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Paul McCartney - Listen To What The Man Said

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Uploaded by on Aug 9, 2009

Venus and Mars is the fourth album by Wings, Paul McCartney's group formed after The Beatles' dissolution. Released as the follow-up to the enormously successful Band on the Run, Venus and Mars continued Wings' string of success and would prove a springboard for a year-long worldwide tour
After recording Band on the Run as a three-piece with wife Linda and guitarist Denny Laine, McCartney added Jimmy McCulloch on lead guitar and Geoff Britton on drums to the Wings lineup in 1974. Having written several new songs for the next album, McCartney decided upon New Orleans, Louisiana as the recording venue, and Wings headed there in January 1975.[1]

As soon as the sessions began, the personality clash that had been evident between McCulloch and Britton during Wings' 1974 sessions in Nashville became more pronounced, and Britton — after a mere six month stay — quit Wings, having only played on three of the new songs. A replacement, American Joe English, was quickly auditioned and hired to finish the album.

The sessions themselves proved to be very productive, not only finishing the entire album, but also several additional songs including two future McCartney B-sides: "Lunch Box/Odd Sox" and "My Carnival". McCartney also decided to link the songs together much like The Beatles had on Abbey Road to give the album a more continuous feel.

John Lennon, often in a nostalgic mood while in Los Angeles, had told May Pang (his then girlfriend) that he planned to visit the McCartneys during the recording sessions for Venus and Mars, but this was not to be. Lennon's planned visit would be permanently postponed due to his reunion with Yoko Ono.
Preceded by the single "Listen to What the Man Said" in May, Venus and Mars appeared two weeks later to decent reviews and brisk sales. The album reached #1 in the US, the UK and worldwide (as did "Listen to What the Man Said" in the US) and sold several million copies, even if the reaction was less than what had greeted Band on the Run a year earlier.

Two additional singles, "Letting Go" and "Venus and Mars/Rock Show" were released, though to less success. Although the latter almost reached the US Top 10, it didn't chart at all in the UK.

By September, Wings kicked off what would be their year-long Wings Over the World tour in the UK, with Australia, the United States and Canada pencilled in for the coming months; Venus and Mars material would be heavily featured.

In 1993, Venus and Mars was remastered and reissued on CD as part of "The Paul McCartney Collection" series with "Zoo Gang" (a UK television theme that was the UK B-side of "Band on the Run" in 1974), "Lunch Box/Odd Sox" (B-side of "Coming Up" in 1980), and "My Carnival" ("Spies Like Us"' B-side in 1985) as bonus tracks. In 2007, Venus and Mars was reissued in digital form on iTunes with these bonus tracks plus the 6-minute-plus "party mix" of "My Carnival".

Wings' interpretation of the theme to Crossroads, a British soap opera, was sometimes used to end the show in place of the regular theme tune, usually when there was a cliffhanger ending with a hint of sadness involved

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  • If only today could be like the days back then =(

  • @MrPeterdm

    What the hell are you talking about?! You mean the 1970's? THAT was a more "innocent" time? That was a better world? You mean during the cold fucking war?! That time when Nixon was tapping phones and shit? When prisons were less regulated? You mean the time when Jim Jones started a cult and lead all kinds of idiots to Jonestown? You mean the time when we were still AT WAR in Vietnam?! You mean the time when the Crips and Bloods first started FORMING?!

    Yeah...

    What a better time!

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  • 150,000 American soldiers are being 'retired' as part of a re-organisation programme, but the word is that a new type of soldier has been developed, and almost ready... unmanned craft already are in use, but robotics are a totally different thing, and if they 'go wrong' it is a mafunction & nothing more... on that note the seventies were a lot better...

  • It doesn't really matters if the 70's actually were better because there will NEVER be a time when the world isn't a big piece of shit BUT I do believe we can look back and call days gone by better because in our minds they were. perception is reality. Things were simpler because they were to you. I knew about Jim Jones but was too young to worry, too young to worry about Nam & Gangs but I DID care my buddies were always there and I didn't worry about much. So life WAS better in the 70s!

  • Boston Garden 1976. No idea who opened for them.

  • God bless Paul McCartney!

  • @MMRED Agree.  Like when Carter ruined the US economy. They can have those days. Even though I grew up during that time.

  • every thing you said was in america..obviously you were not alive then.. in canada..so enjoy your dim view of those days..god help you today

  • Phila. "76" I was there, great show!

  • Memories Aug 1975 WCFL radio Chicago!

  • our music today ..has to get back to... the reason for love songs.. depth...character..and just innocence... being devoted..to ..the ones we love.

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