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Paul McCartney and Wings

Paul McCartney and Wings, often billed simply as Wings, were a British-American rock band formed in 1971 by former Beatle bassist Paul McCartney, his wife Linda McCartney on keyboards, session drummer Denny Seiwell, and former Moody Blues guitarist Denny Laine. Wings were noted for their commercial successes, musical eclecticism and frequent personnel changes; going through three lead guitarists and four drummers. However, the core trio of the McCartneys and Laine remained intact throughout the group's existence.

Paul McCartney and Wings
Background information
Also known asWings
Suzy and the Red Stripes
The Country Hams
OriginLondon, England
Genres
Years active1971–1981
Labels
Past members

Created following the McCartneys' 1971 album Ram, the band's first two albums, Wild Life (1971) and Red Rose Speedway (1973) (the latter featuring guitarist Henry McCullough), were viewed as artistic disappointments beside Paul's work with the Beatles. After the release of the title track of the James Bond film Live and Let Die, McCullough and Seiwell resigned from the band. The McCartneys and Laine then released 1973's Band on the Run, a commercial and critical success that spawned two top-ten singles in "Jet" and the title track. Following that album, the band recruited guitarist Jimmy McCulloch and drummer Geoff Britton, only for Britton to quit shortly afterwards and be replaced by Joe English. With the new line-up, Wings released 1975's Venus and Mars, which included the US number one single "Listen to What the Man Said", and undertook a highly successful world tour over 1975–76. Intended as more of a group effort, Wings at the Speed of Sound (1976) was issued midway through the tour and featured the hit singles "Silly Love Songs" and "Let 'Em In".

In 1977, the band earned their only UK number one single, with "Mull of Kintyre", which became one of the best-selling singles in history. Wings experienced another line-up shuffle, however, with both McCulloch and English departing before the release of the group's 1978 album London Town. The McCartneys and Laine again added new members, recruiting guitarist Laurence Juber and drummer Steve Holley. The resulting album, Back to the Egg, was a relative flop, with its singles under-performing and the critical reception negative. During the supporting tour, Paul was arrested in Japan for cannabis possession, putting the band on hold. Despite a final US number one with a live-recorded version of "Coming Up" (1980), after Laine departed from the band, Wings discontinued in 1981.

History

Origins

After the Beatles' break-up in 1970, McCartney recorded two albums: McCartney (1970), credited to himself, and Ram (1971), with his wife, Linda McCartney. He had insisted from the beginning of their marriage that Linda should be involved in his musical projects, notwithstanding her lack of previous experience as a musician, so that they did not have to be apart when he was on tour.[3] Ram was recorded in New York City, where McCartney auditioned a number of drummers and guitarists, selecting Seiwell and guitarist David Spinozza.[4] When Spinozza became unavailable due to other session commitments, Hugh McCracken was enlisted to take his place.[5]

1971–1973: First line-up

After the release of Ram, McCartney decided to form a new group and asked Seiwell and McCracken to join. Seiwell accepted, but McCracken declined, so McCartney invited Denny Laine, whom he had known since the early 1960s, to join.[6] Laine, who was working on a solo album at the time, got a phone call from McCartney enquiring if he would like to work with him, as McCartney said: "I'd known him in the past and I just rang him and asked him, 'What are you doing?' He said, 'Nothing', so I said, 'Right. Come on then!'"[4] Laine then dropped plans for his album there and then.[4] As he had in the Beatles, McCartney would serve as the chief bassist and lead singer for Wings and he doubled on guitar, keyboards, drums and assorted instruments at various times. When asked why he stayed on bass guitar rather than change back to guitar after the Beatles disbanded, he has explained that by then, he was "a bass player pretty much, who also happened to play guitar" and also considers himself a bassist who happens to play piano.[7]

In August 1971, Seiwell and Laine joined Paul and Linda McCartney to record Paul's third post-Beatles album for Apple Records. The result was Wild Life, released 7 December. It was the first project to credit Wings as the artist. The band name is said to have come to McCartney as he was praying in the hospital while Linda was giving birth to their second child together, Stella, on 13 September 1971.[3][4] Paul McCartney recalled in the film Wingspan that the birth of Stella was "a bit of a drama"; there were complications at the birth and that both Linda and the baby almost died. He was praying fervently and the image of wings came to his mind. He decided to name his new band "Wings."[3]

In an attempt to capture the spontaneity of live performances, five of Wild Life's eight songs were first takes by the band.[8] The album included a cover of Mickey & Sylvia's "Love Is Strange".[9] Like Ram, Wild Life left music critics cold,[10][11] a response that typified the anti-McCartney sentiments that prevailed among the music press following the Beatles' break-up.[12][13] In their 1975 book The Beatles: An Illustrated Record, Roy Carr and Tony Tyler called Wild Life "rushed, defensive, badly timed, and over-publicized", and wrote that it showed McCartney's songwriting "at an absolute nadir just when he needed a little respect".[14] Wings similarly struggled to gain artistic credibility, particularly during the early 1970s,[15] with critics, fans and McCartney's musical peers alike ridiculing the inclusion of Linda as a keyboard player and backing vocalist.[16][17]

On 24 January 1972, McCartney added to the Wings line-up guitarist Henry McCullough, after he had tried out for the band.[4] The new line-up immediately mounted an impromptu tour of UK universities (with the group driving around in a van),[18] followed by a tour of small European venues. Although this was the first tour including an ex-Beatle after the Beatles broke up, Wings played no Beatles numbers during the tour, to show that it was a new band in its own right.[19]

In February 1972, Wings released a single called "Give Ireland Back to the Irish", a response to the events of Bloody Sunday.[20] The song was banned by the BBC for its anti-Unionist political stance.[21] Despite limited airplay, it reached number 16 in the UK,[22] as well as number 1 in both the Republic of Ireland and Spain. Wings released a children's song, "Mary Had a Little Lamb", as its next single, which reached the top 10 in the UK.[22] Although some critics interpreted it as a sarcastic reaction to the ban on "Give Ireland Back to the Irish", it was in fact a serious effort by McCartney to record a song for children.[23] Wings followed it with December 1972's "Hi, Hi, Hi", which was again banned by the BBC, this time for its alleged drug and sexual references.[21] The B-side, "C Moon", was played instead.[3] The single peaked at number 5 in the UK.[22]

The band were renamed "Paul McCartney and Wings" for the 1973 album Red Rose Speedway (and for the follow-up Band on the Run),[24] which yielded their first US number 1 hit, "My Love".[25] The album included two tracks left over from the Ram sessions and was originally intended as a two-record set.[26] After producer Glyn Johns had walked out on the project, however,[27] McCartney conceded to EMI's opinion that the material was "substandard" and cut it down to a single disc.[28] Among the unreleased songs from the seven-month sessions was the Linda composition "Seaside Woman", which was finally issued in 1977, credited to "Suzy and the Red Stripes".

 
Paul and Linda McCartney at the Academy Awards at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion 2 April 1974

Near the end of the Red Rose Speedway sessions, in October 1972, Wings recorded the theme song to the James Bond film Live and Let Die, which reunited McCartney with Beatles producer/arranger George Martin. Issued as a non-album single in mid-1973, "Live and Let Die" became a worldwide hit and has remained a highlight of McCartney's post-Wings concert performances (often accompanied by pyrotechnics). That same year, McCartney and Wings filmed a TV special, the critically maligned James Paul McCartney, which featured footage of the group performing in outdoor settings and in front of a studio audience.[29]

After a successful British tour in May–June 1973, Wings went into rehearsals for their next album. McCullough and Seiwell abruptly left the band in August, however, at the end of rehearsals.[30] Both musicians were disenchanted with the group's musical direction and Linda's inclusion;[31] McCullough also objected to McCartney's domineering attitude towards him as a guitar player,[32] while Seiwell had long felt aggrieved at the lack of a formalised financial arrangement and his status as a lowly paid sideman.[33][34]

With the band reduced to a trio, the McCartneys and Laine cut what turned out to be Wings' most successful album, Band on the Run, at EMI's primitive eight-track recording studio in Lagos, Nigeria. The album went to number 1 in both the US and UK[22] and spawned three hit singles: the rockers "Jet" and "Helen Wheels" (originally included only on the US version of the album) and the title track—a suite of movements recalling side two of Abbey Road. It also included "Let Me Roll It", which was seen as an affectionate impersonation of John Lennon's vocal style,[14] and "No Words", the first Wings song on which Laine received a co-writing credit beside the McCartneys.[35] Band on the Run enjoyed a highly favourable response from music critics and restored McCartney's tarnished post-Beatles image.[36][37]

1974–1978: Second line-up

After Band on the Run, Jimmy McCulloch, former lead guitarist in Thunderclap Newman and Stone the Crows, joined the band. The first Wings project with McCulloch was McGear, a 1974 collaboration between Paul and his younger brother Mike McGear, with session musician Gerry Conway playing drums. Warner Bros. Records chose not to play up the "Wings" angle in its marketing for McGear, and the album sold poorly. However, the sessions also generated a single credited to McGear's group the Scaffold, "Liverpool Lou", which became a top-10 hit in the UK. Shortly thereafter, Geoff Britton joined Wings on drums, and the first recording session with this full line-up was held in Nashville, where the band stayed at the farm of songwriter Curly Putman Jr.[38] The trip was immortalised in the 1974 non-album single "Junior's Farm", backed with a straight country track entitled "Sally G", the group's last release on Apple Records. In a rare occurrence for this era, both sides of the single separately reached the Billboard Top 20 in the US.

 
Paul McCartney with Linda McCartney in 1976

Wings began recording sessions for its next album in London in November 1974, then moved to New Orleans to complete Venus and Mars (1975), the first release from the group on Capitol Records. The album topped the charts and contained the US number 1 single "Listen to What the Man Said", which also featured Dave Mason, formerly of Traffic, on guitar and Tom Scott on saxophone. When the Venus and Mars recording sessions moved to New Orleans, Britton quit Wings and was replaced by Joe English who won the job at a secret audition before McCartney.[39] In late 1975 Wings embarked on the Wings Over the World tour,[40] following a postponement to allow McCulloch to recuperate from a hand fracture. Starting in Bristol, the tour took them to Australia (November), Europe (March 1976), the US (May/June), and Europe again (September), before ending in a four-night grand finale at London's Wembley Empire Pool. For this tour, added to Wings' stage act was a horn section consisting of Tony Dorsey, Howie Casey, Thaddeus Richard and Steve Howard, on saxes, brass and percussion.

 
Denny Laine during the 1976 tour

In between sections of the tour, Wings recorded Wings at the Speed of Sound, which was released at the end of March 1976, just prior to the US leg of the world tour. It represented a departure from the previous Wings template in that each of the five members of the band (including English) sang lead on at least one song. However, the two singles, "Silly Love Songs" and "Let 'Em In" (the former a US number one), were both sung by Paul. Four of the album tracks were played in the 1976 portion of the tour, which also included five Beatles songs. One of the Seattle concerts from the American leg of the 1975–76 world tour was filmed and later released as the concert feature Rockshow (1980). The tour's American leg, which also included Madison Square Garden in New York City and Boston Garden in Massachusetts, spawned a triple live album, Wings over America (1976), which became the fifth consecutive Wings album to reach number 1 in the US.[41] From this album came a single release of the live version of "Maybe I'm Amazed"[42] originally from the McCartney album.[43] The single's flipside was "Soily", a previously unreleased rocker that was often used as a closer for the concerts.

 
Jimmy McCulloch (left) and Paul McCartney during the 1976 Wings Over the World tour

After the tour, and following the release of "Maybe I'm Amazed" in early 1977, Wings took a break. Later in the year, the band started recording their next album in the Virgin Islands, but the sessions were interrupted by Linda's pregnancy and then by the departures of both McCulloch and English. McCulloch, who joined Small Faces, died of morphine and alcohol poisoning in 1979. English joined Chuck Leavell's band Sea Level and later founded the Christian-oriented Joe English Band.

Undeterred by their departure, Wings released the already-completed McCartney–Laine ballad "Mull of Kintyre", an ode to the Scottish coastal region where McCartney had made his home in the early 1970s. Its broad appeal was maximised by a pre-Christmas release. It became an international hit, dominating the charts in Britain (where it was Wings' only number 1 single), Australia and many other countries over the Christmas/New Year period. Ultimately, it became the first single to exceed sales of 2 million in the UK, eclipsing the previous all-time best-seller (the Beatles' "She Loves You"), and remains one of the biggest-selling UK singles of all time. However, it was not a success in the US, where the B-side "Girls School" received most of the airplay but barely reached the top 40.

The core trio of Wings then released the album London Town in 1978. Though only the remaining trio are pictured on the sleeve, much of the album included McCulloch and English, having been recorded before their departures. Laine, however, remained and was co-credited on five of the tracks, including the title song.[44] It was a commercial success, although it became the first Wings album since Wild Life not to reach number 1 in the US (peaking at number 2).[45] London Town featured a markedly softer-rock, synth-based sound than previous Wings albums. "With a Little Luck" reached number 1 in the US and number 5 in the UK,[22] but "I've Had Enough" and "London Town" were commercial disappointments in both countries.

1978–1981: Third line-up

 
Steve Holley, the group's last drummer

Later in 1978, lead guitarist Laurence Juber and drummer Steve Holley joined the band, restoring Wings to touring strength. In 1979, McCartney signed a new record contract, leaving Capitol, the company he had been with in the US and Canada since he was a Beatle, and joining Columbia Records, while remaining with Parlophone in the rest of the world. Influenced by the punk and new wave scenes, Wings abandoned its mellow touch and hired Chris Thomas to help in the production process. The result was a somewhat less polished sound. This new version of Wings released the disco-oriented single "Goodnight Tonight", backed by "Daytime Nighttime Suffering", which reached the top 5 in both the US and UK.[22] However, the subsequent album Back to the Egg was not favourably received by critics and although it went platinum in the US, sales were disappointing in comparison to its immediate predecessors. It contained the Grammy-winning song "Rockestra Theme", the result of an October 1978 superstar session with members of Wings, the Who, Led Zeppelin, and Pink Floyd, among others.[46] Three singles, "Old Siam, Sir" (UK only), "Getting Closer",[47] and "Arrow Through Me" (US only), were culled from the album, but performed poorly on the charts. During much of 1979, Wings were inactive as McCartney worked on a new solo album (McCartney II) without the band.

In November and December 1979, Wings toured the UK, once again adding the horns and brass section consisting of Tony Dorsey, Howie Casey, Thaddeus Richard, and Steve Howard. This tour climaxed with a massive "Rockestra" all-star collection of musicians in London in aid of UNICEF and Kampuchean refugees. Also during this tour, a live version of the McCartney II track "Coming Up" was recorded in Glasgow and became Wings' sixth US number one hit the following year.[48]

Paul McCartney and his family arrived in Japan on 16 January 1980 for the planned eleven-date Wings' concert tour of Japan (due to visit Budokan Hall, Tokyo from 21 to 24 January 1980; Aichi-Ken, Taiiku-Kan, Nagoya on 25–26; Festival Hall, Osaka on 28; Osaka Furitsu-Kan, Osaka on 29; Budokan Hall, Tokyo from 31 January to 2 February 1980).[49] McCartney was arrested immediately upon arriving at New Tokyo Airport for possession of 219 grams (7.7 ounces) of marijuana (with an estimated street value of 600,000 yen) hidden in Paul's luggage.[50][51] The arrest put the tour in jeopardy and Wings' music was immediately banned from all television and radio stations across Japan.[49] Wings' Japanese promoters claimed that almost 100,000 tickets for the concerts had been sold, representing a possible loss of well over 100 million yen.[52] The promoters had no option but to cancel all of the tour dates the day after McCartney's arrest.[49] The other band members of Wings, except Linda, left Japan and returned to England on 21 January 1980.[49] McCartney spent ten days in jail before being (unexpectedly) released without charge on 25 January 1980 and deported.[49][51] After returning to England, McCartney decided to release his solo album McCartney II and plans for a US tour were subsequently dropped. Meanwhile, Denny Laine released the single "Japanese Tears" and formed the short-lived Denny Laine Band with Steve Holley and released a solo album Japanese Tears that December.

By 1980, McCartney was growing weary of maintaining Wings and his personal and professional aspirations began to diverge from the group. The McCartneys now had three school-age children and had moved out of London to the countryside of East Sussex, desiring that their children have a normal upbringing. Musically, McCartney was dissatisfied by the band's performances during the 1979 UK tour, and when rehearsals for the next album began in October, it was apparent his latest songs were not a good fit for the band. Consequently, he and George Martin, who would be producing the album, decided not to use Wings for recording. Instead, top session musicians and guest artists were brought in to make the best possible album.[53] In November 1980, Holley and Juber were told they would not be needed for the new album and other than sessions in January 1981 to finish work on the Cold Cuts album of previously unreleased tracks, no further activities were scheduled for Wings. Juber has said he could see the "writing on the wall" regarding Wings' future at that point and moved to New York to continue his career there.[54]

Laine stayed on for the Tug of War sessions in Montserrat in February 1981 but his relationship with McCartney had become strained over business and personal matters. Laine had begun to feel that he was not being adequately compensated for his role in Wings, and was particularly bitter that he was employed as a contract writer on "Mull of Kintyre", a song he co-wrote with McCartney. He had been paid a flat fee for his contributions so when the song became a hit, he did not share in the royalties.[nb 1] Laine was also upset with McCartney over his drug arrest in Japan which meant a loss of extra income from the tour as well as putting future tour plans in doubt. Laine's marriage was also troubled, and his wife and the McCartneys did not get along well, adding to his upset with Wings.[56] In April 1981, Laine announced he was leaving Wings, citing the lack of tour plans as the reason. While Laine's departure effectively ended the band, a spokesman for McCartney said that Wings still continued as an active concept.[57] McCartney finally acknowledged the band no longer existed while promoting the release of Tug of War in 1982.[58]

The Country Hams

The Country Hams was a pseudonym used by the group for the release of the single "Walking in the Park with Eloise" in 1974, a song written years before by Paul's father James.[38] Wings (with guest musicians Chet Atkins and Floyd Cramer) recorded it during the sessions for Junior's Farm.

Suzy and the Red Stripes

Suzy and the Red Stripes was a pseudonym used by the group for the release of the Linda McCartney and Wings single "Seaside Woman" in 1977. It was written and sung by Linda McCartney. It was the only release by Wings under that name. Linda said that the "Suzy and the Red Stripes" pseudonym came about because she had been called "Suzi" in Jamaica because of "a fantastic reggae version of 'Suzi Q'", and Red Stripe is Jamaica's leading brand of beer.[59]

Partial reunions

In March 1997, Denny Laine, Laurence Juber and Steve Holley did an impromptu "Wings" reunion at a Beatlefest convention in East Rutherford, New Jersey.[60] This was not a planned event, and no further reunions were intended. However, ten years later, in July 2007, Laine, Juber and Denny Seiwell reunited for one show at a Beatlefest convention in Las Vegas. Among other songs, they performed "Band on the Run", "Mull of Kintyre" and "Go Now".[61] Laine and Seiwell appeared again at the Fest for Beatles Fans in Secaucus, New Jersey, in March 2010[62] and were joined by Juber at the Fest in Chicago in August 2010.

Laine, Juber and Seiwell performed together at the Fest for Beatles Fans in Los Angeles, California, in October 2014; the setlist included "Hi, Hi, Hi", "Live and Let Die" and "Rockestra Theme". In August 2017, the trio performed at the festival once again, this time joined by drummer Steve Holley.[citation needed]

Laine, Juber, Seiwell and Holley performed together in January 2018 at Grand Oak Live, a music venue in Upland, California, headlining an event called Imagine Something Yesterday.[63][better source needed]

Laine, Juber and Holley performed again in March 2019 at the Fest for Beatles Fans in Jersey City, New Jersey performing songs from the band's final album Back to the Egg.[citation needed]

Legacy

Wings had twelve top-10 singles (including one number one) in the UK and fourteen top 10 singles (including six number ones) in the US. All 23 singles released by Wings reached the US top 40, and one two-sided hit, "Junior's Farm"/"Sally G", reached the top 40 with each side. Of the nine albums released by Wings, all went top 10 in either the UK or the US, with five consecutive albums topping the US charts. Paul McCartney was unquestionably Wings' leader and dominant creative force, but Denny Laine, Jimmy McCulloch, and Linda McCartney all contributed a little in songwriting, and Laine, McCulloch, Joe English, and Linda McCartney all performed a few lead vocals.

The success of Wings was a vindication for McCartney.[64] His first few post-Beatles albums were highly criticized and often dismissed by critics as "lightweight" next to the more serious nature of his former bandmates' solo output. But by the mid-1970s, the solo careers of the other three former Beatles were in varying degrees of decline, with John Lennon putting his career on hold in 1975 for the first five years of his son Sean's life. A year later, George Harrison had all but retired from live performances, with his new releases failing to match the success of his initial solo output. Ringo Starr was living in Los Angeles and was writing and recording, but as a solo artist had not been performing onstage other than rare guest appearances. Meanwhile, Wings continued to tour regularly and enjoy much commercial success. According to author Robert Rosen, by 1980, Lennon was envious enough of McCartney's continuing success to make his re-emergence on the music scene.[65]

One of the criticisms of Wings was that the other members were little more than sidemen backing up a solo McCartney.[66] Guitarist Henry McCullough quit the band because he grew tired of being told by McCartney exactly what to play, and said that Wings were never a "real band."[67] On the other hand, other former members of Wings such as Joe English and Laurence Juber have said that they were allowed a degree of creative freedom. In an interview, Juber, Wings' third lead guitarist, said, "I was a sideman, but the job assignment very much included considering myself a part of the band ... In all its incarnations Wings sounded like a band, not like a solo McCartney project and I think that reflects well not only on Paul's ability to share in the creative process, but also on the importance of Denny and Linda's contributions, too. The other players brought their own personalities to the scene."[66]

In addition to its own output, Wings recorded several songs that were released through various outlets both before and after the band's break-up. Denny Laine's 1977 solo album Holly Days was a joint effort by Laine with Paul and Linda McCartney;[68] three songs on Laine's 1980 solo album Japanese Tears were performed by Wings with Laine on lead vocals; Laine also contributed to several songs on Paul McCartney's 1982 and 1983 solo albums Tug of War and Pipes of Peace, respectively. Juber's instrumental "Maisie"—which was backed by members of Wings—appeared on his solo album Standard Time. The McCartneys and Laine contributed backing vocals to George Harrison's 1981 tribute to John Lennon, "All Those Years Ago". Linda McCartney continued to tour and record with her husband up until her death in 1998, after which a compilation of her songs entitled Wide Prairie was released that featured seven Wings songs written or co-written by her. Wings also backed Paul's brother Mike McGear on the McGear album, as well as McGear's band the Scaffold on the single "Liverpool Lou" and its B-side "Ten Years After on Strawberry Jam". Paul McCartney also used three unreleased Wings songs as B-sides of his solo singles several years after Wings' break-up.

Wings' 1977 single "Mull of Kintyre"/"Girls School" is still the biggest-selling non-charity single in the UK (although Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" sold more, its sales include a reissue in aid of the Terrence Higgins Trust),[69] and it ranked fourth in the official list of all-time best-selling singles in the UK issued in 2002.[70]

In 2001, Wingspan: Hits and History was released, a project spanning an album and a television special retrospective.

Personnel

During its ten-year lifespan, Wings underwent numerous personnel changes, including twice being reduced to its core McCartney–McCartney–Laine trio.

Members

Timeline

Line-ups

1971–1972
  • Paul McCartney – lead vocals, bass, guitar, piano, keyboards
  • Linda McCartney – keyboards, vocals
  • Denny Laine – guitar, bass, piano, vocals
  • Denny Seiwell – drums, percussion
1972–1973
  • Paul McCartney – lead vocals, bass, guitar, piano, keyboards
  • Linda McCartney – keyboards, vocals
  • Denny Laine – guitar, bass, piano, vocals
  • Henry McCullough – guitar, vocals
  • Denny Seiwell – drums, percussion
1973–1974
  • Paul McCartney – lead vocals, bass, guitar, piano, keyboards, drums
  • Linda McCartney – keyboards, vocals
  • Denny Laine – guitar, bass, piano, vocals
1974–1975
  • Paul McCartney – lead vocals, bass, guitar, piano, keyboards
  • Linda McCartney – keyboards, vocals
  • Denny Laine – guitar, bass, piano, vocals
  • Jimmy McCulloch – guitar, vocals
  • Geoff Britton – drums, percussion
1975–1977
  • Paul McCartney – lead vocals, bass, guitar, piano, keyboards
  • Linda McCartney – keyboards, vocals
  • Denny Laine – guitar, bass, piano, vocals
  • Jimmy McCulloch – guitar, vocals
  • Joe English – drums, percussion, vocals
1977–1978
  • Paul McCartney – lead vocals, bass, guitar, piano, keyboards, drums
  • Linda McCartney – keyboards, vocals
  • Denny Laine – guitar, bass, piano, vocals
1978–1981
  • Paul McCartney – lead vocals, bass, guitar, piano, keyboards
  • Linda McCartney – keyboards, vocals
  • Denny Laine – guitar, bass, piano, vocals
  • Laurence Juber – guitar, vocals
  • Steve Holley – drums, percussion, vocals

Discography

Collaborations

Live

Tours

Wings played five concert tours during their ten-year existence:[71][42]

Awards

Music Week Award
Year Award Work Recipient Result
1977 Music Week's top single "Mull of Kintyre" Wings Won
Yugoton Award
Year Award Work Recipient Result
1976 Gold LP For successful sales of their albums in Yugoslavia McCartney, Ram, Wild Life, Red Rose Speedway, Band on the Run, Venus and Mars, Wings at the Speed of Sound Paul McCartney and Wings Won
Brit Award
Year Award Work Recipient Result
2010 The BRITs Hits 30 "Live and Let Die" Paul McCartney and Wings Nominated
American Music Award
Year Award Work Recipient Result
1974 Favorite Pop/Rock Band/Duo/Group "Live and Let Die" Paul McCartney and Wings Nominated
Academy Award
Million-Air Award
Year Award Work Recipient Result
2012 over 4 million performances "Live and Let Die" Paul McCartney Won
The Guinness Book of Records
Year Award Work Recipient Result
1979 Most successful and honoured composer and musician in popular music history Paul McCartney Won
Q Awards
Year Award Work Recipient Result
2010 A Classic Album Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings Won
RIAA award
Year Award Recipient Result
1976 Top Male Vocalist of the Year Paul McCartney Won
NME Awards
Year Award Recipient Result
1974 Best bass guitarist Paul McCartney Won
1976 Best bass guitarist Paul McCartney Won
Capitol Radio music Awards
Year Award Work Recipient Result
1977 The Best Single "Mull of Kintyre" Wings Won
Best Live Show in London 1976 Wembley performances Paul McCartney and Wings Won
Daily Mirror Readers Awards
Year Award Recipient Result
1977 The Best Male Group Singer Paul McCartney Won
Best Rock Group Paul McCartney and Wings Won
Best Pop Group Paul McCartney and Wings Won
1979 Outstanding Music Personality Paul McCartney Won
Ivor Novello Awards
Year Award[72] Work Recipient Result
1978 Best Pop Song "Mull of Kintyre" Wings Nominated
Best Selling A Side "Mull of Kintyre" Wings Won
1980 Outstanding Services to British Music Paul McCartney Won
Juno Awards (Canadian Music awards) and Nominations
Year Award Work Recipient Result
1975 International Album of the Year Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings Won
Best Selling Single "Band on the Run" Paul McCartney and Wings Nominated
1976 International Album of the Year Venus and Mars Wings Nominated
1977 International Album of the Year Wings over America Wings Nominated
Grammy Awards and Nominations
Year Award[73][74] Work With Result
1974 Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s) "Live and Let Die" George Martin Won
Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture "Live and Let Die" Paul McCartney, Linda McCartney, George Martin Nominated
Best Pop Vocal Performance by a Duo, Group or Chorus "Live and Let Die" Paul McCartney and Wings Nominated
1975 Best Pop Vocal Performance by a Duo, Group or Chorus "Band on the Run" Paul McCartney and Wings Won
Best Engineered Recording, Non-Classical Band on the Run Geoff E. Emerick Won
Album of the Year Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings Nominated
1977 Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s) "Let 'Em In" Wings Nominated
1978 Best Album Package Wings over America Wings Nominated
1980 Best Rock Instrumental Performance "Rockestra Theme" Wings Won
1981 Best Rock Vocal Performance, Male "Coming Up" Paul McCartney Nominated
2012 Best Historical Album Band on the Run Paul McCartney, Sam Okell, Steve Rooke Won
2013 Grammy Hall of Fame Award Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings Inducted
2014 Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package Wings over America Simon Earith, James Musgrave Won

Notes

  1. ^ After splitting with McCartney in 1981, Laine was paid an additional £135,000 ($255,000 in 1981) for "Mull of Kintyre".[55]

References

Citations

  1. ^ The following sources cite the band as soft rock:
    • "'It's just me': an exclusive interview with Paul McCartney about McCartney III". Loud and Quiet.
    • "For Paul McCartney and Paul Simon, age is no hindrance to song-writing". The Economist. 13 September 2018.
    • "Paul McCartney's 73rd birthday: Some interesting facts about the music legend". India Today. 18 June 2015. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
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External links

  • Paul McCartney and Wings discography at Discogs  


paul, mccartney, wings, this, article, about, 1970s, rock, band, featuring, paul, mccartney, late, 1960s, american, folk, rock, band, wings, 1968, band, other, uses, wings, disambiguation, often, billed, simply, wings, were, british, american, rock, band, form. This article is about the 1970s rock band featuring Paul McCartney For the late 1960s American folk rock band see Wings 1968 band For other uses see Wings disambiguation Paul McCartney and Wings often billed simply as Wings were a British American rock band formed in 1971 by former Beatle bassist Paul McCartney his wife Linda McCartney on keyboards session drummer Denny Seiwell and former Moody Blues guitarist Denny Laine Wings were noted for their commercial successes musical eclecticism and frequent personnel changes going through three lead guitarists and four drummers However the core trio of the McCartneys and Laine remained intact throughout the group s existence Paul McCartney and WingsWings in 1975 L R Joe English Denny Laine Linda McCartney Jimmy McCulloch and Paul McCartneyBackground informationAlso known asWingsSuzy and the Red StripesThe Country HamsOriginLondon EnglandGenresSoft rock 1 pop rock 2 Years active1971 1981LabelsAppleCapitolParlophoneColumbiaPast membersPaul McCartney Linda McCartney Denny Laine Denny Seiwell Henry McCullough Jimmy McCulloch Geoff Britton Joe English Steve Holley Laurence JuberCreated following the McCartneys 1971 album Ram the band s first two albums Wild Life 1971 and Red Rose Speedway 1973 the latter featuring guitarist Henry McCullough were viewed as artistic disappointments beside Paul s work with the Beatles After the release of the title track of the James Bond film Live and Let Die McCullough and Seiwell resigned from the band The McCartneys and Laine then released 1973 s Band on the Run a commercial and critical success that spawned two top ten singles in Jet and the title track Following that album the band recruited guitarist Jimmy McCulloch and drummer Geoff Britton only for Britton to quit shortly afterwards and be replaced by Joe English With the new line up Wings released 1975 s Venus and Mars which included the US number one single Listen to What the Man Said and undertook a highly successful world tour over 1975 76 Intended as more of a group effort Wings at the Speed of Sound 1976 was issued midway through the tour and featured the hit singles Silly Love Songs and Let Em In In 1977 the band earned their only UK number one single with Mull of Kintyre which became one of the best selling singles in history Wings experienced another line up shuffle however with both McCulloch and English departing before the release of the group s 1978 album London Town The McCartneys and Laine again added new members recruiting guitarist Laurence Juber and drummer Steve Holley The resulting album Back to the Egg was a relative flop with its singles under performing and the critical reception negative During the supporting tour Paul was arrested in Japan for cannabis possession putting the band on hold Despite a final US number one with a live recorded version of Coming Up 1980 after Laine departed from the band Wings discontinued in 1981 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 1971 1973 First line up 1 3 1974 1978 Second line up 1 4 1978 1981 Third line up 1 5 The Country Hams 1 6 Suzy and the Red Stripes 1 7 Partial reunions 2 Legacy 3 Personnel 4 Discography 5 Tours 6 Awards 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit After the Beatles break up in 1970 McCartney recorded two albums McCartney 1970 credited to himself and Ram 1971 with his wife Linda McCartney He had insisted from the beginning of their marriage that Linda should be involved in his musical projects notwithstanding her lack of previous experience as a musician so that they did not have to be apart when he was on tour 3 Ram was recorded in New York City where McCartney auditioned a number of drummers and guitarists selecting Seiwell and guitarist David Spinozza 4 When Spinozza became unavailable due to other session commitments Hugh McCracken was enlisted to take his place 5 1971 1973 First line up Edit After the release of Ram McCartney decided to form a new group and asked Seiwell and McCracken to join Seiwell accepted but McCracken declined so McCartney invited Denny Laine whom he had known since the early 1960s to join 6 Laine who was working on a solo album at the time got a phone call from McCartney enquiring if he would like to work with him as McCartney said I d known him in the past and I just rang him and asked him What are you doing He said Nothing so I said Right Come on then 4 Laine then dropped plans for his album there and then 4 As he had in the Beatles McCartney would serve as the chief bassist and lead singer for Wings and he doubled on guitar keyboards drums and assorted instruments at various times When asked why he stayed on bass guitar rather than change back to guitar after the Beatles disbanded he has explained that by then he was a bass player pretty much who also happened to play guitar and also considers himself a bassist who happens to play piano 7 In August 1971 Seiwell and Laine joined Paul and Linda McCartney to record Paul s third post Beatles album for Apple Records The result was Wild Life released 7 December It was the first project to credit Wings as the artist The band name is said to have come to McCartney as he was praying in the hospital while Linda was giving birth to their second child together Stella on 13 September 1971 3 4 Paul McCartney recalled in the film Wingspan that the birth of Stella was a bit of a drama there were complications at the birth and that both Linda and the baby almost died He was praying fervently and the image of wings came to his mind He decided to name his new band Wings 3 In an attempt to capture the spontaneity of live performances five of Wild Life s eight songs were first takes by the band 8 The album included a cover of Mickey amp Sylvia s Love Is Strange 9 Like Ram Wild Life left music critics cold 10 11 a response that typified the anti McCartney sentiments that prevailed among the music press following the Beatles break up 12 13 In their 1975 book The Beatles An Illustrated Record Roy Carr and Tony Tyler called Wild Life rushed defensive badly timed and over publicized and wrote that it showed McCartney s songwriting at an absolute nadir just when he needed a little respect 14 Wings similarly struggled to gain artistic credibility particularly during the early 1970s 15 with critics fans and McCartney s musical peers alike ridiculing the inclusion of Linda as a keyboard player and backing vocalist 16 17 On 24 January 1972 McCartney added to the Wings line up guitarist Henry McCullough after he had tried out for the band 4 The new line up immediately mounted an impromptu tour of UK universities with the group driving around in a van 18 followed by a tour of small European venues Although this was the first tour including an ex Beatle after the Beatles broke up Wings played no Beatles numbers during the tour to show that it was a new band in its own right 19 In February 1972 Wings released a single called Give Ireland Back to the Irish a response to the events of Bloody Sunday 20 The song was banned by the BBC for its anti Unionist political stance 21 Despite limited airplay it reached number 16 in the UK 22 as well as number 1 in both the Republic of Ireland and Spain Wings released a children s song Mary Had a Little Lamb as its next single which reached the top 10 in the UK 22 Although some critics interpreted it as a sarcastic reaction to the ban on Give Ireland Back to the Irish it was in fact a serious effort by McCartney to record a song for children 23 Wings followed it with December 1972 s Hi Hi Hi which was again banned by the BBC this time for its alleged drug and sexual references 21 The B side C Moon was played instead 3 The single peaked at number 5 in the UK 22 The band were renamed Paul McCartney and Wings for the 1973 album Red Rose Speedway and for the follow up Band on the Run 24 which yielded their first US number 1 hit My Love 25 The album included two tracks left over from the Ram sessions and was originally intended as a two record set 26 After producer Glyn Johns had walked out on the project however 27 McCartney conceded to EMI s opinion that the material was substandard and cut it down to a single disc 28 Among the unreleased songs from the seven month sessions was the Linda composition Seaside Woman which was finally issued in 1977 credited to Suzy and the Red Stripes Paul and Linda McCartney at the Academy Awards at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion 2 April 1974 Near the end of the Red Rose Speedway sessions in October 1972 Wings recorded the theme song to the James Bond film Live and Let Die which reunited McCartney with Beatles producer arranger George Martin Issued as a non album single in mid 1973 Live and Let Die became a worldwide hit and has remained a highlight of McCartney s post Wings concert performances often accompanied by pyrotechnics That same year McCartney and Wings filmed a TV special the critically maligned James Paul McCartney which featured footage of the group performing in outdoor settings and in front of a studio audience 29 After a successful British tour in May June 1973 Wings went into rehearsals for their next album McCullough and Seiwell abruptly left the band in August however at the end of rehearsals 30 Both musicians were disenchanted with the group s musical direction and Linda s inclusion 31 McCullough also objected to McCartney s domineering attitude towards him as a guitar player 32 while Seiwell had long felt aggrieved at the lack of a formalised financial arrangement and his status as a lowly paid sideman 33 34 With the band reduced to a trio the McCartneys and Laine cut what turned out to be Wings most successful album Band on the Run at EMI s primitive eight track recording studio in Lagos Nigeria The album went to number 1 in both the US and UK 22 and spawned three hit singles the rockers Jet and Helen Wheels originally included only on the US version of the album and the title track a suite of movements recalling side two of Abbey Road It also included Let Me Roll It which was seen as an affectionate impersonation of John Lennon s vocal style 14 and No Words the first Wings song on which Laine received a co writing credit beside the McCartneys 35 Band on the Run enjoyed a highly favourable response from music critics and restored McCartney s tarnished post Beatles image 36 37 1974 1978 Second line up Edit After Band on the Run Jimmy McCulloch former lead guitarist in Thunderclap Newman and Stone the Crows joined the band The first Wings project with McCulloch was McGear a 1974 collaboration between Paul and his younger brother Mike McGear with session musician Gerry Conway playing drums Warner Bros Records chose not to play up the Wings angle in its marketing for McGear and the album sold poorly However the sessions also generated a single credited to McGear s group the Scaffold Liverpool Lou which became a top 10 hit in the UK Shortly thereafter Geoff Britton joined Wings on drums and the first recording session with this full line up was held in Nashville where the band stayed at the farm of songwriter Curly Putman Jr 38 The trip was immortalised in the 1974 non album single Junior s Farm backed with a straight country track entitled Sally G the group s last release on Apple Records In a rare occurrence for this era both sides of the single separately reached the Billboard Top 20 in the US Paul McCartney with Linda McCartney in 1976 Wings began recording sessions for its next album in London in November 1974 then moved to New Orleans to complete Venus and Mars 1975 the first release from the group on Capitol Records The album topped the charts and contained the US number 1 single Listen to What the Man Said which also featured Dave Mason formerly of Traffic on guitar and Tom Scott on saxophone When the Venus and Mars recording sessions moved to New Orleans Britton quit Wings and was replaced by Joe English who won the job at a secret audition before McCartney 39 In late 1975 Wings embarked on the Wings Over the World tour 40 following a postponement to allow McCulloch to recuperate from a hand fracture Starting in Bristol the tour took them to Australia November Europe March 1976 the US May June and Europe again September before ending in a four night grand finale at London s Wembley Empire Pool For this tour added to Wings stage act was a horn section consisting of Tony Dorsey Howie Casey Thaddeus Richard and Steve Howard on saxes brass and percussion Denny Laine during the 1976 tour In between sections of the tour Wings recorded Wings at the Speed of Sound which was released at the end of March 1976 just prior to the US leg of the world tour It represented a departure from the previous Wings template in that each of the five members of the band including English sang lead on at least one song However the two singles Silly Love Songs and Let Em In the former a US number one were both sung by Paul Four of the album tracks were played in the 1976 portion of the tour which also included five Beatles songs One of the Seattle concerts from the American leg of the 1975 76 world tour was filmed and later released as the concert feature Rockshow 1980 The tour s American leg which also included Madison Square Garden in New York City and Boston Garden in Massachusetts spawned a triple live album Wings over America 1976 which became the fifth consecutive Wings album to reach number 1 in the US 41 From this album came a single release of the live version of Maybe I m Amazed 42 originally from the McCartney album 43 The single s flipside was Soily a previously unreleased rocker that was often used as a closer for the concerts Jimmy McCulloch left and Paul McCartney during the 1976 Wings Over the World tour After the tour and following the release of Maybe I m Amazed in early 1977 Wings took a break Later in the year the band started recording their next album in the Virgin Islands but the sessions were interrupted by Linda s pregnancy and then by the departures of both McCulloch and English McCulloch who joined Small Faces died of morphine and alcohol poisoning in 1979 English joined Chuck Leavell s band Sea Level and later founded the Christian oriented Joe English Band Undeterred by their departure Wings released the already completed McCartney Laine ballad Mull of Kintyre an ode to the Scottish coastal region where McCartney had made his home in the early 1970s Its broad appeal was maximised by a pre Christmas release It became an international hit dominating the charts in Britain where it was Wings only number 1 single Australia and many other countries over the Christmas New Year period Ultimately it became the first single to exceed sales of 2 million in the UK eclipsing the previous all time best seller the Beatles She Loves You and remains one of the biggest selling UK singles of all time However it was not a success in the US where the B side Girls School received most of the airplay but barely reached the top 40 The core trio of Wings then released the album London Town in 1978 Though only the remaining trio are pictured on the sleeve much of the album included McCulloch and English having been recorded before their departures Laine however remained and was co credited on five of the tracks including the title song 44 It was a commercial success although it became the first Wings album since Wild Life not to reach number 1 in the US peaking at number 2 45 London Town featured a markedly softer rock synth based sound than previous Wings albums With a Little Luck reached number 1 in the US and number 5 in the UK 22 but I ve Had Enough and London Town were commercial disappointments in both countries 1978 1981 Third line up Edit Some of this section s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Steve Holley the group s last drummer Later in 1978 lead guitarist Laurence Juber and drummer Steve Holley joined the band restoring Wings to touring strength In 1979 McCartney signed a new record contract leaving Capitol the company he had been with in the US and Canada since he was a Beatle and joining Columbia Records while remaining with Parlophone in the rest of the world Influenced by the punk and new wave scenes Wings abandoned its mellow touch and hired Chris Thomas to help in the production process The result was a somewhat less polished sound This new version of Wings released the disco oriented single Goodnight Tonight backed by Daytime Nighttime Suffering which reached the top 5 in both the US and UK 22 However the subsequent album Back to the Egg was not favourably received by critics and although it went platinum in the US sales were disappointing in comparison to its immediate predecessors It contained the Grammy winning song Rockestra Theme the result of an October 1978 superstar session with members of Wings the Who Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd among others 46 Three singles Old Siam Sir UK only Getting Closer 47 and Arrow Through Me US only were culled from the album but performed poorly on the charts During much of 1979 Wings were inactive as McCartney worked on a new solo album McCartney II without the band In November and December 1979 Wings toured the UK once again adding the horns and brass section consisting of Tony Dorsey Howie Casey Thaddeus Richard and Steve Howard This tour climaxed with a massive Rockestra all star collection of musicians in London in aid of UNICEF and Kampuchean refugees Also during this tour a live version of the McCartney II track Coming Up was recorded in Glasgow and became Wings sixth US number one hit the following year 48 Paul McCartney and his family arrived in Japan on 16 January 1980 for the planned eleven date Wings concert tour of Japan due to visit Budokan Hall Tokyo from 21 to 24 January 1980 Aichi Ken Taiiku Kan Nagoya on 25 26 Festival Hall Osaka on 28 Osaka Furitsu Kan Osaka on 29 Budokan Hall Tokyo from 31 January to 2 February 1980 49 McCartney was arrested immediately upon arriving at New Tokyo Airport for possession of 219 grams 7 7 ounces of marijuana with an estimated street value of 600 000 yen hidden in Paul s luggage 50 51 The arrest put the tour in jeopardy and Wings music was immediately banned from all television and radio stations across Japan 49 Wings Japanese promoters claimed that almost 100 000 tickets for the concerts had been sold representing a possible loss of well over 100 million yen 52 The promoters had no option but to cancel all of the tour dates the day after McCartney s arrest 49 The other band members of Wings except Linda left Japan and returned to England on 21 January 1980 49 McCartney spent ten days in jail before being unexpectedly released without charge on 25 January 1980 and deported 49 51 After returning to England McCartney decided to release his solo album McCartney II and plans for a US tour were subsequently dropped Meanwhile Denny Laine released the single Japanese Tears and formed the short lived Denny Laine Band with Steve Holley and released a solo album Japanese Tears that December By 1980 McCartney was growing weary of maintaining Wings and his personal and professional aspirations began to diverge from the group The McCartneys now had three school age children and had moved out of London to the countryside of East Sussex desiring that their children have a normal upbringing Musically McCartney was dissatisfied by the band s performances during the 1979 UK tour and when rehearsals for the next album began in October it was apparent his latest songs were not a good fit for the band Consequently he and George Martin who would be producing the album decided not to use Wings for recording Instead top session musicians and guest artists were brought in to make the best possible album 53 In November 1980 Holley and Juber were told they would not be needed for the new album and other than sessions in January 1981 to finish work on the Cold Cuts album of previously unreleased tracks no further activities were scheduled for Wings Juber has said he could see the writing on the wall regarding Wings future at that point and moved to New York to continue his career there 54 Laine stayed on for the Tug of War sessions in Montserrat in February 1981 but his relationship with McCartney had become strained over business and personal matters Laine had begun to feel that he was not being adequately compensated for his role in Wings and was particularly bitter that he was employed as a contract writer on Mull of Kintyre a song he co wrote with McCartney He had been paid a flat fee for his contributions so when the song became a hit he did not share in the royalties nb 1 Laine was also upset with McCartney over his drug arrest in Japan which meant a loss of extra income from the tour as well as putting future tour plans in doubt Laine s marriage was also troubled and his wife and the McCartneys did not get along well adding to his upset with Wings 56 In April 1981 Laine announced he was leaving Wings citing the lack of tour plans as the reason While Laine s departure effectively ended the band a spokesman for McCartney said that Wings still continued as an active concept 57 McCartney finally acknowledged the band no longer existed while promoting the release of Tug of War in 1982 58 The Country Hams Edit The Country Hams was a pseudonym used by the group for the release of the single Walking in the Park with Eloise in 1974 a song written years before by Paul s father James 38 Wings with guest musicians Chet Atkins and Floyd Cramer recorded it during the sessions for Junior s Farm Suzy and the Red Stripes Edit Suzy and the Red Stripes was a pseudonym used by the group for the release of the Linda McCartney and Wings single Seaside Woman in 1977 It was written and sung by Linda McCartney It was the only release by Wings under that name Linda said that the Suzy and the Red Stripes pseudonym came about because she had been called Suzi in Jamaica because of a fantastic reggae version of Suzi Q and Red Stripe is Jamaica s leading brand of beer 59 Partial reunions Edit In March 1997 Denny Laine Laurence Juber and Steve Holley did an impromptu Wings reunion at a Beatlefest convention in East Rutherford New Jersey 60 This was not a planned event and no further reunions were intended However ten years later in July 2007 Laine Juber and Denny Seiwell reunited for one show at a Beatlefest convention in Las Vegas Among other songs they performed Band on the Run Mull of Kintyre and Go Now 61 Laine and Seiwell appeared again at the Fest for Beatles Fans in Secaucus New Jersey in March 2010 62 and were joined by Juber at the Fest in Chicago in August 2010 Laine Juber and Seiwell performed together at the Fest for Beatles Fans in Los Angeles California in October 2014 the setlist included Hi Hi Hi Live and Let Die and Rockestra Theme In August 2017 the trio performed at the festival once again this time joined by drummer Steve Holley citation needed Laine Juber Seiwell and Holley performed together in January 2018 at Grand Oak Live a music venue in Upland California headlining an event called Imagine Something Yesterday 63 better source needed Laine Juber and Holley performed again in March 2019 at the Fest for Beatles Fans in Jersey City New Jersey performing songs from the band s final album Back to the Egg citation needed Legacy EditWings had twelve top 10 singles including one number one in the UK and fourteen top 10 singles including six number ones in the US All 23 singles released by Wings reached the US top 40 and one two sided hit Junior s Farm Sally G reached the top 40 with each side Of the nine albums released by Wings all went top 10 in either the UK or the US with five consecutive albums topping the US charts Paul McCartney was unquestionably Wings leader and dominant creative force but Denny Laine Jimmy McCulloch and Linda McCartney all contributed a little in songwriting and Laine McCulloch Joe English and Linda McCartney all performed a few lead vocals The success of Wings was a vindication for McCartney 64 His first few post Beatles albums were highly criticized and often dismissed by critics as lightweight next to the more serious nature of his former bandmates solo output But by the mid 1970s the solo careers of the other three former Beatles were in varying degrees of decline with John Lennon putting his career on hold in 1975 for the first five years of his son Sean s life A year later George Harrison had all but retired from live performances with his new releases failing to match the success of his initial solo output Ringo Starr was living in Los Angeles and was writing and recording but as a solo artist had not been performing onstage other than rare guest appearances Meanwhile Wings continued to tour regularly and enjoy much commercial success According to author Robert Rosen by 1980 Lennon was envious enough of McCartney s continuing success to make his re emergence on the music scene 65 One of the criticisms of Wings was that the other members were little more than sidemen backing up a solo McCartney 66 Guitarist Henry McCullough quit the band because he grew tired of being told by McCartney exactly what to play and said that Wings were never a real band 67 On the other hand other former members of Wings such as Joe English and Laurence Juber have said that they were allowed a degree of creative freedom In an interview Juber Wings third lead guitarist said I was a sideman but the job assignment very much included considering myself a part of the band In all its incarnations Wings sounded like a band not like a solo McCartney project and I think that reflects well not only on Paul s ability to share in the creative process but also on the importance of Denny and Linda s contributions too The other players brought their own personalities to the scene 66 In addition to its own output Wings recorded several songs that were released through various outlets both before and after the band s break up Denny Laine s 1977 solo album Holly Days was a joint effort by Laine with Paul and Linda McCartney 68 three songs on Laine s 1980 solo album Japanese Tears were performed by Wings with Laine on lead vocals Laine also contributed to several songs on Paul McCartney s 1982 and 1983 solo albums Tug of War and Pipes of Peace respectively Juber s instrumental Maisie which was backed by members of Wings appeared on his solo album Standard Time The McCartneys and Laine contributed backing vocals to George Harrison s 1981 tribute to John Lennon All Those Years Ago Linda McCartney continued to tour and record with her husband up until her death in 1998 after which a compilation of her songs entitled Wide Prairie was released that featured seven Wings songs written or co written by her Wings also backed Paul s brother Mike McGear on the McGear album as well as McGear s band the Scaffold on the single Liverpool Lou and its B side Ten Years After on Strawberry Jam Paul McCartney also used three unreleased Wings songs as B sides of his solo singles several years after Wings break up Wings 1977 single Mull of Kintyre Girls School is still the biggest selling non charity single in the UK although Queen s Bohemian Rhapsody sold more its sales include a reissue in aid of the Terrence Higgins Trust 69 and it ranked fourth in the official list of all time best selling singles in the UK issued in 2002 70 In 2001 Wingspan Hits and History was released a project spanning an album and a television special retrospective Personnel EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message During its ten year lifespan Wings underwent numerous personnel changes including twice being reduced to its core McCartney McCartney Laine trio Members Paul McCartney lead vocals bass guitar piano keyboards drums 1971 1981 Linda McCartney keyboards vocals 1971 1981 died 1998 Denny Laine guitar bass piano vocals 1971 1981 Denny Seiwell drums percussion 1971 1973 Henry McCullough guitar backing vocals 1972 1973 died 2016 Jimmy McCulloch guitar vocals bass 1974 1977 died 1979 Geoff Britton drums percussion 1974 1975 Joe English drums percussion vocals 1975 1977 Laurence Juber guitar backing vocals 1978 1981 Steve Holley drums percussion backing vocals 1978 1981 Timeline Line ups 1971 1972 Paul McCartney lead vocals bass guitar piano keyboards Linda McCartney keyboards vocals Denny Laine guitar bass piano vocals Denny Seiwell drums percussion1972 1973 Paul McCartney lead vocals bass guitar piano keyboards Linda McCartney keyboards vocals Denny Laine guitar bass piano vocals Henry McCullough guitar vocals Denny Seiwell drums percussion1973 1974 Paul McCartney lead vocals bass guitar piano keyboards drums Linda McCartney keyboards vocals Denny Laine guitar bass piano vocals1974 1975 Paul McCartney lead vocals bass guitar piano keyboards Linda McCartney keyboards vocals Denny Laine guitar bass piano vocals Jimmy McCulloch guitar vocals Geoff Britton drums percussion1975 1977 Paul McCartney lead vocals bass guitar piano keyboards Linda McCartney keyboards vocals Denny Laine guitar bass piano vocals Jimmy McCulloch guitar vocals Joe English drums percussion vocals1977 1978 Paul McCartney lead vocals bass guitar piano keyboards drums Linda McCartney keyboards vocals Denny Laine guitar bass piano vocals1978 1981 Paul McCartney lead vocals bass guitar piano keyboards Linda McCartney keyboards vocals Denny Laine guitar bass piano vocals Laurence Juber guitar vocals Steve Holley drums percussion vocalsDiscography EditMain article Wings discography Wild Life 1971 Red Rose Speedway 1973 Band on the Run 1973 Venus and Mars 1975 Wings at the Speed of Sound 1976 London Town 1978 Back to the Egg 1979 Collaborations McGear credited to Mike McGear 1974 Holly Days credited to Denny Laine 1977 Live Wings over America 1976 Wings over Europe 2018 Tours EditWings played five concert tours during their ten year existence 71 42 Wings University Tour 11 shows in the UK 1972 Wings Over Europe Tour 25 shows 1972 Wings 1973 United Kingdom Tour 21 shows 1973 Wings Over the World Tour 66 shows 1975 1976 Wings 1979 United Kingdom Tour 20 shows 1979Awards EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Music Week AwardYear Award Work Recipient Result1977 Music Week s top single Mull of Kintyre Wings WonYugoton AwardYear Award Work Recipient Result1976 Gold LP For successful sales of their albums in Yugoslavia McCartney Ram Wild Life Red Rose Speedway Band on the Run Venus and Mars Wings at the Speed of Sound Paul McCartney and Wings WonBrit AwardYear Award Work Recipient Result2010 The BRITs Hits 30 Live and Let Die Paul McCartney and Wings NominatedAmerican Music AwardYear Award Work Recipient Result1974 Favorite Pop Rock Band Duo Group Live and Let Die Paul McCartney and Wings NominatedAcademy AwardYear Award Work Recipient Result1974 Best Original Song Live and Let Die George Martin Paul McCartney Linda McCartney NominatedMillion Air AwardYear Award Work Recipient Result2012 over 4 million performances Live and Let Die Paul McCartney WonThe Guinness Book of RecordsYear Award Work Recipient Result1979 Most successful and honoured composer and musician in popular music history Paul McCartney WonQ AwardsYear Award Work Recipient Result2010 A Classic Album Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings WonRIAA awardYear Award Recipient Result1976 Top Male Vocalist of the Year Paul McCartney WonNME AwardsYear Award Recipient Result1974 Best bass guitarist Paul McCartney Won1976 Best bass guitarist Paul McCartney WonCapitol Radio music AwardsYear Award Work Recipient Result1977 The Best Single Mull of Kintyre Wings WonBest Live Show in London 1976 Wembley performances Paul McCartney and Wings WonDaily Mirror Readers AwardsYear Award Recipient Result1977 The Best Male Group Singer Paul McCartney WonBest Rock Group Paul McCartney and Wings WonBest Pop Group Paul McCartney and Wings Won1979 Outstanding Music Personality Paul McCartney WonIvor Novello AwardsYear Award 72 Work Recipient Result1978 Best Pop Song Mull of Kintyre Wings NominatedBest Selling A Side Mull of Kintyre Wings Won1980 Outstanding Services to British Music Paul McCartney WonJuno Awards Canadian Music awards and NominationsYear Award Work Recipient Result1975 International Album of the Year Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings WonBest Selling Single Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings Nominated1976 International Album of the Year Venus and Mars Wings Nominated1977 International Album of the Year Wings over America Wings NominatedGrammy Awards and NominationsYear Award 73 74 Work With Result1974 Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist s Live and Let Die George Martin WonBest Original Score Written for a Motion Picture Live and Let Die Paul McCartney Linda McCartney George Martin NominatedBest Pop Vocal Performance by a Duo Group or Chorus Live and Let Die Paul McCartney and Wings Nominated1975 Best Pop Vocal Performance by a Duo Group or Chorus Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings WonBest Engineered Recording Non Classical Band on the Run Geoff E Emerick WonAlbum of the Year Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings Nominated1977 Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist s Let Em In Wings Nominated1978 Best Album Package Wings over America Wings Nominated1980 Best Rock Instrumental Performance Rockestra Theme Wings Won1981 Best Rock Vocal Performance Male Coming Up Paul McCartney Nominated2012 Best Historical Album Band on the Run Paul McCartney Sam Okell Steve Rooke Won2013 Grammy Hall of Fame Award Band on the Run Paul McCartney and Wings Inducted2014 Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package Wings over America Simon Earith James Musgrave WonNotes Edit After splitting with McCartney in 1981 Laine was paid an additional 135 000 255 000 in 1981 for Mull of Kintyre 55 References EditCitations The following sources cite the band as soft rock It s just me an exclusive interview with Paul McCartney about McCartney III Loud and Quiet For Paul McCartney and Paul Simon age is no hindrance to song writing The Economist 13 September 2018 Paul McCartney s 73rd birthday Some interesting facts about the music legend India Today 18 June 2015 Retrieved 6 February 2022 Weinbender Nathan Paul McCartney is releasing his 25th solo album so we re ranking his post Beatles career highlights Inlander Lewis Dave 18 June 2020 The 10 best Paul McCartney amp Wings songs Classic Rock Magazine a b c d Lewisohn Mark 2002 Wingspan Little Brown and Company New York ISBN 0 316 86032 8 a b c d e Miles Barry Badman Keith eds 2001 The Beatles Diary After the Break Up 1970 2001 reprint ed London Music Sales Group ISBN 978 0 7119 8307 6 Perone James E 2012 The Album A Guide to Pop Music s Most Provocative Influential and Important Creations ABC CLIO p 147 ISBN 978 0 313 37907 9 Sounes Howard Fab An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney 2010 285 87 You Gave Me The Answer Wild Life Special PaulMcCartney com 26 October 2018 Archived from the original on 10 May 2019 Retrieved 5 April 2019 Wright Jeb Denny Seiwell of Wings Archived 3 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Interview Classic Rock Revisited website Retrieved 17 May 2007 Erlewine Stephen Thomas Wild Life Paul McCartney Wings Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Archived from the original on 24 March 2013 Retrieved 18 April 2013 Woffinden Bob 1981 The Beatles Apart London Proteus pp 47 62 63 ISBN 0 906071 89 5 Madinger Chip Easter Mark 2000 Eight Arms to Hold You The Solo Beatles Compendium Chesterfield MO 44 1 Productions p 151 ISBN 0 615 11724 4 Frontani Michael 2009 The Solo Years In Womack Kenneth ed The Cambridge Companion to the Beatles Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 164 65 ISBN 978 0 521 68976 2 Ingham Chris 2005 Introduction Ten Years After In Hunt Chris ed NME Originals Beatles The Solo Years 1970 1980 London IPC Ignite p 14 a b Carr Roy and Tyler Tony The Beatles An Illustrated Record New York Harmony Books a subsidiary of Crown Publishing Group 1975 ISBN 0 517 52045 1 Doggett Peter 2011 You Never Give Me Your Money The Beatles After the Breakup New York NY It Books pp 177 194 95 208 ISBN 978 0 06 177418 8 Schaffner Nicholas 1978 The Beatles Forever New York NY McGraw Hill p 156 ISBN 0 07 055087 5 Rodriguez Robert 2010 Fab Four FAQ 2 0 The Beatles Solo Years 1970 1980 Milwaukee WI Backbeat Books pp 43 95 96 180 ISBN 978 1 4165 9093 4 How On Earth Do You Follow The Beatles Paul McCartney On Wings Uncut co uk Archived from the original on 10 September 2012 Retrieved 18 April 2013 However McCartney played a solo version of Let It Be on piano at Nottingham Paul McCartney biography Archived 10 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine 2003 MPL Communications Retrieved 11 December 2006 BBC Radio Leeds interview Archived 3 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21 November 2006 a b The seven ages of Paul McCartney Archived 5 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine BBC News 17 June 2006 Retrieved on 6 November 2006 a b c d e f Official Charts Paul McCartney The Official UK Charts Company Archived from the original on 27 December 2012 Retrieved 18 April 2013 Garbarini Vic 1980 The McCartney Interview interview LP Columbia Records Mulligan Kate Siobhan 2010 The Beatles A Musical Biography Santa Barbara Calif Greenwood p 150 ISBN 978 0 313 37686 3 Red Rose Speedway Paul McCartney Wings Awards allmusic com Retrieved 17 April 2013 Benitez Vincent P 2010 The Words and Music of Paul McCartney The Solo Years Santa Barbara Calif Praeger p 43 ISBN 978 0 313 34969 0 Sounes Howard 2010 Fab An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney London HarperCollins pp 302 03 ISBN 978 0 00 723705 0 Doggett Peter 2011 You Never Give Me Your Money The Beatles After the Breakup New York NY It Books p 208 ISBN 978 0 06 177418 8 Madinger Chip Easter Mark 2000 Eight Arms to Hold You The Solo Beatles Compendium Chesterfield MO 44 1 Productions pp 180 81 ISBN 0 615 11724 4 Emerick Geoff with Howard Massey Here There and Everywhere My Life Recording the Music of the Beatles Gotham 2006 p 337 ISBN 978 1 59240 269 4 Clayson Alan 2003 Paul McCartney London Sanctuary p 167 ISBN 1 86074 486 9 Rodriguez Robert 2010 Fab Four FAQ 2 0 The Beatles Solo Years 1970 1980 Milwaukee WI Backbeat Books p 210 ISBN 978 1 4165 9093 4 Sounes Howard 2010 Fab An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney London HarperCollins pp 308 10 ISBN 978 0 00 723705 0 Rodriguez Robert 2010 Fab Four FAQ 2 0 The Beatles Solo Years 1970 1980 Milwaukee WI Backbeat Books p 204 ISBN 978 1 4165 9093 4 Madinger Chip Easter Mark 2000 Eight Arms to Hold You The Solo Beatles Compendium Chesterfield MO 44 1 Productions p 189 ISBN 0 615 11724 4 Frontani Michael 2009 The Solo Years In Womack Kenneth ed The Cambridge Companion to the Beatles Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 166 67 ISBN 978 0 521 68976 2 Ghosh Palash 16 July 2013 Band On The Run 40 Years Ago Paul McCartney Saved His Career With An Album Made Under Duress In Nigeria International Business Times Archived from the original on 14 October 2017 Retrieved 11 January 2016 a b Bailey Jerry Paul and Linda Try the Gentle Life Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Tennessean 18 July 1974 Retrieved 9 June 2007 Joe English biography Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine at Drummer Academy com Sounds Wings are Flying 22 April 1976 Retrieved 17 December 2018 Wings Over America paulmccartney com Archived from the original on 15 April 2013 Retrieved 15 April 2013 a b McGee Garry 2003 Band on the Run A History of Paul McCartney and Wings Rowman amp Littlefield p 106 ISBN 978 0 87833 304 2 Calkin Graham Paul McCartney Maybe I m Amazed Jpgr co uk Archived from the original on 16 November 2012 Retrieved 17 April 2013 Erlewine Stephen Thomas London Town AllMusic Archived from the original on 5 November 2017 Retrieved 11 March 2019 Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Albums 6th edition ISBN 0 89820 166 7 McCartney Songwriter ISBN 0 491 03325 7 p 122 McCartney Songwriter ISBN 0 491 03325 7 p 123 The Story of Wings Last Most Frustrating LP Back to the Egg ultimateclassicrock com 8 June 2015 Retrieved 8 November 2021 a b c d e Paul McCartney is arrested in Japan for marijuana possession beatlesbible com 16 January 1980 Archived from the original on 28 April 2015 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Tokyo Officials Hold Paul for Drugs The Michigan Daily 17 January 1980 Retrieved 11 February 2018 a b Wasserman Harry Paul s Pot Bust Shocker Makes Him A Jailhouse Rocker Archived 22 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine High Times July 1980 Retrieved 17 March 2010 McCartney Songwriter ISBN 0 491 03325 7 p 124 Green Paul Martin McCartney Tug Team Scores Billboard 26 February 1983 60 Terrill Marshall 15 October 2010 Ex Wings guitarist Laurence Juber talks about having Paul McCartney as a boss daytrippin com Archived from the original on 1 February 2013 Retrieved 23 June 2012 Penniless Denny The Times 17 December 1986 Giulliano Geoffrey Blackbird The Life and Times of Paul McCartney 1991 0 452 26858 3 AP Wings clipped Archived 18 June 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Leader Post 30 April 1981 D2 Bonici Ray Paul McCartney Wings It Alone Music Express April May 1982 Gambaccini Paul The RS Interview Paul McCartney Archived 20 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine Rolling Stone 31 January 1974 Retrieved 14 May 2007 1997 Wings photo page by Michael Cimino Archives Archived from the original on 1 December 2008 Wings Alumni to Take Flight ClassicRockCentral com 10 July 2007 Retrieved 17 September 2007 The Fest for Beatles Fans Blog Archive Denny Laine amp others added to NY METRO Lineup Archived 20 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 20 February 2010 Denny Laine www facebook com Archived from the original on 26 February 2022 Bronson Fred Silly Love Songs from The Billboard Book of Number One Hits p 436 Billboard Books 2003 ISBN 978 0 8230 7677 2 Retrieved on 3 June 2009 Rosen Robert Nowhere Man The Final Days of John Lennon 2001 pp 135 36 ISBN 978 0 932551 51 1 a b Terrill Marshall 15 October 2010 Exclusive Ex Wings guitarist Laurence Juber talks about having Paul McCartney as a boss Daytrippin Magazine Archived from the original on 22 April 2016 Retrieved 13 April 2016 Harper Colin Hello Goodbye Henry McCullough amp Wings Mojo September 1997 Thompson Dave Holly Days Denny Laine Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Archived from the original on 7 July 2013 Retrieved 18 April 2013 Morgan Gann Theo The UK s Top 10 Best Selling Singles Archived 25 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine ukcharts 20m com Retrieved 12 March 2008 UK All Time Best Selling Singles Archived 27 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine Listology Retrieved 12 March 2008 Harry 2002 pp 845 851harvnb error no target CITEREFHarry2002 help Wings tours details Lewisohn 2002 pp 170 171 Wings tours dates Ivor Novello Awards The 1970s Music For Stowaways 18 October 2018 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 21 June 2019 Grammy Awards Won by Paul McCartney Grammy com Archived from the original on 17 January 2010 Retrieved 3 October 2007 List of 48th Annual Grammy Award Winners CBS News 9 February 2006 Archived from the original on 5 May 2007 Retrieved 3 October 2007 External links EditPaul McCartney and Wings discography at Discogs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul McCartney and Wings amp oldid 1135868247, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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