Paul McCartney debuted his new band Wings with a controversial song about the Northern Irish massacre known as Bloody Sunday.
The delegation led by Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po arrived in Jakarta on Tuesday evening, with the senior official expected to address the “Think Business, Think Hong Kong” symposium ...
Among them was Paul McCartney's 1972 hit 'Hi, Hi, Hi', which he wrote with wife Linda and recorded with Wings. The song includes the lyrics: "We're gonna get hi, hi, hi with the music on.
But their music also occasionally landed the band in hot water - with 'I Am the Walrus' and 'A Day in the Life' being among the songs banned by the BBC for ... Among them was Paul McCartney's 1972 hit ...
Which is why McCartney, as mentioned above, became snippy with some reviewers and snubbed others. The American reviewers were much nicer. The book also demonstrates that Paul McCartney is a ...
Paul McCartney ... Lennon and McCartney was supposedly obliterated, it was instead very much alive. It is evident in the looks Lennon and McCartney exchange in the first song they practice ...
“People in Power,” as the song’s title translates in English, has become the unofficial anthem of a mass uprising that has consumed this southern African nation over the past few ...
Among them is musician Paul McCartney, who told his fans during a Q&A on his website he hopes to "finish an album" in the coming year. "I’ve been working on a lot of songs, and have had to put ...
Considering the wealth of songs he’s written over his illustrious career, there’s not much calling for Paul McCartney to indulge in recording covers of other artists. However, when the Beatles bassist ...
he knew he'd got the song, so rather than ask me, 'John, do these lyrics' because, by that period, he didn't want to say that to me, okay..." But this is not how Paul McCartney remembers it.
Paul McCartney's McCartney ... What brings McCartney II to the Billboard 200 once more? Some versions of the album feature the musician’s song “Wonderful Christmastime,” which is not just ...
That line sounds more like a sexual metaphor than anything. Considering plenty of The Beatles’ songs and Paul’s solo songs are built around innuendo, fans should be forgiven if they assume ...