Paul McCartney’s first foray into the musical realm was in the world of brass. In The Beatles Anthology, McCartney described his father buying him his first trumpet at a local music store called Rushworth & Draper’s. “I loved it,” McCartney recalled.
“There was a big hero-thing at the time. There had been Harry James—The Man With The Golden Trumpet. And now, in the fifties, it was Eddie Calvert, a big British star who played ‘Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White’—all those gimmicky trumpet records. There were a lot of them around back then, so we all wanted to be trumpeters.”
Paul said he learned his C major scale and how to play “The Saints” (in C major). But his attraction to the instrument wore off after he realized he wanted to be a singer, too. “I wasn’t going to be able to sing with this thing stuck in my mouth,” McCartney said. “So, I asked my dad if he’d mind if I swapped it for a guitar, which also fascinated me. He didn’t, and I traded my trumpet in for an acoustic guitar, a Zenith, which I still have.” (As fate would have it, Paul used that Zenith to compose early songs like “I Saw Her Standing There” and “Michelle”)
One day, while watching television, Paul happened upon a trumpet player named David Mason performing Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, and the performance was so riveting that McCartney immediately employed producer George Martin to connect him with Mason.
"My dad bought me a trumpet for my birthday, at Rushworth & Draper’s (the other music store in town), and I loved it. There was a big hero-thing at the time. There had been Harry James – The Man With The Golden Trumpet – and now, in the Fifties, it was Eddie Calvert, a big British star who played ‘Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White’ – all those gimmicky trumpet records. There were a lot of them around back then, so we all wanted to be trumpeters.
I persevered with the trumpet for a while. I learnt ‘The Saints’, which I can still play in C. I learnt my C scale, and a couple of things. Then I realised that I wasn’t going to be able to sing with this thing stuck in my mouth, so I asked my dad if he’d mind if I swapped it for a guitar, which also fascinated me. He didn’t, and I traded my trumpet in for an acoustic guitar, a Zenith, which I still have."
“I did not even know who the Beatles were when I was asked to do a recording session with them,” Mason later told. “For me, it was just another job. I took nine trumpets along, and we tried various things, by a process of elimination, settling on the B flat piccolo trumpet.”
Mason was helping McCartney and the rest of the Beatles flesh out the final parts of “Penny Lane,” an ode to the Fab Four’s native Liverpool. The trumpeter said that Martin transcribed McCartney’s compositional ideas as the Beatle sang them out loud, then Mason performed them on tape. “They were jolly high notes, quite taxing,” he recalled.
Mason’s piccolo trumpet solo was so ornate and unusually high that many believed the band sped up the tape in post (much like they did for other solos, like Martin’s “In My Life” piano feature), but Mason insists that was never true. Still, the job was strenuous. After finishing one take, McCartney asked Mason to try one more, but Martin put his foot down, knowing how physically demanding the part truly was.
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