Laine couldn’t talk about his Wings days
during the due to the upcoming deluxe reissue of Wings Over
America, part of an ongoing McCartney project.
“I just did a huge interview with the Rolling Stone guy about that,
so we want to keep that under wraps until it comes out,” he said to Hippo.
But he was forthcoming about plenty of other topics, like “Go Now,”
the Moody Blues’ lone hit before Laine left the band. American DJ B.
Mitchel Reid brought them the song, originally recorded by Bessie
Banks.
“He came back with a suitcase full of singles and said, ‘Pick a few
songs that you’re interested in doing’ … a lot of people wondered where
the hell we got that music from — that’s how we got it.”
Laine made the well-received single “Say You Don’t Mind” with
Electric String Band, an ELO forerunner that featured cello and violin
soloists from the Royal Academy of Music.
“Fusion was going on with the Beatles; they were sort of the
leaders of all that,” Laine said. His difference was bringing it to the
stage, “using pickups on violins and stuff like that. So whereas the
Beatles and everybody else [worked] in the studio, I was doing it on the
road.”
Touring, however, was difficult.
“These guys were hard to pin down because they were always going around the world with orchestras and stuff,” said Laine.
But those who saw the shows came away impressed, including a former
Beatle who watched them open for Jimi Hendrix at London’s Saville
Theatre in June 1967.
Hendrix played a rousing version of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts
Club Band” just days after the Beatles released the album, reportedly
blowing McCartney away. But Sir Paul’s response to Laine’s new band led
to a big career boost.
“It gave Paul an opportunity to see what I was doing … that’s one of the reasons he obviously called me up to join Wings.”
Denny Laine is writing an autobiography.
“It’s a work in progress,” he said. “I’ve been given the go-ahead
to write about the McCartneys, but obviously I’ll run it by Paul. I’ve
written a lot of the early Wings stories ... but it’s not just about the
Wings period. I don’t want that to be the central point. I’m going from
Day 1 right up until the 2000s. Finding the time to finish is the
problem.”
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