Label: DCC Compact Classics (US), GZS-1096
Style: Soft Rock, Classic Rock
Country: Liverpool, England (18 June 1942)
Time: 57:29
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 325 Mb
Charts: UK #2, AUS #2, CAN #1, GER #32, ITA #8, JPN #4, NLD#3, NOR #2, US #1. US, UK & CAN: Platinum.
In
his post-Beatles albums, Paul McCartney has proven himself a clever
miniaturist whose records resemble collages built around simple musical
fragments, each of which is painstakingly produced. While some have
dismissed McCartney’s music as insufferably cute, uninspired trivia, all
of his albums contain at least some worthwhile music.
At the Speed
of Sound doggedly continues in the same vein, but with much less
effervescence. Where Venus and Mars was framed by the astrological
motif, At the Speed of Sound ostensibly invites the listener to spend a
day with McCartney and Wings—a day in which the listener is gently
harangued as well as entertained.
"Let 'Em In" begins with
door-knocking sound effects, out of which steps a marching band. Like
most of the rest, "Let 'Em In" puts a simple musical theme through
carefully arranged changes. The melodic idea is small, but
quintessentially McCartneyesque in its provincial jollity.
With the
electronic soup-slurping sounds that open side two, one notes that it is
almost time for lunch on this imaginary visiting day. But first the
McCartneys answer those critics who lashed out at Venus and Mars's
lovebird verses with a tract in defense of moon, June and spoon, "Silly
Love Songs." It’s a clever retort whose point is well taken; the center
of the song focuses on the syllables "I love you," which Paul and Linda
reiterate with the insistence of phonetics instructors, weaving the
phrase through a disarmingly lovely three-part chorus. Homeyness then
climaxes with Linda singing "Cook of the House," complete with sizzling
pan and running water. A surrealist concept like side one’s first-rate
"The Note You Never Wrote," "Cook" is a rockabilly nursery rhyme. Though
the instrumentation is excellent, the song fails because of Linda’s
colorless, amateurish singing. (Those with feminist sympathies will also
detest this celebration of scatterbrained wife-in-kitchen coziness.)
If
"Silly Love Songs" is acceptably didactic, the album’s closing number,
"Warm and Beautiful," pushes the point too far. The opening chords
suggest a parody of Lennon’s infinitely superior "Imagine" and the
ultrasimple melody and lyrics suggest a parody of Lennon’s "Love,"
serving up, with apparent sincerity, the stalest pop ballad clichés ever
to emerge from an English music hall. Perhaps McCartney is trying to
remind us that these tiresome clichés might well outlast the pop music
many critics call art. Or perhaps it is an attempt to transcend cliche
by being the biggest cliché. Or perhaps "Warm and Beautiful" is simply
one of the worst songs Paul McCartney has ever written.
While there
is much to admire on At the Speed of Sound, it is contained in the
production more than the material. Ultimately, this album lacks the
melodic sparkle of Venus and Mars, which in its turn lacked the energy,
passion and structural breadth and unity of Band on the Run, Wings’
finest album. No one rocker on Speed matches the spirit of "Jet" or
"Band on the Run" from Band, while no ballad even begins to approach the
majesty of "My Love," from Red Rose Speedway. As a whole, At the Speed
of Sound seems like a mysterious, somewhat defensive oddity by a great
pop producer who used to be a great pop writer. Like all McCartney and
Wings records, At the Speed of Sound is spectacularly well arranged and
recorded, with McCartney continuing to demonstrate his special affinity
for using brass in surprising and witty ways. The playing is laboratory
perfect. McCartney, like almost no one else, seems able to play the
studio as an instrument. Though it’s a wonderful gift, I hope it doesn’t
distract him from songwriting more than it already has. For the best
McCartney songs will most certainly outlast all the studios in which
they were recorded.
(full version:
rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/wings-at-the-speed-of-sound-87638/)
Review by Stephen Holden. May 20, 1976
01. Let 'Em In (05:13)
02. The Note You Never Wrote (04:29)
03. She's My Baby (03:07)
04. Beware My Love (06:32)
05. Wino Junko (05:28)
06. Silly Love Songs (05:56)
07. Cook Of The House (02:45)
08. Time To Hide (04:31)
09. Must Do Something About It (03:43)
10. San Ferry Anne (02:09)
11. Warm And Beautiful (03:25)
12. Walking In The Park With Eloise (03:13)
13. Bridge On The River Suite (03:13)
14. Sally G (03:38)
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