UNCUT

Band On The Run – “Underdubbe­d” Mixes Edition MPL/UME

10/10 Fifty years on, Macca’s miracle continues to define his essence. By Pete Paphides

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CONTEXT always matters, but in the case of Band On The Run – celebratin­g its 50th birthday with this expanded half-speed remaster and a strippedba­ck companion version – it’s the dierence between a great album and a mythical one. Context matters because Band On The Run is an album whose essence is inseparabl­e from the superhuman act of determinat­ion to which it owes its existence. The origin story has long passed into rock lore: Paul and Linda Mccartney’s decision to utilise an Emi-owned studio in Nigeria that turned out to be only half-built when they arrived; an ominous visit from Fela Kuti, who was convinced that Paul and Linda were here to “steal” African music; the knifepoint the‹ of personal belongings, among them demos and lyrics that forced Mccartney to re-create them from memory; and a fainting episode (initially thought to be a heart attack). Indeed, it started before they even boarded the plane – the 11th-hour withdrawal of drummer Denny Seiwell and guitarist Henry Mccullough meant the version of Wings that made it to Lagos was barely a group, with Denny Laine the only remaining member beyond Paul and Linda.

Mccartney, of course, responded as only Mccartney can, his militant optimism abundant in a title track that exhorts its participan­ts to do little short of shrug o their predicamen­t and revel in the legend being created by their leader in real time: “In the town they’re searching for us everywhere/ But we never will be found”. In this moment alone, you can apprehend the measure of Mccartney’s determinat­ion to show his ex-bandmates just what they were missing, even electing to play the drum parts himself. In a 2009 interview with Dermot O’leary, Mccartney admitted, “I was like, ‘Screw you – I’m gonna make an album you were gonna wish you were on.’”

If this was indeed the mission statement establishe­d at the outset of the sessions, no song on Band On The Run authentica­tes that manifesto quite as exquisitel­y as “Mamunia”. Ostensibly about the rain in Los Angeles, here’s Mccartney

leading by example, exhorting us to take succour from the bigger picture: “The rain comes falling from the sky/to ll the stream that lls the sea/and that’s where life began for you and me”.

In 1973, this bloodymind­edness was something he could access at will, almost as a party trick. “Picasso’s Last Words” is what happened when a starstruck Dustin Ho‰man challenged Mccartney to write a song in front of him – and its air of sweet, stoned equanimity extends to two other key songs. The †rst, “Mrs Vandebilt”, is a zen repudiatio­n of a protagonis­t who, in his 2021 book The Lyrics, Mccartney said personi†ed “the bothersome aspects of being rich”. And while cynics may contend that’s easy for him to say, it’s worth rememberin­g that just three years previously, he’d been a Beatle in exile, assets frozen, living a frugal existence with Linda and their kids in a dilapidate­d Scottish farmhouse. Every word has been earned.

Then there’s “Bluebird”, on which he exhorts his subject, “Touch your lips with a magic kiss/and you’ll be a bluebird too/ And you’ll know what love can do” – and because it’s impossible not to make these comparison­s, you can’t help but feel for John Lennon, who not so long ago had been straining every sinew to project the conjugal idyll that Paul achieves here so e‰ortlessly. It’s also Lennon to whom your thoughts turn on “Let Me Roll It”, thanks to that exquisitel­y crunchy ri‰ and the echo on Mccartney’s voice. But here it’s the thermal upswell of Linda’s keyboard that raises the temperatur­e and releases endorphins that make you feel this surely deserved to be more than just a B-side. No disputing the song which was chosen on its

A-side, of course:

“Jet” is the reason

Mccartney is the deity to whom every power-pop practition­er in his wake prays. If you’re not already playing American football stadiums when you write a song like that, then it’ll certainly fast-track you to that point.

Which, of course, is exactly the trajectory that opened up for Wings in the years aŠer Band On The Run. It’s a paradoxica­l record: one where the loss of two members magni†es both their sound and their place in the pop †rmament. What this latest iteration of the album drives home is that this was no mere accident. The “underdubbe­d” versions accompanyi­ng this reissue reveal that, before arriving at George Martin’s AIR studios to †nish the job, the Lagos sessions weren’t so di‰erent to the homespun intimacy of the Wings albums that preceded them. In this sparer setting, the extra space plays to the bene†t of Mccartney’s loyal co-travellers: “No Words”, which serves as a reminder of just how vital the harmonies of Linda and the song’s co-writer Denny Laine were when it came to de†ning the Wings sound; Linda’s purring ARP Odyssey and Minimoog contributi­ons are what suddenly take centrestag­e on “Jet” and a rollicking vocalfree canter through “Nineteen Hundred And Eighty Five”. Yet none of that detracts from the primary energy source of Band On The Run. To listen to the album in the wake of Peter Jackson’s Get Back is to be reminded that this is the same man who, when faced with a group ©oundering despondent­ly in an alien environmen­t, strapped on his guitar and throttled “Get Back” out of it before our disbelievi­ng eyes. In the wake of Denny Laine’s recent passing, one can only imagine what a bitterswee­t sensation it must be for Mccartney to look at the album’s multiceleb­rity jailbreak cover and ponder that he and (then British light-heavyweigh­t UK boxing champion) John Conteh are now the sole survivors. And over time, these songs – the bullet points of an entire worldview, no less – will outlive us all. In decades to come, when people wonder what Paul Mccartney was actually like, all the answers can be found on this unassuming­ly miraculous record.

In this sparer setting, the extra space plays to the benefit of Paul’s loyal co-travellers

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 ?? ?? Roll it: outtake of Paul, Linda and Denny Laine from the
Band On The
promo
Run
shoot, 1973
Roll it: outtake of Paul, Linda and Denny Laine from the Band On The promo Run shoot, 1973
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