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Paul McCartney: A Fireman Interviewed

The former Beatle talks about karma, wealth, nostalgia, fame and his new LP, Electric Arguments

I imagine you know who Paul McCartney is, but here are some recent data: He’s 66 years old, single and financially secure. He recently released Electric Arguments, the third album by Fireman, an ongoing McCartney side project that represents the former Beatle's foray into trance and dance music. Composed of McCartney and British producer/deejay Youth, Fireman opens its third full-length release with “Nothing Too Much Just Out of Sight,” a tune that features the most bone-rattling vocal McCartney’s delivered since “Helter Skelter.” The first time I heard it on the radio, I thought it was Jack White. Not bad for a 66-year-old. On the occasion of the album’s release, McCartney agreed to a short chat.

 

L.A. WEEKLY: At what point did you become an adult?
PAUL McCARTNEY
: When my first baby was born.

How old do you feel emotionally?
Twenty-five.

What’s the biggest obstacle you’ve overcome in your life?
Linda’s death.

What was it about Linda Eastman that made her such a stabilizing force in your life?
She was just such a supercool girl. She just was. She was supercool.

Do you believe in destiny?
Yes.

Do you believe in karma, or do some people get away with murder?
I believe in karma (laughing), and I believe people get away with murder, too. For a while. Somewhere down the line everyone must pay for their misdeeds.

The Beatles’ music was always wonderful, but at a certain point it became something more than entertainment; at what point did you know that the work you were doing was important?
It’s difficult to discuss this without sounding immodest, but I think I started to feel it around the time of “Eleanor Rigby.” Prior to that, I thought the music was very good, and I realized we were in a different league when we wrote “From Me To You,” because it had a middle eight in it and went somewhere we hadn’t been before, but you used the word “important.” For me, “Eleanor Rigby” was the start of that.

Does music have the power to bring about social change?
Yeah, that’s a proven fact. “We Shall Overcome” and “Give Peace a Chance” are two examples, and there are thousands of less obvious examples. “We Shall Overcome” is inextricably bound up with the civil rights movement, and “Give Peace a Chance” equals Vietnam. Those are two huge events, and that music was hugely important to them.

Is it important that your music be commercially successful?
It’s not important, but it’s preferable. I like the idea that people hear my stuff, and if it’s commercially successful, that’s a good sign that it’s being heard.

What’s the most significant difference between work you do as Fireman and the rest of your music?
Fireman is improvisational theater. When I sit down to write a song, it’s a kind of improvisation, but I formalize it a bit to get it into the studio, and when I step up to a microphone, I have a vague idea of what I’m about to do. I usually have a song, and I know the melody and lyrics, and my performance is the only unknown. In this case, I had neither lyrics nor melody to go on — and it felt great. The previous Fireman record didn’t have vocals, so when we began adding them for this record, the music moved into the area of improvisational theater, as the lyrics were improvised in the studio as well. I’d arrive at the studio in the morning and the first thing I’d do would be to apologize to the engineers. I’d say “Okay, guys, this could really be the most serious error of my career.”

Working that way, how do you know when a piece of music is finished?
Instinct. I paint, and that’s the trick with painting, too, particularly if you paint in the abstract form. You’ve just got to know when it’s time to stop.

To what degree was the music sculpted in the editing?
Very much, and that’s where Youth comes in. I trust him implicitly. He’s a deejay, and I went to one of his gigs to watch him work and he’s good. He mixes stuff there and then, and it’s the same process with Fireman. He takes everything I throw at him and selects what he thinks is the best, and 99 percent of the time I agree with him.

What’s the most useful thing about money?
Helping people who are ill. I have a very large family and if anybody gets ill, I can help them.

What’s the biggest problem money creates?
Wow, you’re getting deep girl! I’ve never even met you! Okay, the biggest problem are the kinds of people who have license plates like one I saw in East Hampton: It read ‘rich 1.’ The kind of people who actually believe they’re cool because they’ve got money — I can‘t begin to describe the symptoms of that, but you know what I’m talking about.

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  • Donaldthump18 10/06/2011 6:46:00 PM

    Funny Paul, I dreamed about you again last night - good friends hanging. I married a man who reminds me of you, and we have a marriage that seems to mirror your and Lovely Linda's. I would like to know more about your thoughts on everything. Like, how do you reconcile being vegan and feeding meat to your many Dogs. I really want to know. This is a problem of mine. My fussy Peke, Lady, and certainly the wily Cat, Ebony, must have meat, no? It kills me: today, I bought a chicken on sale to cook for them, and the poor Bird had severe bruising on her right thigh. Someone flung her, and now I want to fight for her pain. So I took pictures, froze the sad thigh piece, and will write to the meat packers, the shop, Peta, and the German state. What would you do? And how do you feed your Dogs?

  • 08/30/2011 3:36:00 PM

    He's talking about mindless consumerism. You're the one being reductive.

  • brenda 02/13/2009 6:17:00 PM

    what is your thoughts on what this world is.....l read micheal talbots book and saw your name there,i'm really interested in the subject due to personel experiences....thanks

  • david was 02/11/2009 8:31:00 PM

    Kristine is the coolest, far cooler than Sir Paul even! Non-fawning, incisive, cut-to-the-chase interviewing....All Hail KMK!!!

  • Stu Bowlie 02/07/2009 9:34:00 AM

    In what POSSIBLE sense is it a "mistake" to go to Disneyland or get a milkshake at McDonald's? PLEASE -- this sort of mindless reductionism is what gives progressive politics a bad name. The personal is NOT the political; the personal is the COMPLETELY IRRELEVANT. The CORPORATE is the political ... and those of us who go to Disneyland twice in a lifetime, or buy a milkshake at McDonald's occasionally, are not to blame for ANYTHING outside the fevered mystical imaginations of the politically perfect.

  • O. Amaro 02/06/2009 3:14:00 AM

    Count me in as another who thought the questions were as interesting as any I've ever read from a Beatle interview. I would've loved to have seen Sir Paul's reaction to each question as it was asked. I wonder if Mr. McCartney knew ahead of time what the questions would be, or was ready for the same, tired ol' standard questions. Kudos to Ms. McKenna for her succinct and unique choice of questions. And the the person who wrote that they would've liked to hear more of the Mills "fiasco"...I think that would've thrown the interview in a very sour direction. Besides, as Paul said, he'd rather look upon the past as being of happy memories rather than focus on the bad.

  • Sam Mann 02/02/2009 10:25:00 AM

    Good Interview! Thank you.

  • ps 02/01/2009 9:31:00 AM

    good point about the environmental cost of eating meat; wonder if you are reading michael polan? he stretches the point out. we need to say this loudly so more people hear it.

  • Amy Pickard 01/30/2009 4:49:00 AM

    Just wanted to say that FINALLY there is an interview with Macca with intelligent, DIFFERENT questions!!!! I'm so tired of the usual questions- "What's your favorite Beatles album?" and "Why do you think people love the Beatles?", blah blah blah. I'm a huge McCartney fan and have read practically everything ever written about him-including interviews-and I've been incredibly frustrated at the lack of creativity in the questions. Kudos to one of THE best McCartney interviews EVER. Thank you so much!

  • dirk 01/29/2009 11:08:00 AM

    As always, McCartney is the master of innocuous statements. I love most of his music, but he stopped saying important things long, long ago.

  • Maddie 01/24/2009 6:07:00 PM

    Excellent interview. What a down-to-earth guy. I admire him a lot.

  • Jesse 01/24/2009 3:42:00 AM

    Nice interview with Macca. When he's relaxed as he seems here, he's an interesting fellow. He can put his ego aside. A beautiful job by your interviewer.

  • bonnie 01/23/2009 5:00:00 PM

    That is my Paul. So real. So cool. I love him!

  • VAL 01/23/2009 11:25:00 AM

    I simply love the guy. I love his music and I love his wife who passed away and that he loved her so very much and their children. I dislike and always did, Heather MIlls and knew it was his kind heart and vulnerability that caused him to marry such scum. He's amazing and kind and sweet and my favorite Beatle. While I loved their music, it was only Paul that I liked. If I were to meet him, I would fall in love with him for I've loved him forever. I just love how good he was with his wife who was indeed so good to him too. I only wish him a great life and love and peace from his life that was shattered by the money grubbing witch who keeps him close after having his child. I'm sorry for him that he's going to have to interact with her and I hope he meets a loving strong lady who can make that communication and relieve him of having to communicate with Muddy Mills at all. See how much I care about him, I can't stop talking about him. HE'S AWESOME AND THE INTERVIEW WAS SUPER... THANK YOU!!!! ... and this is the last of four times I've tried to comment when I'm refused. Why?

  • Voxx 01/22/2009 1:47:00 PM

    Paul has aged like a fine wine. I think it's great that he's continued to explore music and art in his own way, despite the harsh criticism that has hounded him through the years. He sounds like a great guy, and shows real gratitude and awareness for the singularly blessed life he's lived so far. How lucky -- to be the cute Beatle, and still be kicking after all these years. Cheers, Sir Paul. ~Voxx~

  • Allen dela Pena 01/22/2009 12:56:00 PM

    Thank you for your intelligent questions. Keep it up!

  • Allen dela Pena 01/22/2009 12:56:00 PM

    Thank you for your intelligent questions. Keep it up!

  • Jeff 01/22/2009 6:40:00 AM

    This too was one of the best interviews I have ever read on Mcartney. I would have liked to hear his take on Heather Mills however and his new found status as a bachelor. Overall a solid A on the interview.

  • Catherine Smith 01/22/2009 3:45:00 AM

    Chiming in also to express my appreciation for the very fine, very readable and very personable interview and major compliments to Ms. McKenna. This was a warm, enjoyable read and I felt as if I were hearing from a friend about a very pleasant celebrity encounter she had. Not suprised at how supercool Sir Paul is, but grateful it came across in this very fine interview. Many thanks and keep up the good work.

  • Kevin 01/22/2009 2:23:00 AM

    Kudos to the reporter for asking questions I haven't heard asked of Sir Paul previously.

  • Marie 01/21/2009 6:40:00 PM

    Loved this interview. Thank goodness someone finally asked him different and itneresting questions. It felt like I was sitting with two interesting people talking at a cafe somewhere. Thank you.

  • Martin 01/21/2009 8:24:00 AM

    I too would like to thank you for the great interview. Really good questions! Thank you again.

  • LongTimeFan 01/19/2009 6:49:00 AM

    I agree with the comments that cite this as one of the great Macca interviews of all time. Having suffered through a laborious tedium of same old questions and same stock answers, this interviewer finally asked the questions "we fans would've asked if given the opportunity." Kudos. P.S. This is the first comment I've ever made to an article. It was thrilling to see other people recognizing this particular interview as the treasure it is.

  • azzabazz 01/17/2009 6:18:00 AM

    Wow. I've read hundreds of McCartney interviews. But this one ranks right up there with the best of them. Short, succinct yet asking very different questions. And clearly, Paul was enjoying them as well. Thank you for allowing Paul's humanity to shine through!

  • Carol 01/16/2009 5:20:00 PM

    I want to thank Ms Mckenna for a very superior McCartney interview. She showed up with intelligent questions for an intelligent man who is still involved up to his eyeballs in an important musical life. She is neither servile, nor condescending, and she elicits some short, sharp, interesting answers from a man who has suffered many dumb or lazy interview questions over the years. Well done, the interviewer!!

  • Daniel Niswander 01/16/2009 11:05:00 AM

    Paul is still such an interesting and down- to -earth person after all that he has experienced in his life and the great humanitarian work as well. This is an interview that I would love to have conducted myself! Thank you Paul for taking the time to do this interview and thank you Kristine McKenna and the L.A. Weekly for sharing it with us.

  • Nellie Apple 01/16/2009 9:04:00 AM

    I think not all people will change ---only time can tell.

  • Barbara Vaughan 01/15/2009 7:12:00 PM

    As for the autograph aversion, I would give anything to have an autograph from Paul McCartney. At age 56, I've written to him 3 times, knowing he does not send things through the mail signed. I was hoping he would make an exception.

 

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