It’s fair to say that Abbey Road Studios is the most documented recording facility in the world, but only if you count the crosswalk outside. Otherwise, the nine-bedroom mansion turned studio hasn’t really had its day in the cinematic sun, the way that more modest studios like L.A.’s Sound City and Alabama’s Muscle Shoals have. Making up for that with an A-lister-filled movie treatment is “If These Walls Could Sing,” the first feature-length documentary from Mary McCartney, who has a hell of a shared Rolodex to draw upon in gathering the firsthand rock ‘n’ roll anecdotes you expect and want in a film like this. She’s also savvy enough to know that the guy working in the back gluing irreplaceable mid-century microphones back together deserves a few seconds of screen time, too.
McCartney starts her film off by showing a baby picture of herself at the studio,...
McCartney starts her film off by showing a baby picture of herself at the studio,...
- 9/4/2022
- by Chris Willman
- Variety Film + TV
It should hardly come as a surprise that Anton Corbijn would want to make a movie about iconic rock ‘n’ roll looks. Before he began directing feature films with 2007’s striking Joy Division drama “Control,” after all, Corbijn was responsible for quite a few notable rock looks of his own as a design director and rock photographer responsible for U2’s “The Joshua Tree” album cover, among many others.
So when the Dutch photographer-turned-director, whose other films include “The Americans” and “A Most Wanted Man,” turns to rock iconography for the documentary “Squaring the Circle (the story of hipgnosis),” it’s clear that the guy knows what he’s talking about — not that Corbijn himelf does the talking in the film, which had its world premiere on Friday at the Telluride Film Festival.
Instead, he leaves the storytelling to the illustrious likes of Paul McCartney, Peter Gabriel, Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant and Jimmy Page,...
So when the Dutch photographer-turned-director, whose other films include “The Americans” and “A Most Wanted Man,” turns to rock iconography for the documentary “Squaring the Circle (the story of hipgnosis),” it’s clear that the guy knows what he’s talking about — not that Corbijn himelf does the talking in the film, which had its world premiere on Friday at the Telluride Film Festival.
Instead, he leaves the storytelling to the illustrious likes of Paul McCartney, Peter Gabriel, Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant and Jimmy Page,...
- 9/3/2022
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
There’s a sequence in Peter Jackson’s 2021 Beatles documentary, Get Back, when, on the fourth day of the tense writing-and-rehearsal marathon for a high-stakes live show and what would become the Fab Four’s final album, Let It Be, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr are sitting around griping that John Lennon is running late, as usual. The Beatles are in the dumps and just about done. And McCartney, bearded and overflowing with song ideas — among them, the seeds of “Get Back” — becomes the group’s engine. It...
- 4/29/2022
- by Richard B. Simon
- Rollingstone.com
Paul McCartney will launch a 13-city U.S. tour in April — his first since 2019 — with a May 13 stop at Los Angeles’ SoFi Stadium on the roster.
Called the “Got Back” tour, in sly reference to the popular Disney+ documentary series The Beatles: Get Back, McCartney’s tour begins April 28 in Spokane, Wa, with subsequent stops in Seattle, Oakland, L.A., Syracuse, Boston and Baltimore, among others (see the full itinerary below).
The tour concludes on June 16 at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ, the sole New York City-area stop and McCartney’s first visit to MetLife since 2016.
McCartney’s tour website gives some clues about what to expect of the tour, noting: “With songs like ‘Hey Jude,’ ‘Live and Let Die,’ ‘Band on the Run,’ ‘Let It Be’ and so many more, the Paul McCartney live experience is everything any music lover could ever want from a rock show:...
Called the “Got Back” tour, in sly reference to the popular Disney+ documentary series The Beatles: Get Back, McCartney’s tour begins April 28 in Spokane, Wa, with subsequent stops in Seattle, Oakland, L.A., Syracuse, Boston and Baltimore, among others (see the full itinerary below).
The tour concludes on June 16 at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ, the sole New York City-area stop and McCartney’s first visit to MetLife since 2016.
McCartney’s tour website gives some clues about what to expect of the tour, noting: “With songs like ‘Hey Jude,’ ‘Live and Let Die,’ ‘Band on the Run,’ ‘Let It Be’ and so many more, the Paul McCartney live experience is everything any music lover could ever want from a rock show:...
- 2/18/2022
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
Paul McCartney will tell the stories behind 154 songs he wrote throughout his career in his upcoming book, The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present, due out November 2nd. The tunes (detailed below) include titles from his work with the Beatles, Wings, and his own solo recordings. It also includes the words to an unrecorded Beatles song, “Tell Me Who He Is,” from the early Sixties; McCartney discovered the handwritten lyrics in a notebook while researching the book.
The anthology features McCartney’s handwritten lyrics, previously unpublished photos, drafts, and drawings. He accompanies...
The anthology features McCartney’s handwritten lyrics, previously unpublished photos, drafts, and drawings. He accompanies...
- 8/23/2021
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
As it turns out, Peter Jackson’s “Get Back” might be only the second-most satisfying authorized Beatles documentary of 2021 when it comes out around Thanksgiving time. Or maybe it’ll come out as the toppermost of the poppermost after all in fan rankings of these thing. But what’s for sure is that the Rick Rubin-hosted “McCartney 3, 2, 1” is such an unerring delight that it sets a very high bar for Beatlemania satiation this year. Not because it’s that artfully created or brilliantly hosted, but maybe because it doesn’t aspire to impress anyone with anything except how effortlessly it prompts the most talented musician of the last century to empty out a good portion of his brainpan for public perusal.
If you saw the teasers for the six-part series, and saw the shots of McCartney and Rubin standing over a mixing board and both nodding their heads vigorously...
If you saw the teasers for the six-part series, and saw the shots of McCartney and Rubin standing over a mixing board and both nodding their heads vigorously...
- 7/20/2021
- by Chris Willman
- Variety Film + TV
Paul McCartney joined TikTok to share behind-the-scenes footage from the studio and photoshoot for his new album McCartney III.
Macca’s recent uploads show him welcoming fans to his studio, jumping on his Appaloosa horse that’s featured on the album artwork, and getting photographed by his daughter, Mary — who also shot his recent Rolling Stone cover with Taylor Swift.
Ten of his songs were also uploaded to the site, including “Maybe I’m Amazed,” “Band on the Run,” “Jet,” “Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey,” “Come on To Me,” and others.
Macca’s recent uploads show him welcoming fans to his studio, jumping on his Appaloosa horse that’s featured on the album artwork, and getting photographed by his daughter, Mary — who also shot his recent Rolling Stone cover with Taylor Swift.
Ten of his songs were also uploaded to the site, including “Maybe I’m Amazed,” “Band on the Run,” “Jet,” “Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey,” “Come on To Me,” and others.
- 12/18/2020
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
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