The Star Malaysia - Star2

Ringo Starr

What’s My Name Ume

- – Pablo Gorondi/ap

WITH enviable energy and the simple, persistent message of “peace and love,” Ringo Starr has become one of humanity’s quintessen­tial goodwill ambassador­s.

What’s My Name, his 20th studio album, is another bundle of positivity and cheer, with a handful of good tunes to boot.

What’s My Name continues Starr’s practice of including some sort of Beatle connection on his albums – a guest spot from a Liverpool lad or two, a song one of them wrote for Starr or sometimes just a reference to their collective glories.

A John Lennon demo of Grow Old With Me was released not long after his 1980 murder, but it wasn’t until recently that Starr found out that Lennon felt the song would be a good choice for the Beatle drummer.

Starr’s take has his sincere feelings and Paul Mccartney’s typically melodic bass playing going for it. On the downside, it’s followed by a horrifying­ly synthetic cover of Motown staple Money (That’s What I Want), which Lennon sang when the Beatles covered it.

Other titles, usually co-written by the drummer, are 100% Starr in their sentiment: Send Love Spread Peace, Life Is Good and Thank God For Music.

Magic and the faintly Rutleslike It’s Not Love That You Want, written with Dave Stewart, are among the most enjoyable.

Saving one of the best for last, the rocking title track’s biographic­al details act as a succinct update of the decades since I’m The Greatest, another Lennonpenn­ed song that Starr sang on his still-the-best 1973 self-titled album.

What’s My Name is another sign of Starr’s seemingly boundless enthusiasm and his love for music.

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