Wild Life is the debut album by Wings, and Paul McCartney's third album since the Beatles' breakup. Paul and Linda McCartney had worked with drummer Denny Seiwell on their prior album, Ram, and they added Denny Laine, the former leader of the Moody Blues, to that trio to become Wings.
With a fresh set of McCartney/McCartney tunes, the newly formed Wings quickly recorded their debut that August with the mindset that it had to be instant and raw in order to capture the freshness and vitality of a live studio recording. Most of the songs were recorded in one take. McCartney would later cite the quick recording schedule of Bob Dylan as an inspiration for this. McCartney handled all lead vocals, sharing those duties with Linda on "I Am Your Singer".
After a party announcing the band's formation that November, Wild Life appeared the following month to lukewarm commercial and critical reaction. The album reached #11 in the UK and #10 in the US, where it went gold.
One notable song, "Dear Friend", apparently an attempt at reconciliation with John Lennon, was recorded during the Ram sessions. Music critic Ian MacDonald used "Dear Friend" as a counter-argument to the caricature of McCartney as an emotional lightweight.[1]
The liner notes for Wild Life (and on the Thrillington album) were credited to Clint Harrigan, but in 1990 McCartney admitted that he was Harrigan to journalist Peter Palmiere.[citation needed] Interestingly enough, the first person who ever knew the identity of Harrigan was Lennon who admitted as much during their Melody Maker feud in 1972.[citation needed]
In addition to naming the previously hidden tracks, the original CD version added "Oh Woman, Oh Why" (the B-side of "Another Day"), "Mary Had a Little Lamb", and "Little Woman Love".
In 1993, Wild Life was remastered and reissued on CD as part of "The Paul McCartney Collection" series with singles "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" and "Mary Had a Little Lamb" as well as B-sides "Little Woman Love" and "Mama's Little Girl"—all recorded in 1972—as bonus tracks, and also two hidden tracks: "Bip Bop Link" (a Laine acoustic guitar solo) between "I Am Your Singer" and "Tomorrow"; and "Mumbo Link" (an instrumental jam) after "Dear Friend".
The first two singles by Wings were decent - but it wasn't until 'Hi Hi Hi' 'C Moon' and Red Rose Speedway until I'd say their songs became classic.
ForeverTreesGreen 2 months ago
@stampede331 the middle instrumental passage reminds me also "When I´m sixty four", because of the clarinet or what it is.
MichalFokt 10 months ago
@stampede331 Who cares about the 'words' if the song and melody appeal to a particular person? People put too much stock in lyrical meaning instead of enjoying the sheer simplicity of a terrific underrated early Wings tune.
MiddSouthFootball09 11 months ago
@riverdale999 Bip Bop's sound is very interesting and shouldn't be left off...its great when its played with an acoustic guitar
rockyraaacoon 1 year ago
@cagefame what are you, fucking retarted?
tauntingfrenchman1 1 year ago
@cagefame bahahahahahaha
greenbeatles1 1 year ago
Lovely!
oliaiguambfigues76 1 year ago
If anyone needs evidence of Paul's talent - look no further....
costellodan 1 year ago
@cagefame this is the song
heydigabs 1 year ago
I hear the beginning of Mammunia in this track. Good thing he elaborated on this effort because Mammunia is great while this is the kind of emotionally lightweight and insubstantial fluff that he does when he's got a melody but "no words" that anybody really cares about.
stampede331 1 year ago