Book review: Conversations on composing in Paul McCartney's volumes

The former Beatle Paul McCartney traces the origins of his creations in two sumptuous volumes edited by Paul Muldoon.
Book review: Conversations on composing in Paul McCartney's volumes

Paul McCartney. Picture: The Lyrics Book

If he hadn’t become a musician, Paul McCartney says, he would probably have been an English teacher. He has fond memories of his English teacher, Alan Durband, who studied with FR Leavis and taught the young Paul the value of close reading. When he wrote songs with John Lennon, the chords and melody came first. But the words mattered too. Where the straight-up, irony-free early lyrics wooed their audience through a flurry of pronouns — ‘She Loves You’, ‘From Me to You’, ‘Please Please Me’, etc — the later lyrics aspired to poetry.

Take ‘Eleanor Rigby’, which began as a song about the kind of old lady McCartney did chores for as a scout during bob-a-job week and who he thought of calling Daisy Hawkins until working with Eleanor Bron on the film Help! and spotting a shop sign with the name Rigby in Bristol.

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