Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Award of Merit (1986)







 

January 27, 1986



Paul McCartney

Associated Press

January 10, 1986


    Former Beatle Paul McCartney will be honored with the Special Award of Merit during the 13th annual presentation of the American Music Awards, a spokesman for the show said Thursday.

     McCartney will accept the award by satellite connection from London during the television broadcast of the show, January 27, said publicist Paul Shefrin.  The Award of Merit winner is selected by a blue ribbon panel, unlike the other American Music Award winners, who are selected by polling music buyers. 

    Shefrin said the merit award recognizes outstanding contributions over a long period of time to the musical entertainment of the American public. The inscription on the award will state that for more than two decades, McCartney has been responsible for enormous changes in the sound and content of music.

Making himself laugh


 

Pepper Period


 

Paul Spreads Those Wings (1973)

 




Paul Spreads Those Wings

No writer listed

Beat Instrumental

June 1973


     Has McCartney lost his magic touch? That's the question being asked time and again as Paul and his "new" band Wings undertake their first major British tour. It's a question that has been asked ever since the days of the Beatles' split. The one which only time and audiences can decide.

    The other Beatles have been accepted in their new roles: George as a solo artist and guitarist, John for his work with Yoko and Elephant's Memory, and Ringo as a filmmaker and actor. The public doesn't seem to have decided about Paul; however, few can understand how the man who wrote standards such as "Yesterday" and "Fool on the Hill" can turn his back on 10 years of success and start from scratch all over again. 

    Those who have heard the singles from Wings: "Mary Had a Little Lamb," "Give Ireland Back to the Irish,"and "Hi Hi Hi". Still don't know what to expect from the group, and have been disappointed with the band's publicity that has happened. 

    It probably started with Paul's lawsuit against the other Beatles, which wasn't helped by the appearance of wife, Linda, on the scene, and was capped by two drug cases, which could well mean that the band won't be allowed to perform in America. 

    Now that manager Alan Klein has parted company with the other three Beatles, the way is open for the fabulous foursome to work together again. And it was with all this in mind that Beat Instrumental spoke to Wings' American drummer, Denny Seiwell. 

    We asked him about the effects of all the controversy and how much it prevented Wings from relaxing and making music. "Well, it affected us quite a bit," he said. "We are a new band, and we have our normal growing pains, but we can't be just another new band in the sense that we can't go playing in little nightclubs where we can gig five nights a week and get it together as a new band would.

     "In that respect, we've had a completely different scene, and we've had to learn how to deal with that simply because Paul McCartney is in the group, not to mention Denny Laine and Henry McCullough. Everything we do is under a microscope and compared by the audience to the last time that they saw the Beatles live."

     Such a comparison may be unfair, although Denny claims that none of the group resents it, but it will no longer be necessary to view Wings' new LP, Red Rose Speedway, and their current tour. "Yeah, I kind of feel that we've come through all that," said Denny. "And now people are just starting to accept us as a band. Anyway, this new album that we've just done really reflects that. If I was listening to it as someone who had nothing to do with it, I would say it was a group. It wasn't just some musicians who were thrown together in a session scene.

     "It's obvious that we all been together, and we've had as many problems as anybody that has been living together. It's like a marriage, you know, and over the years, we go through our hassles and our scenes, and that's how we got to know each other. That's how you really form a love between everybody in the band."

     Much of Wings' "getting to know you" time was spent on and around Paul's farm in Scotland. Denny recalls, "It was nice when we were up there in the spring of last year. We were rehearsing for the European tour, and it was great to be doing it out in the country, that relaxed. We got to know each other a lot better, and the music started to happen; we found out what every member of the band really had to offer. And that's the thing that really takes time, you put all the offerings together and make one little bit of magic."

     Can Wings' magic ever be as great as the Beatles' magic? Few would care to say, but at this stage, it's still obvious that the rest of the band are overshadowed by Paul's Beatle past. Is it something they want to be free of?  "No, not at all." said Denny. "I mean, who are we to say anything like that? That we don't want the shadow of the Beatles? They were the most fantastic group that ever hit the world, of course. And anyway, it's not really a problem. It's just that sometimes you go to a concert and people are expecting something, Beatle-ish, they don't necessarily get it, but they're not disappointed with Wings either. 

    "On the European and the college tour of this country that we did, the audiences went away really happy. They loved it. You don't get any people shouting up about the Beatles. We never get any of that. Every now and then, we get someone shout up for us to play one of the songs that Paul wrote in those days. But that's very rare. We haven't done any of those songs up until this TV show that we've just done, in which we've done a little medley of some songs, songs that Paul wrote and that he's proud of writing."

     Wings material Denny describes as "a mince" because the band have so many songs that they could do that they never know which ones to put together into a stage act. "But we're all rock and rollers at heart," said Denny. "We would like the next album to be a rock and roll one, you know, get everybody rocking. We love bands like Slade, for example. 

    With Red Rose Speedway, however, we had enough of Paul's material alone to do a double album. He has an amazing imagination and is still writing as many songs as he ever used to."

     Paul also uses his imagination when it comes to choosing the members of Wings, and has pulled together some fine musicians. Lead Guitarist Henry McCullough worked with the Grease Band of Joe Cocker fame.  Denny Laine, who handles vocals, piano, and guitar, comes from the Moody Blues, and drummer Denny Seiwell has worked with top jazz and session bands all over the world. 

    He told us the story of how he joined Wings. "I was living in New York when Paul came to town looking for musicians to make Ram. He found out who all the top session guys were and had them drop around to the studio, which was a rundown, old basement in a real heavy district. A friend called me up and asked me to do a demo. I had no idea it would be an audition, so I showed up at the studio, which I'd never heard of before. Anyway, I just went in, and there was Paul and his old lady just standing there, which kind of took me by surprise. So we just had a chat, and he told me what he was looking for and asked me if I mind playing a bit for him."

     It's taken some time for  Wings to settle in. Was Denny worried about the prospect of The Beatles getting together again? "No, I think it's amazing," he said. "I'd love to put another Beatles record on my turntable. I don't know if they'll get together again as a band, and I'm sure that what we've all got going together now with Wings is going to continue anyway. Just because Klein is out of the scene now, it doesn't mean that Wings is going to fold, because we've just devoted so much of ourselves to making the band work. We've gone through changes that no other band in the world has had to go through, and we really want to make it work."

Arriving in Cannes


 January 27, 1976

Monday, January 26, 2026

By George, He's Got It (1996)

 


By George, He's Got It

By New Service Reports

January 26, 1996


    George Harrison won $11 million in a lawsuit accusing his longtime manager of living the high life at the former Beatles' expense.

     Harrison had claimed that Denis O'Brien bought himself yachts and villas around the world during their 20-year partnership, while Harrison suffered "enormous losses."

     The losses involved Handmade Films, a now-defunct company that made the movies Life of Brian and Time Bandits. A Los Angeles jury returned the verdict last week. A spokesman for Harrison said, "Winning's one thing, but collecting's another."

A Young Pal


 January 1961 

Beware My Love Sessions







 Wings sessions for the song "Beware My Love" January 1976 

Award winning Hand Made Films





 January 26, 1986 

Handmade Films win a special award.  

Nepal Shakes To Elephant Clash (1986)




 

Nepal Shakes to Elephant Clash

By Nic Ellis

The Age

January 25, 1986


The scene is the royal Chitwan National Park in southern Nepal. Something quite bizarre is about to happen. Anticipation hangs as heavy as the winter morning mist.

     In a tent to one side, a team of British Gurkhas adjusts field boots and solar topees, ready for the fray. In the next tent, the military qualities of the opposition look doubtful. The leader stubs out a cigarette and pulls himself from a chair. "C'mon, team!" The Liverpudlian drawl is unmistakable. It is Ringo Starr, his face half hidden by a solar topee.

     The two teams mount and take up position on the field of combat.  Shadowy figures in the mist, a bell sounds beyond the pall. Battle begins...

     This is polo on elephants. For the next 10 minutes, the earth groans under 30 tonnes of elephant flesh as the two teams of four trundle around the field after a standard four-inch polo ball. A referee with the flag and whistle keeps an eye on play from atop a huge bull tusker. There is 15 minutes cooling off for the elephants, a flurry of tactile chatter, and the team's swap ends, and elephants for a second 10 Minute chukka. Brigadier Miles Hunt-Davis' Gurkhas manage two goals. Ringo Starr's team, sponsored by Paris jewelers Cartier, and fielding Ringo and his actress wife Barbara Bach, singer-comedian Billy Connolly, and Max Boyce, managed none. 

    The first scores are on the board at the 1985 World Elephant Polo Championships.

     "Cartier were pathetic," laughs Jim Edwards, but does not mean it.  "Seriously," he said, "They were terrific fun. They had added a new dimension to this year's competition."

     Edwards is the father of modern elephant polo and boss of Tiger Tops, a luxury Jungle Lodge deep in Royal Chitwan National Park. Tiger Tops has hosted the elephant polo championships each year since their inception in 1982.

     A Punch cartoonist first mooted elephant polo early in the century when he drew an Indian polo team on elephants after they had thrashed the opposition during a tour of Britain. Except for the odd game in Jaipur, the idea never took off. Then Jim Edwards met a Scottish "gentleman farmer," James Manclark at the Toboggan Club in St. Mortiz, and elephant Polo was reborn over late-night cocktails. 

    Elephant Polo is based on pony polo. The field is smaller, and there are two10-minute chukkas instead of four. The rules state that players must not ride across opponents or knock each other off their mounts. Players are roped to a ghadi, a cushion on the elephant's back, and ride behind a mahout who guides the beast around the field using a steel goad or a deft kick behind the ear. All that is left for the players to do is to wield a giant polo stick and connect with the ball.

     "It's been likened to playing golf with a fishing rod from the top of a moving Land Rover," said a first timer, Colin Morris. Morris, a dapper English Concorde pilot, is the captain of the newly formed British Airways Elephant Polo Team. 

    "This is the first time I've piloted a jumbo," quips Morris. "Concordes are far easier. At least I have some control over what I'm doing."

     British Airways and Cartier are the novice teams of the competition. The regulars include two home sides, the Tiger Tops Tuskers, led by Jim Edwards, and the women's team, the Tigeresses. Then there is Manclark's Scottish team with professional polo players, the Pan Am sponsored Jumbos, a women's team backed by Oberol hotels and British brigades of Gurkhas and the King Mahendra Trust for Nature Conservation. Intrepid visitors make up the 10th team.

     Day two dawns another misty morning. As the day hots up so does the action. The Oberol ladies draw British Airways and comes through the first chukka one up. Manclark races to their aid with paternal advice, offering anything, his country estate, his teams of polo ponies, his body, if they knock British Airways out of contention. The ladies oblige. Manclark does not.

     Jim Edwards looks concerned that his Tuskers have only managed to hold Manclark's team to a nil- all draw at halftime. "What will be your tactics from here?" Someone asked. "I'm going to drink a Bloody Mary," said Edwards and strides off in the direction of the busiest tent. It works. Tuskers win one-nil. 

    Day three produces Cartier's moment of glory. They pull a score out of the hat against Tuskers a two- nil down in the second chukka. They mount a desperate attack on the home side's goal, while Billy Connolly remains solid and on defense. Ringo directs traffic up front. "Okay, Barb, you've got the ball now. Whack it!"  But Barbara is disoriented. "Where's the ball? What's going on?" The captain is courageous. He disappears into the fray and emerges with the ball. Max Boyce is positioned on the smallest, most nifty elephant, "Ringo! Ringo! Ringo!"  Ringo passes like a veteran. Max takes a swipe, and the ball whistles through the uprights to rapturous applause. The Cartier dignity remains untarnished,  just. 

    But it is the only goal Tuskers concede. They brush aside the Pan Am Jumbos in the semi-finals on the fourth day to meet the King Mahendra Trust in the fifth-day final. In a hard-fought game, Tuskers win through with the only goal of the match. Three minutes into extra time, the scoreer Prithi Ram, a Tiger's Top elephant handler, is the toast of the tournament.

    It is time to pop the Moet et Chandon.