Monday, April 6, 2026

Another Lennon (1981)

 



Another Lennon (1981)

By John Howard

Sunday Mirror

April 5, 1981


    John Lennon is alive and well and living in North Wales, or at least as far as his son is concerned. It is now four months since ex-Beatle John Lennon was shot dead outside his New York apartment. But his son, Julian, 18, told me, "I believe that, apart from a life hereafter, people live on for as long as there are happy memories of them. I know that Dad's presence will be around for a long time. He was always joking, always sounded happy, which made me think more of him as a friend than a dad."

     I spoke to Julian after a photo session with his knock-around rock group, jokingly named the Lennon Drops, at his home in Ruthin, North Wales. Julian lives there with his mother, Cynthia, John Lennon's former wife.

     "My earliest memory of my father was when I was about three, and he sang 'Happy Birthday' to me," said Julian. "We were living in Weybridge, Surrey, and dad threw a birthday party for me and brought in a long cake shaped like a train and festooned with candles. He and mum both sang to me, and it was a great event."

     Just before John died, he spoke fondly of his son, saying that he was at the stage of discovering girls. I can second that. Julian's girlfriend, Sally Hudson, has a maturity beyond her 18 years. And Tanya Waters, the percussionist and straight lady of the zany Lennon Drops, is quite an eyeful, too.

     Another member, David Jones, is nicknamed "the Professor" because of his comic inventiveness. Derry Evans, vocalist and guitarist, was a child actor in the BBC TV police series "Z Cars", which was set in Liverpool, the cradle of the Beatles. Mike Johnson, occasional guitarist, doubles as road manager and bodyguard. 

    Julian can also play the guitar. "Dad started teaching me when I was a tiny tot," he said. "My voice is okay," he said, humbly.  "Last year, I made a tape of one of Dad's songs from his rock and roll album. I didn't think it sounded like me. Then I played it to mum and a few friends, and they said, 'You're right. It doesn't sound like you. It sounds like your father.' It excited me to think I could sound a bit like him."

 However, in his anxiety not to be seen as a carbon copy of his father, Julian took to the drums. John Lennon's second wife, Yoko Ono, arranged professional tuition for Julian in New York when he visited her after his father's death in December. But he will learn most from a famous drummer who has promised to pass on some tricks of his trade, ex-Beatle Ringo Starr. Ringo is closer to Julian than any of his other Beatle uncles. Starr's former wife, Maureen Starkey, is still, after all these years, Julian's mother's best friend. 

    Julian had planned a summer move to New York, where Yoko Ono is ready to help him break into the rock world in a big way. Then, as his mother Cynthia put it, "He decided to have a rest in the calm after the storm that followed his father's murder. He is taking things easy and not rushing ahead. He has to settle down. He wants to work out more precisely what he should do with his life, and I have to see how I can help him with that."

Paul on the mic



 

George Harrison Interview (1967)


 George Harrison Interview

By Alan Walsh

Melody Maker

September 2 & September 9, 1967


    "You may think this interview is of no importance to me," said George Harrison across the table at NEMs Enterprises' Mayfair offices. You'd be wrong. It's very important. We have realized that it's up to everyone-- including the Beatles-- to spread love and understanding, to communicate this in any way we can."  George, radiant in a flowered shirt and trousers, long, flowing hair and bushy mustache lit up a dismal, wet London day by his clothes, his friendliness and the warmth of his replies. George spoke quietly but frankly about many subjects, from God to LSD, and the 90-minute conversation examined the whole existence of the most introspective Beatle.

Q: You've just returned from Haight Ashbury. What were your impressions of life there? 

George: Well, we were only in Haight Ashbury for about 30 minutes, but I did see quite a bit. We parked our limousine a block away, just to appear the same, and walked along the street for about 100 yards, half like a tourist, half like a hippie. We were trying to have a look in a few shops.

 Q: Who was with you? 

George: Pattie, her sister Jenny, a friend of Jenny's, Derek Taylor, Neil Aspinall-- our road manager, and Magic Alex, who's a friend. We walked along, and it was nice. At first, they were just saying 'Hello', and 'Can I shake your hand?' Things like that. Then more and more people arrived, and it got bigger and bigger. We walked into the park, and it just became a bit of a joke. All these people were just following us along.

 Q: One of them tried to give you. STP, I believe?

 George: They're trying to give me everything. This is a thing that I want to try and get over to people. Although we've been identified a lot with hippies, especially since all this thing about pot and LSD came out, we don't want to tell anyone else to have it, because it's something that's up to the person himself. Although it was like a key that opened the door and showed a lot of things on the other side, it's still up to people themselves what they want to do with it. 

    LSD isn't a real answer. It doesn't give you anything. It enables you to see a lot of possibilities that you may never have noticed before. But it isn't the answer. You don't just take LSD, and that's it, forever you're okay. 

    A hippie is supposed to be someone who becomes aware. You're hip if you know what's going on, but if you're really hip, you don't get involved with LSD and things like that. You see the potential that it has and the good that could come from it, but you also see that you don't really need it.

     I needed it the first time I ever had it; actually, I didn't know I'd had it. I never even heard of it. Then this is something that just hasn't been told. Everybody now knows that we've had it, but the circumstances were that somebody just shoved it in our coffee before we'd ever heard of the stuff. So we happen to have it quite unaware of the fact. 

    I don't mind telling people I've had it. I'm not embarrassed. It makes no difference, because I know that I didn't actually go out and try to get some.

 Q:  You never deliberately set out to take LSD?

 George: No, not really for me. It was a good thing, but it showed me that LSD isn't really the answer to everything. It can help you go from A to B, but when you get to B, you see C, and you see that to really get high, you have to do it straight. There are special ways of getting high without drugs -with yoga, meditation, and all those things.

    So this was the disappointing thing about LSD. In this physical world we live in, there's always duality, good and bad, black and white, yes and no. Whatever there is, there's always the opposite. There's always something equal and opposite to everything. And this is why you can't say LSD is good or it's bad, because it's good and it's bad, it's both of them, and it's neither of them, altogether, people don't consider that.

 Haight Ashbury was a bit of a shock, because although there were so many great people, really nice people, who only wanted to be friends and didn't want to impose anything or be anything, there was still the black bit, the opposite. There was the bit where people were so out of their minds trying to shove STP on me and acid. Every step I took, there was somebody trying to give me something, but I didn't want to know about that. I want to get high. And you can't get high on LSD. You can take it and take it as many times as you like, but you get to a point that you can't get any further unless you stop taking it.

     Haight, Ashbury reminded me a bit of the Bowery. There were these people just sitting around the pavement begging, saying, 'Give us some money for a blanket.' These are hypocrites. They're making fun of tourists and all that. And at the same time, they're holding their hands out, begging off them. That's what I don't like.

     I don't mind anybody dropping out of anything, but it's the imposition on somebody else. I don't like the moment you start dropping out and then begging off somebody else to help you, then it's no good. I've just realized through a lot of things that it doesn't matter what you are, as long as you work. It doesn't matter if you chop wood, as long as you chop and keep chopping, then you get what's coming to you. 

    You don't have to drop out. In fact, if you drop out, you put yourself further away from the goal of life than if you were to keep working. 

Q:  Have you any defined idea of what your goal in life is?

 George:  We've all got the same goal, whether we realize it or not, we're all striving for something which is called God, for a reunion complete. Everybody has realized at some time or another that no matter how happy they are, there's still always the unhappiness that comes with it. Everyone is a potential Jesus Christ. Really, we are all trying to get to where Jesus Christ got, and we're going to be on this world until we get there. We're all different people, and we are all doing different things in life. But that doesn't matter, because the whole point of life is to harmonize with everything, every aspect in creation. That means down to not killing the flies, eating the meat, killing people or chopping the trees down. 

Q: Can we ever get it down to this level? 

George: You can only do it if you believe in it. Everybody's a potential divine. It's just a matter of self-realization before it will all happen. The hippies are a good idea. Love, flowers, and that is great. But when you see the other half of it, it's like anything. I love all these people too, those who are honest and trying to find a bit of truth and straighten out the untruths. I'm with them 100%, but when I see the bad side of it, I'm not so happy. 

Q:  to get anywhere near what you are talking about. Do you believe you have to be a hippie or a flower person? 

George: Anybody can do it. I doubt if anyone who is a hippie or flower person feels that he is; it's only you, the press, who call us that they've always got to have some tag, if you like. I'm a hippie or a flower person. I know I'm not. I'm George Harrison, a person just like everybody else, but different to everybody else at the same time. You get to a point where you realize that it doesn't matter what people think you are. It's what you think you are yourself that matters, or what you know you are; anyone can make it. You don't have to put a flowery shirt on. 

Q: Could a bank clerk make it?

 George:  Anyone can, but they've got to have the desire. The Beatles got all the material wealth that we needed, and that was enough to show us that this thing wasn't material. We are all in the physical world. Yet we are striving for isn't physical. We all get so hung up with material, things like cars and televisions and houses, yet what they can give you is only there for a little bit, and then it's gone. 

Q:  So, did you ever reach the point where you considered getting rid of the material wealth?

 George: Yes, but now that I've got the material thing in perspective, it's okay. The whole reason I've got material things is because they were given to me as a gift. So it's not really bad that I've got it because I didn't ask for it. It was just mine. All I did was be me. All we ever had to do was just be ourselves. And it all happened. It was there, given to us all this, but then it was given to us to enable us to see that that wasn't it. There was more to it.

Q: Where do these beliefs fit in with the musical side of the Beatles? 

George: I'm a musician. I don't know why. This is a thing that I've looked back on since my birth. Many people think life is predestined. I think it is vaguely, but it's still up to you which way your life's going to go. All I've ever done is keep being me, and it's all just worked out. It just did it all ----magic. I just did it. We never planned anything. It's so obvious, because I'm a musician now, that's what I was destined to be. It's my gig. 

Q: George, can you tell me where the Beatles are musically today? What are you trying to do? 

George:  Nothing. We're not trying to do anything. This is the big joke. It's all Cosmic Joke 43. Everyone gets our records and says, 'wonder how they thought of that,' or 'wonder what they're planning next,' or whatever they say. But we don't plan anything. We don't do anything. All we do is just keep on being ourselves. It just comes out. It's the Beatles. All any of us are trying to do now is get as much peace and love as possible. Love will never be played out, because you can't play out the truth.

     Whatever I say can be taken a million different ways, depending on how screwed up the reader is, but the Beatles is just a hobby, really. It's just doing it on its own. We don't even have to think about it. The songs write themselves. It's just all works out. Everything that we're taking into our minds and trying to learn or find out, and I feel personally, it's such a lot. There's so much to get in, and yet the output coming out the back end is still so much smaller than what you're putting in; everything is relative to everything else. We know that now. So we got to a point where when people say there's nothing else you can do, we know that's only from where they are. They look up and think we can't do anymore. But when you're up there, you see you haven't started.

     Take Ravi Shankar, who's so brilliant. With pop music; the more you listen to it, the more you get to know it, the more you see through it, and the less satisfaction it gives you. Where in Indian music,  and Ravi Shankar as a person, it's exactly the opposite, because the more you're able to understand the music, the more you see there is to appreciate, the more you get back out of it. You can have just one record of Indian music and play it for the rest of your life. You'd probably never see all the subtleties in it. It's the same with Ravi Shankar. He feels as though he hasn't started, and yet he's doing so much, teaching so many people, writing film music, everything.

 Q:  Have you any idea what the Beatles will do next time you go into the recording studio?

 George: No idea. We won't know until we do it. We're naturally influenced by everything that's going on around us. If you weren't influenced, you wouldn't be able to do anything. That's all anything is-- an influence from one person to another. We'll write songs and go into the studio and record them, and we'll try and make them good. We'll make a better LP than Sgt. Pepper. But I don't know what it's going to be.

 Q: If you had a child, do you know what you would try to do as a father?

 George:  I haven't, and I can't really know what I'd do, but I do know I wouldn't let it go to school. I'm not letting fascist teachers put things into the child's head. I'd get an Indian guru to teach him, and me too. 

Q:   I believe the Beatles are thinking about making a film in which you create the visuals as well as the sound and music. 

George: Yes, we've got to the point now where we found out that if you rely on other people, things never work out. This may sound conceited, but it's not. It's just what happens. The things that we've decided ourselves and that we've gone ahead and done ourselves have always worked out right, or at least satisfactorily, whereas the moment you get involved with other people, it goes wrong. It's like a record company. You hand them the whole LP and the sleeve and everything there on a plate, all they've got to do is print it. Then all the crap starts. 'You can't have that', and 'You don't do this'. And we get so involved with trivial little things that it's all started deteriorating around us. 

    It's the same with the film. The more involved we get with film people, the less of a Beatles film tt's going to be. Take that Our World television show, we were trying to make it into a recording session and have a good time, and the BBC were trying to make it into a television show. It's a constant struggle to get ourselves across through all these other people, all hassling. 

    In the end, it'll be best if we write the music, write the visual and the script for the film, edit it, do everything ourselves, but then it's such a hell of a job that you have to get involved, and that means you can't do other things. But we'll have to get other people to do things, because we can't give that much time to just a film, because it's only a film, and there are more important things in life.

 Q: Do you think the film will come off in the near future? 

George: Yes, I think it'll probably all happen next year, sometime. 

In the Inner Circle


 

Ringo sees Paul


 Ringo, Barb and Oliva attend Paul's concert at the Fonda Theater in Los Angeles.  (Yes -- I see Steve Tyler there as well and probably more famous people -- but really -- this is a Beatles site -- Ringo, Barb & Oliva are the true stars of this photo) 

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Tea Time with the Fabs


 

Safari Park



April 5, 1966 -- Ringo and John attend the opening of a Safari Park.  
 

Julian Lennon -- The Lennon Legacy (1984)


 Julian Lennon - The Lennon Legacy 

By Colin Irwin

Melody Maker

October 13, 1984


    Four years after a madman took out his father, Julian Lennon launches his own career in music. In his first major interview, he tells Colin Irwin all about the agony and ecstasy. 

    The tea is cold. It's that appalling, stewy, curdled kind of coldness, with layers of skin hatching on top, and rigor mortis setting in underneath. Tea that died of frostbite. Julian Lennon stares balefully at it for a second or two. Takes a purposeful, but apparently satisfying gulp, and eyes his interrogator --the merest hint of a sigh.

     "The chimney fell down into my bedroom that night. There wasn't a wind or anything. It just fell straight in. It was all very strange, one of those nights, y' know, when you have that feeling that something's happened?

     "I had a certain feeling that night. I came down at like, eight in the morning and saw all the press outside the window and thought, 'What the hell's going on here?'  I came downstairs, and the blinds were closed. I sat down, and my stepdad told me, I just said, 'Are you sure he's dead?' He said, 'Yeah.' I said, 'Yes, but are you sure?'"

     The same day, Julian was on a plane to New York to the Dakota Building, to the scene of his father's murder, it was, he says, now, pure instinct. He wasn't sure why, but he knew his place was with his young stepbrother [sic]and his father's widow, Yoko.  

    "She was a wreck. I went over there because, well, I felt sorry more for Sean than for Yoko, because he was so young. It's hard to tell a kid, y' know? And she didn't know how to tell him. She really didn't know. She asked me for advice. I said, 'Listen, tell him straight. It's the only thing you can do.' So we were sitting there, and she couldn't tell him. She was cracking up all the time. So I was there, edging her on, helping her out a little bit. And Sean wasn't quite sure what was going on. She couldn't explain it, so I was helping her along. 

    "The thing that bugged me --- well, it wasn't a big thing, but the next day in the New York Times, or whatever it was, she had a whole page on how 'I told Sean', you know, which is like, pathetic. You don't need to do things like that."

     Journalism being what it is, every time Julian Lennon sits down with a reporter and a cup of cold tea, he'll be asked the same questions. Which is why he won't be doing many interviews, which is why his first stab at making records will be greeted with abnormal curiosity and cynicism. Which is why, for all his outward bravado, he's as nervous as a kitten. 

    Today, Julian is nursing a mild hangover, still overcoming the remnants of jet lag, and is clearly apprehensive about his first encounter with a music paper. He talks in a strangely lethargic, yet hypnotic voice -- adenoidal and a hint of Liverpool -- and as he thaws, the anecdotes become more engaging and the wit more scathing.  He tries hard not to be bitchy about Yoko, but fails miserably, laconically referring to her as "Hokey Cokey", and maintains a wry, down-to-earth outlook on life that, given the reflected glare with which he's grown up, is astonishing. 

    He seems admirably equipped for the torrid upheaval that's about to occur in his life. At the age of 21, Julian Lennon is finally ready for His coming out ball. His debut single, "Too Late for Goodbyes", is just out and already helping keep the good people of Gallup going, and will be followed by an album, Valotte. Then there's the matter of getting a band together, then the World Tour, then writing some new material, then the second album that takes him well into 1986.

     He spent 10 years of his childhood without seeing or even hearing from his father, yet both on and off record, the resemblance is spectacular. Musically, he pitches in at the latter end of John's solo career, a long, long way from the man's artistic peak. It must be said, though Julian insists that Double Fantasy was one of his dad's greatest work (the stuff he did on it anyway).

    The voice in particular has that pungent edge always identified with Lennon senior, and the songs, all except one written by him, carry familiar echoes in the structure and phrasing. The more up-tempo material, including the single and the liveliest track, "I Don't Know Which Way to Turn", is undeniably Beatle-ish, yet he seems to favor the moodier ballad style of "Lonely", which could in fact be the long-lost twin brother of "How Do You Sleep" -- John's early '70s taunting at Paul McCartney.

 Produced by Phil Ramone, it is a curiously unfashionable album for a 21-year-old to make, and soft focus arrangements clearly aren't the order of the day in Britain. At least the music press certainly will crucify him. Sounds have already waded in ---hobnail boots flying, whacking out the predictable accusation that if it wasn't for blah blah, he'd be in the dole queue with all the other urchins.

    In any case, he vigorously insists it's not true. The tapes were originally touted around his record label, Charisma, anonymously, and he never particularly wanted to make a record in the first place. He just wrote songs at home for his own amusement and never dreamt they would end up on a record. "Oh, I don't really care what people say about it. I love the record. It does seem to be unfashionable alongside what else is happening in Britain right now. But I think the British have a different attitude to music than everyone else anyway. They're more cynical."

     He was five when his parents split up. Paul McCartney drove to see him and his mother, Cynthia, to lend moral support just after it had happened. On the way, McCartney wrote a song for him designed to give him strength and courage. It started off as "Hey Julian," transmuted to "Hey Jules", and wound up as "Hey Jude". Julian never did get strength or courage from the song. He only found out a couple of years ago "Hey Jude" was about him, but nevertheless, he admits he gets a little thrill if he hears it now.

     In any case, those days are pretty much a blur to him. They tell him he was taken on the road with The Beatles a few times, but he doesn't recall. "All I can remember is just a little time when they were doing Magical Mystery Tour. You know the coach in it? I remember being on that coach. That's about it."

     Subsequent years were spent in a variety of homes in Liverpool, London, and Wales, with his mother and, a wicked exaggeration, "a succession of stepdads." He says he wasn't properly aware of his rather special pedigree until he was seven. "I didn't really get through; still doesn't, in a way. It's a weird feeling, sort of unexplainable. I suppose it really happened when I was 13 or 14, growing up, and people find out it's like, you go to a new school, and the headmaster would say, ' Here we have. ' And everybody go,' Boom!' And from that day, everybody knows. They point their finger and go,  'Ooh.' It's hard trying to make friends with someone who already knows you from being the son of someone else; you don't know what their interest is, friendship, or just up for grabs. 

    Meeting Julian is quite a revelation. His years at public school, along with constant media interest and his generous fondness for booze, suggest all sorts of nasty preconceptions. My own had been the soundtrack of a spoiled little brat trading on his father's name, his ego matched only by his wealth. It's an image fostered by a series of gossip column items following his father's death, which documented his progress around London nightclubs --stories about his supposed plans to form a band named the Lennon Drops, or even worse, Lennon Kittens, didn't help to deflect the image of a privileged layabout. 

    The reality, naturally, is somewhat different. "Listen, everybody goes out to clubs and everybody goes out to drink, and just because something happened that's related to me, I was someone to pick on. So even if I did go to a club four nights a week or whatever. So did a lot of other people, you know, it was like a 'let's pick on him' situation, because they had nothing better to do. I'd read all this 'Playboy Lennon out boozing again' stuff. I just thought, 'Fuck you. Everybody goes out drinking.' I was really pissed off about all that."

 The inference was that you were this poor, little rich kid, more money than sense. 

    "Oh, listen, it was a question of scraping the money together. I could get into places through my name or whatever, which is nice, y' know, take what you can within reason. It's great getting into places without paying. Which happens, but just because I was out. Well, it only takes a couple of beers to get pissed. You get into a nightclub free, and you pay five or 10 quid and you're ratted. It's not like spending hundreds every night, is it?"

 You're saying you don't have much money?

     "No, I didn't. Still haven't.  Never have had. I've had as much as anyone else."  An odd eyebrow raised at this.  "Really, even less than most people. At times when I was in Wales, if I wanted to go out for a drink, I'd go up to me mum and say, 'Look, it's Mike's birthday today. Can you lend us a fiver so we can go and have a drink?'  Used to do this about twice a week."

    Everyone imagines there's this bottomless fortune you dip into now and then.

    "Yeah? God knows where it is. Old 'Hokey Cokey'  over there has got something to do with it. I know that for sure. But I don't really care about that side of it. It's great if you've got money. And eventually something will come through to me, I imagine."

    But is it in a trust or something?

     "Oh, I don't know what she's doing. She's selling or making her own Foundations or ... I've no idea. Me?  I would have just liked to have had a guitar of his, or some clothes, y'know? Things that mean more to me than money. I think I got a jumper out of it. I had a guitar of my dad's, but she wanted it back, so she got a guy to come over and pick it up and take it back. It was a beautiful black Yamaha acoustic guitar with a gold inlaid dragon. A guy gave it to me and said, 'This is from Yoko.' And I said, 'Great. Thanks very much.'  But this guy had apparently been working for Yoko and stole it. I had no idea of this whatsoever, but she got it taken back anyway, and that's the last I've seen of it. 

    "When I was there, I saw a hat, and I picked it up and looked at it, and it's 'Put it back. Leave it alone. Don't touch anything.' Now it's all locked away in cupboards. God knows what's going to happen to it."

 So you're still scraping a living?

     "Well, my manager has been loaning me a couple of tenors every week, so I'm lucky in that respect. And there's a trust that dad set up years ago for his sons, which will be split between me and Sean. So I'll get half of that. It's about £200,000 at the moment, and I'm not supposed to get it until I'm 26 and my mom's a trustee.

     "But we've been scraping around in flats ever since the word go, and it's like hell having to move every six months. So finally, I had a word and said, 'Mum, I need to settle down.' So hopefully I can use that money, some of it anyway. We're trying to get this flat in Kensington. So at least then I'll have my own home. Not that I'm ever home, because the bloody company keeps sending me all over the world. It sounds stupid, but I can't wait to sit back and watch BBC One or Coronation Street with a girl, a cup of tea, and a dog by my side. I'm a homely sort of person."

     There was always a piano around the house. Julian dabbled a bit, flirted with the idea of becoming a drummer and learned the rudiments of the guitar. Far from being inevitable, the thought of turning to music as a career was a long way from his mind. Initially, he wanted to be an actor and then a recording engineer. "But you need O levels for that one. And I was never around a school to have O levels. I was always out with the lads downtown, boozing. 

    "Y' know, family connections made schooling a little unusual. Anyway, I was in a public school, and there was a comprehensive across the road, and I used to get flak from them. When I tried walking into town late at night to try and get some fish and chips, I get chased. And there'd be a couple of little fights here and there. It's a real pain in the arse sometimes. 

    "One time we were in one of the pubs in the town and one of the local yabos, he was a mechanic and six foot tall, and Welsh yakki da and all that. And he said, 'Do you know how Julian Lennon, he sticks £10 notes around his wall with pins?' So that got around town because, you know, rich little bastard. It's hard sometimes just having a drink, relaxing, because you have to keep looking over your shoulder. I was at a party once, and this guy came up to me, and he was massive, as big as big could be. And he said, 'Julian Lennon, you insulted my little brother at school.' And he went to take a swipe at me. This poor woman comes in front of me to try and stop him, and he hit her. It got very heavy at times."

     When he was 14, his mother rang John Lennon in New York and suggested he might like to make the acquaintance of his son. John said, "Come on over." So they did.  Their revived relationship was awkward at first, but they got on well enough, and the visits had started to become regular, and the relationship close at the time of his death. 

    "I still think about it all the time. There was one interview I heard the other day. He was commenting on death, and the thing he said was, 'It's like getting out of one car and into another', which I thought was wonderful. He wasn't scared of it. I think he's either resting away somewhere, or he's having a bloody good time with the lads up there, with ole Jimi Hendrix and lot of others jamming away or down the pub. I bet he's having a wonderful time."

    A couple of years ago, Julian grew his hair long and became a heavy metal freak chasing round after Rush and AC/DC. Now he says he's been so busy he's lost touch a bit, but still listens in awe to Sgt. Pepper and his father's Plastic Ono Band work.

     He also affectionately relates a story about going into a toilet and finding Eddie Van Halen in there swigging a bottle of scotch. The pair of them settled down with the Scotch still in the loo and got on famously.

     He admits he's nervous about putting his own talents against some of the artists he hears on the radio and then full of admiration for Trevor Horn's production work with Frankie, but mourns the current obsession with dance rhythms.

    "I still listen to my dad's stuff from time to time. I always felt proud of everything he did. I always had something against him, but I never knew what it was apart from him, leaving home and all that. It was because I went to visit him, but he never came to visit me. That's the only thing that got me."

     He has no illusions about the business he's entering. He already come into the clutches of some sharks within no time at all, found he owed £6000 after signing some ludicrous contract. He had no money to pay it, but his present manager, Dean, bailed him out, and he's confident he won't get fooled again. 

    So far, he's got just two members for his band, both guitar players, one of them Justin Clayton, who he was at school with, wrote one of the best tracks on the album, "Jesse." While the other is Carlton Morales, the son of a preacher from North Carolina. 

    "The guitarists hate each other, but they complement one another when they play, so I'll just have to keep them apart until it's time to go on stage."  Fights in the band before they're even started. Can't be bad. 

    Julian is whisked away into the sunset. His face is plastered on posters all over London. His single is getting as much airplay as the Culture Club's "War Song", and he's just successfully negotiated his first interview. His tea is still cold.

Its the socks!


 You know I love to discuss Paul McCartney's socks.  We have seen him in a wide variety of colors of the years, but here is the first time we have seen him wearing Yellow Submarine socks!  

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Working With Paul (1971)




Photo by Linda McCartney 

 Working With Paul

By Vicki Wickham

Hit Parader

November 1971


    "All I remember is getting a phone call from Linda McCartney, addressing herself as 'Mrs. McCartney'. And I said, 'Who?' She said, 'My husband would like to meet you.' And I said,' Did I ever work for your husband before?' And she said, 'This is Linda McCartney, and my husband is Paul McCartney', like I was supposed to know Paul McCartney was calling my house, that kind of thing. She didn't make it clear what they wanted me for. I thought it was a meeting or a recording session, but it turned out to be an audition. "

     "Paul pays attention to every detail. When he records it all comes out Paul McCartney," says one session musician.  That was the start of David Spinozza's association with Paul McCartney in New York when they recorded Paul and Linda's album, Ram. 

    David, age 21, is a studio musician. He's been a session musician since he was 17. In an average week without even trying, he can make $1,500 and a lot more if he does more sessions. The union rate for a musician in New York is $90 per three-hour session. 

    He's rated as the top session guy. But not only that, he's rated as being the most original, exciting, imaginative, and broadest guitarist in the business, alongside Hendrix, BB King, Clapton, and every heavy you can think of. He can play anything, but whatever it is, it's David Spinozza. He started out in the Black scene, learning from an upright bass player who taught guitar in music stores. He had a guitar when he was six, playing through school, and is now studying the classical guitar. He is a guitarist on Freda Payne's "Band of Gold."  In fact, he's on just about everyone's record.

     When he and Linda got it together on the phone, he took down an address. "So I went to this place on 45th Street, some dirty loft, and they must have been there for three days auditioning people. I'd heard that some of the studio guys had given them a hard time, which I really didn't want to do, because I wanted to work with him.

     "So when I got there, there were three guitar players, but you had to be called, like you couldn't walk in off the street with your guitar. He introduced himself to me with a three-day-old beard, and we're alone in this gigantic room, and there's nothing but amplifiers, piano, drums, and Linda. He wanted me to play something. He played a blues, a solo, and some folk, and said he wanted me to do that. I played it. And then he just said,  'Sorry, I couldn't spend more time, but I have a lot of people to see, blah blah.' So I said, 'Fine.'

    " As soon as I got home, the phone rang, and Linda wanted me to do the sessions the following week. The dates started out going really smoothly, but then what was happening was that although originally they had told me they wanted me for four whole weeks, days were getting called out, and they weren't booking definite dates. So I had to keep asking, not to be a drag, but to keep my book straight and to know what other work I could take.

     "I kept asking, but I wasn't getting a straight answer. Finally, after I hadn't heard from them, Linda rang me up on, I guess, a Sunday night, and wanted me to do all the following week just like that. I couldn't because I'd asked if we'd be working, and they had said probably not. So I had taken other dates. I told them that I couldn't keep every week open, because when McCartney goes back to England, there are other people that call me all year and they're going to keep me eating, not him, although I'd love to do his sessions. So she called me the Sunday evening, and I said I could make two of the days, but not all five. And she got very indignant. I guess that's the vibrations I got. I got vibrations like 'it's a Paul McCartney session. You're supposed to keep your life open indefinitely.'

     "Now, evidently, they're not hip to the New York scene. Maybe in England, it's a looser kind of studio scene. In NY, you take dates, you do them, and you don't cancel out on other people, and you don't keep weeks open, not knowing. It's a business as well as an art. 

    "So finally, I just did those two days, and the next week, I still couldn't get a straight answer, and it seemed I was dealing with Linda, not with Paul. She just really speaks for him and handles the business and wouldn't let me talk directly to him to sort out what he wanted. Then she called me one day, having told me the night before we'd be working, and just canceled out the day after I had turned down work. She said they were going to do overdubs. So I guess they got bugged at me trying to find out how I stood.

     "The studio was fine. Paul knew what he wanted. I think the whole album was done in the same form as the McCartney album, only we played the parts for him. It was done in a way. There was no freedom. We were told exactly what to play. He knew what he wanted, and he just used us to do it. He just sang us the parts he wanted, and the tune developed as we went along. We added things, we made suggestions. But I would say that two out of 10 times he took one of our suggestions, or at least if he did, he modified it and made it into a Paul McCartney-sounding thing. It always came out Paul McCartney, regardless of the suggestion. 

     "Linda didn't have much to do in the studio. She just took care of the kids. You know, the kids were there all the time. Every day. They brought the whole family every day to the studio, and they just stayed, no matter how long Paul stayed. If he was there until four o'clock in the morning, everybody stayed. I thought, to a certain degree. It was distracting. It was a nice, loose atmosphere, but distracting.

    "Linda? I really don't know what she did in the studio, aside from sit there and make her comments on what she thought was good and what she thought was bad. My personal opinion is that everybody, especially in the music business, when they finally find an old lady that they really dig, they try to get her into everything, which I don't believe in. I just didn't. It just didn't make sense to me.

     "She sang all right. I heard some of the things she sang on the album. She can sing fine, like any girl who worked in a high school glee club; she can hold a note and sing background. So Paul gives her the note and says, 'Here, Linda, sing this, and I'm going to sing this.' And she does it, but it's all McCartney. Paul McCartney, I mean.

     "I played acoustic. There's one track which is a cute thing, a blues tune, which I think has a pretty unique sound on it, and I had fun doing it. It's called "3 Legs."  Paul likes to double-track a lot of things. We both played acoustic on some tracks and then tripled. Denny Seiwell was on drums, Paul and I on guitars. Sometimes Paul played piano, but he never played bass while we were there. He overdubbed the bass. It was a little weird because bass drums and guitar would have been more comfortable, but that's the way he works.

     "It seemed weird for him to come to town and audition the heaviest musicians in the business, cats who've been playing in music for 15 years and played with just about everyone, and who, as musicians, The Beatles just couldn't stand next to as instrumentalists. You don't have to audition these cats. They can play anything under the sun. We asked him once, and he said he was only in town for two days to check out the musicians. And it turned out that he couldn't go out and buy all the different albums to find out which cats were into what music, and so he just called an audition to try to hear everyone. I can understand his point, because people sound good on records and then their attitudes are bad or something, so you have to meet them and get involved personally. 

    "Paul doesn't like to have to, and I think he personally liked us. He doesn't like having to say, 'Well, I don't like this playing because of this.' He's just going to tell you he doesn't like it and change it. He really doesn't want to have to argue with you because he knows what he wants. The Beatles, as writers, are definitely innovators, but as players, there's just a minimum amount of playing on their albums. Their music at that time was bad. It was juvenile. I was listening to James Brown, Muddy Waters, people like that. 

    "Working with Paul was fun inasmuch as it was good to see how he works and where he's coming from, but as a musician, it wasn't fun because it wasn't challenging or anything like that, but it was good. McCartney is definitely a songwriter, not a musician, but he writes beautiful songs. In the studio, he's incredibly prompt and businesslike, no smoking pot, no drinking or carrying on, nothing, just straight ahead. He came in at 9am in the morning. We were all there and would listen to what we'd done the day before, so that it would get us psyched, ready to do the day's work. Then we went into the studio, and it was eight hours of just playing. He's not a very loose cat, not eccentric in any way at all, very much of a family man. He just wants to make good music.