PAUL McCARTNEY Picasso's last words - This has to be one of his greatest works! First time hearing
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- Опубликовано: 8 окт 2024
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PAUL McCARTNEY Picasso's last words(Drink ro me).This song is so arty and so non conventional,that i think it must rank as one of his greatest works.
#musicreactions
#paulmccartney
#popmusic
Paul and Linda were at a party in Los Angeles and Dustin Hoffman asked McCartney - How in the world do you write all those songs? Paul saw a newspaper and picked a random headline - which just happened to be about Picasso's death. The article mentioned that his last words were... "Drink to me. Drink to my health. You know I can't drink anymore." So Paul makes up the song right there in front of Hoffman. Dustin starts yelling for his wife... Honey come over here!.. He's doing it! He's writing a song right here in front of me!
Maybe I'm amazed maybe I'm not LoL 😂
Close. They were in Jamaica.
Thanks for that story. I love that!
@@sourisvoleur4854 - Thanks for that correction. Now that you said Jamaica - I remember it.
Written after Dustin Hoffman challenged him to write a song based on an article in a magazine about Picasso's death. They were at dinner and Paul wrote it right there on the spot.
Dustin said it was one of the greatest moments of his life.
Songwriters: Paul Mccartney / Linda Mccartney
This album is soooooooo good. Every song is great.
One of the few perfect albums. By which I mean I never skip any song when playing it.
Absolutely!
Except “Bluebird”
Call-backs to Jet and Mrs. Vanderbilt. Then the next song is Nineteen Hundred and Eightyfive, which does the great call-back to Band on the Run. Love this album!
Please listen to another great Paul McCartney song, "Another Day". Glad you are delving deeply into his solo stuff. Also listen to "Jet" also from "Band on The Run."
Adore Another Day, and the others you mentioned.
You are a wise man Harri
I'm gonna keep saying it until you do it!
Listen to Every Night from his debut album. It's gorgeous. :)
A living legend, from a group of legends, The Fab Four
One of the wonderful songs from Band on the Run, one of the best albums of the 70's. Clever little addition of Jet included in there too! Paul and Wings at their best!
And was the Ho Hey Ho at the end a shout out to his song 1985? Amazing song with Jet and 1985 shoutouts? Maybe?
Great choice Mr. Clarke. One of Paul's best. 🎉
I always had an infinity with this song. I don't really know why. I tried to figure out what it may me feel, it was just some peaceful feeling. And I enjoyed the musical continuity of the album.
It is his best!
If Picasso composed and sent Mac a song this would be it.
I’ve always loved this song. This was a great choice. Thanks Harri and JK Clark 🌺✌️
Great, ,thank you.
My regret is that I can never experience hearing this album for the first time again. It was a revelation. I was with a group of friends and we all heard different bits and pointed them out. Magical moment.
We all came away saying it was the best piece of work any solo former Beatle had made up to that moment.
That actually was an early drum machine, or “rhythm box,” which was used on “Bluebird” earlier on the album… so he was calling back to that as well as “Jet” and “Mrs Vanderbilt.”
Great observation on this song being like a Picasso cubist painting.
Sir Paul McCartney is a very mature master musician and lyricist, arranger and conductor with a passion to create and produce musical masterpieces.
John Lennon had to concede that "Band on the Run" was McCartney's best post-Beatle album. In a few ways it contributed to the end of the "war of words" between the two former partners.
Check out McCartney’s C’mon People from Off the Ground.
One of my favorites on "Band On The Run" next to "Mamunia" & "Mrs. Vandebilt", the whole album is great & timeless
You need to eventually listen to the entire band on the run album, it'll be a great ride
The album "Band One The Run" is by Paul McCartney and the group Wings where Paul performed, as far as I know.
Spoken french words by Pierre Denis Le Sève, in case you wondered! :)
The fourth best song on “Band on the Run” and it’s this good.
Listen to McCartney’s account of this song in the recently released podcast Feb 27 ‘24, McCartney A Life In Lyrics.
The extra music breaks are reprises on 2 songs on the full album - jet and Mrs Vanderbilt. Listen to the full album .
there is a song entitled "Pablo Picasso" by Jonathan Rickman and the Modern Lovers
YES! Such a great tune!
My first thought was that this is a drinking song.
Indeed! And why not? It has a great swing and swagger. You can imagine inebriated people swaying side-to-side singing it. I would.
How the song happened.
ruclips.net/video/YJ9iNYzDIb0/видео.htmlsi=1j7rrgZbzZrNZg1-
Point out a Dyson vacuum cleaner, Paul McCartney will compose a song
Harri - Please react to “Green Door,” by Jim Lowe (1956). Thanks.
A great song and right up Hari's alley, since he likes 1950s songs.
I think that you’re right. I remember the song as a kid. Great rolling piano. Hope that it gets played. Thanks for your like!
I like the song … but from the pepper pot era
1985. Hm
One of many examples of why Paul was the real experimental and avant-garde Beatle. On most of his post-Beatle albums, you’ll get one or two ‘out there’ songs like this. The same isn’t really true of John, who settled on a somewhat simpler song structure based around rock and roll and slow ballads, even if his lyrics were more meaningful at times. George’s songs could be a little more musically interesting than John’s, but never ‘out there’ in the same way. Ringo was just Ringo.
George was the better of all.
John composed “#9 Dream”, the most surreal of all solo Beatles songs. Blows pretty much any Paul song out of the water and it was John’s own arrangement and production.
@@hw343434 No it isn’t and no it doesn’t. The only vaguely surreal thing about it is the soft effect on the vocals but musically it follows a normal pop song structure. Not anywhere near as avant-garde as some of the weird and wonderful compositions Paul came up with.
Where are Paul’s experimental or avante-garde Beatles songs then?! Oh wait, they’re all John’s! “I am the Walrus” vs “Hello Goodbye”, “Strawberry Fields” vs “Penny Lane”, and “Revolution 9” really ends the debate if there ever was one lol… I agree with you though that AFTER The Beatles John decided to go MINIMALIST with “Plastic Ono Band” but that was cause he had already been the avante garde Beatle and true artists don’t repeat themselves and always push toward new ground and maybe for Paul it was the opposite so it was his turn to learn from John’s previous adventures and we’re all grateful to have them both
@@hw343434 John actually complained that all the experimental stuff on his songs was driven by Paul. Something along the lines of “we did his songs straight and then he messed with mine.” But talking about avant-garde, Paul was the one going to watch weird shows and perusing modern art galleries as the others had moved to the shires by 1965 whereas he stayed in London. The whole tape-loops idea was his. I’m not knocking John btw. He’ll always be one of the greats. Just comparing their post-Beatle creations. Paul’s was much more varied musically. Yes there were the radio-friendly ‘silly love songs’ but there was some pretty out there stuff on the albums. A great example of this is Morse Moose and the Grey Goose. Musically it’s a soundscape that takes you all over the place, even if the lyrics take a while to understand their meaning. Never forget that it was the album version of Coming Up that got John back into the studio (for wherever reason he preferred the synth-heavy album version to the live more guitar-driven performance). It’ll be forever a shame that they never got to work together again. Both were keen but whether or not Yoko would have allowed it is anyone’s guess!
Reminds me of john. ever hear of mona lisa twins ? questionable is funny the video makes it so .