Monday, 29 June 2015

Paul McCartney, “See Your Sunshine” From Memory Almost Full (2007): One Track Mind

Wrapped in a very public and bitter divorce, Paul McCartney embraced everything he did matter in the first place in the burning memory almost full, published on June 5, 2007. That's perhaps more than ever in this terrible setback.

Overall, the album took more in retrospect that bitter introspection expected. It is fully realized in "See Your Sunshine" a cunning Alas tune redo ending as anachronistic but somehow more attractive way of registration.


 
Background vocals, bright and cyclic, as strongly reminiscent of Denny Laine and late wife Linda as for completely new transport in 1976. ("Silly Love Songs", after all, went to No. 1 during the last week of May of that year.) This is the kind of pure pop that Paul McCartney became a soundtrack immediately after the ugly decade Beatles own division. And just as welcome.

Memory Almost Full, as a group of very committed fans discovered, was an anagram of "my soul mate LLM", the initials of Linda Louise McCartney. Asked the question, Paul would have said: "Some things are better left a mystery." But he is not one of them. Paul McCartney is supposed to sound just like the song.

That meets that standard, so fully inhabits its own cliché, for a period of overwhelming adversity is part of the charm of Paul. Always it has been.


That said, "See Your Sunshine" is not necessarily representative of Memory Almost Full, who insisted (on grinding industrial riff, the "Vintage Clothes") that we should "live in the past. Not cling to something that is changing quickly "Nostalgia Comfy but also fit with the then recent departure of Paul McCartney Capitol - where, after all, had been recorded since the early 60s McCartney subsequently signed with a stamp of Starbucks for this, his solo CD 21, and He agreed to release Memory Almost Full, for the first time in digital format on the website.

Still, it was comforting to know that just as Paul McCartney tried to embrace this new world daredevil, who had not forgotten what came before. In a statement released in advance of the album chart, McCartney said the title came after the "Memory Almost Full" message appeared on her cell phone. "In modern life," he wrote, "our brains can get a bit overloaded".

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