Thursday, April 9, 2026
Paul Can Still Stop Traffic (1981)
Paul Can Still Stop Traffic
No writer listed
The London Evening Standard
April 9, 1981
Nearly 20 years on from the Beatles' first hit record, Paul McCartney still manages to stop the traffic and send the audience into paroxysms of screaming when his new film Rock Show was unveiled before Lord Snowden and a host of celebrities at the Dominion Theater, Tottenham Court Road, last night.
The movie is simply a collection of concert footage film during Wings tour of America five years ago and hung around a show played by the band before a recording 67,000 people at a hall in Seattle.
Despite a lack of consistency in recent Wings albums, the film confirms yet again that Wings is one of the most exciting rock bands in the world, and it verifies McCartney's status, along with Mick Jagger and Pete Townsend, as one of the last of the '60s rock legends still functioning.
The film might have been even more exciting with a little backstage action, but it would appear to have been shot with the home video market eventually in mind, and as such, it must be destined eventually to become a number one video cassette best seller. Certainly, it catches one of the great bands of the 70s at their peak.
Beatles Music Straightforward on Next Album (1969)
Beatles Music Straightforward on Next Album
By Alan Smith
New Musical Express
May 3, 1969
"If I could only get the time to myself right now, instead of all this Monopoly and financial business with Northern Songs, I think I could probably write about 30 songs a day. As it is, I probably average about 12 a night. Paul, too, he's mad on it. It's something that gets in your blood. I've got things going round in my head right now, and as soon as I leave here, I'm going around to Paul's place and start work.
"The way we're writing at the moment, it's straightforward, and there's nothing weird. Songs like 'Get Back'- things like that. We recorded that one on the Apple roof. And I'm not sure if that's the version that went out. We always record about 10 versions.
"You get lost in the end. I'm not really interested in the production of our records. In fact, I wish I didn't have to go through the whole thing -- going through the production and balancing the bass and all that. For me, the satisfaction of writing a song is in the performing of it. The production bit is a bore. If some guy would invent a robot to do it, great, but all that, 'get the bass right, get the drums right.' That's a drag to me. All I want to do is get my guitar out and sing songs.
"I quite fancy giving some live shows, but Ringo doesn't, because he says, you know, it'll just be the same when we get on, nothing different. I can't give you any definite plans for a live show when we're not even agreed on it. We've got to come to an agreement for a start. There's too much going on now for us to even talk realistically about going on tour.
"In a way, that's why it's unfortunate that all the publicity came out about doing live shows when it did; we were only thinking about it vaguely, but it kind of got out of hand. I suppose the next Great Beatle Event will be the next LP in about eight weeks. A lot of the tracks will be like, 'Get back.' A lot that we did in one take, kind of thing. We've done about 12 tracks, some of them still to be remixed.
"Paul and I are now working on a kind of song montage that we might do as one piece on one side. We've got two weeks to finish the whole thing. So we're really working at it. All the songs we're doing sound normal to me, but probably they might sound unusual to you. There's no 'Revolution #9' there, but there's a few heavy sounds. I couldn't pin us down to being on a heavy scene or a commercial pop scene or a straight, tuneful scene. We're just on whatever's going--- just rocking along.
"The follow-up to 'Get Back' is 'The Ballad of John and Yoko'. It's something I wrote, and it's like an old-time ballad. It's the story of us going along, getting married, going to Paris, going to Amsterdam, all that. It's 'Johnny B Paperback Writer', as I say. We don't want to release it straight away, because it might kill the sales, and I suppose we're cowards that way.
"I don't regard it as a separate record scene. It's the Beatles' next single, simple as that. The story came out that only Paul and I were on the record, but I wouldn't have bothered publicizing that. It doesn't mean anything. It just so happened that there were only two of us there. George was abroad, and Ringo was on the film, and he couldn't come that night. Because of that, it was a choice of either remixing or doing a new song, and you'll always go for doing a new one instead of fiddling around with an old one. So we did, and it turned out well.
"As for this financial business that's going on, it does get in the way of the writing, but I don't find it that much of a drag. It is. It is that much of a drag. It's like Monopoly, what with all these bankers and played around a big table with all these heavies, you know, the bit, 'then I'll give you the Strand or Old Kent Road', and you say, 'No, you give me two houses.' It's just like that. Really, the outcome of this whole financial business doesn't matter. We'll still be making records, and somebody will be copping some money, and we'll be copping some money, and that'll be that.
"I don't have any involvement in Mary Hopkin's records. It's pure Paul. But there is one discovery I'd like to promote. I think I'm going to make a pop record with Yoko. I've got this other song we've been singing last night, and I think it would be quite a laugh for her to do a pop record. It's one I've written myself, and it's about Yoko, but I'll just change the word Yoko to John, and she can sing it about me.
"This TV film, Rape, we did for Austrian TV--- so it didn't get fantastic reviews, but then neither does every record the Beatles make. Hell, do you remember the reviews of "Hey Jude?" I remember Stuart Henry saying, 'Och weel, y' either like it orr y' don't.' The critics are the same with Rape. It's a good film, and we stand by it. There's a few people who understand it, and the rest have no idea. They don't know the difference between Jean-Luc Godard and Walt Disney.
It's funny. The critics can accept it from Luc Godard, but they can't accept it from us, too, because they're so hung up on who Yoko and I are and what we do that they can't see the product. But that'll die, and Yoko and I will just have to overcome our image, and people will have to judge us on our art, not the way we look.
"You can say Paul and I are writing separately these days. We do both. When it comes to needing 500 songs by Friday, you've got to get together. I definitely find I work better when I got a deadline to meet. It really frightens you. You've got to chum them out all the time. I'm sort of arranging things in my mind. The film that The Beatles recently made of us recording and working. Somebody is editing that at the moment, it's 68 hours, and they're trying to get it down to five for several TV specials, or then it might be a movie. I don't know.
"This image thing that people are always on about with the Beatles' image is something in Joe Public's eye. That's why it's a drag when people talk about fresh-faced Beatles like it was five years ago. I mean, we're always changing, like the TV clip of 'Get Back.' Now I've got the beard, Paul is clean-shaven, and George is the one with the mustache. Even I can't keep up with our own image, I come into Apple one day, and there's George with a new head on him. So if that's the way it is with us, I tell you, the public doesn't stand a chance of keeping up with how we look. Anyway, who we are, is up to ourselves. Personally, music is what's important. As far as that's concerned.
"In my case, Yoko and I stimulate each other like crazy. For instance, did you know she's trained as a classical musician? I didn't know that until this morning. In college, she majored in classical composition. I've just written a song called 'Because.' Yoko was playing some classical bit, and I said, 'Play that backward', and we had a tune. We'll probably write a lot more in the future.
I've written with other people as well. For instance, there's this mad thing I wrote half with our electronic genius Alex. It was called, 'What a Shame Mary Jane had a Pain at the Party,' and it was meant for the last Beatles album. It was real madness, but we never released it, and I'd like to do it again. There was another song I wrote around Pepper time that's still in the can called, 'You Know My Name, Look Up the Number.' That's the only words to it. It just goes on all the way like that. And we did these mad backings, but I never finished it, and I must.
Why did we spring 'Get Back' on the public so suddenly? Well, we'd been talking about it since we recorded it, and we kept saying, 'That's a single.' Eventually, we got so fed up talking about it. We suddenly said, 'Okay, that's it. Get it out tomorrow.'
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
1973 -- Another Chapter in the Adventures of....
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| Ringo at his office at the St. James Apple office in 1973 |
Rock Stars Roll in Weath but Keep Working Anyway (1976)
This is part of a larger article written about wealthy rock stars in the 1970s and how they balance performing and home life and if it is necessary to keep performing. I just took out the part about John and Paul because it is all that is of interest on this site. I don't know of many John interviews in 1976, so it caught my eye.
Rock Stars Roll in Wealth but Keep Working Anyway
By Lisa Robinson
April 9, 1976
John Lennon has been through the whole thing, up, down, sideways, fame, touring, adulation, girls, money, marriages, lawsuits, immigration problems. Since the Beatles' breakup, he's been through various wild stages and has recently settled down with his wife, Yoko, and newborn son, Sean, in New York City.
Lennon traded an active rock-and-roll life for a peaceful family existence, with no regrets. But he's still a rock and roller at heart, even though he doesn't miss the road.
"When I think of 38 cities and all the sweating around, I don't miss it," John told me over tea in his sprawling New York apartment, which overlooked Central Park." Also, the gigs now are so big," added John. "I might want to do a club, but then people would say, 'Oh, Lennon couldn't make it in the big halls.' I couldn't do that 38 city thing. Even though I know it sells records, I prefer the recording studio where you can control things."
As his audience has grown up and calmed down a bit, would a Beatles reunion concert ever be possible? "Well," smiled the man who never has to work again. "I can see the headlines now, but I know we'd get an audience. When we see each other these days, there isn't any tension. So you never know. But as Ringo said," Lennon added. "If you say yes, then it's positive, and if you say no, then it's negative. So there's no talk about it. But when we're together, we're happy.
"It would be hard to do a Beatles concert, because it could never be good enough for all those people who have this dream of how wonderful we were and how good it was. Our music would sound the same, only better, though, because we're all better now."
Would you ever do "I want to hold your hand?"
"Yes," John laughed, "We'd do a good version of that."
Although former Beatle, Paul McCartney, does tour with his group Wings, and his solo and Wings albums have sold well into the millions, he also spends much of his year in Scotland, with his wife and current musical partner, Linda and their three daughters.
"I have to tour in a way that doesn't make me nervous," McCartney told me last year. "Do a gradual build up. Smallish dates before the big ones. Yes, I get nervous about all kinds of things.
"The real truth about any kind of Beatles stuff is that we're going to have to wait and see," McCartney smiled, talking in his Abbey Road Studio with Linda by his side. "I wouldn't like the group to reform and carry on full time, because it went full circle, but I think it was a great band, even though technically and funk-wise, it could have been better, but we were quite jolly."
Wings are Back
April 8, 1981 -- Wings might not be recording or performing together any more but on this night in 1981, Wings were back on the big screen at the premiere of "Rock Show." Paul was there to greet fans and to mingle at the after party.














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