Thursday, 31 December 2020

Paul McCartney and Wings - Wings Over America (1976) [Vinyl Rip] 1st Press, 3LP Live

Year: 1976 (LP 1976, 1st Press)
Label: MPL Communications (UK), PCSP 720 0C 154-98497/8/9
Style: Classic Rock
Country: London, United Kingdom
Time: 43:20, 32:50, 40:06
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 280, 212, 268 Mb

This year's premiere U.S. tour by Paul McCartney's post-Beatles group was one of the best-attended and best-put-together concert jaunts ever mounted. McCartney is one superstar who instinctively understands the importance of adding entertainment to live musical appearances, and his painstaking mixes of tapes made all along the tour represent the many original programming concepts in this show. The three disks are packaged in a clever split double-pocket jacket with a poster taking up the fourth compartment. Just about all the great songs written by McCartney either for the Beatles or Wings can be found here in intensely performed versions that cleverly take maximum advantage of the excitement of playing before big arena audiences. One unique bonus found on this LP is Wings guitarist Denny Laine, original singer of the Moody Blues performing that group's early hit "Go Now," which was only in the show at LA. But McCartney live with this well-honed group is an endless fascination. He remains the ultimate pop-rocker whether singing with his solo acoustic guitar, driving the group with his bass, rocking full-out with the travelling horn quartet or riffling off piano arpeggios for his haunting ballads. No LP in the future is likely to deliver us this much of McCartney in so many effective settings. Best cuts: "Jet," "Band On The Run," "Magneto & Titanium Man," "Silly Love Songs," "Let 'Em In," "Blackbird," "Yesterday," "Live And Let Die," "Lady Madonna," "Listen To What The Man Said," "Long And Winding Road ," "Hi Hi Hi," "Richard Cory."
(Billboard, 1976)

For such an expensive, three-record concert souvenir, made by an artist as commercially astute as Paul McCartney, a consumer-conscious review seems appropriate. The Wings fan with all the studio albums, for instance, may find Wings over America a legitimate alternative; excepting the single side of acoustic material, these performances are rawer and more driven than the original recordings and, in many cases, much the better for it. "Rock Show" is placed in its natural habitat; "Magneto and Titanium Man" becomes more sinewy and sinister; "Time to Hide" is reborn and simply wonderful. "Soily," the encore original, is a perfect climax, one of the best fast songs McCartney has written. In other words, there is probably enough novelty here to make Wings over America worth owning. From the above, non-Wings fans -- particularly those who find them wimpy -- can infer that this is as good and tough as you'll get this particular band.
On the debit side, the acoustic set is unremittingly maudlin. Many of Wings' mediocre songs -- "My Love," "Listen to What the Man Said," "Silly Love Songs" -- successfully resist transcending mediocrity.
There isn't much stage patter; crowd noise is kept at an unobtrusive but effective level; the cover painting compares favorably to a witty James Rosenquist, but the poster inside is downright cheesy. Caveat emptor.
(Ken Tucker, Rolling Stone, 2/10/77)

Wings Over America - Triple Live album, with Poster (pictures are included):
Wings over America is a live album by the band Wings, released in December 1976 on MPL Communications (in the US, it was released by MPL Communications and Capitol). In its initial release, it was a triple album and included a poster of the band, which reached number 8 in the UK charts and peaked at number 1 in the US. The cover was designed by Hipgnosis, and features a painting of an airliner about to open its cabin door.
Wings over America was another success for Wings, reaching number 1 in the US in early 1977 (the last in a 5-album stretch of consecutive number 1 albums for Wings) and number 8 in the UK. For the five Beatles songs included, McCartney elected to reverse the songwriting credit to McCartney?Lennon.

Linda McCartney - backing vocals, piano, keyboards, percussion

Denny Laine (ex Moody Blues) - lead vocals on "Spirits of Ancient Egypt", "Picasso's Last Words (Drink to Me)," "Richard Cory," "Time to Hide", and "Go Now" and backing vocals, acoustic, electric and bass guitars, piano, keyboards, percussion, harmonica

Jimmy McCulloch (ex Thunderclap Newman, Stone The Crows) - lead vocals on "Medicine Jar" and backing vocals; acoustic, electric and bass guitars 

Joe English - backing vocals, drums, percussion 

Tony Dorsey - trombone, percussion

Howie Casey - saxophone, percussion

Steve Howard - trumpet, flugelhorn, percussion

Thaddeus Richard - saxophone, clarinet, Western concert flute, percussion

01. A1 Venus And Mars - Rock Show - Jet (10:15)
02. A2 Let Me Roll It (03:44)
03. A3 Spirits Of Ancient Egypt (04:04)
04. A4 Medicine Jar (Jimmy McCulloch) (04:05)
05. B1 Maybe I'm Amazed (05:09)
06. B2 Call Me Back Again (05:24)
07. B3 Lady Madonna (02:37)
08. B4 The Long And Winding Road (04:26)
09. B5 Live And Let Die (03:31)
10. C1 Picasso's Last Words (Drink To Me) (01:57)
11. C2 Richard Cory (03:01)
12. C3 Bluebird (03:41)
13. C4 I've Just Seen A Face (02:07)
14. C5 Blackbird (02:32)
15. C6 Yesterday (02:22)
16. D1 You Gave Me The Answer (02:04)
17. D2 Magneto And Titanium Man (03:19)
18. D3 Go Now (03:43)
19. D4 My Love (04:18)
20. D5 Listen To What The Man Said (03:41)
21. E1 Let Em In (04:05)
22. E2 Time To Hide (Denny Laine) (04:58)
23. E3 Silly Love Songs (05:54)
24. E4 Beware My Love (05:12)
25. F1 Letting Go (04:35)
26. F2 Band On The Run (05:43)
27. F3 Hi, Hi, Hi (03:34)
28. F4 Soily (06:01)

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LP1

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LP2

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LP3

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