Wings Over America (1976)
Disc One
1. Venus and Mars/Rock Show
2. Jet
3. Let Me Roll It
4. Spirits in Ancient Egypt
5. Medicine Jar
6. Maybe I'm Amazed
7. Call Me Back Again
8. Lady Madonna
9. The Long and Winding Road
10.Live and Let Die
11.Picasso's Last Words
12.Richard Cory
13.Bluebird
14.I've Just Seen a Face
15.Blackbird
16.Yesterday
Disc Two
1. You Gave Me the Answer
2. Magnito and Titanium Man
3. Go Now
4. My Love
5. Listen to What the Man Said
6. Let 'Em In
7. Time to Hide
8. Silly Love Songs
9. Beware My Love
10.Letting Go
11.Band on the Run
12.Hi Hi Hi
13.Soily
 
If anything, this album deserves
credit for its sheer volume. On this live album, Paul decides to include the
entire concert as opposed to a "sampler" which was usually the format
for live releases back in the day. Since Mac and company played a two hour show (not
that common back in those days), the concert needed a triple
album to accommodate the entire show. It fits nicely on two compact
discs, so one's budget isn't strained too much.
Paul McCartney was now emerging as the Beatle with the most success to
show for his solo efforts. All members had ups and downs, and even Paul
(a few short years later) would prove he was not immortal either, but
Paul McCartney now proved that he had a very successful "other" group in
his band Wings, and he set out to prove it to the world. This is truly a "Wings"
album. Most of the material here is from the last few albums, but
that's really how it should be. When McCartney released a plethora of
live compact discs ten, twenty and thirty years later, they would all
follow a similar formula - which was a few surprises, but mostly Beatles classics
and a handful of songs from whatever album the tour was supporting.
This album stands out in that it doesn't follow that formula of those later albums.
Yes, there are a few Beatles songs on this album, but he performs them
out of nostalgia rather than obligation. Apart from Yesterday
none of the Beatles tunes could be classified as particularly the best of the best.
So whenever a true fan sees his hero in concert, the more obscure
the songs the better. That's not to say "unheard" of songs are that
welcome (there's a couple of here as well, including a Simon and
Garfunkel cover), but it's the deeper songs on the albums that never received
much airplay that are refreshing. Of course, most of the "hits" from his solo career do
make an appearance here, and one song, Maybe I'm Amazed, is
actually a bit better than the original song (it was wisely released
as a single off this album).
Being that this was the mid seventies, the overall quality isn't as good
as one might be accustomed to having listened to several "live" McCartney
releases years later. Concerts still were not the expensive spectacle
"once in a decade" event they would come to be. Rather it was just an
informal gathering of going to watch some people play music without too
many extras. If you missed the show, the band would probably be back
sometime next year. So, yes, the quality is a bit lacking, although
some would attribute that to the Wings not being that great of a band. I can't honestly say. The music, for me, serves its
purpose. A great souvenir of a tour that I never saw and it holds true
to the performance, the songs themselves, and even the time when it was
released. I'm awfully glad this one wasn't "filtered" down to only
include hits.
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