1 00:00:14,824 --> 00:00:22,064 Speaker 1: Pushkin. Hi everyone, it's Paul muldoon. Before we get to 2 00:00:22,144 --> 00:00:24,784 Speaker 1: this episode, I wanted to let you know that you 3 00:00:24,864 --> 00:00:29,384 Speaker 1: can binge all twelve episodes of McCartney A Life and 4 00:00:29,464 --> 00:00:35,184 Speaker 1: Lyrics right now, add free by becoming a pushkin Plus subscriber. 5 00:00:35,904 --> 00:00:40,224 Speaker 1: Find Pushkin Plus on the McCartney A Life and Lyrics Show, 6 00:00:40,304 --> 00:00:47,584 Speaker 1: pedge in Apple Podcasts, or at pushkin dot fm, slash Plus. 7 00:00:49,384 --> 00:00:53,024 Speaker 2: We had guitars, we played, We did the occasional gigs. 8 00:00:53,424 --> 00:00:55,824 Speaker 2: But one of the things you used to do was 9 00:00:55,824 --> 00:00:57,984 Speaker 2: you would you would go to a party and you 10 00:00:57,984 --> 00:01:03,504 Speaker 2: would take your guitar with you. Now, John, being older 11 00:01:03,744 --> 00:01:07,704 Speaker 2: and at art school, would go to art school parties 12 00:01:08,624 --> 00:01:13,984 Speaker 2: which men George normally wouldn't have an entree into. But 13 00:01:14,864 --> 00:01:17,624 Speaker 2: I remember going to one and I took my guitar. 14 00:01:17,784 --> 00:01:22,864 Speaker 2: So I'm sitting enigmatically in the corner with my black 15 00:01:22,904 --> 00:01:29,184 Speaker 2: pole and neck sweater on, trying to look French, trying 16 00:01:29,384 --> 00:01:36,104 Speaker 2: to look interesting to this older crowd. And so one 17 00:01:36,144 --> 00:01:42,624 Speaker 2: of the weapons that I used was to play this 18 00:01:42,744 --> 00:01:49,744 Speaker 2: sort of frenchy sounding song and sort of make gottural noises, 19 00:01:54,264 --> 00:01:58,344 Speaker 2: kind of half thinking that someone will think, well, he's French. 20 00:01:58,544 --> 00:02:04,784 Speaker 2: Probably intellectual. It's probably intellectual. It wasn't necessary. Once the 21 00:02:04,784 --> 00:02:08,584 Speaker 2: Beatles were going to try and look enigmatic, it just 22 00:02:08,784 --> 00:02:10,224 Speaker 2: was no longer necessary. 23 00:02:20,144 --> 00:02:24,064 Speaker 1: I'm Paul muldoone for a while now. I've been fortunate 24 00:02:24,224 --> 00:02:27,624 Speaker 1: to spend time with one of the greatest songwriters of 25 00:02:27,744 --> 00:02:28,544 Speaker 1: the era, and. 26 00:02:28,544 --> 00:02:31,464 Speaker 2: Will you look at me? I'm going on too. I'm 27 00:02:31,504 --> 00:02:33,184 Speaker 2: actually a performer. 28 00:02:33,144 --> 00:02:36,744 Speaker 1: That is Sir Paul McCartney. We worked together on a 29 00:02:36,784 --> 00:02:39,304 Speaker 1: book looking at the lyrics of more than one hundred 30 00:02:39,344 --> 00:02:43,904 Speaker 1: and fifty of his songs, and we recorded many hours 31 00:02:44,144 --> 00:02:45,384 Speaker 1: of our conversations. 32 00:02:45,744 --> 00:02:49,104 Speaker 2: It was like going back to an old snapshot album 33 00:02:49,144 --> 00:02:53,864 Speaker 2: looking back on work I hadn't ever analyzed. 34 00:02:54,384 --> 00:03:00,584 Speaker 1: This is McCartney, a life in lyrics, a masterclass, a memoir, 35 00:03:01,184 --> 00:03:05,464 Speaker 1: and an improvised journey with one of the most iconic 36 00:03:05,544 --> 00:03:13,704 Speaker 1: figures in popular music. In this episode, Michelle, when Paul 37 00:03:13,744 --> 00:03:18,144 Speaker 1: McCartney was trying to look French at art school parties, 38 00:03:18,664 --> 00:03:21,464 Speaker 1: he would have been playing a guitar he bought from 39 00:03:21,584 --> 00:03:25,544 Speaker 1: Hesse's Guitar Shop, the main music store in Liverpool. 40 00:03:25,824 --> 00:03:28,304 Speaker 2: We would go in the shop and to us it 41 00:03:28,464 --> 00:03:34,864 Speaker 2: was like Valhalla, just all these guitars. There's no finer 42 00:03:34,944 --> 00:03:39,704 Speaker 2: shop than a guitar shop. And I still find that today. 43 00:03:39,984 --> 00:03:43,264 Speaker 2: Still there's just the beauty, it's magic of all this 44 00:03:44,384 --> 00:03:49,224 Speaker 2: potential music surrounding, you know, all this rock and roll 45 00:03:50,664 --> 00:03:54,504 Speaker 2: suggested by these shops, and everything gleaming and looking beautiful 46 00:03:54,544 --> 00:03:58,544 Speaker 2: and shiny. And we used to love going in the shop, 47 00:03:58,824 --> 00:04:00,984 Speaker 2: just to go in the shop, and we would pay 48 00:04:01,024 --> 00:04:05,824 Speaker 2: our dues with our little books at a counter, and 49 00:04:05,944 --> 00:04:10,224 Speaker 2: I still actually have my book, my little payment book. 50 00:04:10,704 --> 00:04:15,184 Speaker 1: Hessis was manned by the shopkeeper Jim Gretti, who let 51 00:04:15,304 --> 00:04:20,704 Speaker 1: customers pay for their instruments in monthly installments. With the purchases, 52 00:04:21,024 --> 00:04:23,944 Speaker 1: he also offered some free instruction. 53 00:04:24,704 --> 00:04:27,464 Speaker 2: He would often stand there with his guitar. He was 54 00:04:27,464 --> 00:04:30,144 Speaker 2: a bit of a jazz guitarist and he would often 55 00:04:30,184 --> 00:04:32,384 Speaker 2: be sort of playing a bit of guitar like guys 56 00:04:32,384 --> 00:04:36,984 Speaker 2: in music shops too. We liked him, We admired his 57 00:04:37,144 --> 00:04:39,824 Speaker 2: skills on the guitar because he was far in advance 58 00:04:39,864 --> 00:04:44,024 Speaker 2: of us. And there was this one chord that we 59 00:04:44,104 --> 00:04:47,824 Speaker 2: heard in play, was a particularly lush chord. We said, 60 00:04:47,984 --> 00:04:51,384 Speaker 2: what's that? What chorde is that? And so he took 61 00:04:51,424 --> 00:04:53,904 Speaker 2: the trouble to point it out to us. It was 62 00:04:53,984 --> 00:04:58,104 Speaker 2: what we knew as an F chord, simple F shape 63 00:04:58,184 --> 00:05:03,064 Speaker 2: down at the first position, down at the nut. But 64 00:05:03,664 --> 00:05:08,864 Speaker 2: he used one of his fingers to cover the first 65 00:05:09,064 --> 00:05:15,424 Speaker 2: two strings up on the fourth fret, which would be 66 00:05:15,464 --> 00:05:20,184 Speaker 2: an A flat and an E flat, and those gave 67 00:05:20,224 --> 00:05:23,224 Speaker 2: a very jazzy cord. You got your F cord, your 68 00:05:23,264 --> 00:05:28,304 Speaker 2: normal F code, but with these it just very lush 69 00:05:28,944 --> 00:05:31,984 Speaker 2: and very exotic. So the good thing was when he 70 00:05:32,064 --> 00:05:35,144 Speaker 2: showed it to two of us, we were bound to remember, 71 00:05:36,744 --> 00:05:41,384 Speaker 2: because you know, George forgot it, I'd remember similarly vice versa. Anyway, 72 00:05:41,424 --> 00:05:45,344 Speaker 2: we knew this cord and we worked it into quite 73 00:05:45,384 --> 00:05:46,024 Speaker 2: a few things. 74 00:05:53,624 --> 00:05:59,704 Speaker 3: There were bound on a hill, but I never heard 75 00:05:59,784 --> 00:06:00,424 Speaker 3: them ringing. 76 00:06:02,224 --> 00:06:04,504 Speaker 2: We wrote it into the Beatles' version of Till There. 77 00:06:04,464 --> 00:06:07,104 Speaker 4: Was You, Till there was You. 78 00:06:09,304 --> 00:06:13,384 Speaker 2: There were because we just thought it was juicy and 79 00:06:13,504 --> 00:06:19,104 Speaker 2: it showed that we knew a bit. It showed us 80 00:06:19,144 --> 00:06:25,104 Speaker 2: this F demented or whatever it was called. And I 81 00:06:25,144 --> 00:06:31,424 Speaker 2: was making this song in c It was trying out 82 00:06:31,464 --> 00:06:35,104 Speaker 2: to be the French song that I would do at 83 00:06:35,144 --> 00:06:39,864 Speaker 2: the party. And to the second chord, I use this 84 00:06:41,064 --> 00:06:43,944 Speaker 2: Jim Gretti chord, this F chord with the added notes 85 00:06:44,784 --> 00:06:48,104 Speaker 2: we'll have an official title. It will be f Augmented 86 00:06:48,464 --> 00:06:52,504 Speaker 2: ninth or something. But we didn't deal in such luxuriousous 87 00:06:52,584 --> 00:06:56,624 Speaker 2: titles and names. Of course. It was just that one. 88 00:07:01,424 --> 00:07:07,224 Speaker 1: Paul McCartney was constantly collecting a chord here, a progression there. 89 00:07:07,744 --> 00:07:10,424 Speaker 1: It was all part of an attempt to be a 90 00:07:10,504 --> 00:07:15,624 Speaker 1: cool French intellectual, to impress John's friends. Everything he took 91 00:07:15,664 --> 00:07:18,904 Speaker 1: in was inspiration for his party piece. 92 00:07:22,024 --> 00:07:25,664 Speaker 2: Then I progressed through put in another nice little chord 93 00:07:25,744 --> 00:07:29,944 Speaker 2: we knew, which again I don't know the name of, 94 00:07:30,504 --> 00:07:35,704 Speaker 2: but we got this chord off the coasters record called 95 00:07:35,704 --> 00:07:36,944 Speaker 2: along came Jones. 96 00:07:41,504 --> 00:07:44,344 Speaker 5: I dropped down in my either tear and turned on 97 00:07:44,584 --> 00:07:48,464 Speaker 5: channel to a bad gun sling of gom over the 98 00:07:48,544 --> 00:07:52,104 Speaker 5: taste and posty. Soon he trapped her in the old 99 00:07:52,504 --> 00:07:54,384 Speaker 5: mal and failed with an eagle lab. 100 00:07:55,104 --> 00:07:57,264 Speaker 4: If you don't give it a d to your ranch, 101 00:07:57,304 --> 00:07:58,944 Speaker 4: I'll thaw you all it had. 102 00:07:59,344 --> 00:08:02,704 Speaker 2: And then he grabbed her good, and then he tied 103 00:08:02,744 --> 00:08:07,464 Speaker 2: it down, and then he had a good and then 104 00:08:07,504 --> 00:08:16,024 Speaker 2: along came Joan has been alone. But there's this Jeff 105 00:08:16,104 --> 00:08:19,664 Speaker 2: Lynn calls them naughty chords, which were a slightly naughty 106 00:08:19,704 --> 00:08:24,184 Speaker 2: chord that's out of our normal realm. So I used 107 00:08:24,184 --> 00:08:28,704 Speaker 2: these two little chords and had this melody which I say, 108 00:08:28,744 --> 00:08:32,864 Speaker 2: I used to make French grunts too, and it was 109 00:08:32,984 --> 00:08:43,544 Speaker 2: kind of half a joke really. Then years later, when 110 00:08:43,584 --> 00:08:48,424 Speaker 2: the Beatles were starting to become popular and I was 111 00:08:48,464 --> 00:08:54,024 Speaker 2: looking for ideas songs to do, Edith Piaff had a 112 00:08:54,064 --> 00:08:58,984 Speaker 2: big hit with a song called Milord, which was interesting. 113 00:08:59,024 --> 00:09:00,704 Speaker 2: It was a big here because it was out of 114 00:09:00,944 --> 00:09:04,104 Speaker 2: left field. Whereas all the other songs you sort of 115 00:09:04,184 --> 00:09:10,664 Speaker 2: knew what genre they were, this one was French and 116 00:09:11,944 --> 00:09:13,784 Speaker 2: had this interesting. 117 00:09:14,944 --> 00:09:16,864 Speaker 6: Lord as well. 118 00:09:18,944 --> 00:09:23,704 Speaker 4: Wood easy second thought, blessing. 119 00:09:24,664 --> 00:09:26,624 Speaker 2: The idea of a girl sort of talking to a 120 00:09:26,664 --> 00:09:30,464 Speaker 2: guy about mill Lord. We didn't quite get it, but 121 00:09:30,584 --> 00:09:37,864 Speaker 2: it was nice. And then she slows down, do well, 122 00:09:38,064 --> 00:09:43,984 Speaker 2: Lord does that trick? I took all of this in. 123 00:09:44,744 --> 00:09:47,024 Speaker 2: All of this was like just I just fill in 124 00:09:47,064 --> 00:09:49,144 Speaker 2: my tank, all this stuff. 125 00:09:49,704 --> 00:09:53,904 Speaker 1: As the band brainstormed for the album that would become 126 00:09:54,224 --> 00:10:00,024 Speaker 1: Rubber's Soul, John Lennon remembered Paul's French party piece from 127 00:10:00,064 --> 00:10:04,664 Speaker 1: more than five years earlier and encouraged him to pick 128 00:10:04,704 --> 00:10:05,304 Speaker 1: it back up. 129 00:10:05,744 --> 00:10:11,304 Speaker 7: So I went away and thought something bomb bomb me Lord. 130 00:10:13,464 --> 00:10:22,864 Speaker 7: So I've bought Michel that's nice French, nice sound. Michellell mabel. 131 00:10:23,784 --> 00:10:30,744 Speaker 3: These arm words that go to gather, well, my Michelle. 132 00:10:32,064 --> 00:10:45,224 Speaker 6: Be these shell mabel, these. 133 00:10:45,184 --> 00:10:48,024 Speaker 4: Arm words that go together. 134 00:10:48,584 --> 00:10:50,544 Speaker 6: Well. My mission. 135 00:10:50,744 --> 00:10:55,264 Speaker 1: In his quest to be a believable Frenchman and to 136 00:10:55,304 --> 00:10:59,584 Speaker 1: write a song like Edith Piaf's, McCartney would need help 137 00:10:59,904 --> 00:11:01,784 Speaker 1: to overcome the language barrier. 138 00:11:02,424 --> 00:11:04,704 Speaker 2: I never took French in school. I did Spanish, German 139 00:11:04,744 --> 00:11:08,744 Speaker 2: and Latin. Strangely, you get most English people talk French. Yes, 140 00:11:10,024 --> 00:11:11,064 Speaker 2: British people. 141 00:11:11,544 --> 00:11:14,264 Speaker 8: No, that's it is odd. It wasn't offered at the school. 142 00:11:14,624 --> 00:11:18,144 Speaker 2: Yeah, like it seemed like everyone else took it. John 143 00:11:18,224 --> 00:11:19,944 Speaker 2: took it, but he couldn't remember any of it. 144 00:11:20,224 --> 00:11:23,024 Speaker 4: I love you, and love you and love you. 145 00:11:24,824 --> 00:11:27,144 Speaker 3: That's all I wanted to say. 146 00:11:28,984 --> 00:11:35,824 Speaker 6: Until that bad I will say. 147 00:11:36,184 --> 00:11:38,984 Speaker 4: That you understand. 148 00:11:40,144 --> 00:11:44,864 Speaker 2: I had a friend called Ivan for probably my best 149 00:11:44,904 --> 00:11:47,704 Speaker 2: friend in school, even though he wasn't in my class. 150 00:11:47,904 --> 00:11:49,944 Speaker 2: He was born on the same day as I was, 151 00:11:50,424 --> 00:11:54,104 Speaker 2: exactly in Liverpool, eighteenth of June forty two, so we 152 00:11:54,184 --> 00:11:57,624 Speaker 2: had that in common sense of humor. Was crazy guy. 153 00:11:57,824 --> 00:11:59,584 Speaker 2: Turned out he was the guy to introduced me to 154 00:11:59,664 --> 00:12:03,104 Speaker 2: John Lennon. It was a conduit put us together. So 155 00:12:03,224 --> 00:12:07,944 Speaker 2: I was still very good friends with Ivan, who by 156 00:12:08,024 --> 00:12:11,704 Speaker 2: then had been a Cambrig scholar classics, and he and 157 00:12:11,784 --> 00:12:16,664 Speaker 2: his wife lived in Islington. Jan his wife and I 158 00:12:16,744 --> 00:12:18,424 Speaker 2: used to visit them, just go to dinner, we go 159 00:12:18,464 --> 00:12:22,224 Speaker 2: out the pub whatever. And so I was talking to her. 160 00:12:22,304 --> 00:12:26,664 Speaker 2: I knew she talked French, so I said, Jan, what 161 00:12:26,864 --> 00:12:32,624 Speaker 2: rhymes with Michelle? Two syllables? Do you think of anything? 162 00:12:33,144 --> 00:12:37,264 Speaker 2: She said? Matt Bell said, I love it. What's that 163 00:12:37,384 --> 00:12:41,944 Speaker 2: meaning with my beauty? Okay, mis Ma Bell, I think 164 00:12:42,064 --> 00:12:48,904 Speaker 2: that's lovely. I said, we're going together. They're going together 165 00:12:48,944 --> 00:12:51,744 Speaker 2: where they fit, don't they nicely? They rhyme something like that. 166 00:12:52,064 --> 00:12:57,264 Speaker 2: She said, Son, demo givonne trepan ensean bleu. You must 167 00:12:57,304 --> 00:13:01,544 Speaker 2: sounds on blur. I would have said on some So 168 00:13:02,664 --> 00:13:05,144 Speaker 2: I said, that's brilliant. I wrote it down, went back 169 00:13:05,584 --> 00:13:08,144 Speaker 2: and started working on the song with the idea. Now 170 00:13:08,744 --> 00:13:11,624 Speaker 2: that I talking to a girl called Michelle, she's my 171 00:13:11,824 --> 00:13:15,464 Speaker 2: bell and oh, by the way these words goes it wegether? Well, 172 00:13:15,904 --> 00:13:17,224 Speaker 2: look at me, I'm speaking French. 173 00:13:19,464 --> 00:13:23,704 Speaker 6: Won't ansome slab your ansome? 174 00:13:25,304 --> 00:13:27,904 Speaker 4: I need you and need you an need. 175 00:13:29,984 --> 00:13:31,984 Speaker 6: I need to make you see. 176 00:13:33,664 --> 00:13:35,784 Speaker 2: And so that gave me the idea for the song, 177 00:13:36,344 --> 00:13:38,864 Speaker 2: which was going to be I love you, I need you, 178 00:13:38,984 --> 00:13:42,544 Speaker 2: I need you, and until we get together and get 179 00:13:42,584 --> 00:13:46,464 Speaker 2: it on, I'll say these words and this is all 180 00:13:46,544 --> 00:13:49,904 Speaker 2: you need to know, just for now and the rest 181 00:13:49,904 --> 00:13:51,504 Speaker 2: of us In English, I love you, I need you. 182 00:13:52,064 --> 00:13:54,224 Speaker 2: You know I want you, I. 183 00:13:54,584 --> 00:14:07,624 Speaker 1: Love you, as was often the kiss for the Beatles 184 00:14:07,664 --> 00:14:10,944 Speaker 1: in the mid nineteen sixty is. The recording session for 185 00:14:11,344 --> 00:14:16,024 Speaker 1: Michelle was extremely fast. They put the whole thing together 186 00:14:16,424 --> 00:14:17,464 Speaker 1: in an hour and a half. 187 00:14:17,984 --> 00:14:20,344 Speaker 2: Luckily we came in prepared, we knew it all. So 188 00:14:20,464 --> 00:14:24,544 Speaker 2: I played the guitar, did that, George made a lovely 189 00:14:24,664 --> 00:14:29,184 Speaker 2: solo on electric guitar, and the rest of the guys 190 00:14:29,224 --> 00:14:29,984 Speaker 2: that have filled. 191 00:14:29,824 --> 00:14:37,264 Speaker 4: In, woo, I think you know mine now. 192 00:14:38,544 --> 00:14:41,664 Speaker 2: And then it came time for me to play the 193 00:14:41,864 --> 00:14:47,424 Speaker 2: bass on it. And again these little tricks that had 194 00:14:47,464 --> 00:14:52,864 Speaker 2: sort of got loaded in my sort of consciousness, like 195 00:14:52,984 --> 00:14:57,304 Speaker 2: all my life, just musical ideas that i'd heard that 196 00:14:57,464 --> 00:15:02,344 Speaker 2: I could pull from my subconscious and reuse them what 197 00:15:02,504 --> 00:15:05,784 Speaker 2: I like, particularly on that is where the chords are 198 00:15:05,824 --> 00:15:08,424 Speaker 2: descending in the C minor things that it is now 199 00:15:08,544 --> 00:15:12,304 Speaker 2: the verse until I don't know what I'm saying no, no, no, 200 00:15:12,384 --> 00:15:18,184 Speaker 2: no no. It goes bom boom boom boom boom doom. 201 00:15:19,224 --> 00:15:21,904 Speaker 2: While that's happening, don't you don't you turn? I go 202 00:15:22,304 --> 00:15:27,464 Speaker 2: doom doom, doom, doom doom. Instead of kind of going 203 00:15:27,584 --> 00:15:32,504 Speaker 2: boom boom or boom boom boom, the going with it, 204 00:15:33,024 --> 00:15:35,464 Speaker 2: I go against it with the bass, which I was 205 00:15:36,424 --> 00:15:37,384 Speaker 2: very satisfied with. 206 00:15:37,984 --> 00:15:40,424 Speaker 4: I'll get to use somehow. 207 00:15:41,624 --> 00:15:45,984 Speaker 6: Until I do. I'm telling you so you. 208 00:15:49,704 --> 00:15:51,944 Speaker 8: The basse was coming to the fore and a number 209 00:15:51,984 --> 00:15:54,464 Speaker 8: of psalms in that era wasn't. 210 00:15:55,344 --> 00:15:59,824 Speaker 2: I'd been very inspired by James Jamieson, the hometown bass player, 211 00:16:00,224 --> 00:16:13,984 Speaker 2: who was very melodic. It encouraged me and millions of 212 00:16:14,024 --> 00:16:18,584 Speaker 2: others to move away from the root notes traditionally, in 213 00:16:18,704 --> 00:16:21,944 Speaker 2: contrary wessons, have you just played boom boom boom boom 214 00:16:22,144 --> 00:16:26,424 Speaker 2: boom boom boom boom boom boom boom boom boom. Those 215 00:16:26,464 --> 00:16:29,544 Speaker 2: two notes are all the way that's your base part basically, 216 00:16:30,264 --> 00:16:32,544 Speaker 2: and that's why they had no glamor attached to it 217 00:16:32,624 --> 00:16:38,024 Speaker 2: at all. But James Jamison then started playing around with it, 218 00:16:50,544 --> 00:16:54,144 Speaker 2: and I was massively inspired by him, and so I 219 00:16:54,304 --> 00:16:59,984 Speaker 2: started thinking, ah, there room for movement here and I 220 00:17:00,144 --> 00:17:02,344 Speaker 2: started to experiment a little. 221 00:17:18,384 --> 00:17:23,344 Speaker 1: In the beginning. Before the Beatles were the Beatles, Paul 222 00:17:23,504 --> 00:17:27,944 Speaker 1: had gravitated toward playing lead guitar. He had learned chords, 223 00:17:28,384 --> 00:17:32,224 Speaker 1: some from that music store proprietor Jim Gretty, and then 224 00:17:32,464 --> 00:17:34,464 Speaker 1: passed them on to John Lennon. 225 00:17:34,784 --> 00:17:36,464 Speaker 2: It could have been one of the guitar players, but 226 00:17:36,584 --> 00:17:39,024 Speaker 2: there were two already, right. And what had happened with 227 00:17:39,144 --> 00:17:40,944 Speaker 2: my guitar playing was I was good at it at 228 00:17:40,984 --> 00:17:43,944 Speaker 2: home and John Jant. Mimi used to say, oh, it 229 00:17:44,064 --> 00:17:46,544 Speaker 2: was much better than John, mind you. When I first 230 00:17:46,584 --> 00:17:50,104 Speaker 2: met John, he played banjo coats. He didn't play guitar 231 00:17:50,144 --> 00:17:53,064 Speaker 2: because I had to show him guitar coats because he'd 232 00:17:53,104 --> 00:17:56,424 Speaker 2: been taught by his mom and he only knew banjo coats. 233 00:17:56,904 --> 00:18:00,184 Speaker 2: What happened to me was we played a place called 234 00:18:00,224 --> 00:18:07,384 Speaker 2: the Conservative Club, which was above a shop in Broadway, Liverpool. 235 00:18:08,104 --> 00:18:09,704 Speaker 2: We had this gig in it was like what the 236 00:18:09,784 --> 00:18:12,544 Speaker 2: first thing I ever played and I was lead guitar player. 237 00:18:13,104 --> 00:18:16,104 Speaker 2: John was rhythm and I had a solo and I 238 00:18:16,304 --> 00:18:20,984 Speaker 2: totally froze. I could not move my fingers, let's go. 239 00:18:23,984 --> 00:18:27,824 Speaker 2: It was like just so embarrassing my lead guitar playing 240 00:18:27,944 --> 00:18:32,864 Speaker 2: career melted at that moment, and I said, well, I'm 241 00:18:32,904 --> 00:18:34,904 Speaker 2: not doing this again. This, I'm not cut out for this. 242 00:18:35,024 --> 00:18:35,584 Speaker 2: I'm not good. 243 00:18:36,024 --> 00:18:40,504 Speaker 1: McCartney still played guitar, he just avoided the solos, but 244 00:18:40,704 --> 00:18:44,384 Speaker 1: when the Beatles trained for more than two years in Hamburg, 245 00:18:45,024 --> 00:18:48,304 Speaker 1: it was the guitar that wasn't cut out for him. 246 00:18:49,184 --> 00:18:53,624 Speaker 2: I had from Hess's and Jim Gretti. What I was 247 00:18:53,704 --> 00:18:57,784 Speaker 2: paying awful was a little guitar called a Rosetti Lucky seven, 248 00:18:58,304 --> 00:19:01,744 Speaker 2: which is quite the cheapest thing you could buy. But 249 00:19:01,904 --> 00:19:05,344 Speaker 2: it looked pretty. It was red and it was a 250 00:19:05,504 --> 00:19:08,584 Speaker 2: sort of electric guitar, but it was really just a 251 00:19:08,624 --> 00:19:12,384 Speaker 2: plank of forward, very badly made. But it kind of 252 00:19:12,424 --> 00:19:14,304 Speaker 2: looked all right, so I thought it look good in 253 00:19:14,384 --> 00:19:17,584 Speaker 2: the photoson on stage. But I took it to Hamburg 254 00:19:18,144 --> 00:19:21,744 Speaker 2: and the stress of Hamburg was just too much forward it. 255 00:19:22,144 --> 00:19:25,504 Speaker 2: Then it fell apart, basically, just part of it. Wasn't 256 00:19:25,544 --> 00:19:29,544 Speaker 2: well made. Guitars have this trust rod going through. This didn't. 257 00:19:30,144 --> 00:19:32,904 Speaker 2: This was just a neck attached to a body and 258 00:19:33,104 --> 00:19:35,904 Speaker 2: it was a terrible little thing. Anyway, it fell apart, 259 00:19:36,424 --> 00:19:39,624 Speaker 2: so there was no retrieving it. It was we didn't 260 00:19:39,704 --> 00:19:43,264 Speaker 2: know someone who could fix it, and we couldn't fix it, 261 00:19:43,824 --> 00:19:47,384 Speaker 2: so that was dumped and I became the pianist because 262 00:19:47,424 --> 00:19:48,704 Speaker 2: there was a piano on stage. 263 00:20:00,504 --> 00:20:03,944 Speaker 1: This was nineteen sixty one and at the time the 264 00:20:04,064 --> 00:20:08,984 Speaker 1: band consisted of Paul John, George Harrison, drummer Pete Bez, 265 00:20:09,584 --> 00:20:13,864 Speaker 1: and Stuart Sutcliffe, a bass player whom John had met 266 00:20:13,944 --> 00:20:14,744 Speaker 1: at art school. 267 00:20:15,384 --> 00:20:19,824 Speaker 2: Well, he wasn't very musical. Stuart. He loved his music, 268 00:20:19,904 --> 00:20:22,904 Speaker 2: but he just wasn't. All of us had played guitar, 269 00:20:23,384 --> 00:20:25,704 Speaker 2: so the transition to go to bass wasn't too hot. 270 00:20:26,344 --> 00:20:29,864 Speaker 2: Stuart hadn't, so he had to learn from the ground up, 271 00:20:29,864 --> 00:20:32,264 Speaker 2: and we showed him to the things, but we actually 272 00:20:32,384 --> 00:20:34,624 Speaker 2: used to have to ask him to turn his back 273 00:20:35,104 --> 00:20:38,184 Speaker 2: to the camera if there were any photos being taken, 274 00:20:38,744 --> 00:20:42,024 Speaker 2: because we knew that people could see. He wasn't necessarily 275 00:20:42,104 --> 00:20:44,384 Speaker 2: playing in the same key as us. But he's a 276 00:20:44,424 --> 00:20:46,584 Speaker 2: lovely guy and he fell in love with a photographer 277 00:20:46,624 --> 00:20:52,304 Speaker 2: called Astroude Kirshner in Hamburg, and Stuart told us one 278 00:20:52,344 --> 00:20:55,184 Speaker 2: that he was going to stay. So now we didn't 279 00:20:55,224 --> 00:20:58,184 Speaker 2: have a bass player. Now. The rumor since has been 280 00:20:58,264 --> 00:21:00,304 Speaker 2: that I edged him out of the band, because we 281 00:21:00,424 --> 00:21:03,304 Speaker 2: certainly did have our difficulties. For me, it was mainly 282 00:21:03,304 --> 00:21:05,064 Speaker 2: because I didn't think he was a very good musician, 283 00:21:05,504 --> 00:21:09,624 Speaker 2: which he wasn't and he admitted it. So for me 284 00:21:09,824 --> 00:21:15,544 Speaker 2: that caused problems because being a I mean, you could 285 00:21:15,584 --> 00:21:18,624 Speaker 2: say being a perfectionist, but actually asking the bass player 286 00:21:18,664 --> 00:21:20,904 Speaker 2: to play in the same key as us isn't really 287 00:21:20,984 --> 00:21:24,824 Speaker 2: looking for perfection. It's quite a mild request. 288 00:21:25,464 --> 00:21:29,864 Speaker 1: Well, it's been rumored that McCartney wanted Stuart Sutcliffe gone 289 00:21:30,184 --> 00:21:33,744 Speaker 1: so he could play the bass. He remembers there not 290 00:21:33,984 --> 00:21:36,824 Speaker 1: being much competition for the role. 291 00:21:37,184 --> 00:21:40,064 Speaker 2: When Stuart left. We said who wants to be BASSI 292 00:21:40,064 --> 00:21:43,744 Speaker 2: and Johnson will not me? George were not me, Ringo, 293 00:21:44,344 --> 00:21:46,544 Speaker 2: or maybe it wasn't Ringo at that point I think 294 00:21:46,584 --> 00:21:49,944 Speaker 2: it was still pe Pest said not me, and that 295 00:21:50,104 --> 00:21:53,104 Speaker 2: left me the guy who didn't have a guitar and 296 00:21:53,384 --> 00:21:56,504 Speaker 2: was now playing piano. So I had to switch to bass. 297 00:21:56,864 --> 00:22:00,304 Speaker 2: So I bought myself the Hoffner bass, which is a 298 00:22:00,384 --> 00:22:04,784 Speaker 2: lovely instrument. It fulfilled all my requirements. It was cheap, 299 00:22:05,784 --> 00:22:08,864 Speaker 2: available and light light. 300 00:22:09,184 --> 00:22:10,104 Speaker 8: I think it's important. 301 00:22:10,144 --> 00:22:13,904 Speaker 2: It's life weeight. I didn't realize till later how important 302 00:22:13,944 --> 00:22:17,704 Speaker 2: it was, but it's actually really affects your style of playing. 303 00:22:18,344 --> 00:22:21,584 Speaker 2: So I got that for thirty quid or thirty marks 304 00:22:22,224 --> 00:22:26,544 Speaker 2: something thirty something in Hamburg, down by the Ulster where 305 00:22:26,544 --> 00:22:27,944 Speaker 2: there was some instrument shops. 306 00:22:28,824 --> 00:22:31,904 Speaker 1: By the time he wrote the lyrics too, Michelle, several 307 00:22:31,984 --> 00:22:37,424 Speaker 1: years after Hamburg, McCartney had become a venerable bass player, 308 00:22:37,944 --> 00:22:41,904 Speaker 1: creating bass lines that did much more than back up 309 00:22:42,024 --> 00:22:43,304 Speaker 1: the other instrumentation. 310 00:22:56,424 --> 00:22:59,224 Speaker 2: The end which came off on the Beatles Road. It 311 00:22:59,304 --> 00:23:01,984 Speaker 2: seeming like a bit of a mistake. We sort of 312 00:23:02,064 --> 00:23:05,184 Speaker 2: tried to slow down, but our hearts weren't in it. 313 00:23:06,144 --> 00:23:10,064 Speaker 2: Like the French people liked that trick. I don't think 314 00:23:10,824 --> 00:23:13,064 Speaker 2: the guys like that trick to us. So you'll hear 315 00:23:13,104 --> 00:23:17,464 Speaker 2: it sounds like the record just slows down, Miche slows 316 00:23:17,504 --> 00:23:21,344 Speaker 2: down a little bit. Well, but it doesn't go me 317 00:23:22,264 --> 00:23:27,104 Speaker 2: show no. Well, it don't rapidly accelerates. 318 00:23:27,784 --> 00:23:29,664 Speaker 8: So had that been part of the thinking at some 319 00:23:29,824 --> 00:23:33,384 Speaker 8: point that it would bear more of the French tradition. 320 00:23:33,304 --> 00:23:40,784 Speaker 2: Yeah, exactly. So you will hear at the end of 321 00:23:40,864 --> 00:23:44,144 Speaker 2: the record of the sell just slows down a little bit. 322 00:23:44,224 --> 00:23:46,304 Speaker 2: But it sounds just like there's something wrong with the record. 323 00:23:47,624 --> 00:23:49,504 Speaker 2: We didn't use it a great traumatic effect. 324 00:23:49,984 --> 00:23:53,864 Speaker 1: As the Beatles rose to fame, there was no longer 325 00:23:53,984 --> 00:23:57,464 Speaker 1: a need for McCartney to pretend he was French in 326 00:23:57,664 --> 00:24:02,184 Speaker 1: order to impress. In twenty ten, however, he played the 327 00:24:02,304 --> 00:24:06,664 Speaker 1: song to impress at a very different engagement when he 328 00:24:06,784 --> 00:24:10,784 Speaker 1: was receiving an honor from President Barack Obama. The First 329 00:24:10,904 --> 00:24:13,384 Speaker 1: Lady Michelle Obama was there as well. 330 00:24:14,024 --> 00:24:15,664 Speaker 2: The Next Time We Like to Do is a song 331 00:24:15,904 --> 00:24:18,944 Speaker 2: I have been itching to do at the White House, 332 00:24:20,464 --> 00:24:24,624 Speaker 2: and I hope the President will forgive me. Have I 333 00:24:24,744 --> 00:24:25,504 Speaker 2: seen this one? 334 00:24:26,024 --> 00:24:43,264 Speaker 4: What Marbles words go. 335 00:24:43,904 --> 00:24:49,984 Speaker 1: To Get Michelle, released in nineteen sixty five on the 336 00:24:50,064 --> 00:24:56,824 Speaker 1: Beatles Rubber So In the next episode, once There was away. 337 00:24:59,744 --> 00:25:01,544 Speaker 6: To get back Home. 338 00:25:02,224 --> 00:25:06,504 Speaker 1: Longing for the way things used to be, and knowing 339 00:25:06,904 --> 00:25:09,584 Speaker 1: you can never truly re turn home. 340 00:25:11,784 --> 00:25:21,064 Speaker 3: Get back home, Sleep pretty darn, do not cry, and 341 00:25:21,264 --> 00:25:23,704 Speaker 3: I will sing another by. 342 00:25:28,504 --> 00:25:30,824 Speaker 4: The snub must be. 343 00:25:35,224 --> 00:25:45,624 Speaker 9: Small way you way rise, Sleep pretty dark, do not Cry. 344 00:25:48,584 --> 00:25:52,264 Speaker 1: In the season finale of McCartney A Life in Lyrics, 345 00:25:52,864 --> 00:26:01,544 Speaker 1: Golden Slumbers carry that with and the end. McCartney A 346 00:26:01,704 --> 00:26:06,544 Speaker 1: Life in Lyrics is a co production between iHeartMedia, NPL 347 00:26:07,064 --> 00:26:08,784 Speaker 1: and Pushkin industries,