Monday, December 28, 2009

Paul McCartney 23: Flaming Pie

Beatle activity took precedence for a time, so Paul abandoned the band he took around the world twice. Once the Anthology project blew over, we were pleasantly surprised to hear he had a new album all ready, and mortified to hear that half of it was produced by Jeff Lynne.

Flaming Pie might as well be called McCartney III, since it was written and recorded fairly quickly, with a minimum of pretension and him on most of the instruments. But there are other musicians on it, and the resulting title refers to a John Lennon expression as a nod to the old days when making records was fun and carefree.

“The Song We Were Singing” is a fantastic start, not unlike a pub singalong. “The World Tonight” has some fine spiraling guitar that’s not undercut by the drums. Constant readers will have noted how Jeff Lynne can take some of the world’s greatest rock drummers and make them sound like a machine. In this case, it’s Paul on drums, so he can only sound better. “If You Wanna” is an inoffensive throwaway not unlike “Things We Said Today”. “Somedays” is a very sad sounding song, with mournful strings, but the lyrics are more wistful in their nostalgia. “Young Boy” was the British single, and a good choice, with a slowed-down ending stolen from “Whiter Shade Of Pale”. “Calico Skies” was recorded during the Off The Ground sessions with George Martin, and is full of overtones from his first album. Then “Flaming Pie” comes crashing in. With its obnoxious vocal and pounding piano, it’s another example of getting the recipe exactly right.

“Heaven On A Sunday” takes the mood down again, with atmosphere and interlocking guitars, one played by his son James, for a nice evocation of late-period Wings. The wholly unwelcome Steve Miller is all over the idiotic “Used To Be Bad”, but “Souvenir” provides a little bit of soul, a well-written R&B torcher. “Little Willow” is an incredibly gentle song for any lost friend, in this case Ringo’s ex-wife Maureen. Truly touching and elegantly played. He made a big deal out of finally writing a song with Ringo, but “Really Love You” isn’t a song, it’s a five-minute timekiller. If you skip this one you go right into “Beautiful Night”, that one song per album that’s guaranteed to please. The verses are gorgeous, the choruses are gorgeous, the orchestral arrangement is gorgeous, and the silly party ending can’t kill it. And it’s always nice to follow a beautiful night with a “Great Day”, which probably dates from the 1971 “Bip Bop”/“Big Barn Bed” period. Linda joins in, and the next thing you know, you’re pressing the play button again.

Flaming Pie was such a nice surprise, and completely unexpected. Even Jeff Lynne and Steve Miller couldn’t tarnish the fun to be had herein. In fact, even taking out “Used To Be Bad” and “Really Love You” we still have twelve above-average, fully realized McCartney songs. And with the late-year release of yet another classical work, Paul McCartney’s Standing Stone (a tone poem with orchestra and wordless chorus), he had every reason to be proud. But all was not well at home; Linda’s health would be a concern for the time.

The album was a surprising installment in his ongoing Archive Collection series, partially because it came out before two Wings reissues, and certainly because many fans were faced with buying an expanded version of an album they’d already bought on CD once. The cheaper version included a full second disc with demos of all but two songs—namely, the not-missed “Used To Be Bad” and “Really Love You”—plus other alternate versions, four B-sides of varying musical quality. Exactly two “new songs” are included: the improvisation “C’mon Down C’mon Baby” and the still half-written “Whole Life”, supposedly a collaboration with David A. Stewart, working the Tom Petty example backwards.

More affluent collectors could spring for the big box, which spread the extras over two discs, with a few more rough mixes. Another disc is devoted to the Oobu Joobu samplers previously excerpted on various British CD singles, presenting some further rarities in a proto-podcast radio show format. A fourth disc called Flaming Pie At The Mill consists of an audio stroll through the making of the album. Two DVDs, a book, facsimiles, and other ephemera left many wishing they had a fraction of Paul’s disposable income.

Paul McCartney Flaming Pie (1997)—
2020 Archive Collection: same as 1997, plus 21 extra tracks (Deluxe Edition adds another 12 tracks plus 2 DVDs)

2 comments:

  1. A very great record, deserves more than 3 1/2.

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  2. The post-“Anthology” hype might have left some people with the impression that this album heralded a reboot of 60’s Paul. However, that guy had left the building for good sometime after “Ram”, so that just wasn’t a reasonable expectation. Nonetheless, this is pretty good.

    I agree with you about the two major duds. “Born to Be Bad” has a backstory. A chance encounter in the studio in 1969 resulted in Paul playing as the rhythm section on a Miller track called “My Dark Hour”. That’s a much better song, so lightning wasn’t exactly captured twice her. “Really Love You” is nothing but a jam that could have been on “Wildlife”. That’s not a compliment. The other one I don’t really care for much is “Heaven on a Sunday”. Paul ventures into bossa nova territory here. I understand why that would appeal to his “granny music” side, but it’s just not a genre that appeals to me.

    The rest ventures from good to great. Some touching ballads like “Little Willow” and “Calico Skies”, the latter being a very lyrical love song to Linda. Small wonder that he revived it for “Working Classical”. “The Song We Were Singing” and the title track are great tributes to John. Yes, I also immediately noticed the “Full Moon Fever” drum sound on “This World Tonight”, but it doesn’t detract from the song too much. That sound is also on “If You Wanna” to a lesser extent (because Lynne wasn’t involved), yet it could have fit in on “Highway Companion”.

    The first thing I thought of when “Souvenir” came on, of all things, was Aretha Franklin’s “Natural Woman”. She could have sung the hell out of “Souvenir”. Finally, on paper, the sequencing of “Beautiful Night” and “Great Day” seems so obvious as to be banal. On record, though, it absolutely works. The slow stately beginning explodes into the energetic coda, and then we go into the intimacy of “Great Day”. (I also thought of “Big Barn Bed”). A perfect ending for the album.

    The album isn’t quite as cohesive as “Off the Ground”, but is still really listenable – if the duffers are skipped, of course. A 3.5 it is, then.



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