Memory Almost Full - CD/DVD Deluxe Edition

Home > P > Paul McCartney > Discography > Memory Almost Full - CD/DVD Deluxe Edition

Memory Almost Full - CD/DVD Deluxe Edition "Many years from now" must have seemed like an understatement to 16-year-old Paul McCartney, wondering if he'd still be needed or fed at the age of 64. As it turned out, all doubt as to the latter had ceased by his 22nd birthday (though few could have predicted he'd end up washing down those meals with the liquid pride of Seattle). As to the former? Now that McCartney, as of the date of this album's release, has reached that mythic age, his greatest work is 40 years behind him, his solo peak over 30 years gone. Does the world need a new Paul McCartney album? The answer is yes, at least as much as it needs anything else that passes for music these days. With Memory Almost Full, Macca is back. No, it's not Ram or Band on the Run. It might not even be Flowers in the Dirt--in 1989, he had a full band, the support of Linda, and Elvis Costello as a collaborator. Here, he's on his own. Literally: on the majority of the tracks, everything but the strings is multi-instrumentalist Paul. But the surprise is that it's one of his freest, loosest affairs in years, sonically reminiscent of the Tug of War/Pipes of Peace era with nods to Abbey Road in the album-closing medley, McCartney's gravelly tones on "Gratitude," and 2007's version of "Her Majesty," the palate-cleansing "Nod Your Head." It's a surprise because of the album's inescapable sense of retrospection ("Ever Present Past," "Vintage Clothes," "That Was Me") and even a bit of weariness. The next-to-last song is "The End of the End," after all, in which McCartney tells us about what he'd like to happen "on the day that I die." (He wants "songs that were sung/to be hung out like blankets/that lovers have played on/and laid on while listening to songs that were sung," and will likely get his wish.) But it never gets overwhelming, for McCartney mostly resists his tendency to get plodding and maudlin. In fact, Memory Almost Full must be the most sanguine album made during the dissolution of a marriage since...well, ever. "What went out is coming back," he sings in "Vintage Clothes," and from the sound of things, that may not be just wishful thinking. What's past is prologue; if we're lucky, what to come may be McCartney's late renaissance. --Benjamin Lukoff

More from Paul McCartney


A Hard Day's Night


Wingspan (Hits & History)


All the Best


Ram


Band on the Run


McCartney


Wings - Greatest Hits


Venus and Mars


Chaos and Creation in the Backyard


Unplugged (The Official Bootleg)



Buy


Tracks
1Dance Tonight
2Ever Present Past
3See Your Sunshine
4Only Mama Knows
5You Tell Me
6Mr. Bellamy
7Gratitude
8Vintage Clothes
9That Was Me
10Feet In The Clouds
11House Of Wax
12The End Of The End
13Nod Your Head
14In Private (Bonus Track)
15Why So Blue (Bonus Track)
16222 (Bonus Track)
17Drive My Car - Live At The Electric Ballroom, London
18Dance Tonight - Live At The Electric Ballroom, London
19House Of Wax - Live At The Electric Ballroom, London
20Nod Your Head - Live At The Electric Ballroom, London
21Only Mama Knows - Live At The Electric Ballroom, London
22Dance Tonight (Video)
23Ever Present Past (Video)



Copyright © 2008 NetVision. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement
Celebrity Link
Contents
Home
New Additions
Write to any Celebrity
Top 30
Make Money
Birthdays
Celebrity Shop
Place a Button
Add a Site
Report dead/changed Site
Feedback

Other Sites
Celebrity Site of the Day
Celebrity Search
CelebMatch.com