Paul McCartney & Wings – Band On The Run (1973/Paul McCartney Archive Collection/Concord
DVD/2-CD Set)
Picture:
C+ Sound: B Extras: B Music: B
Hard as
it is to believe, Wings had trouble getting started as a commercially and
critically successful band, but Paul McCartney’s second group already had
memorable hits with classics like Give
Ireland Back To The Irish, My Love
and the title theme to the 1973 hit James Bond film Live & Let Die. The
second album Red Rose Speedway was
even a hit, but that was not good enough somehow for some diehard Beatles and
McCartney fans. However, Band On The Run (1973) struck the
proper chord for fans and the result was a worldwide sensation that continues
to be one of McCartney’s most successful post-Beatles works.
The Concord label has
reissued the album as part of the promising new Paul McCartney Archive
Collection and among the many editions available (including a new vinyl
pressing) are a 3-CD/1-DVD set and this 2-CD/1-DVD set we are covering here
now. As noted before, I always felt
Linda McCartney’s contributions, singing and chemistry with her husband were
grossly underrated and that their music together for this period (starting with
the extremely underrated Admiral
Halsey/Uncle Albert) represents one of the greatest love stories in music
history. This new release just adds more
support and evidence to my theory and belief in this.
The first
CD has the original album as it appeared in the U.K., minus the hit Helen Wheels! The other tracks are:
1)
Band On The Run
2)
Jet
3)
Bluebird
4)
Mrs. Vanderbilt
5)
Let Me Roll It
6)
Mamunia
7)
No Words
8)
Picasso’s Last Words (Drink To Me)
9)
Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five
The
second CD includes Helen Wheels and
runs as follows:
1)
Helen Wheels
2)
Country Dreamer
3)
Bluebird
4)
Jet
5)
Let Me Roll It
6)
Band On The Run
7) Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five
8) Country Dreamer
9) Zoo Gang
Track 2
was the B-side of Helen Wheels and
has been previously issued, Track 9 was the flipside of the hit title song of
the album and the theme to a children’s TV show in the U.K. we have reviewed
elsewhere on this site that was not bad.
That leaves tracks 3 through 8, which are from a taped TV music special
called One Hand Clapping, included
on the DVD in this set.
That
lasts about an hour and is in fairly good shape for an older analog
videotaping, plus we get three Music Videos (Band On The Run, Mamunia
and Helen Wheels), a promo film for
the album that includes four songs to promote it, Wings In Lagos clip
further promotes the album and Osterley Park is a short version of
the behind-the-scenes events of the band and some friends (including James
Coburn, Christopher Lee, Michael Parkinson, Kenny Lunch, Clement Freud and John
Conteh) creating the classic album cover that remains one of the most famous of
the 1970s and best in McCartney’s career.
The album
could have been uneven in its attempts to be diverse and though not every song
is strong, it is consistent and each song is at least unique and has the kind
of energy and joy you would expect from the McCartneys at that point. Linda was always trying to find new ground
outside of the usual pop discourse and Paul continued to find a new voice that
was his and not of his Beatles identity, even when some of the material was in
that mode like the title song here.
Together, they found their own space and the final establishment of that
foundation happened with the making of this album. As a result, Band On The Run does not sound dated much at all and is a sonically
competent as it is a solid work of music.
The anamorphically
enhanced 1.78 X 1 image on the DVD is not bad and the Music Videos compare well
to the same on the McCartney Years
DTS DVD set (see link below). Otherwise,
this looks and sounds as good as it can and older analog video and 16mm footage
is centered in a 16 X 9 frame. The PCM
2.0 16/44.1 Stereo on the CDs and 16/48 on the DVD are just fine, though those
hoping for multi-channel sound will be disappointed and McCartney has decided
not to include the DTS 5.1 mix of the original album that was issued on the
out-of-print DTS DVD from DTS Entertainment that is now more valuable than
ever.
For more
on the McCartneys and Wings, try The
McCartney Years DVD set at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/6274/The+McCartney+Years+(Rhino+DVD)
- Nicholas Sheffo