Eastern Eye (UK)

McCartney’s Lyrics will reveal Indian influence

BEATLES STAR’S AUTOBIOGRA­PHY TO EXPLORE MAHARISHI YOGI’S IMPACT ON THE ROCK BAND

- by AMIT ROY

THE world of books heard an exciting and unexpected piece of news last week – that Paul McCartney is to bring out his autobiogra­phy, The Lyrics, on November 2.

Those who are knowledgea­ble about The Beatles say it will reveal India’s deep influence on their music. There is now a pretty solid body of evidence that for The Beatles, India was their most creative period.

When they were in Rishikesh in the Himalayas for several weeks in February, March and April of 1968, they wrote between 23 and 48 songs, 17 of which were included in their White Album, one of their best known.

The Beatles were holed up there with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, a ridiculous figure who initially fooled the impression­able youngsters with his talk of Indian philosophy, vegetarian food with no spice, transcende­ntal meditation and the like. But The Beatles, who by 1968, were just about the most recognisab­le people on the planet, probably felt trapped by their fame and fortune.

McCartney was there with his girlfriend at the time, Jane Asher; John Lennon with Cynthia Powell, his first wife, whom he had married when she had become pregnant; Ringo Starr with Maureen Starkey, his first wife whom he, too, had married when she had seen to it she had fallen pregnant as a way of getting him away from competitio­n; and George Harrison was there with his first wife, Patti(e) Boyd. Another member of the group was Mia Farrow, the American actress who was nursing a broken heart because her marriage to Frank Sinatra had ended.

Harrison, who had by this time met Ravi Shankar and had spent months in Bombay (now Mumbai) learning the sitar from the Indian maestro, wanted to go deeper into Indian spirituali­ty.

It has been said that 1968 was the year that rocked the world. This was the period when anti-American riots protesting against the Vietnam war erupted in capitals across the world, including especially in front of the US embassy in Grosvenor Square in London.

It was a year scarred by the assassinat­ion of Martin Luther King and the late President John F Kennedy’s younger brother, Robert. Richard Nixon was elected president that year. In Hollywood, Bullitt, starring Steve McQueen, was a hit film, and Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey won an Oscar for Best Special Visual Effects. President Kennedy’s widow, Jacqueline, married the Greek shipping millionair­e, Aristotle Onassis. That was the year when Simon and Garfunkel sang

“Mrs Robinson” and “Sound of Silence”

in The Graduate, starring Dustin Hoffman.

In the ashram, poised on the edge of a cliff overlookin­g the Ganges, The Beatles were busy making music, in between periods of meditation.

McCartney’s autobiogra­phy is not a convention­al one, but “the extraordin­ary story of his life for the first time through the prism of 154 song lyrics”.

It will come out in many capitals throughout the world, but in the UK, it will be published by Allen Lane, a Penguin Random House imprint.

It will be published in two 480-page hardback volumes – A-L and M-Z – with a slipcase, priced at £75.

McCartney, now 78, has always resisted the idea of an autobiogra­phy because he felt enough had been written about The Beatles.

But he explained: “More often than I can count, I’ve been asked if I would write an autobiogra­phy, but the time has never been right. The one thing I’ve always managed to do, whether at home or on the road, is to write new songs. I know that some people, when they get to a certain age, like to go to a diary to recall dayto-day events from the past, but I have no such notebooks. What I do have are my songs, hundreds of them, which I’ve learned serve much the same purpose. And these songs span my entire life.

“I hope that what I’ve written will show people something about my songs and my life which they haven’t seen before. I’ve tried to say something about how the music happens and what it means to me and I hope what it may mean to others too.” The work is edited and introduced by the Pulitzer prizewinni­ng Irish poet Paul Muldoon, who is contributi­ng a chapter. “These commentari­es are as close to an autobiogra­phy as we may ever come,” said Muldoon. “His insights into his own artistic process confirm a notion at which we had but guessed – that Paul McCartney is a major literary figure who draws upon, and extends, the long tradition of poetry in English.”

The publishers said the songs go “from his earliest boyhood compositio­ns through the legendary decade of The Beatles, to Wings and his solo albums to the present. “Arranged alphabetic­ally to provide a kaleidosco­pic rather than chronologi­cal account, it establishe­s definitive texts of the songs’ lyrics for the first time and describes the circumstan­ces in which they were written, the people and places that inspired them, and what he thinks of them now. Presented with this is material from McCartney’s personal archive – drafts, letters, photograph­s – which make this a unique visual record of one of the greatest songwriter­s of all time.”

 ??  ?? EXTRAORDIN­ARY STORY: Paul McCartney; (above left) a mural of The Beatles at the now-derelict ashram in Rishikesh, India; (above
right) his book The Lyrics
EXTRAORDIN­ARY STORY: Paul McCartney; (above left) a mural of The Beatles at the now-derelict ashram in Rishikesh, India; (above right) his book The Lyrics
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