Monday, May 18, 2026

Wing Concept Extends Beyond Beatles Magic (Atlanta 1976)


 Wings Concert Extends Beyond Beatles Magic

By Jerry Schwartz & Sally Smith

The Atlanta Constitution

May 19, 1976


    Paul McCartney hammered down the opening three piano chords of "Lady Madonna," and the Omni roared. Until that instant, McCartney and Wings had been cruising through the repertoire of Wings material to an enthusiastic but less than overwhelmed response from the jammed arena, but the instantly recognizable Beatles tune galvanized the 1000s of rock fans at the Omni and showed the unmistakable power the Beatles still exert over rock music nearly a decade after their demise.

     After "Lady Madonna," the Wings concert took flight. There were two more Beatles numbers, but the rest of the material was strictly Wings. There was clearly more power and a heavier rock line in the live performance than the Wings recordings have shown. And that pleased the crowd. 

    Tuesday night was the first of two Atlanta Wings concerts. The second is Wednesday night. Both were sold out within hours after the tickets went on sale.

     The crowd Tuesday night was enormous. The chicly dressed young people began arriving as early as 5:30pm. Three hours later, just before the music began, the crowd had jammed every seat in the Omni and was beginning to spill over into the aisles

    Wings burst onto the stage as clouds of purple smoke whooshed across the platform, and millions of bubbles floated from the ceiling. It was not the only theatrical effect. Flash pots exploded, strobes winked wildly, and a green laser cut patterns through the auditorium as the band performed the title song from the James Bond movie "Live and Let Die."

     But the theatrics were secondary to the music, and the music was crystal clear thanks to an incredibly engineered audio system with the power of 75 awesome 600-watt Crown amplifiers. Every instrument and every vocal could be heard with a clarity unique for rock concerts. Even horn solos, usually drowned in rock concerts, came through perfectly. 

    The middle section of the concert was devoted to numbers performed on an acoustic guitar left alone on stage. McCartney said to the audience, " See if you remember this," and started to sing, " Yesterday, all my troubles seem so far away." And what is perhaps the nearest thing to a classic rock music has produced. After the group did an extended version of "Band on the Run", accompanied by a movie in which the Band on the Run album cover came to life, Wings left, but they were called back by the screaming, jumping audience for two encores. 

    In the audience, opinion was divided on just what Wings' drawing power is.  It is Wings' music alone that would have brought the 1000s to the Omni? Some, like Lisa Cowley of Marietta, said, "I doubt it. It's really McCartney and the Beatles. It's great to see Paul. It would be even better if John Lennon, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr were here."  But others were there strictly for Wings. "I think McCartney is fantastic. It's not the Beatles that brought me here. It's McCartney," said one young woman. "It's obvious he was the real talent in the Beatles."

     Immediately after the concert, Paul and his wife, Linda, collapsed, flushed and exhausted, in their dressing room backstage. "The reception's been wonderful everywhere," McCartney said, "and we're really pulling together, working tight. It's fine. In fact, when we first set out on the tour, it felt like a holiday. Everybody was so high, but...." He rubbed his eyes and shook his head. "Now the traveling is starting to get to us."

     McCartney was enthusiastic about the future of rock. "I suppose a lot of people do get blase about rock music about the age of 30, but I've always felt that rock was a mating thing, a physical thing, and there's a certain age group that's always going to do that."

Wild crowds in Liverpool


 

Setting up the show



 

Paul with the Shoco people who set up everything for the Wings Over America tour 

Guitar playing George


 

Reunited or Not -- Beatles like to keep hungry fans guessing (1981)

 


Photo taken by Linda McCartney 

Reunited or Not -- Beatles Like to Keep Hungry Fans Guessing

By Kim Tyson

Austin American-Statesman

May 19, 1981


    The new Beatlemania.  It has hit the country, supported by rumors about a new Beatles record. The latest controversy to stir hardcore fans' memories is whether the Beatles have really joined again in tribute to the late John Lennon, and if the record is really by the Beatles.

    The record company says it can't even substantiate that all of them sing on it. "All Those Years Ago", a single by George Harrison, is already being played by radio stations and is expected to be available in some record stores this week.

    Whether it represents the long-awaited Beatles reunion has been left up to Beatles fans. Most of those associated with the industry deny it's anything like a reunion and focus their debate on the quality of the music.

     In Austin, Texas, both K98 and KLBJ began playing the three-minute 42-second single immediately after it was released for promotional purposes on May 7. The song is also a cut on Somewhere in England (Dark Horse Records, a subsidiary of Warner Bros). 

    Robb Stewart, program director for K98, called the record "a sentimental favorite" and said the station has received a "massive reaction" to it. He said the station has been receiving 5 to 6 requests an hour, and they play the single every 5 to 6 hours. "The Beatles have been famous for letting people say it's them ---no, it's not. The end product is making people talk about the Beatles. 

    "The Beatles like to cause a lot of talk about themselves, dead or alive. Beatlemania will be with us forever," Chuck Dunaway, program director for KLBJ, said. "The station has been playing it every 10 to 12 hours; it's the closest thing I think you'll get to a Beatles reunion record.

     "It's just a good commercial song, but there's nothing wrong with being commercial. It's gotten a great response, a super response," he said. 

    San Antonio's top 40 station, KTSA, played the single for three days that first week, then took it off the playlist to give it more time to prove itself. Station manager Lee Randall said, "We're debating whether to start it up again."

     "My judgment is the record is only being played because it's got three of the four remaining Beatles on it," said Randall, who added that his station had received a few calls for the song. "It sounds like a typical George Harrison record to me. The world was waiting for a Beatles record, and this is a George Harrison record. I think."

     The record has Harrison singing the lead and playing lead guitar. In the background are reputed to be Paul McCartney and his wife Linda on backup vocals, and Ringo Starr on drums, but a casual listener may have trouble picking out the background voices.

    " All Those Years Ago" has a soft rock beat and Harrison's sweet-sounding slide guitar. The lyrics contain references to John Lennon's songs, such as "All You Need Is Love", "Walls and Bridges", and "Imagine".

     "I'm shouting all about love, while they treated you like a dog. When you were the one who had made it so clear all those years ago,"  Harrison sings. 

    Local record stores said last week they hadn't received it, but Record Town Manager Charlie Caldwell said he anticipates a shipment today of the single. "We had several people a week come in and ask for it," he said.

     "It's really not that big of a deal," said Jack Cantor, manager of Inner Sanctum Records. He called the reaction "practically nil."

     "In no way is it a Beatles reunion cut," Cantor said, giving his opinion of its quality. "It's just another pop song. It's a good method for Warner Bros. to stir up some media hype on it," he said. He has heard from his customers. "Oh, it's okay, it's nothing like the Beatles."

     As for national reaction, the May 15 Radio and Records weekly tabloid, considered one of the most respected trade publications for radio and records, showed that the single set a new record in the tabloid's history for the first week acceptance. 87% of their 231 reporting stations across the country added it to their playlist the first week. 

    Cal Rudman, a Cherry Hill, New Jersey, publisher of a popular radio station tip sheet, Friday Morning Quarterback, predicted it to be a hit, no question. "Absolutely, it will be very big." Rudman, famous for forecasting the success of Christopher Cross, called the Beatles reunion idea overblown, but said the song's acceptance record is terrific. "It's a good George Harrison record", said Rudman, who views it as a quality sounding, quality produced song. 

    He added that he believes some of its popularity has been buoyed by rumors. "The word is, it was supposedly written for Ringo to do. I don't think it's fair for the American public to bill it as a Beatles reunion record. The point is, if you can't make out Paul McCartney's voice, if it's not featured predominantly, then what does it all mean?"

     Bob Merlis, publicity director for Warner Bros. Records, says the single was in some stores across the nation as early as Wednesday, and the Harrison LP is expected to be out by the first of June. The album Merlis says lists no studio information other than to say it was recorded entirely in England and gives no musician credits to Paul and Linda McCartney, who are believed to be singing background vocals on "All Those Years Ago." However, it does thank them for their help with the song. 

   "Ringo Starr is listed as one of four drummers on the album, but not listed for that specific song," Merlis said. "I've been trying to track this down for two weeks," Merlis said. About the publicity that the three remaining Beatles have gotten together for the song. "They may all three be on it, I just don't have any hard evidence," he said. 

Harrison and his manager won't comment.

Sunday, May 17, 2026

The Model of Hipness (1996)

 

John with John Dunbar in 1967

John looks as his wife Marianne Faithfull greets Peter Asher 

John Dunbar outside the Indica in 1966
The Model of Hipness

By Kevin Jackson

Sunday Telegraph (London)

May 12, 1996


    It was 30 years ago today, well, give or take, about seven months that one of the most momentous encounters in the history of the popular arts took place. Launched on the mischievous phrase, "Go and say hello to the millionaire."

     The millionaire in question was John Lennon. The addressee was Yoko Ono. The venue was the Indica Gallery London W1 and the date was November 9, 1966.  As one recent chronicle of those heady times put it, "The person who effected this introduction, whilst of historical significance, has never been widely acknowledged." Credit where it is overdue then,for good and ill, the man who brought John and Yoko together was the owner of the Indica Gallery John Dunbar.

    Today, Dunbar leads what seems an agreeably unfused life, drawing and making various art objects which he sells from time to time at exhibitions held in his roomy flat in Maida Vale. The latest of his productions is a suspended nest of wire that catches the light refracted from a prism mounted on a windowsill.

     A likable, unassuming chap, he seems happier to discuss the novels of Anthony Powell. "Just around the corner," he points out, "is the Little Venice canal into which Pamela Widmerpool threw a manuscript by X Trapnal" --than reminisces fondly about wild and crazy escapades with rock stars. Indeed, as he says, the craziness of some of those escapades is precisely what stops him from summoning up neat anecdotes of the period at will. In the words of the old gag: If you can remember the 60s, you weren't really there.

     Three decades ago, however, Dunbar was quite definitely one of the presiding spirits of what Time Magazine, unfortunately, christened "Swinging London." Friend and collaborator with Paul McCartney as well as the Lennon -Onos, husband to Marianne Faithfull, an energetic and influential go between from the worlds of avant garde art, film, and pop music and wittingly or otherwise, a youthful mentor to those who were hungry for the cultural omniscience he wore so lightly.

     In her autobiography, Faithfull (which he has not read, :in case it makes me annoyed"), his former wife recalls, remembers the Dunbar of the early '60s as being into bebop jazz, Coltrane, Charlie Parker, and Beethoven's last quartets. They first met in 1963 at a staircase party at his Cambridge College. Churchill.

     "John had a beautiful, sensitive face, and he was the model of hipness," she said. They became partners the same night and were married in May 1965. She gave birth to their son, Nicholas, that November. In the interim, Marianne Faithfull, the impressionable convent girl, had been discovered at a party by Andrew Loog Oldham, who recorded a Mick Jagger/ Keith Richards song entitled " As Tears Go By " and became a famous pop singer.

     The transformation had happened behind his back. They had rowed, and Dunbar went off to Greece for the summer of 1964. On his return, they met up in a cafe and were in the process of patching up their quarrel when a song called " As Tears Go By " came on the radio, followed by the announcement that the super new hit (that had been released on August 24) was now at number nine in the charts. She almost choked on her coffee, but the actual cool concierge of bebop and Beethoven proved unexpectedly tolerant about the whole pop scene, though he would have had good reason for foreboding. 

    For example, when Bob Dylan came to England early in 1965 for the concert tour, which was mordantly recorded in Don Pennebaker's documentary, Don't Look Back, Marianne received an imperial summons to his suite at the Savoy.  Dylan rapidly selected her for the role of chief concubine. His principal seduction ploy was to claim that he was writing an epic poem about her and then tear it up before her eyes in a fit of artistic pique.  Despite being every bit as awed by Dylan as everyone present, she resisted, pointing out that she was about to be married to an English poet.

     Dylan was duly scornful, the more so when he discovered that this English poet was no more than an undergraduate. When the two young men finally met, Dunbar was dressed in an untypically fogeish tweed jacket, a copy of The Guardian crammed into his pocket. Dylan went into a jealous rage and sneered at Miss Faithfull that her bea was a wearer of horn-rimmed spectacles and an intellectual jerk.

     Undaunted, she went on to marry Dunbar and the following week at the Cambridge register office. Dunbar was sufficiently romantic to gather his bride a bouquet of May blossoms picked from the nearby fields. Though their honeymoon was hardly the stuff of maidens' dreams. They spent it in Paris in the rowdy company of the beat poets, Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Gregory Corso. "Mantra slathering, beatniks," according to Marianne Faithfull, "careening around our hotel room, throwing up, spilling cheap Rosee all over the place and ranting on about the Rosenbergs, Rimbaud, Tanger and Buggery."

     Their Chelsea flat became a popular center for the emerging London scene. Paul McCartney and his then-girlfriend Jane Asher were among the regulars. Dunbar began contributing a fortnightly column on art to the Scotsman, but his real ambitions were more practical. According to Marianne Faithfull, the whole cultural revolution was first plotted out in a Chelsea espresso bar as early as 1963. Other accounts suggest it was hatched rather later in 1965. When Dunbar was introduced to Barry Miles, known simply as Miles, by an American writer, Paolo Leoni, the three men huddled together. Miss Faithfull writes, "to plot the building of the New Jerusalem." Still working towards her A-levels at the time, she was deeply impressed by the sight of these "three mad intellectuals, all dressed in existential black, charting the future of the globe."

     The principal tools of this revolution were to be the Indica, a combined Art Gallery and bookshop. Its name, Dunbar explains, "comes from the classification 'Cannabis indica', although more respectable citizens would be told it was an act of homage to the then fashionable status of all things Indian." Back for the project, to the tune of about £1600, came from Peter, Asher, brother of Jane, and half of the singing duo Peter and Gordon. Together with Asher, Dunbar, and Barry Miles, who rented a building in Mason's yard off Duke Street for about £20 a week. Paul McCartney helped put up the shelves, designed and lettered the wrapping paper, and Indica opened in January 1966 with the bookshop (Miles domain) upstairs and the gallery (Dunbar's) downstairs. 

    The book shop was moved to Southampton Row a couple of months later, leaving the Mason's Yard premises to Dunbar and art. Neither Dunbar nor Miles was a model capitalist. "I never liked the business side of it too much," Dunbar says. "You know, actually dealing with the rent and the electricity bills." Yet the gallery initially thrived, partially because of the conspicuous patronage of the Beatles. Both Lennon and McCartney were bought from the gallery. And McCartney would often put a handout in their direction, partly because it was such a lively place, what with Ginsburg living in a flat next door, William Burroughs, Baleful president just around the corner, and Rowan Polanski, one of India's best customers, often dropped by late at night to make a new purchase. 

    "All of our exhibitions were very successful in terms of publicity," said Dunbar. "Because there wasn't anything else going on in London, so the papers couldn't leave it alone. Plus, there were pop stars and stuff around, and our openings were kind of wild."

     Soon, Indica was a noted center for every kind of fashionably non-painterly art, with a particular leaning toward the kinesthetic. At the same time, Dunbar's friendship within the rock world was flourishing. With McCartney, who, in those days, be it remembered by those who knew him as the 'cuddly one' that the girls liked was the avant-garde Beatle, the one who was into Luciano Berio and Stockhausen.

     Dunbar made a series of short, eight mm and six mm films, shooting random footage around London, and then retreated to McCartney's flat, where they would sit up all night editing them to the Beatles' own electronic compositions, "crazy stuff with guitar and cello," McCartney described it. As results were shown to Michelangelo Antonioni in London at the time to film Blow Up, but the master's response is not on record.

     All this amounted to a notable coup for a man fresh out of college. He had gone to Cambridge to read natural science, biological stuff, rather than a tedious course, and had only changed the history of art for his final year. Asked what knowledge of art he acquired by the time he graduated, he replied, "None," and laughs disarmingly. What Dunbar lacked in academic depth, however, he made up for with a good eye, a gift of constantly bumping into the right people, and a lifelong familiarity with creative types. 

    Dunbar's '60s were not all fun, however. Enjoyable notoriety and jollities at Indica were shadowed by disaster in his love life. After flirtations and fumblings in and around the rock world, Marianne Faithfull ran off with Mick Jagger and took their son with her.  Though they had long since been back on cordial terms, her flight began a period of estrangement, which reached its peak in 1972 when he took out a high court action against her and eventually regained custody of Nicholas.

     In the meantime, Dunbar, the great introducer, had accomplished his most far-reaching introduction. He says that he's now hazy on the precise details, but the general agreed-upon version runs something like this. On December 10, 1966 [sic], the Indica Gallery was to present a show entitled Unfinished Paintings and Objects.  Suspecting that his pal, John Lennon, would find it interesting, he invited the musician along for a private view the evening before. Lennon was perplexed by the objects on  show: an apple with a £200 price tag mounted on a pedestal, a board with nails hammered partway in, and a note saying, " Hammer a nail in" and so on.

     Dunbar led Lennon downstairs to a room in which assistants were darning a huge canvas bag, went over to the small Japanese woman dressed in black, and whispered, "Go and say hello to the millionaire." Yoko Ono walked up to John Lennon and presented him with a card inscribed with a single word, "breathe". John panted. The rest you know. 

     It was in the nature of the times that enterprises such as Indica seldom lasted long, suffering from its owner's understandable preoccupation with other matters. "Once you've done something like that, you know what an incredible hassle and pain in the arse it is". The gallery closed in 1967, and the bookshop went into liquidation at the end of 1966 owing £500.

     Dunbar retreated to the countryside of Northumberland for a while, eventually returning to the art world for a few years, with a stint with the British Council in the early 70s. Since then, he has served another son named William, in honor of the great Scottish poet William Dunbar, and set up as an artist in his own right.

     Some of his drawings have been published in the United States in journals edited by his brother-in-law, the poet Ed Dorn, and others. Sales of his sculptures and other objects seem to cover household expenses, maintaining him in the way of life he describes as "genteel poverty." Impeccable or not, he certainly appears to enjoy a thriving social life. Our first meeting had to be postponed because he'd been out on the tiles until seven that morning, and he wears the air of a man essentially contented with his lot.

 Not long ago, his son, Nicholas, now 30, also became a father. "Marianne and me-- grandparents," he laughs. "We never thought that would happen."

Arms folded


 

Ringo's friends

Photograph by Ringo Starr 

 

John and Yoko colorful days





 

May 16, 1971 

Thursday, May 14, 2026

McCartney Still a Superstar (Washington D.C. 1976)


 
Backstage in Maryland 


McCartney Still a Superstar

By Jeannette Smyth

The Washington Post

May 18, 1976

    Paul McCartney was the first Beatle to take LSD 11 years ago and turn on a generation. Saturday night, 10 years after the Beatles' last tour of America, six years after the Beatles broke up, Paul McCartney introduced the girl he married to more than 22,000 roaring fans at the Capitol Center in suburban Maryland. 

    "I'd like to introduce you to my missus," he said. "My better half, Linda!"

     Oh, Paul, you broke a million hearts now approaching the shady side of 30 when you married her. The times have settled down now, and so have you. There's nothing like the chagrin an aging hippie feels to know that the Woodstock generation is fighting flab instead of a revolution. Nothing like the wrinkles one feels deepening in one's brow as one looks around the Capitol Center full of Beatle Maniacs, and baby, you still have their number after all these years. 

    They first heard you when they were six years old, but Paul, they'll never boogie like we did. They didn't have to flaunt their dope the other night because nobody would arrest them anyway. They didn't even dance. The only sign that there ever was a revolution was that long-haired girl in a pant suit integrating the men's room. "The lines in the women's bathrooms were too long. They're all in there, combing their hair," growls one young woman.

     Rock and roll is dead, along with the innocents who died in Vietnam, Height- Ashbury, and Mississippi. The only people who are outlaws enough to dance well anymore, the only people under 30 you can trust are the desperados at gay discos. 

    McCartney, who grossed $200,000 Saturday night for himself, his wife, and his new band Wings, doesn't think rock and roll is dead. "No way," he said in a dressing room interview after the concert, in which he was on stage for an extraordinary two hours. "It's good." He said, " It's been through a bit of a dip, and now it's better. I think people just like music: rock and roll, reggae, soul, funk, and the R&B. It looked a bit rough at times," he conceded.

     McCartney is one of the few '60s superstars who is still alive, still making money, still a superstar. "There are still definitely other stars," said Ben Fong-Torres, veteran editor of Rolling Stone Magazine, in a recent interview. "But not the phenomenon. There are no heroic statures of The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, and Janis Joplin. They signaled new things. They went to the edge or over it, and signaled a new lifestyle."

     For McCartney, at least, who has settled down to domesticity. Sales are good. Nearly 25% of Britain's top 100 single records are old Beatles tunes. Capitol Records plans to recycle 26 old Beatles hits and an album to be released in tune with what a spokesman calls "the largest campaign in the history of the music business." Wing's latest album sold a million copies. 

    "They don't scream like they used to," McCartney said when asked how this generation of American audiences, differed from those 10 years ago. "But when I looked out at the audience tonight, they were going potty out there, weren't they? This was a crazy audience, one of the craziest we've had on this tour."

     How crazy could they be, baby? Only two were treated for fainting at the first aid station. Only 11 arrests were made, most for possession of alcohol, one for interfering with an officer. No drug possession arrests. Even though the Prince George's County Police doubled their usual rock concert patrol from 8 to 15 officers, "it was relatively quiet for a concert that size," said a police spokeswoman.

     Yes, some of them waited all night to get First Come First Served festival seating. Yes, they stampeded the barricades down in front of the stage where McCartney could see them. They elbowed each other to catch a glimpse of him. "He's the most important person I'll probably ever see," as one Woodstock generation oldie put it.

     Up in the stands, they loved him, giving him standing ovations and screaming, but they didn't dance on their seats or in the aisles. If that's the pottiest crowd he's had, then this is the oldest generation of young people we've ever seen. 

    "People don't want to lose their seats," said a 17-year-old Alexandria girl with braces and jeans who asked that her name not be used. "Most of them are drunk or stoned, and besides, people don't dance at rock concerts, not really." Yellow Submarine was the first Beatles tune she remembers hearing 10 years ago when she was in the second grade.