Showing posts with label Paul McCartney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul McCartney. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2011

Sir Paul McCartney Performs at Wrigley Field for 'On the Run' Tour

Sir Paul McCartney Performs at Wrigley Field for 'On the Run' Tour

I was interviewed about the upcoming Paul McCartney show at Wrigley Field. How cool is that! I can't wait for Sunday to see Paul.

Sir Paul McCartney Performs at Wrigley Field for 'On the Run' Tour: MyFoxCHICAGO.com

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Macca, your joke wasn't that funny



Was Paul out of line with this quip?
Yes. It is disrespectful to criticize a president while at the White House, regardless of who it is.

Should he apologize?
No. It was meant to be humorous and forced apologies are meaningless blather and rarely sincere. Besides, we have free speech here. (I'm also a libertarian and wouldn't impose on anyone's first amendment rights)

This did knock him down another peg in my view though. The other peg(leg) being Heather Mills, although he did manage to escape that one, I did start questioning his sanity/character when he married her.

Love his music. Abhor his politics.

Just my two cents.... for what it's worth.

Kat

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Beatlefest Chicago 2010

Beatlefest (aka the Fest for Beatles Fans) just sent out an email annoucing their guest for the Aug 13-16 fest at the Hyatt Regency O'Hare. You know I'll be there. I've been going since 1979. This fest sounds like a great line up with three members of Wings. I saw Laurence Juber in concert last night and he is so incredible. I can't get enough. I wish I could afford to see him on the Beatle cruise next year. LJ announced that he is releasing a new CD of LJ plays the Beatles 2. I'd love to see a Wings reunion playing Rockestra at the fest. Gary Wright and Chris O'Dell will have interesting stories to tell I'm sure. I am so looking forward to festing this summer.

Friday, January 1, 2010

I'm a Beatles Rock Band player now

















I am so happy that I now have Beatles Rock Band Limited Edition Bundle. Santa gave it to me and the Limited Edition Beatles Rock Band is the only way to get a Hofner Bass just like Paul McCartney plays. I love being Paul and luckily I have teenagers at home I can jam with. I must say, the drums are a bit tricky for me so I am focusing on the bass first. I do switch off between the instruments and singing though.

I was a little disappointed to find that you have to buy John Lennon's Rickenbacker and George Harrison's Gretsch guitar controllers separately. Fortunately, I found the Rickenbacker guitar controller at FYE on sale for $79 and with a backstage pass loyalty card and a coupon also, I shaved about $30 off the $99 pricetag. That is better than any price I have seen anywhere so far, so my disappointment with only getting half the Beatles in the bundle is a little better. I still need to pick up the George Harrison Gretsch guitar to have the complete set. I just don't want to shell out another hundred bucks to get one.

IMHO I still think they need a Fab Four edition that includes all four of their instruments and maybe sell a keyboard separately so you can add Billy Preston for the rooftop concert....or maybe a big bag to be Yoko.

I am looking forward to seeing what they will have for the Paul McCartney Rock Band. They are adding tracks from his New York concert to the game. Overall, this is really a wonderful game and I recommend all Beatle-fans get one before they stop selling the limited edition and you can't find the other guitars. This game gets a big McCartney-style thumbs up from me. I haven't had this much fun in ages.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Ram On Ukulele Paul McCartney Cover

Gigi from Wonderwall was teaching me this today at the Here Comes the Sun event. Awesome little song for the ukulele.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Autism walk and special Beatles Red Nose Day t-shirt raffle


I am participating in Walk Now for Autism to help find a cure for autism. As you may know, my son Sean has a form of autism called PDD-NOS. This stands for Pervasive Developmental Disorder Not Otherwise Specified. Sean is a very sweet boy who enjoys Star Wars, Lego video games and Tae Kwon Do. He started high school this year and is involved with the Best Buddies program at his school. Thankfully, he is high functioning, although he still requires special ed and many services and therapies in school and out.


Autism is the second most common developmental disorder in the United States affecting one in every 150 children born today. Despite some promising discoveries, the cause of autism is unknown and a cure does not exist. Research is crucial. Every 20 minutes another child is diagnosed with autism. Not only must we find ways to improve the quality of life for children and adults with autism, but we also must find a cure, and soon.


By participating in this event, our hope is that we will soon hear “Your child no longer has autism.


*** Raffle ***
Every $10 donation to my page can be entered into the drawing to win a pair of Chicago Bears tickets.


I have also added a second very special drawing for my fellow Beatle-fans to win a Red Nose Day t-shirt (M,L or XL) instead. This is only open to residents of the US. Drawings will be during the first week of May. Drop me a note at kat@beatle-fans.com and let me know which drawing you would like to participate in and shirt size if you are entering the rednose raffle. The raffle is for the world famous Beatles Red Nose Comic Relief t-shirt designed by Stella, photo by Linda and modeled by Paul McCartney on the Grammy Awards.


Thanks so much for your support. Here is the link to my page at Walk Now for Autism.


** Kat's walk page **


Good luck!

Friday, January 2, 2009

Have a Gear New Year!

beatles gear new year




The highlight of my Beatleyear 2008 was seeing Ringo twice in Chicago, attending his peace & love birthday party and then seeing him and the All-Starr band a couple days later. Also, Paul ridding himself of that beast-woman Heather Mills was a good thing.

Have a happy and prosperous 2009 filled with Peace & Love,

Kat



***

Buy super cheap Beatle books at BookCloseOuts.com

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Carnival of Light - Sir Paul McCartney wants to see it released


It sure looks like Paul McCartney is exploring his avant garde/funky side. He also said recently that he should have released his recent Firemen work under his own name instead of a pseudonym.

From The Guardian UK Sunday November 16

Carnival of Light

For Beatles fans across the world it has gained near mythical status. The 14-minute improvised track called 'Carnival of Light' was recorded in 1967 and played just once in public. It was never released because three of the Fab Four thought it too adventurous.

The track, a jumble of shrieks and psychedelic effects, is said to be as far from the melodic ballads that made Sir Paul McCartney famous as it is possible to imagine. But now McCartney has said that the public will have the chance to judge for themselves.

'It does exist,' McCartney says on a BBC Radio 4 arts programme to be broadcast this week. Talking to John Wilson, the presenter of Front Row, the former Beatle confirms that he still has a master tape of the work and says he suspects that 'the time has come for it to get its moment'.

'I like it because it's the Beatles free, going off piste,' he adds.

In the 40 years since 'Carnival of Light' was recorded by McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison and John Lennon in the Abbey Road studios in London, its collection of disparate rhythms has become a kind of holy grail for Beatles obsessives. The track was put together on 5 January 1967, in between working on the vocals for the song 'Penny Lane'.

Once released it should offer proof that the Fab Four, and McCartney in particular, were much more avant-garde in their tastes than many gave them credit for. According to the few who heard the track on the one occasion the recording was played publicly, at a London music festival in 1967, it features the sound of gargled water and strangled shouts from Lennon which vie with church organs and distorted guitar.

'We were set up in the studio and would just go in every day and record,' McCartney tells Wilson. 'I said to the guys, this is a bit indulgent but would you mind giving me 10 minutes? I've been asked to do this thing. All I want you to do is just wander round all of the stuff and bang it, shout, play it. It doesn't need to make any sense. Hit a drum, wander to the piano, hit a few notes ... and then we put a bit of echo on it. It's very free.'

McCartney had been commissioned to create a piece for an electronic music festival at the Roundhouse Theatre in north London by his friend Barry Miles. The event, the Million Volt Light and Sound Rave, was organised by International Times, an underground newspaper. Many in the audience had no idea they were listening to a new Beatles track. Other performers included Delia Derbyshire whose work at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop included jointly creating the theme for Doctor Who.

McCartney, who this month releases his third experimental album of new work under the alias the Fireman, regards 'Carnival of Light' as evidence of how musically adventurous he has always been. For the three other Beatles the track was just an oddity. George Harrison dismissed it as too weird. But McCartney is hopeful it can now be released with the agreement of the group's estate.

'It will help reaffirm McCartney's claim to have been the most musically adventurous of all the Beatles,' said Wilson this weekend. 'He told me he would love to release the track. All he needs now is the blessing of Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono and George Harrison's widow Olivia.'

The piece was inspired, McCartney says, by the works of composers John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen. In his book Complete Beatles Recording Sessions, author Mark Lewisohn - who was played the track in 1987 - describes 'distorted, hypnotic drum and organ sounds, a distorted lead guitar, the sound of a church organ, various effects (water gargling was one) and, perhaps most intimidating of all, Lennon and McCartney screaming and bawling random phrases including "Are you all right?" and '"Barcelona!".'

Beatles fans came close to hearing 'Carnival Of Light' in 1996 when it was considered for inclusion in the exhaustive Anthology compilation. 'We were listening to everything we'd every recorded,' McCartney says. 'I said it would be great to put this on because it would show we were working with really avant-garde stuff ... But it was vetoed. The guys didn't like the idea, like "this is rubbish".'

McCartney revealed that George Harrison disparaged sonic experimentation as 'avant-garde a clue'.

Sir George Martin, the Beatles producer who oversaw the track, has described it as 'one of those weird things'. 'It was a kind of uncomposed, free-for-all melange of sound that went on. It was not considered worthy of issuing as a normal piece of Beatles music at the time and was put away.'

Thursday, April 3, 2008

The Paul McCartney Death Hoax


The Greatest Hoax in Rock and Roll History - Part 1


By Kathy Wheeler

Back in 1969, around the time that The Beatles released Abbey Road, a rumor spread that Paul McCartney had died at approximately 5:00 am in a car crash on November 9, 1966 and the Beatles were covering it up. The story was widely circulated for about two months. The Beatles were said to be revealing clues through songs and album covers. Some say this rumor originated on college campuses around the country and it was mostly an American phenomenon. The story came out nearly three years later on October 12, 1969 when Detroit disk jockey Russ Gibb received a call from a listener about the “I buried Paul” clue on Strawberry Fields and he began pulling out Beatles albums and inventing new clues on the spot. The Newspapers publicized his on-air bit and the rumor spread like wildfire.

At the urging of a Miami disc jockey, Dr. Henry Truby, Director of the University of Miami’s Language and Linguistics Research Laboratory ran a twenty-hour spectrograph experiment using Beatle songs to analyze the “vocal fingerprints”. He compared Yesterday with Hey Jude. Dr. Truby discovered six distinct voices and concluded that he heard three Paul McCartneys.

The story took on a life of its own. Suddenly everything the Beatles had done since Yesterday and Today may have concealed a secret message that Paul was dead. Of course, he wasn’t dead, but everyone had a great time searching for clues. The biggest puzzle is what did the Beatles know and when did they know it. If they actually had anything to do with it, they have never said so publicly. They have always denied having anything to do with it. No one really knows whether the clues were planted intentionally from the start, were coincidental, or whether someone in the Beatles organization picked up on the rumors early on and capitalized on them. I have my suspicions, however, that John, with his somewhat twisted sense of humor, and possibly others such as Mal Evans, Brian Epstein or someone close to the Beatles may have masterminded or had some involvement in the greatest hoax in rock and roll history.

The Fatal Crash

Paul left Abbey Road Studios in a huff on the day John met Yoko. Driving a white Aston-Martin sports car, he ran off the road after being distracted by a pretty girl —possibly a meter maid. He suffered severe head injuries and his teeth were knocked out. There was a secret look-alike contest and that a man named William Campbell was the winner. You could tell the imposter by the scar on his upper lip. He was also taller, which is why they stopped touring. Some also said the replacement’s name was Billy Shears.

It is true that Paul McCartney was in a crash in 1966 and November 9, 1966 happened to fall on a Wednesday. There were also times when he would be in the studio until around 5:00 in the morning. However, Paul’s accident was on a motorbike, not in a car. In the Beatles Anthology he says that he grew a mustache because he had a moped accident and chipped his tooth and tore up his lip. He certainly was not decapitated. In the promotional videos for Paperback Writer and Rain, you can see Paul’s chipped tooth. The video was actually filmed on May 20, 1966, a few months before the alleged car crash.

Early Clues

Now that you have heard about the accident and how clues are hidden in the songs and albums, it is time to do some detective work and find all the clues. For some strange reason clues were popping up in albums that came out before November 9, 1966, namely Rubber Soul, Yesterday and Today, as well as Revolver.

The name of the album Rubber Soul may just be the very first clue. Rubber for the tires of the car Paul was driving and Soul for death. The serious expressions on their faces may indicate mourning. Were they looking down into the grave? The distortion in the photo symbolizes that something is not the same about the group. Could it have been because someone was standing in for Paul? On the back in the lower left corner Paul is shown as only a head, no neck or body, indicating head injuries or possibly decapitation. The song I’m Looking Through You could indicate transparency such as a ghost. Paul also refers to William Campbell when he sings, “You don’t look different, but you have changed.”

Yesterday and Today’s Butcher Cover was meant to shock people and retaliate against Capitol Records for repackaging their albums in America. The cover features the Beatles in a gruesome scene with decapitated dolls, raw meat and false teeth. This supposedly symbolized the fact that Paul was dead, torn up and bloody, decapitated and his teeth had been knocked out. Paul was also the Beatle with most of the stuff on him, including the teeth, which indicated that the corpse was hard to identify, even through dental records. George is holding up a head next to Paul’s head, signifying that Paul had been decapitated. The album was recalled, re-covered and re-released. This was the beginning of the “cover-up”. The new and improved cover for Yesterday and Today featured Paul cross-legged and apparently barefoot sitting in a trunk beneath the other three Beatles. When looked at sideways, he appears to be in a coffin. Both bare feet and crossed legs are ways other cultures (and the mafia) bury their dead.

This type of symbolism will appear elsewhere in this Paul is Dead scenario. The songs also give very subtle clues. Drive My Car is one of the first car references. I’m Only Sleeping is about dying and sleeping forever. Doctor Robert is the guy who secretly signed the death certificate. Nowhere Man means the man (Paul) is no longer here in this world. Act Naturally is advice to William Campbell not to blow the cover-up. The song, Yesterday includes the lines “I’m not half the man I used to be, there’s a shadow hanging over me.” Does this mean Paul is not really Paul?

The last album in the “not-quite-a-clue-yet” category is Revolver. There are a couple of clues in the songs also. Paul’s Got to Get You Into My Life says, “I was alone, I took a ride, I didn’t know what I would find there.” This is another car accident reference. Tomorrow Never Knows tells us to not think about the deception, just accept it. “Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream. It is not dying, it is not dying. Lay down all thoughts surrender to the void, it is shining” is directed at Paul as he is hanging by a thread. The “it” in “it is not dying” refers to the group, not Paul. “It is shining” refers to the white light, which is seen at the moment of death. Basically, the message is that Paul’s death does not have to mean the Beatles are dead. In fact, pretty much the entire song can be reinterpreted as a clue.

And, finally, She Said talks about knowing what it is like to be dead. On the cover of Revolver Paul is pictured differently; his head is turned away from the others. In all the instances where Paul is portrayed differently it is a clue that he is a different person.

Part 2
Part 3














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