Thursday, June 30, 2011

RWC British Abroad Adams


Blog#2:  How did the early life of Paul McCartney influence his music?

                “I was very influenced by him.” –Paul McCartney, on this father

Despite their harmless facade, The Beatles symbolized the generational revolt—even an estrangement from parents—that marked the 1960s.  “My mother hates them, my father hates them, my teacher hates them,” said one young fan. 
“Can you think of three better reasons why I love them?”



However, this was not the intent of John, Paul, George and Ringo.  With the exception of John Lennon, The Beatles grew up in loving stable homes. And they generally respected and revered their parents, which came through in their music—especially Paul McCartney’s.

“My parents aspired for us (1)..  That is one of the great things you can find in ordinary people.  My mum wanted me to be a doctor,” McCartney said.  “And my dad, who left school at fourteen, would have loved me to be a great scientist, a great university graduate.  I always feel grateful for that.”

The happiness and security of Paul’s life were brutally shattered when his mother, Mary, died in 1956, leaving his father James with the task of guiding his two teenage sons through the difficult period of adolescence, Paul later preserved his mother’s memory in the beautiful ballad “Let It Be,” based on a dream he had about her a decade after her death (2).  Paul’s younger brother Michael commented on how their father was there for them after their mother died.  “We both owe him a lot.  He stayed home and looked after us.”  But it would be the musical influence of Paul’s father that would last.

James McCartney, born in 1902, had his own band in the late 1920s.  Jim Mac’s Jazz Band, which included his brother and cousin, played the dance halls around Liverpool during the time of vaudeville.

Music had always been a focus of McCartney family life.  They had an old upright piano at home, and one of Paul’s early memories is lying on the floor, listening to his father play.  “My dad was an original, “Paul remembers.  “To us kids he was a pretty good player, he could play a lot of tunes on the piano.  I was very influenced by him.”  Paul still, in fact, has his father’s old upright piano.

James arranged for 11-year old Paul to be auditioned for junior choir at Liverpool Cathedral, but he was not accepted. This did not stop him from encouraging Paul’s clear interest in music.  “My Dad was the big influence because he was playing the piano all the time by ear,” Paul recalls.  “I tried to get him to teach me, but he said no, you’ve got to get lessons.”

James was not only a musician but also an amateur composer.  “He wrote some stuff,” Paul has said of his dad. “I actually did a song of his with Chet Atkins and Floyd Cramer called ‘Walking in the Park with Eloise.’  I said to my dad: ‘Do you know you wrote that song?’ He said: I didn’t write it. I made it up.’  I said:  ‘I know what you mean, but we call that writing these days, Dad!”’

It wasn’t surprising when Paul began writing songs. “Something was making me make it up, whether I knew how to do it or not,” Paul said. “I’d already written the tune of ‘When I’m Sixty-four’ when I was sixteen.”  Not surprisingly, there is a strong vaudevillian flavour to this song (3).

The musical influence of his father also pervaded Paul’s work with The Beatles.  “He had a lot of music in him, my dad.  He taught me and my bother harmony. I learned very early how to sing harmony, which was one of my big roles in The Beatles (4).   Whenever John sang, I automatically sang in harmony with him, and that’s due to my dad’s teaching.

Paul even credits his father for his now-legendary status as The Beatles’ bass player.  “My dad would point out the bass on the radio.”(5)

As The Beatles were trying to break through, Paul’s father encouraged them. He allowed the Quarry Men – Paul and John’s pre-Beatles group—to rehearse in the McCartney home on Forthlin Road. And as the budding Beatles, Lennon and McCartney wrote some of their classics there, such as “I’ll Follow the Sun.”  “I remember writing that in our front living room at Forthlin Road," says Paul.`

When James turned 64 in 1966, Paul revived and rewrote “When I’m Sixty-four” as a tribute to his father.(7)  The Beatles recorded the song on December 6, 1966 at Abbey Road Studios in London between sessions for Lennon’s classic, surreal “Strawberry Fields Forever.”  And it was the first cut completed for their masterpiece album, the legendary Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Paul’s father lived to see The Beatles become the most influential entertainment act in history, with Paul half of the greatest pop song writing duo of all time.  James must have been proud when he heard those great piano riffs on such Beatle songs as “Let It Be” and “Hey Jude”—both written and played by Paul.

James McCartney died in 1976.  Just before he passed away, he said, “I’ll be with Mary soon.”  But the bond between father and son has lasted over the years, even as Paul celebrates his 69th birthday this month.

This affectionate bond is reflected in a song Paul wrote about a phrase his father used to resolve family disputes.  Here are some lyrics from “Put it There” on Paul’s 1989 album, Flowers in the Dirt. “Give me your hand; I’d like to shake it.  Put it there, If it weighs a ton, That’s what a father says to his young son.”

Nina Adams
06.30.2011

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Comments on BME Blogs of Dustin Bramkamp and Kimberly Krekeler

Dustin:

I was impressed with your blog on the British Musical Experience.  You expressed yourself very well, and I liked your introduction and summation of the rock music genre in the 1960's.  The pictures were an enhancement to your blog, and I especially liked the paragraph on the Vietnam War during the 1960's.

Kimberly K:

I liked your blog because the words flowed easily from one paragraph to another. I also enjoyed the pictures used to illustrate the changes in male hair styles during the 1960's.  In fact, as I have noticed while watching the young male adolescent and high school students here in England, some still wear that hair style with the bands.

Blog Entry #1 (British Musical Experience)

Blog Entry #1 (British Musical Experience):
I think the Beatles had a strong influence on the music culture first in Britain and then in America in the early 1960’s. In the 1960’s British music went global for the first time with the ‘British Invasion.’  The original look and sound of beat groups like The Beatles, R&B bands like The Rolling Stones and female singers like Petula Clark took America by storm and were met with massive fan hysteria and huge record sales.
As the British economy recovered from post-war conditions, pop, fashion and youth culture moved into a period of change.  The Beatles’ influence on rock music and popular culture was huge.  Their success started an almost immediate wave of changes—including a shift from US global dominance of rock and roll to UK acts, from soloists to groups, from professional songwriters to self-penned songs, and to changes in fashion.
The most popular rock and roll artists were fading out for one reason or another (Elvis was in the Army, Little Richard became a preacher, Buddy Holly was killed in a plane crash), or were not able to keep up with the revolution in music that was taking place.  So the timing was perfect for The Beatles.  Listed below are some of the changes that The Beatles affected:

1.       The Beatles changed music forever.  They were classed as ‘respectable’ and although they were as interested in sex and drugs as most other bands, they kept it quiet and were therefore highly regarded by both parents and teenagers.  They had a clean and neat appearance recommended by their manager Brian Epstein. Most of their hits were written by Lennon and McCartney, who became two of the most famous songwriters in history. With the release of the Beatles’ Sergeant Peppers Lonely Hearts Club’ album, songs were extended past the three minutes mark.  Thei r songs contained thoughtful messages and were recorded with different instruments such as the Indian sitar and an orchestra.  The Beatles paved the way for many other popular British bands like the Rolling Stones, The Who, the Kinks and the Animals.
2.       The Beatles influenced Album format and covers:  previously record albums were of secondary consideration to singles (“45s”) in the recording industry.  However, The Beatles started producing albums with more enjoyable songs rather than two hits and the rest fillers. The album covers were more interesting and colourful.
3.       Music Videos:  The Beatles began filming promotional music videos like A Hard Day’s Night (1964) and Help! (1965) which they would send to television networks in lieu of appearing in person.  Richard Lester received praise and respect for his revolutionary camera techniques used in his directing of both films, which lead the way to the modern rock video.
4.       Live Concerts:  The Beatles were the first group to stage a large stadium concert.  At Shea Stadium in New York City on Sunday, August 5, 1965 the group opened their 1965 North American tour to a record audience of 55,600. It was the first concert to be held at a major outdoor stadium  demonstrating that outdoor concerts on a large scale could be successful and profitable.
5.       Hair:  The Beatle haircut, known as the mop-top because of its resemblance to a mop, is a mid-length hairstyle named after and popularised by the Beatles. It is a straight cut, collar-length at the back and over the ears at the sides, with straight bangs.  They adopted it from someone they saw in Hamburg while hitchhiking to Paris.
6.       Fashion:  In the early years The Beatles would wear black and later grey, Edwardian collarless suits.  This style of suit was adopted from the Mod youth cult, then at its peak in the UK. These suits (instead of leather trousers, plaid shirts and slacks) became extremely common for new bands to wear after 1964. Later, during the psychedelic era of 1967-1968, The Beatles popularised bright colours and wore paisley suits and shirts and trousers with floral patterns.  By the late 1960s, The Beatles wore more casual fashions, with t-shirts, blue jeans and denim jackets. Then John started wearing white suits. This mixture of casual wear and unconventional formal clothing could be seen in The Beatles’ later years as they grew beards and drifted towards more hippie and Indian clothing.


I was in my late teens when The Beatles invaded American and I can remember the boys started wearing their hair longer and wearing the Beatle boots that were tight-fitting, Cuban-heeled, ankle-length with pointed toes.  The girls including myself started wearing short, simple, geometric dresses of the mod look modelled by Twiggy. They were mini dresses and some wore heavy mascara (called Panda eyes) similar to Petula Clark that became the look of the 1960’s.

Yes, the American people were influenced by The Beatles almost as much as the music industry.  We just thought they had ‘the look.’

Nina Adams
06.18.11

  

Friday, June 3, 2011

Nina on the beatles

I'm learning to appreciate the beatles in ways that I have never before.