad canât be all bad.â And youâd go, âJohn, he can be... because heâs a fucking idiot.â But John was very enamoured of him, until he wasnât. If you read the history, there comes a point when all the guys turn against [Klein], but I had to do this thing. So to answer your question, because I had to do that, I think I was thought to be the guy who broke The Beatles up and the bastard who sued his mates. And, believe me, I bought into that. Thatâs the weirdest thing. It was so prevalent that for years I almost blamed myself. I knew that that was stupid and when we eventually got back together I knew it was silly, but I think it spawned a lot of people who thought that of me. âThe stupid bastard.â But, come on, man, there were certainly things that didnât help. I remember reading an article, an interview with Yoko, who, OK, she was a big John supporter, I get that, but in this article she goes, âPaul did nothing. All he ever did was book studio.â And Iâm going, âErr? No...â And then John does this famous song, âHow Do You Sleep?â, and heâs going, âAll you ever did was âYesterdayâ...â And Iâm going, âNo, man.â But then you hear the stories from various angles and apparently people who were in the room when John was writing that, he was getting suggestions for the lyrics off Allen Klein. So, you see the atmosphere of âLetâs get Paul. Letâs nail him in a song...â And those things were pretty hurtful. But, hey, you know, character building... Youâve spoken a bit about the depression you experienced after The Beatles split. Has the whole process of navigating fame and the pressures of the music industry affected your mental health? I think so, yes. But, in truth, I just took to booze. There wasnât much time to have mental health issues, it was just, fuck it, itâs boozing or sleeping. But Iâm sure it did, as they were very depressing times. Itâs funny, I remember when I first met Linda, she was divorced with a child and living in New York and having to fend for herself. She got depression and I remember her saying she made a decision. She said, âYou know what? Iâm not going to have this depression, because if I do Iâm going to be in the hands of other people. And Iâm not going to allow that to happen.â So she sort of picked herself up by her bootstraps and said, âIâve got to get out of this myself.â And I think that was what I was able to do, to get out of the depression by saying, âOK, this is really bad and Iâve got to do something about it.â So I did. And I think thatâs my way, almost by being my own psychiatrist. You say, âThis is not cool. Youâre not as bad as you think you areâ and all of the things. So you start to think, âOK.â For instance, John saying, âAll you ever wrote was âYesterdayâ.â No. Wait a minute. âLet It Beâ, âEleanor Rigbyâ, âLady Madonnaâ, for fuckâs sake. And I was happy to tell myself all of this. Thereâs more! âHey Judeâ, âThe Fool On The Hillâ, whatever. I think thatâs how I got out of it, by persuading myself that it wasnât a good idea to give in to my depression and my doubts. I had to look for ways... But this is a common phenomenon. I remember talking to Lady Gaga once about something we were doing together â Iâm dropping all the names! â and she was saying, âWell, thereâs the self-loathing.â And I think, âShit, thatâs the first time Iâd ever heard anyone talk about that.â And her, she was, like, at the top of her game, massively popular and everything she was doing was a hit, but she was just talking about self-loathing. And Iâm saying, âI kind of know what you mean, but Iâm not allowing that. Iâm not having that. Itâs not a road I want to go down.â But you do get it. Any time you write a song, youâre going, âThis is crap. This is terrible. Come on.â So I kick myself and say, âGet it better. If itâs terrible, get it better.â And sometimes someone will come along, someone who you respect, and say, âNo, thatâs great. Donât worry about that,â and then show you a side to it that you didnât notice and then youâll go, âOh, yeah.â A classic example of that was when I was playing âHey Judeâ to John and I said, âThe movement you need is on your shoulder.â I turned round to him and Yoko, who was standing behind me, and said, âDonât worry, Iâll fix that.â And John said, âNo, you wonât. Thatâs the best line in it.â But if you donât have that, you can sometimes be, âWhat Iâm doing is crap and my life amounts to nothing.â And I say to people, âGod, you know, if I can say that!â Pretty weird. As a performer youâre often thinking, âIs this any good? Is this rubbish? Is this a clichĂ©?â Iâm sure as a writer itâs the same. I suppose in the end you have to go, âYou know what? This is the process.â I mean, one thing thatâs good is that I care. Iâm not just pumping out bullshit all the time. I am trying to do good stuff. Maybe you canât succeed all the time, but I love it. Thatâs why I keep going. What comparisons do you draw between fame in the 1960s and fame now? So many. In the 1960s, fame was a completely different ballgame. It was new, it was innocent, it was exciting and any time anyone asked you for an autograph you said, âYeah, let me do two!â You just wanted to do that. Then there came a time when that started to wear off, so you go, âYeah, OK, Iâll do the autograph.â But then people are coming up to you when youâre having a private dinner or something and you go, âCould you wait until Iâve finished eating?â It starts to pale and fame will start to become something that was not as attractive as it once was. But I would not want to be trying to get famous now, with social media and stuff. Lots of people in my family do Instagram and I say, âI canât believe youâre doing this, because every time you post something youâve got to think of something clever to say.â Itâs the worst pressure on earth. Because all youâre doing is taking a picture of your breakfast and youâve got to say, âPancakes are not just for Shrove Tuesday.â For me that is not fun. In truth, I do have an Instagram account and I occasionally dip into it, but itâs not really me. Itâs my team who do it. I like it and I like that they do it, and when I do dip in I kind of enjoy it, especially when something important has happened, like someoneâs birthday or someone has died... I remember once having dinner with Gwyneth Paltrow and she asked if I had a Facebook page and I said I did but that I didnât look at it very much. And she looked at me in horror and said, âThat could be very dangerous.â And I said, âWell, I suppose it could be, but I just canât be bothered.â All of this stuff, I dip into it, but it doesnât really attract me. Iâd rather just go off into a corner and try to write a song. So fame nowadays is a big ballgame, where all of these issues come into play and I would not like to be trying to get more hits than BeyoncĂ© or more than Rihanna. I would not like to be playing that game. I just donât want to have to engage that much. âOK, everybody. Iâm at a restaurant. This restaurant is called, you know, Quaglinoâs, and Iâm having this.â Why would I want to tell anyone where I was? Why would I want to tell them what Iâm eating? Iâm the opposite. I donât want people to know and I donât want them to know what Iâm eating. Thatâs private, otherwise you donât have any private life. For me, Iâm glad it happened in the innocent days of the 1960s. It wasnât so innocent, but the fame angle was. It was exciting getting famous, but then it wears off a bit and when youâve been famous for as long as I have, itâs a thrill sometimes and sometimes itâs a nuisance. But Iâve got strategies. Iâm one of those people who â shock, horror â I donât do pictures. Youâre walking down the street and someone says, âPaul! Paul!â and theyâre reaching in their pocket and you know what theyâre doing: theyâre reaching for their iPhone. And I say, âNo, sorry, I donât do pictures.â And then Iâll say, âI hope you donât mind. Iâll chat to you.â And then Iâll spend bloody five minutes with them, explaining that if I do pictures I suddenly feel not like me. I feel like this famous celebrity. And you know what I always say? I say it reminds me of the South Of France â come and have your picture taken with the monkey. Suddenly Iâm that. Iâve got to be myself. What did you learn from working with Kanye West? There are many ways to make a record. He curates all the ideas and puts them together, often with great success. And what did you learn from working with Rihanna? That even someone who is hugely talented can be a very cool girl. Youâre not averse to showing yourself in public, are you? When I was a kid, Iâd get on a bus, just going three or four stops, and get off, look around. I remember years later, George Harrison said to me, âDo you still go on buses?â And I said, âYeah. I like it. I find it very grounding.â And I actually do like it. I also like a nice car and I like driving too. But thereâs something about that, being ordinary... I mean, I know I canât be ordinary, at all â Iâm way too famous to be ordinary â but, for me, that feeling inside, of feeling like myself still, is very important. Once, I went into New York from Long Island on the bus they call the Jitney. It takes about three hours. And I was loving it because I had a long book that I was trying to finish â it was a Dickens, Nicholas Nickleby. I was really into it and so I wanted some time to read it. So, Iâm on the Jitney and when people came on and sat next to me and they started talking to me I said, âI hope you donât mind but Iâm trying to finish this book.â Anyway, the Jitney stopped in New York, just a few blocks short of where I was going, so I thought Iâd take a bus the rest of the way. Amazingly, I had the right change, so I got on the next bus. When I did, I noticed that everyone had noticed me, but theyâre all being cool and theyâre not saying anything. Theyâre all New Yorkers, looking straight ahead, even though Iâm aware theyâve noticed Iâve got on the bus. Then this black woman pipes up from the back of the bus: âAre you Paul McCartney?â And I said, âYes, I am.â And she said, âWhat are you doing on this bus?â And I said, âWhy donât you stop shouting and come and sit next to me?â And you could see everyoneâs shoulders heaving. Theyâre loving this. She asked me where I was going. I found out she was going uptown to see her sister and we ended up having this lovely conversation. Thatâs why I like a proper conversation. Being ordinary. I love that. It means a lot to me â maybe too much to me. I wouldnât have wanted to get on the bus and sort of announce myself. âHi, itâs Paul McCartney! What do you think of me?â I could no more do that than fly.
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