Paul was interviewed recently at his midtown Manhattan office
suite, he seems as boyish and light-footed as he was onstage decades ago
for "The Ed Sullivan Show," his manner informal, his build slender and
well suited for jeans and a form-fitting sweater.
He's so young in his thoughts that he will dismiss the
idea of a memoir as a project for his 70s, catch himself and dismiss a
book again as if time were still a distant bother.
Memories can be found in his otherwise bright and modern
office, from a small black-and- white photo taken of him by his late
wife, Linda, to the abstract paintings by his late friend Willem de
Kooning. But he is here to promote the present, a score he completed for
Destiny, a first-person shooter game for PlayStation and Xbox. The
premise was intriguing, in part because he is no more adept at video
games than he is at reading sheet music (many rock stars can't) and
because the closing song he wrote, the ballad "Hope for the Future,"
captures how he looks upon the world.
"I thought, 'Seeing it's a shoot-em-up game, I will be the
optimistic hope for the future,' he says. "I will write something that
sums up that side of the game." Writing songs on commission has been a
pastime for McCartney since his years with The Beatles, when he composed
the soundtrack for the 1966 film "The Family Way." He likes the
challenge of fitting a piece of music into a pre-existing narrative,
comparing it to solving a crossword puzzle.
One of his favorite tests was coming up with the theme song, a top
five solo hit for McCartney, for the 1973 James Bond thriller "Live and
Let Die." "It's like 'Live and Let Die,' how the hell am I am going to
write a song like that?" he says. "I can't change the title. I can't say
I'm going to write a song, 'Live and Let Fish.' Then, you sit around
and go, 'OK, You used to say 'Live and let live ... 'You work out a
whole hypothesis."
Paul doesn't think of himself as a personal writer in
the tradition of his former collaborator, John Lennon. His songs often
are less about his own life than about assuming a mood or identity. So
he is as comfortable declaring "Hope for the Future" as he was confiding
"I believe in yesterday," as likely to imagine a lonely old woman
("Eleanor Rigby") as to put in a word for "Silly Love Songs." At times,
he takes on social causes, or at least tries. Having written "Blackbird"
for the civil rights movement in the '60s, he attempted a song about
police killings in Ferguson, Missouri, and New York.
"I was thinking recently about all these protests in New
York and around the country. I thought it would be great to put
something down about that, just to add my voice to the thousands of
people walking in the streets," he says. "I thought it through, and it
just didn't come easily. I'm not giving up on it, but it didn't come
easily, whereas some other emotions might come easily to me."
While forever a Beatle in the hearts of millions, he keeps
his mind open to all moments. He sends out tweets on occasion and texts
his friends, although the fine points of Spotify are beyond him (that's
what lawyers are for). Sam Smith is a favorite young singer, and
McCartney recently attended a Jay Z/Kanye West concert, found it
"amazing" and praised their lyrics as "modern poetry."
McCartney makes frequent visits to his native Liverpool,
where he helped found The Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts on the
site of the school he and George Harrison attended as boys. And he
keeps in close touch with family members and past associates, enjoying
local gossip or joking with Beatles producer George Martin.
Loved ones speak to him from beyond. McCartney finds
himself remembering his late father's pet expressions, like "Get
stripped, you're on next," meaning asking a guest to take his coat off.
While working on a song -- the melodies come to him constantly -- he
might summon the spirit of Lennon.
"I imagine myself back into a room with John, and I'll
think about a lyric], 'Ugh, that's no good.' And I'll imagine him
saying, 'No, can't do that.' So I'm using him as a sort of judge of what
I'm doing," he says.
History -- The Beatles, England, childhood -- follows him
everywhere, whether to a White House party where young friends of the
Obamas gushed like the kids of old, or a birthday party in Tokyo for his
wife, Nancy Shevell. The entertainment was Queen and Beatles tribute
bands.
"I had a kind of very emotional moment when we were
sitting there -- it could have been the alcohol," he says. "And I'm
thinking, 'My God.' The power of British music finally came home to me.
All the way across the world, in Japan, these guys were breaking down
Queen songs and the others Beatles songs. They were replicating them
amazingly. They got all the orchestra parts on 'I Am the Walrus.' They
may not even speak the language that well, but they speak these songs
beautifully.
"I should know that we've had that effect, because it's
historically true. But it doesn't always come home to you in quite the
way it did that night. I was welling up, and I was, 'I can't well up to a
Queen tribute band.'"
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