At the behest of two-term US poet laureate and senior distinguished
fellow at the Winter Park Institute Billy Collins, Paul spoke last
Thursday night to a few hundred students at Knowles Memorial Chapel on
the campus of Rollins College in Winter Park, FL.
Kept secret until the morning of the event, Paul’s visit prompted so
much interest that students had to win tickets in a lottery system.
“I’d say, ‘It’s getting better all the time,’ and he’d say, ‘It can’t get much worse,” McCartney told the students of his creative chemistry with John Lennon. “I would have never thought of that.”
When asked whether lyrics or music come first, he replied, “I
tell students all the time, ‘Look, I don’t know how to do this.’ Every
time I approach a song, there’s no rules. Sometimes the music comes
first, sometimes the words – and if you’re lucky, it all comes
together.”
Paul described how his inspiration for 'Yesterday' came in a dream.
Certain an old melody was stuck in his head, he went around humming the
tune, asking if anyone knew it. “After two weeks,” he said, “I claimed it.”
Collins brought up how Paul’s songs have been covered by countless bands, prompting Paul's gratitude. “If someone on the street corner is reading one of your poems,” he asked Collins, “is it going to bother you?”
Asked about The Beatles’ musical evolution in the late 1960s, Paul drew applause and laughter recalling “a natural growing up we developed – and drugs.”
“At the beginning of The Beatles,” he said, “you’ve got
to remember, we were a boy band. … It was all really fan-oriented. It’s
not a bad thing, but after a while you felt like you wanted to move on.”
Paul and Collins found common ground at the intersection of lyrics
and poetry. Sharing how he once read his own poems to a group of
scholars in New York City, Paul admitted “It was pretty nerve-wracking” and quite different than playing to record-breaking concert crowds. “I had to respect the silence as a great thing,” he said.
Paul closed the night with a performance of 'Blackbird'.
“This was a wonderful event provided through the generosity of Sir Paul McCartney,” said Rollins Acting President Craig M. McAllaster. “He
wanted it to be intimate and mostly for students. That’s why they
filled most of the seats. It’s a wonderful thing to have someone of his
stature and significance give us his time and talent to Rollins
College.”
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