National Post (National Edition)

PAUL McCARTNEY ROLLS THE DICE

ECHOES OF AN OLD BEATLE'S PAST GLORIES.

- McCartney III Paul McCartney Capitol NEIL McCORMICK

“I know there must be other ways of feeling free / But this is what I wanna do, who I wanna be,” yells Paul McCartney over a stew of heavy guitars, grungy bass and thumping drums. Although McCartney III is essentiall­y a product of the pandemic, it is perhaps the most joyous response to lockdown imaginable.

With government advice mandating minimal social contact for people in his age bracket, the 78-year-old singer-songwriter has spent isolation recording an album on which he plays all the instrument­s.

He has done this before in presumably less stressful conditions, so the number III indicates its connection to his post-Beatles solo debut McCartney in 1970, and his first post-Wings offering McCartney II (1980). What all these albums share is a sense of playfulnes­s. McCartney is trying to please no one more than himself, with results that should also please anyone who ever loved his particular way with melody, harmony, rhythm and song.

There is a sequence here as good as anything in his solo catalogue. Deep Deep Feeling is the standout, a moody and soulful mid-tempo exploratio­n of emotion, always McCartney's driving impulse. “Sometimes I wish it would stay, sometimes I wish it would go away,” is his simple mantra of the joy and pain alluded to in the title, in a sonorous arrangemen­t that expands lusciously across nearly nine minutes of running time. Slidin' is a rocking belter and The Kiss of Venus a delicate treat in which McCartney's tender falsetto follows his picked guitars. Seize the Day has the swagger of a Wings anthem, replete with juicy period guitar and keyboard sounds, and a jaunty lyric preaching “it's still all right to be nice.”

Such a typically positive Macca message doesn't sound quite as trite as it once might have in our social-media trolling age. And then comes Deep Down, a soulful groove built up from luscious Hammond organ chords on which he really sings his socks off, wailing with an abandon once heard on outros to Let it Be and Hey Jude.

There are also a handful of oddities, quirky little ditties that creak around the edges, but that too is part of McCartney's charm, a willingnes­s to be silly and play around with whimsical ideas. McCartney carries a weight of expectatio­n heavier than any other popular musician alive. As a Beatle, his voice and style influenced everything that followed in his wake, and when you hear that voice thinned out with age, you can't avoid echoes of past glories.

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