Paul McCartney - Tug of War
Facts
| Artist(s) | Paul McCartney |
| Studio | Capitol |
| Release Date | October 25, 1990 |
| UPC Code | 777746057246 |
| Buy this item | $11.98 at Amazon.com As of Jan 7 13:17 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Or 33 new from $7.91, 15 used from $5.79, 5 collectible from $11.98 |
About Paul McCartney - Tug of War
Jolted by John Lennon's murder in 1980, McCartney mostly kept mum on the subject until 1982's Tug of War, which contained "Here Today," a belated admission of love for his old chum, who McCartney says would have probably laughed it off were he still alive. George Martin's production makes this McCartney's most unabashedly Beatlesque effort. Rockabilly legend Carl Perkins stops by for a cameo, while Stevie Wonder appears on two songs, the funky "What's That You're Doing" and the simplistic (but massively successful) hit single "Ebony and Ivory." --Daniel Durchholz Amazon.com
Tracks
- Tug of War
- Take It Away
- Somebody Who Cares
- What's That You're Doing? - Paul McCartney, Wonder, Stevie
- Here Today
- Ballroom Dancing
- The Pound Is Sinking
- Wanderlust
- Get It
- Be What You See
- Dress Me up as a Robber
- Ebony and Ivory
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User Reviews
Average user review:| I can't get over how good this is. |
| A silver classic! |
| Welcome back, Paulie |
WTYD is one of two duets with Steve Wonder, the other the syrupy classic Ebony and Ivory. Addtionally, there are the excellent Take It Away, Here Today, Wanderlust, Dress Me Up Like a Robber(a favorite obscurity), and the majestic title cut. December 21, 2006
| Enjoyable, creative, multifaceted effort |
I have always kind of steered clear of this album. I find "Ebony and Ivory" to be one of the all-time worst songs, despite its optimistic message. However, when I picked up an LP copy used a few weeks ago and put it on the turntable, I was pleasantly suprised by the diversity and musicality on the album. The music ranges from rocker numbers to ballads, has a catchy dance number or two, has a hard-funk number with Stevie Wonder, a duet with Carl Perkins, features the talents of Sir George Martin, and has a whole clutch of good songs on it. McCartney's tribute to John is short and tender, but not sappy. The instrumentation is lush on some numbers in late-Beatles style, but never Phil Spector 'over-the-top' lush. Lots of goods strings and horns throughout. The first number that McCartney and Stevie Wonder do together is absolutely worth the price of admission. Funk meets the Beatles.
This is a great, eclectic album that will give you many hours of listening pleasure. It's a fun album. You can tell McCartney had fun making it. It's not a classic, and it's not deep. It's just good solid music.
Just make sure you skip 'Ebony and Ivory'. This is easy on the LP, because it's the last song on the B-side. Unless you like it---then crank that puppy. November 5, 2006
| So good it brings tears to one's eyes. |
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