Back to the Egg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Back to the Egg | ||
Studio album by Wings | ||
Released | 8 June 1979 | |
Recorded | 29 June 1978 - 1 April 1979 |
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Genre | Rock | |
Length | 42:01 | |
Label | Parlophone/EMI | |
Producer(s) | Paul McCartney and Chris Thomas |
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Professional reviews | ||
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Wings chronology | ||
Wings Greatest (1978) |
Back to the Egg (1979) |
McCartney II (Paul McCartney) (1980) |
Back To The Egg is the final studio album by Wings and was released in 1979. It is also notable for being leader Paul McCartney's first album for Columbia Records after leaving long-time US distributor Capitol Records in 1978, though he remained with EMI with the rest of the world. When McCartney returned to international distribution by EMI in 1985, Back to the Egg and the rest of McCartney's Columbia-era releases reverted back to Capitol/EMI in the US.
After the release of London Town, following the exit of both guitarist Jimmy McCulloch and drummer Joe English, McCartney hired two new members with a view to recording a raw rock and roll album after the soft rock of London Town and getting Wings back on the road. Laurence Juber became the band's final lead guitarist and Steve Holly, Wings' last drummer. McCartney also decided to join forces in the studio with Chris Thomas (who had trained as a producer during the recording of The Beatles' 1968 double album The Beatles) for the Back to the Egg. By the end of June 1978, this last incarnation of Wings settled into Spirit of Ranachan Studios on McCartney's farm in Scotland, then moved onto Lympne Castle in Kent in September and Abbey Road Studios in October where McCartney organized a special one-off session.
On 3 October, Wings recorded two tracks, "Rockestra Theme" and "So Glad To See You Here" with many celebrity guests under the heading of Rockestra. The Who's Pete Townshend, Pink Floyd's David Gilmour, Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones and John Bonham (in one of his last performances) all took part. Paul McCartney in a 2001 interview with VH1 said that Keith Moon was to have taken part in "Rockestra" but died one month before the recording sessions took place. A highlight of the album, "Rockestra Theme" would win the 1980 Grammy for Best Instrumental Performance.
Eager to release new material, Wings issued non-album dance single "Goodnight Tonight" b/w "Daytime Nighttime Suffering" in late March 1979 when it became a worldwide Top 5 hit and set the stage for Back to the Egg's release that June. With the title a McCartney-ism for getting back to basics, the band considered Back to the Egg the beginning of a new era in their career. It was certainly not intended as their swan song.
Unfortunately, the critical reaction was not warm upon the album's release. Considered uninspired and directionless by many of its reviewers at the time - and to this day, Back to the Egg also sold beneath expectations, reaching #6 in the UK and #8 in the US with relatively short chart stays, although it went platinum. Its single releases "Old Siam, Sir," "Arrow Through Me," and "Getting Closer" were also small hits. Although many McCartney fans are devotees of Back to the Egg, it is still generally considered one of his least popular albums. It is interesting to note that Wings began and ended their studio career with their least successful projects.
Following Back to the Egg's release, McCartney felt the need to do a solo project and retreated to his Scottish farm. Following the example of his 1970 debut album, McCartney, he recorded several new songs all by himself in July 1979 for a projected future release. Although McCartney intended on pursuing Wings' career with future live performances already pencilled in, his solo recordings seemed to imply he was already contemplating the end of the band.
In 1993, Back to the Egg was remastered and reissued on CD as part of "The Paul McCartney Collection" series with "Daytime Nighttime Suffering" ("Goodnight Tonight"'s B-Side) and Paul McCartney's solo 1979 Christmas single "Wonderful Christmastime" b/w "Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reggae" as bonus tracks.
[edit] Trivia
In Japan, there have been numerous attempts to ban the "Wonderful Christmastime" to due the song being directly attributed to 143 separate cases of suicide. In 1987, one Osaka radio station reportedly played the track back-to-back for three days straight, in the lead up to Christmas. Tokyo Police Department reported 57 fatalities during the 1986-87 period alone. A Japanese government spokesman was popularly quoted as saying that "the syncopated synthesizer appears to send people scrambling for the fish knife."
[edit] Track listing
All songs by Paul McCartney, except where noted.
- "Reception" – 1:08
- "Getting Closer" – 3:22
- "We're Open Tonight" – 1:28
- "Spin It On" – 2:12
- "Again And Again And Again" (Denny Laine) – 3:34
- "Old Siam, Sir" – 4:11
- "Arrow Through Me" – 3:37
- "Rockestra Theme" – 2:35
- Features the "Rockestra" line-up
- "To You" – 3:12
- "After The Ball/Million Miles" – 4:00
- "Winter Rose/Love Awake" – 4:58
- "The Broadcast" – 1:30
- Features spoken excerpts from "The Sport of Kings" by Ian Hay and "The Little Man" by John Galsworthy
- "So Glad To See You Here" – 3:20
- Features the "Rockestra" line-up
- "Baby's Request" – 2:49