Stato
Well-known member
- Dec 21, 2011
- 7,366
He did go right wing, talk up Hitler and the far right and say the country needed a dictator or some such bs though.
As Rick James rightly said "Cocaine is a helluva drug".
On the discussion about whether McCartney should be headlining Glastonbury, if Coldplay have done it three times why does anybody care? People make out like it was previously some haven for all things alternative, but even in the eighties it was putting on the likes of Simply Red, Level 42 and The Hothouse Flowers. It was always the eclectic festival and, as the stages have grown, it now tries to cater for all. The Pyramid Stage headliner is generally for the monied, middle class mainstream who can't clap in time to believe that they're down with the cutting edge for a weekend. McCartney is ideal fare for them. A lot will just want to be able to say that they saw him.
On the subject of whether he has 'lost it', some will be aware of my view that he had little to lose in the first place. I've mentioned it once or twice. However, I would suggest that there is value in watching artists in their later years. Having resisted watching Brian Wilson's live show for quite a few years, because of a feeling that he was a damaged man who was being wheeled out for curiosity value, I was buoyed up by watching 'Love & Mercy' and recorded his Glasto appearance that was on BBC4 at the weekend. I actually felt a bit moved by seeing him up there, slightly confused, sometimes missing lyrics, or off key, but still maintaining a belief in the power of music that seems to have sustained him through a very difficult life. Watching Johnny Cash's last ever show on Youtube seemed to have the same personal level of profundity for those of us forced to confront the effects of aging. If McCartney fans can get the same thing from watching him in his eighties, then good luck to them. It won't matter that the power might be lacking, or the vitality missing, they'll be getting something else from the show. Even if its just nostlagia, I wouldn't sniff at that in the awful times that we're all currently living through.
And contrary to the impression I may have given, I don't actually hate all of the Beatles' songs. I hope Macca sings his classics like 'Here Comes The Sun', 'Taxman', 'While My Guitar Gently Weeps' and of course Frank Sinatra's favourite Lennon and McCartney song:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UelDrZ1aFeY
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