Fans will have seen that on Wednesday 19th November
Paul sat down with Lily Cole and a small group of musicians from her
Impossible website to discuss his forthcoming new single 'Hope For The
Future' and share his thoughts about songwriting. Paul chatted with Lily
and the invite-only audience for 45 minutes, taking several questions
from the musicians in attendance. (Pssst – we'll be posting the full
transcript from the Q&A soon!)
As you might imagine, a room made up of musicians had a great number
of things they wanted to ask Paul! So after the talk finished we spoke
with them and took note of a few more questions. Later that day, Paul
kindly sat down with us to answer them.
Today we publish the first of these questions for November's 'You
Gave Me The Answer'. To make it even more exciting, we asked Lily Cole
to read out three of the questions sent in via Twitter. Watch the video
of Lily asking the questions below:
Would you like to find out where the characters 'Eleanor Rigby' and
'Polythene Pam' came from? Or which lyrics Paul is currently enjoying
singing on tour? Read on…
Question: Did Paul and John ever talk about the characters inside their songs and try to get them as real as possible?
Paul: "Some of them you would talk about, some of them didn’t have a provenance; we just made them up. They didn’t come from anywhere.
"But there would be all sorts of examples - like ‘Polythene Pam’ -
who was someone John had known. There was a wild night somewhere and
this girl was dressed in a lot of polythene [laughs], so she was known
as ‘Polythene Pam’. So she was real, baby! And, you know, I'd like to
have been a fly on that wall! So she came from somewhere.
''Eleanor Rigby' came from a combination of old ladies I’d known
when I was a kid. It was sort of a cross between wanting to do good
work, but at the same time a fascination by these older people who had
gone through stuff, that I hadn’t. For some reason or another I was
drawn to those people.
"There was a woman who lived near me in 20 Forthlin Road, where I
used to go and get her shopping for her, just because I was on my way
to the shops. I’d just drop in, I knew her. So we became pretty good
friends and she was a sort of lonely old lady. But I found out things
like she had a little crystal radio set, which fascinated me, because
people in the war made their own little radios, "What! You can make a
radio?! Brilliant!" So she would be part of the 'Eleanor Rigby' thing. I
would occasionally meet other lonely old ladies, so they kind of became
'Eleanor Rigby' too.
"Some of the people – mostly they were made up - but some of them did actually come from somewhere.
'''Father McKenzie' in 'Eleanor Rigby' was going to be Father
McCartney. I had [sings to the tune of 'Eleanor Rigby'] ‘Father
McCartney, do do do do do’. And I said, ‘I’ve got to change that.’ And
John said, ‘No, it’ll be great! Father McCartney!’ I said, ‘No, it’s
like my Dad! I can’t relate to it’. So we got the phonebook out, we just
went: ‘McCartney, McCartney, McCartney, McCartney, McKenzie!’"
PaulMcCartney.com: "There are many stories about where the name Eleanor Rigby came from, is that someone’s name?"
Paul: "It’s a strange thing because there is
actually a gravestone up in the churchyard of the church, St Peter’s in
Woolton - where John and I met on the fateful day of the fete - which
apparently says ‘Eleanor Rigby’. So the idea is, subliminally, I might
have seen it because I would have walked through that graveyard, just as
kids getting from A to B.
"But my theory - of what I can remember of it - was that I liked
the name Eleanor, because we’d worked with Eleanor Bron, the actress in
the film ‘Help’. But I wanted to have a second name. Names are very
important because, you know, like school kids, all the names are
authentic. If you think back to any of your school mates - Grace
Pendleton was one of my school mates – it works! All those real names;
and you can make up ‘Charlie Farnsbarn’ and it just, it doesn’t work as
well. It’s an interesting little thing, names.
"So I was really searching around for Eleanor’s second name. And I
was in Bristol, visiting my then girlfriend - Jane Asher, who was
working at Bristol Old Vic - and I was wondering around waiting for her
to finish and I saw this shop: ‘Rigby’. And I thought [clicks fingers]
‘Perfect! Eleanor Rigby’. A real, nice name. It’s sort of original, and
yet not too far out. It just sort of fitted.
"So that’s my story. But as I say later, a guy - Geoff Wonfor
doing The Beatles Anthology – said, ‘We’ve found this gravestone, what
do you think about that?’"
PaulMcCartney.com: "So the name might have already been buried somewhere in your mind, and then you made that connection?"
Paul: "I wonder. I don’t know. My story, I definitely know is true. The other story’s a little bit spooky. A ‘subconscious theory’!"
Question: Do you still like all the lyrics you wrote in the
past, and are there any that you don't like anymore? And, of course, I
want to know why if the answer is no!
Paul: "There are lyrics I’m embarrassed by. Like
in 'Rockshow' - references to ‘axe’ and Jimmy Page – they seem a little
bit dated. But they are. That’s exactly what they are.
"What made me less embarrassed was when I said this to a couple
of the guys in the band, Rusty and Brian particularly. I said, 'Oh my
god, I can’t stand that - An axe! Jimmy Page!’. I’m going, 'Oh God, it
just doesn’t seem right now, it seems embarrassing'. They said, 'No, I
love that!'
"So it was great. I got their perspective on it, and it sort of
made it alright that they didn’t think it was remotely embarrassing."
PaulMcCartney.com: "We know people who still call their guitars ‘axes’!"
Paul: "It’s a period thing. You don’t really call them that now. But you did then. So that was the embarrassing thing."
Question: What are your personal favourite lyrics you've ever written?
Paul: "There’s some nice things about doing the
live show now. I kind of run through the lyrics - in my mind - to sing
them. So ‘Eleanor Rigby’ is nice, 'Wearing a face that she keeps in a
jar by the door'. I sort of think, 'Pretty good work for a 23 year old
boy!' Something like that I think, 'Yeah, that’s really nice’. So I like
that.
"Currently I’m liking ‘Another Day’. It’s just very sort of
regular life of this girl. [Sings verse 'Everyday she takes her morning
bath'.] It’s just all what a girl might do: 'Wraps a towel around her as
she’s heading for the bedroom chair'. And then she goes to the office,
has a coffee, finds it hard to stay awake, and it all just seems to ring
true to me. But it’s just another day.
"So yeah, I’d single those two out as ones that I like."
PaulMcCartney.com will be publishing more Q&As from Paul's
Impossible songwriting talk soon, so remember to keep checking back…!
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