Sunday, December 31, 2006
Beatles covers to be on UK stamps
Six of the Beatles' album covers are to feature in a special set of UK stamps, to be issued next month.
Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and Revolver are among the sleeves which will be reproduced on 9 January.
TV show The Sky at Night, in its 50th year, will also be commemorated by the Royal Mail in 2007, with six celestial images chosen by Sir Patrick Moore.
Other subjects for sets will include UK inventions which changed the world and the abolition of the slave trade.
The diamond wedding anniversary of the Queen - whose image appears on traditional British stamps - and the Duke of Edinburgh will be marked in October.
Underwater life, British Army uniforms and the centenary of the Scout Association will also feature on stamps in the UK during the next 12 months.
Thursday, December 28, 2006
Paul McCartney Planning Stage Show Based on His Life
Sir Paul McCartney is planning a stage show based on his life, according to the Telegraph.
The UK paper quotes the former Beatle's cousin, the actress Kate Robbins, as saying that McCartney will approve the music and serve as musical director. The music is based on The Liverpool Oratorio — McCartney's first classical work, which he composed with Carl Davis in 1991 to commemorate his home city's 150th anniversary.
Robbins is also working on the adaptation, along with the writer Steve Brown.
The paper reports that McCartney's much-publicized divorce proceedings with his second wife, Heather Mills, have delayed the project.
The story will follow a character named Shanty (a fictionalized McCartney) from his childhood in Liverpool up through his first marriage to Mary Dee (standing in for McCartney's first wife, Linda) and the birth of a child. The couple attempts to balance their family life and their careers.
The paper speculates that the show could go up in Liverpool in 2008 — the city's year as the European Capital of Culture.
McCartney's latest classical album, "Ecce Cor Meum" — Latin for "Behold My Heart" — was released this year. His latest pop album, "Chaos and Creation in the Backyard," was released in 2005.
The UK paper quotes the former Beatle's cousin, the actress Kate Robbins, as saying that McCartney will approve the music and serve as musical director. The music is based on The Liverpool Oratorio — McCartney's first classical work, which he composed with Carl Davis in 1991 to commemorate his home city's 150th anniversary.
Robbins is also working on the adaptation, along with the writer Steve Brown.
The paper reports that McCartney's much-publicized divorce proceedings with his second wife, Heather Mills, have delayed the project.
The story will follow a character named Shanty (a fictionalized McCartney) from his childhood in Liverpool up through his first marriage to Mary Dee (standing in for McCartney's first wife, Linda) and the birth of a child. The couple attempts to balance their family life and their careers.
The paper speculates that the show could go up in Liverpool in 2008 — the city's year as the European Capital of Culture.
McCartney's latest classical album, "Ecce Cor Meum" — Latin for "Behold My Heart" — was released this year. His latest pop album, "Chaos and Creation in the Backyard," was released in 2005.
Monday, December 25, 2006
Merry Christmas from MaccaSpan
Saturday, December 23, 2006
Signed Beatles Album Cover Auctioned For $115K
An album cover signed by all four Beatles as a gift for George Harrison's sister sold Friday at auction for more than $115,000.
The sale, to an unidentified buyer, was believed to set a record price for a signed Beatles album purchased at a public sale, said Mark Zakarin, president of the online auction company ItsOnlyRockNRoll.com. The exact price, with the buyer's commission, was $115,228.82. Bidding on the album began at $25,000. The copy of "Meet The Beatles," the band's first U.S. release on Capitol Records, was put up for sale by Harrison's sister, Louise. "To Lou with love from `Brother'!!," wrote George above his signature. John Lennon's inscription read, "To Lou many love from John Lennon X." Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr expressed similar feelings when all four signed the album cover while aboard a train to Washington for a 1964 concert.
Beatles still popular in Japan after all these years
TOKYO — Although the Beatles split up in 1970, the Fab Four's music continues to attract new generations of fans in Japan.
"I could hardly believe my ears," said Hidenobu Kondo, 44, recalling the day two summers ago when he heard his then 2-year-old son, Ryuichi, suddenly sing part of the Beatles song "We Can Work It Out."
"It really blew me away, because I didn't teach him English or music," said Kondo, a Beatles fan who often listens to the band's CDs as his son plays nearby. "Even a little child must have understood by intuition that the Beatles were good."
Ryuichi took the stage to belt out "I Want Hold You Hand" recently at a club in western Tokyo's Kunitachi city called "Liverpool." The venue, which is named after the port city in England where the Beatles rose to fame, features Japanese bands covering Beatles hits. An audience of about 60 people ranging from university students to a couple in their 70s clapped as young Ryuichi sang away.
The Beatles — John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr — caught the imagination of Japanese baby boomers in the second half of the 1960s.
Japanese musician Yosui Inoue, 58, still remembers the day in 1967 when "All You Need Is Love" was broadcast live around the world. It was a time of "flowers and peace," he said, recalling how young people protesting against the Vietnam War would hand out flowers as a symbol of peace.
Writer Masanori Oe, 64, lived in the United States in the latter half of the 1960s and took part in antiwar rallies. He said that in the face of the draft, young Americans felt the only way they could change the world was by changing themselves.
Picture book author and singer Cocco, 29, of Okinawa, appeared at the "Dream Power" music festival held Nov 4 at Nippon Budokan hall in Tokyo, where the Beatles performed 40 years ago.
The event has been held for the past five years to support children in poor parts of Asia and Africa. The money raised is used to build schools.
Cocco, who sang the Beatles number "Norwegian Wood," said she initially had her doubts about the legitimacy of the fund-raising effort, and traveled to Vietnam to see if the money was really being used for its intended purpose.
What she found warmed her heart. Children at the school she visited gave her necklaces and flowers they had made from bamboo leaves and tissue paper, and convinced her to take part in the event.
Also performing at the festival was Naoki Sato, 33, of singing duo Love Psychedelico. Sato hailed Lennon's influence on him, saying that at a time when it was thought cool for rock musicians to say "no," Lennon's music conveyed the message that it was also cool to say "yes."
Says musician Inoue, "What is so remarkable about the Beatles is the sense of the positive they exuded."
"Love and peace are eternal," he commented. "I took them for granted when I was young, but at my age talk of such things becomes much more serious."
Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, said it was the word "Yes" written on the ceiling of an art gallery as part of her exhibition that drew her and her future husband together. Together they launched their campaign for peace in 1969. Ono says the power of love is incredible and she remains convinced that it will bring about peace one day.
"I could hardly believe my ears," said Hidenobu Kondo, 44, recalling the day two summers ago when he heard his then 2-year-old son, Ryuichi, suddenly sing part of the Beatles song "We Can Work It Out."
"It really blew me away, because I didn't teach him English or music," said Kondo, a Beatles fan who often listens to the band's CDs as his son plays nearby. "Even a little child must have understood by intuition that the Beatles were good."
Ryuichi took the stage to belt out "I Want Hold You Hand" recently at a club in western Tokyo's Kunitachi city called "Liverpool." The venue, which is named after the port city in England where the Beatles rose to fame, features Japanese bands covering Beatles hits. An audience of about 60 people ranging from university students to a couple in their 70s clapped as young Ryuichi sang away.
The Beatles — John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr — caught the imagination of Japanese baby boomers in the second half of the 1960s.
Japanese musician Yosui Inoue, 58, still remembers the day in 1967 when "All You Need Is Love" was broadcast live around the world. It was a time of "flowers and peace," he said, recalling how young people protesting against the Vietnam War would hand out flowers as a symbol of peace.
Writer Masanori Oe, 64, lived in the United States in the latter half of the 1960s and took part in antiwar rallies. He said that in the face of the draft, young Americans felt the only way they could change the world was by changing themselves.
Picture book author and singer Cocco, 29, of Okinawa, appeared at the "Dream Power" music festival held Nov 4 at Nippon Budokan hall in Tokyo, where the Beatles performed 40 years ago.
The event has been held for the past five years to support children in poor parts of Asia and Africa. The money raised is used to build schools.
Cocco, who sang the Beatles number "Norwegian Wood," said she initially had her doubts about the legitimacy of the fund-raising effort, and traveled to Vietnam to see if the money was really being used for its intended purpose.
What she found warmed her heart. Children at the school she visited gave her necklaces and flowers they had made from bamboo leaves and tissue paper, and convinced her to take part in the event.
Also performing at the festival was Naoki Sato, 33, of singing duo Love Psychedelico. Sato hailed Lennon's influence on him, saying that at a time when it was thought cool for rock musicians to say "no," Lennon's music conveyed the message that it was also cool to say "yes."
Says musician Inoue, "What is so remarkable about the Beatles is the sense of the positive they exuded."
"Love and peace are eternal," he commented. "I took them for granted when I was young, but at my age talk of such things becomes much more serious."
Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, said it was the word "Yes" written on the ceiling of an art gallery as part of her exhibition that drew her and her future husband together. Together they launched their campaign for peace in 1969. Ono says the power of love is incredible and she remains convinced that it will bring about peace one day.
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Sixties London to Be Explored in Kennedys' How Did You Meet the Beatles?
By Andrew Gans
Mom, How Did You Meet the Beatles? is the title of a new work from Adrienne Kennedy and her son, Adam P. Kennedy.
Subtitled "A True Story of London in the 1960's," the theatre piece will be presented Jan. 15, 2007, at Joe's Pub. In the production playwright Adrienne Kennedy, according to press notes, "chronicles her search for fame and fortune in 1960's London, where she encountered Laurence Olivier, James Baldwin, Ricki Houston, various British writers and, of course, the Beatles." Show time is 7 PM.
Adrienne Kennedy is the recipient of three Village Voice Obie Awards for her plays Funnyhouse of a Negro, June and Jean in Concert and Sleep Deprivation Chamber. She co-authored the latter with son Adam P. Kennedy, who is the CEO of Kennedy Promotions LLC. The Signature Theatre Company also devoted its 1995-1996 season to Adrienne Kennedy's work.
Joe's Pub is located within the Public Theater at 425 Lafayette Street. Tickets, priced at $20, are available by calling (212) 967-7555 or by visiting www.joespub.com.
Mom, How Did You Meet the Beatles? is the title of a new work from Adrienne Kennedy and her son, Adam P. Kennedy.
Subtitled "A True Story of London in the 1960's," the theatre piece will be presented Jan. 15, 2007, at Joe's Pub. In the production playwright Adrienne Kennedy, according to press notes, "chronicles her search for fame and fortune in 1960's London, where she encountered Laurence Olivier, James Baldwin, Ricki Houston, various British writers and, of course, the Beatles." Show time is 7 PM.
Adrienne Kennedy is the recipient of three Village Voice Obie Awards for her plays Funnyhouse of a Negro, June and Jean in Concert and Sleep Deprivation Chamber. She co-authored the latter with son Adam P. Kennedy, who is the CEO of Kennedy Promotions LLC. The Signature Theatre Company also devoted its 1995-1996 season to Adrienne Kennedy's work.
Joe's Pub is located within the Public Theater at 425 Lafayette Street. Tickets, priced at $20, are available by calling (212) 967-7555 or by visiting www.joespub.com.
FBI releases files on John Lennon after 25-year wait
The FBI has released 10 files on late former Beatle John Lennon which it had withheld for nearly three decades on the grounds that releasing them could threaten the United States.
.The files were published on the Internet Wednesday at www.lennonFBIfiles.com after authorities agreed to release them following a long-running legal campaign by California academic and historian Jon Wiener and rights groups.
.Although the US authorities repeatedly resisted calls for the documents to be released after Wiener's first request was turned down in 1981, the revelations contained in them are hardly startling and many are well-known.
.Among the observations are that Lennon, a noted liberal and peace activist, had given an interview to an underground newspaper in 1971 in which he had "emphasized his proletarian background" and "sympathy with the oppressed and underprivileged people of Britain and the world."
.The files record the fact that Lennon and his wife, Yoko Ono, had signed a petition in support of the Cambodian monarchy when the Southeast Asian nation was being bombed by the United States during the Vietnam War.
.Lennon had also encouraged the belief that he held revolutionary views "by the content of some of his songs," the documents added, an apparent reference to his song "Power of the People."
.Despite the innocuous nature of the information in the files, the FBI had fought against their release because they contained "national security information provided by a foreign government under an explicit promise of confidentiality."
.Publication could "reasonably be expected to ... lead to foreign diplomatic, economic and military retaliation against the United States," lawyers for the FBI told the courts during a 1983 hearing.
.In a statement by the American Civil Liberties Union on Wednesday, Wiener described the FBI's rationale for refusing to release the documents as "absurd."
.Although the foreign government mentioned in the documents has never been named, most analysts believe it refers to Britain.
."I doubt that Tony Blair's government will launch a military strike on the US in retaliation for the release of these documents," said Wiener.
."Today we can see that the national security claims the FBI has been making for 25 years were absurd from the beginning. The Lennon FBI file is a classic case of excessive government secrecy."Wiener had already secured the release of 300 pages of FBI documents on Lennon in 1997, information which formed the basis for his book "Gimme Some Truth: The John Lennon FBI File."
.A court ruled in 2004 that the documents should be released, but the FBI appealed the decision before finally agreeing to release them on Tuesday. — AFP
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
MaccaSpan "Videos" Section Update
Monday, December 18, 2006
'Threat' to Heather Mills-McCartney
Police have warned Heather Mills-McCartney that they have received intelligence of a threat to her safety, it has emerged.
Officers spoke to the 38-year-old and her estranged husband, Sir Paul McCartney, 64, on Thursday about the "non-specific threat" from the Merseyside area.
Ms Mills-McCartney was also told the names of the people who had made the threat, Sussex Police said.
Officers have taken steps for an "immediate police response" to be available to her if it is needed, a force spokesman added.
According to reports, she has been given a panic alarm which allows her to contact Sussex Police headquarters directly. However, officers have said there is "no imminent risk" to the model.
Bernie Murphy, Sussex Police Force Command and Control Centre Supervisor, based in Brighton, said: "On Thursday 14 December 2006 information was received from police in the Merseyside area which indicated a non-specific threat towards Heather Mills-McCartney.
"In accordance with normal police practice, and also taking into account the Osman ruling, the threat was risk-assessed.
"Police can confirm that Mills-McCartney was spoken to by officers and was fully informed of all the information, including details of the names of individuals involved. In addition, Mills-McCartney's estranged husband was also spoken to.
"Police are satisfied there's no imminent risk to Mills-McCartney.
"Local officers have been fully briefed regarding the circumstances and provision has been made for an immediate police response should this be necessary."
Officers spoke to the 38-year-old and her estranged husband, Sir Paul McCartney, 64, on Thursday about the "non-specific threat" from the Merseyside area.
Ms Mills-McCartney was also told the names of the people who had made the threat, Sussex Police said.
Officers have taken steps for an "immediate police response" to be available to her if it is needed, a force spokesman added.
According to reports, she has been given a panic alarm which allows her to contact Sussex Police headquarters directly. However, officers have said there is "no imminent risk" to the model.
Bernie Murphy, Sussex Police Force Command and Control Centre Supervisor, based in Brighton, said: "On Thursday 14 December 2006 information was received from police in the Merseyside area which indicated a non-specific threat towards Heather Mills-McCartney.
"In accordance with normal police practice, and also taking into account the Osman ruling, the threat was risk-assessed.
"Police can confirm that Mills-McCartney was spoken to by officers and was fully informed of all the information, including details of the names of individuals involved. In addition, Mills-McCartney's estranged husband was also spoken to.
"Police are satisfied there's no imminent risk to Mills-McCartney.
"Local officers have been fully briefed regarding the circumstances and provision has been made for an immediate police response should this be necessary."
Sunday, December 17, 2006
McCartney up for iconic accolade
The poll is about who has impacted most on British cultural lifeSir Paul McCartney has made it to the final three in the BBC Culture Show's Greatest Living Icon poll.
Viewers of the television series have been voting for which living Briton they think has had the biggest impact on British cultural life.
The former Merseyside Beatle, 64, is battling for the top spot against Sir David Attenborough and Morrisey.
The winner is to be announced during Saturday's show, which starts at 1950 GMT on BBC2.
The three are ranked ahead of David Bowie, Sir Michael Caine, playwright Alan Bennett and actors Sir Michael Caine and Stephen Fry.
Singer Kate Bush, fashion designer Dame Vivienne Westwood and model Kate Moss are the only women to make it into the top 10.
Stella McCartney bans pheasant shoots on Madonna's country estate!
London, Dec 16 (ANI): Music icon Madonna's English country estate will no longer be available for hunters wanting to shoot some pheasant, for pal Stella McCartney just put an end to the bloody sport at Ashcombe.
Madonna and her British director hubby Guy Ritchie rent Ashcombe in Wilts to shooting parties for as much as 10,000 pounds a day.
And, to give hunters a far more satisfying experience, the singer also bought and released 3,000 imported baby pheasants so that shooters were sure to have enough targets.
However, Sir Paul McCartney's designer daughter Stella, who also happens to be a pal of Madonna's, reportedly ripped into the Material Girl for playing a role in promoting the sport.
"Ashcombe's become a hunting factory and the Ritchies like playing rich landlords. Stella wasn't pleased when she heard about them releasing pheasants and spoke to Madonna" The Sun quoted a source, as saying.
"She's the reason Madonna is stopping shooting next year," the source added.
This is not the first time that Stella has been at odds with the singer, for she recently scolded Madge for wearing a 35,000 pounds fur coat.
Madonna herself gave up hunting peasants last year when a bird she shot did not die immediately, and she had to watch it as it struggled up the hill with blood gushing from its mouth.
"It wasn't dead.Blood was gushing from it's mouth and it was struggling up this hill and I thought, 'Oh God, I did that. I haven't shot since," the singer said last November.
Madonna and her British director hubby Guy Ritchie rent Ashcombe in Wilts to shooting parties for as much as 10,000 pounds a day.
And, to give hunters a far more satisfying experience, the singer also bought and released 3,000 imported baby pheasants so that shooters were sure to have enough targets.
However, Sir Paul McCartney's designer daughter Stella, who also happens to be a pal of Madonna's, reportedly ripped into the Material Girl for playing a role in promoting the sport.
"Ashcombe's become a hunting factory and the Ritchies like playing rich landlords. Stella wasn't pleased when she heard about them releasing pheasants and spoke to Madonna" The Sun quoted a source, as saying.
"She's the reason Madonna is stopping shooting next year," the source added.
This is not the first time that Stella has been at odds with the singer, for she recently scolded Madge for wearing a 35,000 pounds fur coat.
Madonna herself gave up hunting peasants last year when a bird she shot did not die immediately, and she had to watch it as it struggled up the hill with blood gushing from its mouth.
"It wasn't dead.Blood was gushing from it's mouth and it was struggling up this hill and I thought, 'Oh God, I did that. I haven't shot since," the singer said last November.
Saturday, December 16, 2006
Paul to take down lodge to keep pavilion
SIR Paul McCartney will knock down the lodge built on his Peasmarsh estate in order to keep his pavilion.
The former Beatle has been embroiled in a year-long planning battle to save the two-bedroom wooden lodge, at Woodlands Farm without planning permission.At one stage he even offered to tear down a farmhouse and other agricultural buildings on the estate in order to keep the lodge and pavilion.Last month he told planners at Rother District Council that he was withdrawing the application to keep both and just wanted to retain the pavilion.On Thursday the council's planning committee accepted this proposal and a legal agreement was signed between the parties.Sir Paul, who campaigned for the building of Rye Memorial Care Centre, has said the lodge was essential for protecting his privacy,In the summer two American tourists managed to get into the grounds at Woodlands and took video footage of Sir Pau's home and cars and posted it on the internet.Sir Paul's estranged wife Heather Mills McCartney is said to be planning to leave England for America after putting the £625,000 Beckley home (right) she owns on the market.She bought the five-bedroomed Grade II listed barn conversion after splitting from Sir Paul in May. It is only a few miles away from Sir Paul's 950-acre estate.But she has spent little time there, preferring to stay at her beach-front home in Hove.Friends of Heather say she has received a string of job offers in America and recently gave her first televised interview on the divorce to Sir Paul, 64, on American television.She told the show: "I get nothing but support in America. People want to come up and give me a hug."Heather's personal trainer and bodyguard is former Rye man Ben Amagoni, who she met when he worked at Hilden Health Centre in Rye.
The former Beatle has been embroiled in a year-long planning battle to save the two-bedroom wooden lodge, at Woodlands Farm without planning permission.At one stage he even offered to tear down a farmhouse and other agricultural buildings on the estate in order to keep the lodge and pavilion.Last month he told planners at Rother District Council that he was withdrawing the application to keep both and just wanted to retain the pavilion.On Thursday the council's planning committee accepted this proposal and a legal agreement was signed between the parties.Sir Paul, who campaigned for the building of Rye Memorial Care Centre, has said the lodge was essential for protecting his privacy,In the summer two American tourists managed to get into the grounds at Woodlands and took video footage of Sir Pau's home and cars and posted it on the internet.Sir Paul's estranged wife Heather Mills McCartney is said to be planning to leave England for America after putting the £625,000 Beckley home (right) she owns on the market.She bought the five-bedroomed Grade II listed barn conversion after splitting from Sir Paul in May. It is only a few miles away from Sir Paul's 950-acre estate.But she has spent little time there, preferring to stay at her beach-front home in Hove.Friends of Heather say she has received a string of job offers in America and recently gave her first televised interview on the divorce to Sir Paul, 64, on American television.She told the show: "I get nothing but support in America. People want to come up and give me a hug."Heather's personal trainer and bodyguard is former Rye man Ben Amagoni, who she met when he worked at Hilden Health Centre in Rye.
Starr To Set The Record Straight
Former BEATLES drummer RINGO STARR is so sick of the various myths and lies about him, he's decide to tell the truth about his life in a documentary. The 66-year-old musician is currently filming a tell-all movie of his life, which is set to be broadcast on British television next year (07). He explains, "It's an anthology we're doing on me."
Yoko Ono Target in $2M Extortion Plot
A chauffeur for Yoko Ono was arrested yesterday after police said he taped her private conversations and threatened to circulate them unless she paid him $2 million.Detectives arrested Koral Karsan, 50, at his home in Amityville, N.Y., after Ms. Ono, the widow of John Lennon of the Beatles, reported him to police. Police said Mr. Karsan, who worked for Ms. Ono for seven years, threatened to circulate embarrassing photos of her and spoke of killing her and her son, Sean Lennon.Last night, Mr. Karsan was charged with first-degree attempted grand larceny. Outside the 20th Precinct on Manhattan's Upper West Side where he was taken for questioning, he told reporters he was innocent.But police said the Turkish-born driver dropped off an extortion note at Ms. Ono's home at the Dakota apartment building on Central Park West and West 72nd Street on December 8, the 26th anniversary of Lennon's killing. In 1980, Lennon was returning home from a recording studio when Mark David Chapman shot him four times with a .38-caliber revolver. Ms. Ono was with him at the time.In the rambling letter, which was accompanied by a photograph of Ms. Ono in her pajamas, he wrote that he secretly had made audiotapes of her and demanded money in exchange for their safe return. Police said he spoke of killing her, her son, and himself during a later conversation with one of her associates, which was recorded by investigators, the Associated Press reported.Last night, staff at the Dakota declined to comment, saying they had been instructed not to comment on Mr. Karsan's arrest. A publicist for Ms. Ono did not immediately return messages.However, at the parking garage adjacent to the Dakota, an attendant, Juan Ferrara, 55, said Ms. Ono informed staff there last week that Mr. Karsan was no longer working for her and should not be allowed to park there. According to her associates, Ms. Ono leases several cars, including a midnight blue Bentley, which Mr. Karsan often drove.Reached on the telephone last night, a former assistant for the family who said he knew Mr. Karsan expressed surprise at his arrest. "He always seemed like a nice guy," Dane Worthington, who lived at the Dakota with the Lennon family for 17 years, said. "I feel very bad. I know people get greedy."Mr. Worthington, who called his former employer a "sweetheart," noted that her generosity has made it easy for others to take advantage of her. In 2002, Ms. Ono settled a 20-year legal battle with former employee Frederic Seaman, whom she accused of taking personal diaries and family photographs from the Lennon apartment. The ex-employee, who was Lennon's personal assistant, ultimately apologized in court for taking the memorabilia, which he subsequently used in writing a book published in the early 1990s that detailed the day-to-day life of the former Beatle."When people like Yoko are very generous with someone who is working for them, the more generous they are, the more people want," Mr. Worthington said.
Thursday, December 14, 2006
MaccaSpan adds Podomatic Page 3
Something's new at MaccaSpan Radio! MaccaSpan on Podomatic page 3!
Also, we will be hitting the 50th episode by the end of the YEAR!
www.maccaspan.com/radio/player.html
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Stella has a Baby!
Fashion designer Stella McCartney and her husband Alasdhair Willis have welcomed the latest addition to their family - a baby daughter, Bailey Linda Olwyn Willis.The little girl was born on Friday in London, weighing 7lbs 14 oz. She is a second child for the couple, who celebrated the birth of son Miller in March 2005, and a fourth grandchild for Stella's father Paul McCartneyThe tireless animal rights campaigner's pregnancy hardly impacted on her busy schedule, with the 35-year-old recently announcing the continuation of her successful collaboration with sportswear brand Adidas, and preparing for the launch of her organic facial care range in spring 2007.
Astronauts awake to Beatles Tune
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Astronauts aboard the space shuttle Discovery woke up to The Beatles on Sunday, their first morning in space, where the first order of business will be to make sure their ship wasn't damaged during launch.
The crew lit up the sky late Saturday with a fiery ascent that practically turned night into day in the first nighttime launch in four years. Then it was on to the international space station to rewire the orbital outpost.
The astronauts began their day to the mellow tunes of "Here Comes the Sun."
"Good morning, Discovery. We especially want to thank you for the burst of sunshine you brought into our lives last night. It was an awesome launch," Shannon Lucid from Mission Control radioed up to the crew.
"It was pretty great for all of us, too," Commander Mark Polansky responded.
Astronauts will spend the day inspecting the shuttle for potentially critical heat shield damage from debris falling off the external tank during lift off, the problem that doomed the shuttle Columbia in 2003.
Nicholas Patrick, one of the five astronauts experiencing zero gravity for the first time, will use the shuttle's 50-foot robotic arm and similarly long boom with sensors and a camera to inspect the ship. The survey was to start at 3:12 p.m.
Discovery is to dock with the space station Monday to begin the intricate work. Three complicated spacewalks are planned to rewire the space station from a temporary to a permanent power source.NASA had to beat the odds to get off the launch pad Saturday. After only a 30 percent chance of good weather earlier in the day and a two-hour delay in fueling, Discovery streaked through a moonless sky at 8:47 p.m. EST.
"It just all came together perfectly," launch director Mike Leinbach said.
The mood was also upbeat aboard Discovery.
"I think we have five people who just haven't stopped smiling yet," Polansky said after the shuttle reached space.
During its 12-day mission, Discovery's crew will also deliver an $11 million addition to the space lab and bring home one of the space station's three crew members, German astronaut Thomas Reiter of the European Space Agency. American astronaut Sunita "Suni" Williams will replace him, staying for six months.
The two veterans aboard the shuttle are Polansky and Robert Curbeam, who will spacewalk three times. The others are pilot William Oefelein, and mission specialists Patrick, Williams, Joan Higginbotham and the European Space Agency's Christer Fuglesang, who was the first Swede in space.
Fuglesang carried some unusual food into orbit: several cans of moose sausage and moose pate.
The mission is one leg of a three-year race to finish construction on the space station before shuttles are retired in 2010. After Discovery's mission, 13 more shuttle flights are needed to complete the lab.
The launch was the first at night since Endeavour's flight in November 2002 and only the 29th in darkness of NASA's 117 total shuttle launches.
"What you've seen tonight is the successful accomplishment of the most challenging, demanding, technically state-of-the-art, difficult thing that this nation or any nation can do," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin said.
Mission Control in Houston told Discovery's crew that there were no initial reports of any serious problems and that the shuttle was "in great shape."
NASA had required daylight launches for three flights after the Columbia accident so that clear images could be taken of the external fuel tank. Foam broke off Columbia's tank at liftoff and struck the spacecraft's wing, leading to the disaster that killed seven astronauts.
Saturday's launch was only the fourth since the Columbia disaster in 2003 and the third of the year. It also was the last scheduled liftoff from pad 39B, which will be modified for new rockets that will take astronauts back to the moon in 2020.
"It's kind of the end of an era," Leinbach said.
Waiting at the space station for his visitors to arrive Monday, U.S. astronaut Michael Lopez-Alegria played celebratory music for Discovery, "Song 2" by Blur, highlighting the lyrics: "Woo hoo! Woo hoo!"
The crew lit up the sky late Saturday with a fiery ascent that practically turned night into day in the first nighttime launch in four years. Then it was on to the international space station to rewire the orbital outpost.
The astronauts began their day to the mellow tunes of "Here Comes the Sun."
"Good morning, Discovery. We especially want to thank you for the burst of sunshine you brought into our lives last night. It was an awesome launch," Shannon Lucid from Mission Control radioed up to the crew.
"It was pretty great for all of us, too," Commander Mark Polansky responded.
Astronauts will spend the day inspecting the shuttle for potentially critical heat shield damage from debris falling off the external tank during lift off, the problem that doomed the shuttle Columbia in 2003.
Nicholas Patrick, one of the five astronauts experiencing zero gravity for the first time, will use the shuttle's 50-foot robotic arm and similarly long boom with sensors and a camera to inspect the ship. The survey was to start at 3:12 p.m.
Discovery is to dock with the space station Monday to begin the intricate work. Three complicated spacewalks are planned to rewire the space station from a temporary to a permanent power source.NASA had to beat the odds to get off the launch pad Saturday. After only a 30 percent chance of good weather earlier in the day and a two-hour delay in fueling, Discovery streaked through a moonless sky at 8:47 p.m. EST.
"It just all came together perfectly," launch director Mike Leinbach said.
The mood was also upbeat aboard Discovery.
"I think we have five people who just haven't stopped smiling yet," Polansky said after the shuttle reached space.
During its 12-day mission, Discovery's crew will also deliver an $11 million addition to the space lab and bring home one of the space station's three crew members, German astronaut Thomas Reiter of the European Space Agency. American astronaut Sunita "Suni" Williams will replace him, staying for six months.
The two veterans aboard the shuttle are Polansky and Robert Curbeam, who will spacewalk three times. The others are pilot William Oefelein, and mission specialists Patrick, Williams, Joan Higginbotham and the European Space Agency's Christer Fuglesang, who was the first Swede in space.
Fuglesang carried some unusual food into orbit: several cans of moose sausage and moose pate.
The mission is one leg of a three-year race to finish construction on the space station before shuttles are retired in 2010. After Discovery's mission, 13 more shuttle flights are needed to complete the lab.
The launch was the first at night since Endeavour's flight in November 2002 and only the 29th in darkness of NASA's 117 total shuttle launches.
"What you've seen tonight is the successful accomplishment of the most challenging, demanding, technically state-of-the-art, difficult thing that this nation or any nation can do," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin said.
Mission Control in Houston told Discovery's crew that there were no initial reports of any serious problems and that the shuttle was "in great shape."
NASA had required daylight launches for three flights after the Columbia accident so that clear images could be taken of the external fuel tank. Foam broke off Columbia's tank at liftoff and struck the spacecraft's wing, leading to the disaster that killed seven astronauts.
Saturday's launch was only the fourth since the Columbia disaster in 2003 and the third of the year. It also was the last scheduled liftoff from pad 39B, which will be modified for new rockets that will take astronauts back to the moon in 2020.
"It's kind of the end of an era," Leinbach said.
Waiting at the space station for his visitors to arrive Monday, U.S. astronaut Michael Lopez-Alegria played celebratory music for Discovery, "Song 2" by Blur, highlighting the lyrics: "Woo hoo! Woo hoo!"
MaccaSpan "Albums" Section Updated!
The albums section has been updated with basic album info for now, rather then just linking you to Amazon like it did before. The album info pages will eventually expand. In the future, I am hoping to have the same for the DVD/VHS section and I also want to add a SINGLES section.
MaccaSpan - We're always under construction!
Sunday, December 10, 2006
SIGNED BEATLES ALBUM UP FOR SALE
A RARE Beatles album signed by all four members of the band is on sale in a Stratford gallery.The copy of the 1967' Magical Mystery Tour' album, signed by John, Paul, George and Ringo, is on display in Foster Frame in Greenhill Street as part of a collection of signed albums being sold. The album is the soundtrack to the 1967 film of the same name.The picture shows Siobhan O’Sullivan, of Foster Frame, in Stratford, with the album.
Naked Heather pics left on tip
In happier times ... Macca and Heather in picture similar to some of those dumped -->By NICK PARKER HUNDREDS of family photos of Sir Paul McCartney and estranged wife Heather Mills were found dumped yesterday.
The intimate pictures — taken during happier times before their bitter divorce battle erupted — were discovered in bin bags on waste ground.
One shows Heather, 38, in bed barely covered by a white sheet — with her artificial leg standing on a black stiletto shoe beside the divan. Others show her posing nude and showing off her bump while heavily pregnant.
She is also seen wearing diamond earrings in a bath — and in a pink swimsuit while playing in a whirlpool bath with their three-year-old daughter Beatrice.
Sir Paul was shocked when The Sun revealed the find last night.
He said: “I’m very grateful to the Sun for getting these pictures back to me.”
The collection appears to be a McCartney family album taken by the ex-Beatle and his loved ones dating back 30 years. Sir Paul was said to be particularly distressed to learn that touching pictures of his late wife Linda were among those found dumped.
Linda, who died from breast cancer in 1998, is in snaps of a family holiday to Australia and on a cabin cruiser.
Lost love ... Macca and LindaThe haul also includes one of the last pictures of Paul and Linda out together. Tragic photographer Linda looks pale and frail beside him.
The photographs — packed into cardboard boxes — were found among thousands dumped in bin liners on a patch of London wasteground yesterday.
We immediately alerted Sir Paul and arranged to hand the colour prints to him. The private shots show naked Heather leaning out of a Victorian-style bath wearing only diamond stud-earrings.
She gazes over her shoulder while around seven months’ pregnant in a series of snaps.
More than 30 other private pictures show pouting Heather poolside in swimsuit. Four of the dumped pictures are cheeky close-ups of her bum as she sports a skimpy striped thong-style swimsuit.
More pictures show Macca and Heather sitting on a bench in front of India’s Taj Mahal.
Other romantic moments include snaps of trips to Venice, America’s Grand Canyon and on safari in Africa. Private moments showing Sir Paul’s love for little daughter Beatrice were also caught on film.
One set shows the doting dad feeding her with a silver spoon. In another he is bare-chested as he cuddles Bea, who is wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the words: “My Daddy Rocks.”
Sir Paul is also pictured astride a grey pony at a riding school with Bea giggling on his lap. Neither are wearing helmets.
Pictures of Bea in the bath and trying on sunglasses as she gets dressed with her mum were also dumped.
The discovery is the latest twist for the warring couple — locked in one of the messiest divorces in showbiz history.
Heather — who is demanding an £80 million divorce — has been accused of leaking papers alleging Sir Paul beat her and his first wife Linda.
He furiously denies the claims. Heather further turned the screw by suggesting she will demand Peasmarsh — Sir Paul’s £4million, 160-acre estate.
The intimate pictures — taken during happier times before their bitter divorce battle erupted — were discovered in bin bags on waste ground.
One shows Heather, 38, in bed barely covered by a white sheet — with her artificial leg standing on a black stiletto shoe beside the divan. Others show her posing nude and showing off her bump while heavily pregnant.
She is also seen wearing diamond earrings in a bath — and in a pink swimsuit while playing in a whirlpool bath with their three-year-old daughter Beatrice.
Sir Paul was shocked when The Sun revealed the find last night.
He said: “I’m very grateful to the Sun for getting these pictures back to me.”
The collection appears to be a McCartney family album taken by the ex-Beatle and his loved ones dating back 30 years. Sir Paul was said to be particularly distressed to learn that touching pictures of his late wife Linda were among those found dumped.
Linda, who died from breast cancer in 1998, is in snaps of a family holiday to Australia and on a cabin cruiser.
Lost love ... Macca and LindaThe haul also includes one of the last pictures of Paul and Linda out together. Tragic photographer Linda looks pale and frail beside him.
The photographs — packed into cardboard boxes — were found among thousands dumped in bin liners on a patch of London wasteground yesterday.
We immediately alerted Sir Paul and arranged to hand the colour prints to him. The private shots show naked Heather leaning out of a Victorian-style bath wearing only diamond stud-earrings.
She gazes over her shoulder while around seven months’ pregnant in a series of snaps.
More than 30 other private pictures show pouting Heather poolside in swimsuit. Four of the dumped pictures are cheeky close-ups of her bum as she sports a skimpy striped thong-style swimsuit.
More pictures show Macca and Heather sitting on a bench in front of India’s Taj Mahal.
Other romantic moments include snaps of trips to Venice, America’s Grand Canyon and on safari in Africa. Private moments showing Sir Paul’s love for little daughter Beatrice were also caught on film.
One set shows the doting dad feeding her with a silver spoon. In another he is bare-chested as he cuddles Bea, who is wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the words: “My Daddy Rocks.”
Sir Paul is also pictured astride a grey pony at a riding school with Bea giggling on his lap. Neither are wearing helmets.
Pictures of Bea in the bath and trying on sunglasses as she gets dressed with her mum were also dumped.
The discovery is the latest twist for the warring couple — locked in one of the messiest divorces in showbiz history.
Heather — who is demanding an £80 million divorce — has been accused of leaking papers alleging Sir Paul beat her and his first wife Linda.
He furiously denies the claims. Heather further turned the screw by suggesting she will demand Peasmarsh — Sir Paul’s £4million, 160-acre estate.
McCartney Grateful For Return of Photos
SIR PAUL MCCARTNEY is ecstatic after a batch of private family photographs were returned to him, after they were found discarded on a London rubbish tip. The intimate pictures - including some of the former BEATLE's late wife LINDA MCCARTNEY - were discovered by British newspaper The Sun earlier this week (begs04DEC06). The photos show MCCartney in happier times, with a number dating back 30 years. One of the family albums contains snaps of MCCartney's estranged second wife HEATHER MILLS proudly showing off her bump while heavily pregnant with the couple's daughter BEATRICE, and posing in a Victorian bath wearing nothing but diamond earrings. Shocked at the finding, MCCartney says, "I'm very grateful to The Sun for getting these pictures back to me." The 64-year-old is currently embroiled in a bitter divorce battle with Mills, who has sensationally claimed he physically abused her during their four year marriage. The couple split up in May (06) and began divorce proceedings in July (06).
McCartney fronts copyright fight
LONDON, England (Reuters) -- Paul McCartney and Robbie Williams joined thousands of other performers on Thursday in an appeal for an extension to British copyright on their recordings.
They called for "fair play for musicians" in a full-page advertisement in the Financial Times containing more than 4,000 names.
On Wednesday a review for the government rejected extending copyright on sound recordings and performers' rights beyond the existing 50 years.
The advert said it had been placed on behalf of more than 3,500 record companies and 40,000 performers.
"We call upon the UK government to support the extension of copyright in sound recordings," the appeal read.
Cliff Richard, whose first hit "Move It!" from 1958 is close to the cut-off point for copyright protection, has led the way in highlighting the issue.
Without a change in the law, the catalogue of McCartney's Beatles could be up for grabs from 2012 and 2013, including early hits like "Love Me Do" and "I Want To Hold Your Hand".
In his report on intellectual property, former Financial Times editor Andrew Gowers argued the consumer must be protected as well as the artist. He said there was no evidence bands moved to the United States or elsewhere to extend their copyright protection.
The British Phonographic Industry says it will continue to lobby for a copyright extension to 95 years, the same as in the United States, and noted the final decision lies with the European Commission.
They called for "fair play for musicians" in a full-page advertisement in the Financial Times containing more than 4,000 names.
On Wednesday a review for the government rejected extending copyright on sound recordings and performers' rights beyond the existing 50 years.
The advert said it had been placed on behalf of more than 3,500 record companies and 40,000 performers.
"We call upon the UK government to support the extension of copyright in sound recordings," the appeal read.
Cliff Richard, whose first hit "Move It!" from 1958 is close to the cut-off point for copyright protection, has led the way in highlighting the issue.
Without a change in the law, the catalogue of McCartney's Beatles could be up for grabs from 2012 and 2013, including early hits like "Love Me Do" and "I Want To Hold Your Hand".
In his report on intellectual property, former Financial Times editor Andrew Gowers argued the consumer must be protected as well as the artist. He said there was no evidence bands moved to the United States or elsewhere to extend their copyright protection.
The British Phonographic Industry says it will continue to lobby for a copyright extension to 95 years, the same as in the United States, and noted the final decision lies with the European Commission.
Wednesday, December 06, 2006
Beatles lyrics sell for £97,000
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A Texas bookstore owner bought a rare page of working lyrics for Beatle Paul McCartney's song "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" for $192,000 at an auction of rock and pop memorabilia at Christie's on Monday.
Bill Butler also won the bidding for one of rock legend Jimi Hendrix's electric guitars -- a 1968 Fender Stratocaster -- for $168,000, the guitar's strap for $10,800 and a photograph of Hendrix and band members Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell framed by two topless blondes for $5,400.
"I'm worried about getting it all home," Butler, wearing a tan baseball cap emblazoned with the Texas state flag and the words "Vote Kinky Friedman," joked with reporters after the auction.
Butler retired from the telecommunications industry before opening his rare and used book shop in Rosenberg, Texas, just outside Houston. He said he would display the guitar at his bookstore but would store the 1968 McCartney lyrics in a fireproof file cabinet.
Butler lost the bidding for a black leather vest worn on stage by Hendrix. The vest was bought for $28,800 by Don Bernstine, who acquires rock memorabilia for the Hard Rock Cafes, hotels and casinos.
Other big sellers included a notebook containing handwritten lyrics by reggae star Bob Marley, which went for $72,000, and a handwritten poem by Doors singer Jim Morrison, "The American Night," which was sold for $50,400. Both went to private collectors in the United States. Prices included buyer's premiums.
Christie's fall New York auction of 147 lots of guitars, clothing, handwritten lyrics and other memorabilia took in a total of $1,117,920 from people who placed bids in person, by phone and over the Internet. That total was at the upper end of the auction house's estimate of $800,000 to $1.1 million.
The auction included items connected to Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones, Madonna, the Jackson Five, Elvis Presley, Bruce Springsteen, Miles Davis and others.A previously unheard and undocumented interview with John Lennon for Crawdaddy music magazine was sold for $38,400 and an acoustic guitar Dylan played during camping trips went for $24,000. A handwritten 1972 letter by John Lennon to a music magazine about the political situation in Northern Ireland fetched $24,000.
However, a review of Sophocles' "Antigone" written as a junior high school assignment by pop star Britney Spears fetched only about $250, to laughter and applause from bidders, far below the low estimate of $500 -- despite auctioneer Helen Bailey's best efforts.
UPDATE
Beatles lyrics penned by Sir Paul McCartney have been sold for $192,000 (£97,000) at an auction in New York.
The handwritten early version of Maxwell's Silver Hammer from 1968 were given to the musician's biographer Barry Miles soon afterwards.
A guitar owned by the late Jimi Hendrix which had been kept at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame fetched $168,000 (£85,000) at the Christie's sale.
A page from Britney Spears's schoolbook made only $240 (£120).
Beatles reunion
It contained the pop star's handwritten review of a Sophocles translation from when she attended junior high school at the age of 13, with notes from her teacher including "write more neatly".
Hendrix's guitar is a Fender Stratocaster
The auctioneer was forced to start the bidding at only $50 (£25) due to a lack of interest.
Other sales included a notebook containing lyrics written by Bob Marley, which commanded $72,000 (£36,445).
A poem penned by Doors frontman Jim Morrison made (£25,500) - well beyond its $12,000 (£6,075) estimate.
Another item with a Beatles connection was sold for $38,400 (£19,435) - a taped interview with John Lennon from 1974 which formed the basis of an article for Crawdaddy magazine.
He discussed his songwriting technique and the possibility of a Beatles reunion.
Bill Butler also won the bidding for one of rock legend Jimi Hendrix's electric guitars -- a 1968 Fender Stratocaster -- for $168,000, the guitar's strap for $10,800 and a photograph of Hendrix and band members Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell framed by two topless blondes for $5,400.
"I'm worried about getting it all home," Butler, wearing a tan baseball cap emblazoned with the Texas state flag and the words "Vote Kinky Friedman," joked with reporters after the auction.
Butler retired from the telecommunications industry before opening his rare and used book shop in Rosenberg, Texas, just outside Houston. He said he would display the guitar at his bookstore but would store the 1968 McCartney lyrics in a fireproof file cabinet.
Butler lost the bidding for a black leather vest worn on stage by Hendrix. The vest was bought for $28,800 by Don Bernstine, who acquires rock memorabilia for the Hard Rock Cafes, hotels and casinos.
Other big sellers included a notebook containing handwritten lyrics by reggae star Bob Marley, which went for $72,000, and a handwritten poem by Doors singer Jim Morrison, "The American Night," which was sold for $50,400. Both went to private collectors in the United States. Prices included buyer's premiums.
Christie's fall New York auction of 147 lots of guitars, clothing, handwritten lyrics and other memorabilia took in a total of $1,117,920 from people who placed bids in person, by phone and over the Internet. That total was at the upper end of the auction house's estimate of $800,000 to $1.1 million.
The auction included items connected to Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones, Madonna, the Jackson Five, Elvis Presley, Bruce Springsteen, Miles Davis and others.A previously unheard and undocumented interview with John Lennon for Crawdaddy music magazine was sold for $38,400 and an acoustic guitar Dylan played during camping trips went for $24,000. A handwritten 1972 letter by John Lennon to a music magazine about the political situation in Northern Ireland fetched $24,000.
However, a review of Sophocles' "Antigone" written as a junior high school assignment by pop star Britney Spears fetched only about $250, to laughter and applause from bidders, far below the low estimate of $500 -- despite auctioneer Helen Bailey's best efforts.
UPDATE
Beatles lyrics penned by Sir Paul McCartney have been sold for $192,000 (£97,000) at an auction in New York.
The handwritten early version of Maxwell's Silver Hammer from 1968 were given to the musician's biographer Barry Miles soon afterwards.
A guitar owned by the late Jimi Hendrix which had been kept at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame fetched $168,000 (£85,000) at the Christie's sale.
A page from Britney Spears's schoolbook made only $240 (£120).
Beatles reunion
It contained the pop star's handwritten review of a Sophocles translation from when she attended junior high school at the age of 13, with notes from her teacher including "write more neatly".
Hendrix's guitar is a Fender Stratocaster
The auctioneer was forced to start the bidding at only $50 (£25) due to a lack of interest.
Other sales included a notebook containing lyrics written by Bob Marley, which commanded $72,000 (£36,445).
A poem penned by Doors frontman Jim Morrison made (£25,500) - well beyond its $12,000 (£6,075) estimate.
Another item with a Beatles connection was sold for $38,400 (£19,435) - a taped interview with John Lennon from 1974 which formed the basis of an article for Crawdaddy magazine.
He discussed his songwriting technique and the possibility of a Beatles reunion.
Maxwell's Silver Dollar
London, Dec 4 (ANI): Original Beatles lyrics handwritten by Paul McCartney and a Fender guitar owned by Jimi Hendrix are among the lots to be sold in a big auction of rock and pop memorabilia. The item that is expected to fetch the highest price is a page of draft lyrics for the Beatles song Maxwell's Silver Hammer. Christie's expects it to fetch up to 300,000 dollars. "McCartney lyrics rarely appear on the market and have not appeared for about six years," said Helen Hall, of Christie's. The lot also includes two copies of the song that a member of the Beatles' staff wrote out for use by other members of the band. They are the only trio of Beatles lyrics to have appeared on the market. Maxwell's Silver Hammer, which appears on the Abbey Road album, took three days to record and overdub, and caused considerable arguments between the band members as they hurtled towards their break-up. McCartney insisted that the song was a possible single but Lennon disagreed, later calling it "a typical McCartney single, or whatever". Lennon was not even present in the studio when it was recorded because he was recovering from an accident. "We spent more money on that song than any of them on the whole album, I think," he said. The auction at Christie's in New York will cover more than five decades of music history, with lots ranging from Miles Davis' trumpet to a handwritten page from Britney Spears' schoolbook, featuring her teenage analysis of the play Antigone, up for grabs. Love letters by Bob Dylan and a previously unheard interview of John Lennon are also among the lots. (ANI)
Paul McCartney Takes Over Classic FM
Classic FM is pleased to announce a day of special shows featuring Sir Paul McCartney. Tune into the station on Thursday 7th December to hear Sir Paul choose some of his favourite classical tracks and hear the first live recording of 'Ecce Cor Meum'. Don't miss our special Paul McCartney programme from 11am - 1pm when Paul presents his own show and keep your ears peeled throughout the day when we play music from his latest album 'Ecce Cor Meum' and he discusses his music. From 6.30pm join reporter Bob Jones on Classic Newsnight for a special Liverpool Legacy report when Paul discusses his love of Liverpool. And at 8pm don't miss the hour-long In Conversation With Anne-Marie Minhall special when Paul talks about his latest release 'Ecce Cor Meum'. For the next three hours sink into your armchair and enjoy the all-Paul McCartney Evening Concert with Nick Bailey, featuring an exclusive recording of the world premiere of 'Ecce Cor Meum', which was recorded at the Royal Albert Hall on 3 November. Paul will also be popping in to tell Nick Bailey what it was like on the night and keep your ears peeled for the full play of 'Standing Stone'.
Saturday, December 02, 2006
You Never Give Me Your Money
Sir Paul McCartney is still seething after taking John Lennon's widow Yoko Ono's advice - because it cost him millions of pounds.
The music legend was keen to buy back the copyright of the original Beatles songs for the relatively cheap price of GBP12.5 million in the eighties. But Ono warned him against the purchase, insisting the deal wasn't worth anything.
Pop star Michael Jackson seized on the opportunity and bought the rights for GBP28 million. They are now worth in excess of GBP500 million and part-owned by Sony.
Beatles producer Sir George Martin says, "Paul spoke to Yoko saying, 'Shall we buy it back between John and myself?'
"But she said it wasn't worth it.
"At present, the copyright is worth something approaching one billion dollars."
"Paul's always had a chip on his shoulder about that."
The music legend was keen to buy back the copyright of the original Beatles songs for the relatively cheap price of GBP12.5 million in the eighties. But Ono warned him against the purchase, insisting the deal wasn't worth anything.
Pop star Michael Jackson seized on the opportunity and bought the rights for GBP28 million. They are now worth in excess of GBP500 million and part-owned by Sony.
Beatles producer Sir George Martin says, "Paul spoke to Yoko saying, 'Shall we buy it back between John and myself?'
"But she said it wasn't worth it.
"At present, the copyright is worth something approaching one billion dollars."
"Paul's always had a chip on his shoulder about that."
Monday, November 27, 2006
Beatles on IPOD Only?!?
NEW YORK (Fortune) -- Click on the iTunes music store and punch in "Beatles" under artist search. More than 50 albums will pop up, including Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Play the Beatles, but none are the real deal. Fans wishing to download the actual Fab Four in MP3 format have to search peer-to-peer sites like Limewire for unlicensed songs they can listen to free.
But that may be about to change. While details remain to be worked out, Fortune has learned that iTunes is close to a deal to bring the Beatles catalog online. Apple Computer (Charts) is said to be angling to become the exclusive online music store for the Beatles for a limited window of time. Other music stores, such as Microsoft's (Charts) MSN and Rhapsody, have courted the Beatles over the years to no avail, but it appears Apple is close to getting first dibs on the band's hits.
When reached by Fortune, an Apple spokesman responded that the company does not comment on "rumor and speculation." If the deal goes through, it will mark a Nixon-Brezhnev-worthy truce - with the band's record label, Britain's EMI Group, serving as a peacemaker - between Apple Computer's Steve Jobs and Neil Aspinall, the onetime Beatles road manager who is now guardian of the band's business interests under the rubric Apple Corps.
Zune vs. iPod: the battle begins
At a recent industry conference, David Munns, head of EMI North America, said the Beatles would be available online "soon." The parties were hoping to make a splashy announcement to coincide with the Nov. 21 release by EMI's Capitol Records of "Love," a mashup of Beatles songs that serves as a soundtrack to a Las Vegas Cirque du Soleil production. That didn't happen. Apple Corps declined to comment.
As Fortune went to press, numerous deal points were still being hammered out. According to a music industry executive apprised of the talks, the parties were discussing how lengthy a window of exclusivity iTunes might get and how many tens of millions of dollars Jobs - who is said to be personally involved in the discussions - will commit to an advance for the band and marketing costs.
Also being discussed is whether the band would be willing to take two steps at the same time and endorse the iPod by allowing its music to be used in a commercial. Another scenario making the rounds is the prospect of the Beatles following U2's example with a branded iPod. "If the Beatles were in an iPod ad, that would be humongous," this executive said.
The deal could well fall apart for any number of reasons, including the long-running legal feud between Apple Corps and Apple Computer over both their names and the similarities between the Granny Smith that appears on the label's LPs and the half-eaten apple that is Jobs' corporate logo.
Apple Corps has been in and out of courtrooms with Jobs' Apple for more than 20 years. In the latest incarnation last May, a London judge ruled in favor of Jobs - saying that the iTunes service did not violate a 1991 deal in which Jobs was allowed to keep doing business under the Apple name as long as he agreed not to enter the music business. The Beatles have lodged an appeal, which is slated to be heard next February (clearly, if the two Apples wind up in business together, the matter is likely to be dropped).
The 1987 "Revolution" Nike (Charts) commercial was the first time a Beatles song was used in a TV ad, and the sneaker maker wound up discontinuing the spot after being sued by the Beatles. (Nike thought it had obtained the proper license for the song, only to find itself in the middle of a legal battle between EMI and Apple Corps.)
"The Beatles' position is that they don't sing jingles to peddle sneakers, beer, pantyhose, or anything else," a lawyer for the band told the Associated Press at the time. Notice he didn't say iPods.
But that may be about to change. While details remain to be worked out, Fortune has learned that iTunes is close to a deal to bring the Beatles catalog online. Apple Computer (Charts) is said to be angling to become the exclusive online music store for the Beatles for a limited window of time. Other music stores, such as Microsoft's (Charts) MSN and Rhapsody, have courted the Beatles over the years to no avail, but it appears Apple is close to getting first dibs on the band's hits.
When reached by Fortune, an Apple spokesman responded that the company does not comment on "rumor and speculation." If the deal goes through, it will mark a Nixon-Brezhnev-worthy truce - with the band's record label, Britain's EMI Group, serving as a peacemaker - between Apple Computer's Steve Jobs and Neil Aspinall, the onetime Beatles road manager who is now guardian of the band's business interests under the rubric Apple Corps.
Zune vs. iPod: the battle begins
At a recent industry conference, David Munns, head of EMI North America, said the Beatles would be available online "soon." The parties were hoping to make a splashy announcement to coincide with the Nov. 21 release by EMI's Capitol Records of "Love," a mashup of Beatles songs that serves as a soundtrack to a Las Vegas Cirque du Soleil production. That didn't happen. Apple Corps declined to comment.
As Fortune went to press, numerous deal points were still being hammered out. According to a music industry executive apprised of the talks, the parties were discussing how lengthy a window of exclusivity iTunes might get and how many tens of millions of dollars Jobs - who is said to be personally involved in the discussions - will commit to an advance for the band and marketing costs.
Also being discussed is whether the band would be willing to take two steps at the same time and endorse the iPod by allowing its music to be used in a commercial. Another scenario making the rounds is the prospect of the Beatles following U2's example with a branded iPod. "If the Beatles were in an iPod ad, that would be humongous," this executive said.
The deal could well fall apart for any number of reasons, including the long-running legal feud between Apple Corps and Apple Computer over both their names and the similarities between the Granny Smith that appears on the label's LPs and the half-eaten apple that is Jobs' corporate logo.
Apple Corps has been in and out of courtrooms with Jobs' Apple for more than 20 years. In the latest incarnation last May, a London judge ruled in favor of Jobs - saying that the iTunes service did not violate a 1991 deal in which Jobs was allowed to keep doing business under the Apple name as long as he agreed not to enter the music business. The Beatles have lodged an appeal, which is slated to be heard next February (clearly, if the two Apples wind up in business together, the matter is likely to be dropped).
The 1987 "Revolution" Nike (Charts) commercial was the first time a Beatles song was used in a TV ad, and the sneaker maker wound up discontinuing the spot after being sued by the Beatles. (Nike thought it had obtained the proper license for the song, only to find itself in the middle of a legal battle between EMI and Apple Corps.)
"The Beatles' position is that they don't sing jingles to peddle sneakers, beer, pantyhose, or anything else," a lawyer for the band told the Associated Press at the time. Notice he didn't say iPods.
Thursday, November 23, 2006
London Fans meet Sir Paul
Sir Paul McCartney received a rousing reception as he mingled with adoring fans at a New York record store where he launched his latest work.Hundreds of people showed up at the launch of DVD 'The Space Within', some of whom had queued for two nights to meet their musical hero.The 64-year-old former Beatle took a break from his bitter divorce from estranged wife Heather to sign copies of his classical composition Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart).Many gripped his hands as he spoke to them and emerged in tears, overwhelmed with emotion.Afterwards they said they had avoided asking the star about the breakdown of his marriage.New Yorker Susan Roazzi said: "I told him that we believe in his goodness and wish he and his family peace. He said 'Thank you very much'. He seemed very warm and responsive."Sir Paul and his wife were catapulted into the headlines when divorce papers claiming he mistreated her were leaked to the media.Through his lawyers, the pop star said he would "vigorously" defend himself against the accusations.
Sunday, November 19, 2006
Ecce Cor Meum on Sirius
Sirius will broadcast Paul McCartney's recent Carnegie Hall concert, featuring his new classical piece, Ecce Cor Meum (his only U.S. performance of that work). They will also air an interview with Sir Paul during intermission.
The concert will air Fri. Nov. 17 at 3 pm ET, Sat. Nov. 18 at 11 am ET, Sun. Nov. 19 at 12 am ET and 9 pm ET on SIRIUS Pops, channel 86.
Saturday, November 18, 2006
UK Signing
Paul McCartney Exclusive UK Signing Session London No.1 Piccadilly Virgin MegastoresWednesday 22nd November 2006 – 12:30pmFollowing Paul McCartney’s in-store signing session Monday at Virgin Megastore, Times Square, New York City, Paul McCartney will make an exclusive special appearance at Virgin Megastore’s flagship store in London on 22nd November to sign copies of his classical album Ecce Cor Meum and brand new live concert film DVD Paul McCartney: The Space Within US.This is a wristband only event. For the chance to meet music’s greatest icon, pick up your copy of the DVD and/or CD on Wednesday 22nd November at the No.1 Piccadilly Megastore and you will receive your wristband to meet Paul McCartney. Paul will sign only these products, limit of two autographs per person. Time and space are limited.Ecce Cor Meum, Paul’s third classical album, was released on EMI Classics in September and has remained in the classical top ten since. It received its world premiere performance on 3rd November at the Royal Albert Hall and will be performed in the US tonight at the internationally renowned Carnegie Hall.This week (13th November) Warner Music Vision released the DVD Paul McCartney: The Space Within US, which contains a never before released concert and behind the scenes footage from Paul’s critically acclaimed 2005 US Tour. The US Tour ran for 11 weeks and saw Paul play 34 shows across America. The out-of-this world, feature-length concert film delivers live performances of more than two dozen Beatles, Wings and McCartney solo classics spanning four decades. It includes footage from Paul’s personal wake-up call to the astronauts aboard the international space station, as well as 35 minutes of exclusive bonus material and featurettes including new interviews with McCartney and his band, the pre-concert film, sound-check songs, and more. Among the musicians, celebrities, dignitaries and fans interviewed for the film; President Clinton, Tony Bennett, Herbie Hancock, Eddie Vedder, Alec Baldwin and many more.
Friday, November 17, 2006
Paul McCartney on WNYC
WNYC, co-presenting with NPR, brings you a special event tonight at 7:30pm as we broadcast the American premiere of Paul McCartney's classical oratorio "Ecce Cor Meum" (Behold My Heart), live from Carnegie Hall.Scored for choir and orchestra, the Orchestra of St. Luke's under Gavin Greenaway joins the Concert Chorale of New York and the American Boychoir, with soprano Kate Royal as soloist.Commissioned by Magdalen College, Oxford, McCartney's goal was to write "a choral piece which could be sung by young people the world over in the same way that Handel's Messiah is." The texts combine English and Latin, which McCartney concieved of after performing in a concert of composer John Tavener's work at the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola in New York. The resulting oratorio in four movements combines tradition and innovation into a cohesive and deeply affecting whole.WNYC's John Schaefer and NPR's Fred Child co-host the broadcast, which includes a live interview with Sir Paul during intermission.
An interview with Sir Paul McCartney
During the intermission of the US premiere of "Ecce Cor Meum" at Carnegie Hall on November 14, WNYC's John Schaefer and Fred Child of NPR interviewed Sir Paul McCartney, who spoke about the inspiration for his classical compositions.
Download the MP3
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Paul's NY Signing
PAUL McCARTNEY CELEBRATES RELEASE OF NEW CONCERT DVD AND CLASSICAL CD WITH NEW YORK CITY SIGNINGWHO: PAUL McCARTNEY
WHAT: IN-STORE AUTOGRAPHY SIGNING
WHERE: VIRGIN MEGASTORE – TIMES SQUARE1540 Broadway, New York, NY 10036
WHEN: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13th, 12:00-2:00PM
Well, Paul didn't start signing until 12:30. Most people waited outside Virgin for a LONG time to get inside just to get something signed by Paul. As luck would have it, Paul was giving 2 autographs out to each person.
The sad fact remained that even though people who had a wrist band were guaranteed to meet Paul... Over a hundred or so with wrist bands never got that chance due to time. The other thing that isn't fair to all the REAL Paul fans is that there are over 100 DVD's and CD's being sold on ebay right now with Paul's signature on them. I guess a lot of people saw the chance of meeting a legend like Paul McCartney just a fast way to make a buck. It's sickening is what it is! For those of you who are REAL Paul fans and got to meet Paul, cherish that CD/DVD, and consider yourself VERY lucky cause there were a lot of Paul McCartney fans who were let down that day.
WHAT: IN-STORE AUTOGRAPHY SIGNING
WHERE: VIRGIN MEGASTORE – TIMES SQUARE1540 Broadway, New York, NY 10036
WHEN: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13th, 12:00-2:00PM
Well, Paul didn't start signing until 12:30. Most people waited outside Virgin for a LONG time to get inside just to get something signed by Paul. As luck would have it, Paul was giving 2 autographs out to each person.
The sad fact remained that even though people who had a wrist band were guaranteed to meet Paul... Over a hundred or so with wrist bands never got that chance due to time. The other thing that isn't fair to all the REAL Paul fans is that there are over 100 DVD's and CD's being sold on ebay right now with Paul's signature on them. I guess a lot of people saw the chance of meeting a legend like Paul McCartney just a fast way to make a buck. It's sickening is what it is! For those of you who are REAL Paul fans and got to meet Paul, cherish that CD/DVD, and consider yourself VERY lucky cause there were a lot of Paul McCartney fans who were let down that day.
Tuesday, November 14, 2006
The Space Within US (Out Now)
The Space Within US in out now! Order your copy NOW from Amazon for for ONLY $14.99! That's a saving of 40% if you buy it now! Don't wait, DVD prices go sky high after a couple months!
My fellow Canadian fans can order from Amazon.ca for only $13.98! That's a savings of 48%
In 2005, rock legend Paul McCartney crossed America with his record-breaking, sold out US tour. Now, harnessing the power of more than 25 hi-definition cameras and the thunder of 5.1 digital surround sound, PAUL McCARTNEY: THE SPACE WITHIN US captures this epic experience on DVD. Better than a front-row seat, this feature-length concert film takes viewers onto the stage and beyond, capturing Paul’s out of this world performance--which was beamed to the astronauts aboard the International Space Station who wake up to some "English Tea" with Paul and the band through a live feed from the tour.
PAUL McCARTNEY: THE SPACE WITHIN US FEATURES LIVE PERFORMANCES OF OVER 30 HITS INCLUDING: Magical Mystery Tour / Flaming Pie / Maybe I’m Amazed / Eleanor Rigby / Let Me Roll It / Drive My Car / Got To Get You Into My Life / Till There Was You / I Will / Fine Line / Good Day Sunshine / Fixing a Hole / Hey Jude / Too Many People / Penny Lane / English Tea / I’ve Got a Feeling / Follow Me / Jenny Wren / Helter Skelter / Yesterday / Get Back DVD Features: Sound Check Songs "Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On," "Friends to Go," and "How Kind of You"; More About US--Extensive Interviews with Paul McCartney, the Band, and the US Tour Crew; US Tour Pre-Show Film; On The Road With US; Liner Notes Introduction by Cameron Crowe; Song Selections...
Sunday, November 12, 2006
Macca to pay 20 Mil for Beatrice?
Rumor: Paul McCartney to pay 20 million pounds for Beatrice?
News of the World is reporting that Paul McCartney has secretly offered his soon-to-be ex-wife, Heather Mills, an additional 20 milli0n pounds (on top of the 80 million pounds she is claiming in the divorce settlement) for custody of their daughter Beatrice, 3. Paul has apparently been discussing it with family members with a pal saying; "Paul only wants what's best for his little girl...she means everything to him." Paul has made this move in apparent fear that if Mills gets custody of Bea he will have great difficulty seeing her and that she will slowly cut him out of her life.
This information should be taken with a grain of salt. The couple are currently going through a divorce and as far ask I know, no annoucement has been made over who has filed, for what type of custody of Beatrice.
Saturday, November 11, 2006
Macca Like An Icon
Sir Paul McCartney is among the 10 famous faces to be shortlisted for the nation's top living icon honour.
Only three women appear - singer Kate Bush, fashion designer Dame Vivienne Westwood and model Kate Moss.
Other names vying for the top position are playwright Alan Bennett, actors Sir Michael Caine and Stephen Fry, and singers David Bowie and Morrissey.
Listeners of the BBC Two programme The Culture Show can vote for the winner, to be announced on 16 December.
"It's a striking list - no Queen, no Maggie, no JK Rowling, " said producer Edward Morgan.
"Best of all this is a totally open race. Any of the 10 could win," he added.
The shortlist of 10 was whittled down from a list of more than 500 people nominated by the BBC show's audience.
Friday, November 10, 2006
Cheers for Paul
SIR Paul McCartney, whose divorce from Heather Mills gets messier by the week, is making a scene everywhere he goes. Monday night, the former Beatle dined at Italian eatery Il Gattopardo on West 54th Street. When he got up to leave, patrons applauded and cheered - one even shouted, "We're with you all the way, Paul!" The circus continued yesterday when McCartney, after being chased by photographers and reporters, stopped his car in residential New Jersey to give an impromptu press conference, where he said, "Look, I am doing just fine. I just need some time to myself."
Wednesday, November 08, 2006
McCartney to sign CD's
Paul McCartney will appear in person sign copies of his new EMI Classics CD at the Times Square Virgin Megastore on Monday, November 13.
Ecce Cor Meum ("Behold My Heart") is McCartney's fourth classical album since the Liverpool Oratorio was released in 1991. He worked on the piece, a commission from Magdalen College, Oxford, for more than eight years.
Anthony Smith, president of Magdalen College from 1998 to 2005, wanted "a choral piece which could be sung by young people the world over, in the same way that Handel's Messiah is."
The four-movement work for chorus and orchestra received its world premiere performance at London's Royal Albert Hall on November 3; the U.S. premiere performance is at New York's Carnegie Hall on November 14.
The singer will also sign copies of a DVD called Paul McCartney: The Space Within Us, a two-hour feature-length film of new performance footage from the 2005 "US" tour.
The signing will begin at 12 noon.
McCartney doesn't hold a grudge.
NEW YORK — Paul McCartney said Saturday he bears no grudge against his estranged second wife — despite acrimonious divorce proceedings that have seen lurid allegations about their marriage reported across the world.
The 64-year-old former Beatle said the break up — seized on in Britain as the most high-profile split since Prince Charles and Princess Diana parted ways a decade ago — had left him saddened, but determined to act with dignity.
McCartney and Heather Mills McCartney, a 38-year-old anti-land mine campaigner, announced their separation in May and began divorce proceedings in July. They have a 3-year-old daughter, Beatrice.
"There are certain things in life that are personal, and I think a relationship with a partner is intensely personal, and I prefer to keep it that way," McCartney told British Broadcasting Corp. radio in an interview broadcast Saturday.
"When you are going through difficulties, I think the thing to do for the sake of all the people concerned is to keep a certain dignity and remember that it is a private affair, and that way, you will probably get through it better," he said.McCartney said keeping details of the divorce private would "put less noses out of joint, and I think it is a more dignified way to go about it."
He was interviewed Friday, following the premiere of his classical composition Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart) at London's Royal Albert Hall, the BBC said. He said the work was inspired by the death of his first wife, Linda, from breast cancer in 1998.
Mills McCartney last month said she would take legal action against a number of British newspapers who published disparaging claims about her husband, alleged to have been contained in divorce court papers drawn up on her behalf.
Her law firm, Mishcon de Reya, said she would sue British tabloid The Sun, and newspapers Daily Mail and Evening Standard.
McCartney's lawyers said he would vigorously defend himself against the allegations that he had physically abused his second wife.
"Life goes on, I do not hold grudges against anyone, I don't blame anyone for the sadnesses that have happened to me. I am sad about them because it would stupid to be otherwise," McCartney said. "I think life goes on, and it is what you make of it, so I am pretty optimistic.
The 64-year-old former Beatle said the break up — seized on in Britain as the most high-profile split since Prince Charles and Princess Diana parted ways a decade ago — had left him saddened, but determined to act with dignity.
McCartney and Heather Mills McCartney, a 38-year-old anti-land mine campaigner, announced their separation in May and began divorce proceedings in July. They have a 3-year-old daughter, Beatrice.
"There are certain things in life that are personal, and I think a relationship with a partner is intensely personal, and I prefer to keep it that way," McCartney told British Broadcasting Corp. radio in an interview broadcast Saturday.
"When you are going through difficulties, I think the thing to do for the sake of all the people concerned is to keep a certain dignity and remember that it is a private affair, and that way, you will probably get through it better," he said.McCartney said keeping details of the divorce private would "put less noses out of joint, and I think it is a more dignified way to go about it."
He was interviewed Friday, following the premiere of his classical composition Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart) at London's Royal Albert Hall, the BBC said. He said the work was inspired by the death of his first wife, Linda, from breast cancer in 1998.
Mills McCartney last month said she would take legal action against a number of British newspapers who published disparaging claims about her husband, alleged to have been contained in divorce court papers drawn up on her behalf.
Her law firm, Mishcon de Reya, said she would sue British tabloid The Sun, and newspapers Daily Mail and Evening Standard.
McCartney's lawyers said he would vigorously defend himself against the allegations that he had physically abused his second wife.
"Life goes on, I do not hold grudges against anyone, I don't blame anyone for the sadnesses that have happened to me. I am sad about them because it would stupid to be otherwise," McCartney said. "I think life goes on, and it is what you make of it, so I am pretty optimistic.
Paul McCartney Signing in NY
PAUL McCARTNEY CELEBRATES RELEASE OF NEW CONCERT DVD AND CLASSICAL CD WITH NEW YORK CITY SIGNING
WHO: PAUL McCARTNEY
WHAT: IN-STORE AUTOGRAPHY SIGNING
WHERE: VIRGIN MEGASTORE – TIMES SQUARE
1540 BroadwayNew York, NY 10036
WHEN: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13th
12:00PM SIGNING BEGINS
PAUL McCARTNEY'S ECCE COR MEUM (BEHOLD MY HEART) (EMI CLASSICS)Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart) is Paul's fourth classical album since his first in 1991. The album has been more than eight years in the making and its origins follow in the historic tradition of composers that have been commissioned to write music for the world-renowned Magdalen College Oxford. Paul was specially invited by Anthony Smith (President of Magdalen College 1998 - 2005) to compose something to set the seal on a new concert hall for the college. His hope was for 'a choral piece which could be sung by young people the world over, in the same way that Handel's Messiah is'. Ecce Cor Meum was released on September 26th, with a subsequent 'limited edition' version released on October 17th. The U.S. Premiere performance is at Carnegie Hall on November 14th. 'PAUL McCARTNEY: THE SPACE WITHIN US' DVD (A&E Home Video)The Paul McCartney: The Space Within US is a two-hour epic concert experience of never-before released performance footage from 2005 'US' Tour. The feature-length concert film delivers live performances of more than two dozen Beatles, Wings and McCartney solo classics spanning. It includes footage from Paul's wake-up call to the international space station, as well as 35 minutes of exclusive bonus material and new interviews with McCartney and his band, a pre-concert film, footage from sound-checks, and more.
WHO: PAUL McCARTNEY
WHAT: IN-STORE AUTOGRAPHY SIGNING
WHERE: VIRGIN MEGASTORE – TIMES SQUARE
1540 BroadwayNew York, NY 10036
WHEN: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13th
12:00PM SIGNING BEGINS
PAUL McCARTNEY'S ECCE COR MEUM (BEHOLD MY HEART) (EMI CLASSICS)Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart) is Paul's fourth classical album since his first in 1991. The album has been more than eight years in the making and its origins follow in the historic tradition of composers that have been commissioned to write music for the world-renowned Magdalen College Oxford. Paul was specially invited by Anthony Smith (President of Magdalen College 1998 - 2005) to compose something to set the seal on a new concert hall for the college. His hope was for 'a choral piece which could be sung by young people the world over, in the same way that Handel's Messiah is'. Ecce Cor Meum was released on September 26th, with a subsequent 'limited edition' version released on October 17th. The U.S. Premiere performance is at Carnegie Hall on November 14th. 'PAUL McCARTNEY: THE SPACE WITHIN US' DVD (A&E Home Video)The Paul McCartney: The Space Within US is a two-hour epic concert experience of never-before released performance footage from 2005 'US' Tour. The feature-length concert film delivers live performances of more than two dozen Beatles, Wings and McCartney solo classics spanning. It includes footage from Paul's wake-up call to the international space station, as well as 35 minutes of exclusive bonus material and new interviews with McCartney and his band, a pre-concert film, footage from sound-checks, and more.
Friday, November 03, 2006
Preview "LOVE"
AS YOU'VE NEVER HEARD THEM BEFORE
The new album LOVE is coming - and to coincide with the release, you can hear an exclusive preview of four of the tracks at TheBeatles.com!
Strawberry Fields Forever Lady Madonna Octopus's Garden While My Guitar Gently Weeps
As a registered member of thebeatles.com, your email address will give you access to the music - just click HERE for the homepage and follow the on-screen instructions.
ABOUT THE ALBUM
The album features 26 tracks re-worked by George and Giles Martin for the LOVE show in Las Vegas, an incredible music and visual experience created out of the collaboration between The Beatles and Cirque Du Soleil. The result is an unprecedented approach to the music.
LOVE will be released on Monday November 20th. The stereo CD will contain 78 minutes of music, and features 26 tracks.
Simultaneously released will be a special 2 disc edition that will include the stereo CD and an Audio only DVD containing a slightly extended version in amazing 5.1 surround sound.
CLICK HERE TO PREVIEW THE FOUR EXCLUSIVE TRACKS
You can pre-order the album from your local retailer or from the official online store here now:THE BEATLES STORE
Many thanks.
TheBeatles.com
Monday, October 30, 2006
The Space Within US Review
By Gloria Goodale
BILL BERNSTEIN/A&E Paul McCartney: The Space Within Us (A&E Networks, Saturday, 10 p.m. EST): Beatlemaniac alert! Take a Magical Mystery detour from the divorce headlines dogging Sir Paul and experience the sheer fun and listening pleasure of classic Lennon/McCartney songs, as well as a sprinkling of Wings and solo McCartney material. While it provides plenty of music, this hour-long documentary based on McCartney's 2005 US tour is more of a concept film than a traditional concert flick. It opens with the former Beatle musing about the nature of creativity, outer space, and the scientific underpinnings of music. This cosmic perspective plays out in McCartney's live, onstage musical wake-up call of "Good Day Sunshine" to the International Space Station during a California concert. The hour includes an eclectic mix of notables reminiscing (including President Clinton and Tony Bennett) as well as numerous surprisingly sweet meet-and-greets with McCartney and his starstruck fans. This is the best sort of family entertainment, one that allows multiple generations to bond over a genuine cultural icon. Watch it and sing along with the ecstatic crowds filmed by more than 25 HD cameras. Even if you can remember a time when this music didn't exist, why would you want to? (This program will be released in an enhanced, two-hour DVD format on Nov. 14). Grade: A
Paul and Linda marriage claims 'rubbish', says Carla
Writer and vegetarian campaigner Carla Lane has spoken out about Paul McCartney's first marriage - saying there were no problems.She made the comments after it was suggested that Linda McCartney discussed the relationship in tapes with her friend Peter Cox.Lane, 69, who was one of Linda's best friends, said: "It's just a load of rubbish."All I say is, if Paul did anything that was not nice, Linda would have told me, and she never did."She told Radio 4's Woman's Hour: "Linda told me all things. I mean, if he had a little mood she would say 'oh, he's in a mood', you know."But she never did say anything that gave me the impression that she didn't care about him."The former Beatle's marriage to Linda, who died in 1998 from cancer, was believed to be one of the strongest in showbusiness.This weekend McCartney and estranged wife Heather Mills put aside their differences to attend their daughter Beatrice's third birthday party.McCartney, 64, recently spoke of his increasingly bitter divorce, saying it was a "very difficult" time for him.Speaking before the storm caused by the anonymous leaking of legal papers containing allegations that he mistreated Heather, he said he was hoping for a "happy resolution".
The Best Seats for the Best Fans
-FANS ONLY TICKET OFFER FOR ECCE COR MEUM PREMIERE
The World Premiere performance of Ecce Cor Meum takes place this Friday November 3rd at The Royal Albert Hall in London and we want to make sure Paul’s fans get the best seats in the house! Having just finished allocating tickets for Paul's guests, we have realised that we have some of the very best seats left over for this very special evening. Therefore, we want to offer them to YOU, the McCartney fanbase of PM.com, instead of just putting them back on sale to the general public. There will be a limited booking period so be sure to get in there first! The PM.com ticket offer works as follows:
PM.com users should call the main Royal Albert Hall box office from 9am tomorrow morning (31/10/06), and identify themselves as 'PM.com Subscribers'. You will then be offered the exclusive opportunity to purchase these last remaining best few seats. THE IMPORTANT DETAILS Royal Albert Hall Main Box Office No: 0207 589 8212
ID Code : 'PM.com Subscribers' Offer expires: Wednesday November 1st, 1pm (GMT)
Sunday, October 29, 2006
Stella rages against stepmother
Stella McCartney flew into a rage, screaming "I'll kill the bitch" during her father Paul McCartney's bitter divorce war with his second wife, a British newspaper has reported.
Pregnant Stella McCartney reportedly had to be restrained by the former Beatle at the family home upon hearing that Heather Mills had claimed Sir Paul hit his first wife, Linda, who is Stella's late mother.
"I can't believe what she's doing, I'm going to kill her," a source quoted Stella as saying in Sunday's News of the World.
"She's been a manipulative cow from day one.
"The cow won't be happy until she destroys all of us - and our memories of our mother."
McCartney and Mills, 37, had their first face-to-face meeting in more than four months on Saturday at their daughter Beatrice's third birthday party, but kept their distance from one another.
Meanwhile, a friend of Linda said McCartney and Linda's marriage was not as idyllic as many believed and she sometimes became depressed about their relationship.
McCartney was controlling and Linda sometimes thought of leaving the marriage, Peter Cox told the Mail on Sunday in London.
"There were moments when Linda would feel deeply unhappy and depressed about her marriage," said Cox, who has audio tapes that Linda made about her life and relationship with McCartney while working with Cox on a vegetarian cookbook.
"Every marriage has its ups and downs, of course. In her low moments, the idea of leaving him did cross her mind, but she immediately rejected it.
"Her family was the most important thing in her life and there was no way she'd give them up. At the low points, she did feel trapped."
Cox has given an undertaking to McCartney's lawyers that he will not divulge the contents of the tapes. However, there has been speculation that they might yet play a part in the former Beatle's increasingly bitter divorce from Mills.
Mills alleges that McCartney was violent towards her during their four-year marriage, claims he has vigorously denied.
British newspapers reported last week that Mills, a former model, had told friends she believed she had damning information about McCartney and Linda's 29-year marriage, including that he attacked her.
Linda died of breast cancer in 1998.
The Mail on Sunday said it was not thought Linda referred to domestic abuse on any of the 19 tapes she made and gave to Cox.
Cox said McCartney had "a darker side and could be very controlling. Linda often had to dance attendance upon him. He bossed her around".
"It struck me that she didn't have ready access to money," he said.
"For instance, I would often lend her a fiver or a tenner for groceries."
But he said he had no doubt Linda loved McCartney.
"Whatever the strange dynamic of their relationship, Linda was the only one Paul could open up to," said Cox.
"She was like a mother to him. I have no doubt she loved him enormously, despite their problems."
Saturday, October 28, 2006
McCartney Mess End of Era for Some Fans
'You can knit a sweater by the fireside, Sunday mornings go for a ride.' It was an idyllic picture of marriage in the golden years that Paul McCartney sang of in the 1967 Beatles hit 'When I'm 64.'
It also was an image that McCartney _ now 64, as it happens _ epitomized in his own life for years, showing a turbulent world that even a rock star could have what was by all appearances a loving, stable, long-lasting family life with his first wife, Linda, ending only with her death from cancer in 1998.
Now, British tabloids are buzzing with unsavory allegations connected to the sensational divorce of McCartney and his second wife, Heather Mills McCartney, with unsubstantiated claims flying of physical abuse, callousness, an alleged assault with a broken wine glass by him, a bottle of ketchup thrown by her.
There may well not be an iota of truth among them. Yet the public airing of this nasty dispute is depressing to many who've followed McCartney _ the optimistic one who wanted to 'fill the world with silly love songs' _ for four decades of music and life (and briefly, rumored death.) For some of these fans, it even signals an end to an arc that began with heady innocence, then met tragedy with the murder of John Lennon, more sadness with the death of George Harrison, and now, on a smaller scale, Paul's ugly mess.
'I am amazed, and yet not really surprised, that their lives have spiraled this way,' says John Pisani, a longtime fan who, at 57, is just seven years younger than Paul and part of the Baby Boomer generation that grew up with the Beatles. 'It kind of mirrors the way the world has changed for all of us, the way we feel about our lives. Their early music was so innocent. And now, life is so insane.'
'It just makes sense to me that Paul is going through this,' said Pisani, a housepainter in Cape Cod, Mass. 'But I wouldn't wish it on anybody. And I feel bad for both of them.'
Many people find the mere discussion distasteful, preferring to let the sordid case speak for itself in the tabloids. 'It's just sad, for all this to go so bad so quickly,' said Jason Fine, deputy managing editor at Rolling Stone magazine. Like others interviewed, he noted how so many long admired McCartney for the strength of his first marriage.
'They were such a unit,' Fine says. 'They had made it through those times when so many people got divorced. And they worked together, too _ it was a partnership.'
Also unfortunate, Fine says, is that the messy divorce comes at a time when McCartney, one of two surviving Beatles along with Ringo Starr, is on a creative upswing, with a well-received album last year, 'Chaos and Creation in the Backyard,' that was 'really a refreshing record.'
'He seems to have come back into the creative spotlight,' says Fine. 'It's a shame that this is happening now.'
A shame, but will this affect McCartney's image or legacy in any lasting way? Hardly likely, says Bruce Spizer, author of six books about the Beatles.
'Most people understand that Paul, like any person, has faults, but they know him as a family man, based on the wonderful marriage he had with Linda,' said Spizer. 'So they would take all this with extreme skepticism.' Of the Beatles fans he's heard discussing it, he says a good 90 percent don't believe the reported allegations against Paul.
Steven Beer, an entertainment attorney in New York, falls into that camp. 'I believe you can't always accept what you read or hear,' says Beer, 47. 'What we're seeing here is just the negative gamesmanship that divorce brings. Maybe he had bad judgment in his choice of a partner, but in my mind, Paul McCartney continues to be a rock 'n' roll icon with a positive character.
'He's a responsible Dad,' Beer adds. 'He doted on his wife Linda. He even put her in his band! What more could you want? He deserves a medal for that.'
Certainly McCartney isn't the first celebrity to have dirty laundry aired from a relationship gone sour. And yet if the celebrity is well-liked _ or in the case of a Beatle, loved _ these scandals tend to be mere blips on the screen, says Ken Baker, West Coast executive editor of the celebrity magazine US Weekly.
'The public will forgive a beloved celebrity for just about anything, save murder,' said Baker. 'It's this mesmerizing force that celebrities have. People see them as part of their extended family.'
'The world loves Paul, and people are gonna love Paul pretty much whatever they read,' he said. And in a he-said she-said matchup, it's no contest: 'People are going to believe the person they like and the person they know.'
Kenyon Phillips, 31, finds it hard to believe all the messy details reported by the media, basically because McCartney, in his eyes, was maybe too nice _ a 'wimp,' actually.
'Paul was more the goody-goody,' says Phillips, founder of a New Wave band called Unisex Salon. 'He was never the cool one.' That, he says, was Lennon, who had 'that air of menace. It was sexy, and dangerous.'
However the divorce plays out, fans like Pisani, the housepainter in Massachusetts, hope that one thing won't be forgotten: the Beatles' music.
'Their music came into our lives,' he said. 'If it hadn't, we'd be even more crazy now. It's so easy to focus on the scandal. But it's important not to forget the wonderfulness of what they did create.
'It's just so important to remember what felt good about a Beatles song.'
It also was an image that McCartney _ now 64, as it happens _ epitomized in his own life for years, showing a turbulent world that even a rock star could have what was by all appearances a loving, stable, long-lasting family life with his first wife, Linda, ending only with her death from cancer in 1998.
Now, British tabloids are buzzing with unsavory allegations connected to the sensational divorce of McCartney and his second wife, Heather Mills McCartney, with unsubstantiated claims flying of physical abuse, callousness, an alleged assault with a broken wine glass by him, a bottle of ketchup thrown by her.
There may well not be an iota of truth among them. Yet the public airing of this nasty dispute is depressing to many who've followed McCartney _ the optimistic one who wanted to 'fill the world with silly love songs' _ for four decades of music and life (and briefly, rumored death.) For some of these fans, it even signals an end to an arc that began with heady innocence, then met tragedy with the murder of John Lennon, more sadness with the death of George Harrison, and now, on a smaller scale, Paul's ugly mess.
'I am amazed, and yet not really surprised, that their lives have spiraled this way,' says John Pisani, a longtime fan who, at 57, is just seven years younger than Paul and part of the Baby Boomer generation that grew up with the Beatles. 'It kind of mirrors the way the world has changed for all of us, the way we feel about our lives. Their early music was so innocent. And now, life is so insane.'
'It just makes sense to me that Paul is going through this,' said Pisani, a housepainter in Cape Cod, Mass. 'But I wouldn't wish it on anybody. And I feel bad for both of them.'
Many people find the mere discussion distasteful, preferring to let the sordid case speak for itself in the tabloids. 'It's just sad, for all this to go so bad so quickly,' said Jason Fine, deputy managing editor at Rolling Stone magazine. Like others interviewed, he noted how so many long admired McCartney for the strength of his first marriage.
'They were such a unit,' Fine says. 'They had made it through those times when so many people got divorced. And they worked together, too _ it was a partnership.'
Also unfortunate, Fine says, is that the messy divorce comes at a time when McCartney, one of two surviving Beatles along with Ringo Starr, is on a creative upswing, with a well-received album last year, 'Chaos and Creation in the Backyard,' that was 'really a refreshing record.'
'He seems to have come back into the creative spotlight,' says Fine. 'It's a shame that this is happening now.'
A shame, but will this affect McCartney's image or legacy in any lasting way? Hardly likely, says Bruce Spizer, author of six books about the Beatles.
'Most people understand that Paul, like any person, has faults, but they know him as a family man, based on the wonderful marriage he had with Linda,' said Spizer. 'So they would take all this with extreme skepticism.' Of the Beatles fans he's heard discussing it, he says a good 90 percent don't believe the reported allegations against Paul.
Steven Beer, an entertainment attorney in New York, falls into that camp. 'I believe you can't always accept what you read or hear,' says Beer, 47. 'What we're seeing here is just the negative gamesmanship that divorce brings. Maybe he had bad judgment in his choice of a partner, but in my mind, Paul McCartney continues to be a rock 'n' roll icon with a positive character.
'He's a responsible Dad,' Beer adds. 'He doted on his wife Linda. He even put her in his band! What more could you want? He deserves a medal for that.'
Certainly McCartney isn't the first celebrity to have dirty laundry aired from a relationship gone sour. And yet if the celebrity is well-liked _ or in the case of a Beatle, loved _ these scandals tend to be mere blips on the screen, says Ken Baker, West Coast executive editor of the celebrity magazine US Weekly.
'The public will forgive a beloved celebrity for just about anything, save murder,' said Baker. 'It's this mesmerizing force that celebrities have. People see them as part of their extended family.'
'The world loves Paul, and people are gonna love Paul pretty much whatever they read,' he said. And in a he-said she-said matchup, it's no contest: 'People are going to believe the person they like and the person they know.'
Kenyon Phillips, 31, finds it hard to believe all the messy details reported by the media, basically because McCartney, in his eyes, was maybe too nice _ a 'wimp,' actually.
'Paul was more the goody-goody,' says Phillips, founder of a New Wave band called Unisex Salon. 'He was never the cool one.' That, he says, was Lennon, who had 'that air of menace. It was sexy, and dangerous.'
However the divorce plays out, fans like Pisani, the housepainter in Massachusetts, hope that one thing won't be forgotten: the Beatles' music.
'Their music came into our lives,' he said. 'If it hadn't, we'd be even more crazy now. It's so easy to focus on the scandal. But it's important not to forget the wonderfulness of what they did create.
'It's just so important to remember what felt good about a Beatles song.'
McCartney moves to silence Linda's audio tapes during divorce battle
Former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney, who is in the midst of an acrimonious divorce battle with his second wife, Heather Mills, has reportedly warned his late first wife Linda's close pal Peter Cox, that he might have to face legal action if the contents of her audio tapes were disclosed.
Cox, who co-wrote the book 'Linda McCartney's Home Cooking' in 1989, was given the 15 cassettes containing an audio record of her ideas.
According to British newspaper the Daily Mirror, the 20-hour long recording also contain revelations of her marriage to McCartney, which he now wants to keep secret in the light of his bitter divorce battle with estranged wife Heather Mills.
An insider has revealed that McCartney's management company MPL Communications and Cox have now entered into an agreement to keep the content of audio tapes confidential.
"They're dynamite. Linda begins to unburden her troubles and the tapes become an audio diary," Contactmusic quoted the source as saying.
"It's a private and emotional confessional. She vents feelings which she'd not dared share even with her closest loved ones. She found the tapes cathartic. Mr Cox has been silenced and the tapes remain a secret," the source added.
Thursday, October 26, 2006
Paul McCartney World Tour Rumour
by Tim Cashmere
Paul McCartney may be gearing up for a new world tour, which could
include Australia for the first time since 1991, according to The
Evening Standard.
"Paul is going on a five-month world tour at the end of next year to get
over Heather. But it is also rather a convenient way of recouping the
losses he will make in the divorce courts." A "friend" of the star told
the paper.
"He'll take in the USA, Australia, Japan and some of Europe as well. He
plans to take Beatrice with him for some of the shows, which Heather has
agreed to."
McCartney was due to perform a one off show in Melbourne, Australia in
2002, but cancelled thanks to the Bali bombings.
Paul McCartney may be gearing up for a new world tour, which could
include Australia for the first time since 1991, according to The
Evening Standard.
"Paul is going on a five-month world tour at the end of next year to get
over Heather. But it is also rather a convenient way of recouping the
losses he will make in the divorce courts." A "friend" of the star told
the paper.
"He'll take in the USA, Australia, Japan and some of Europe as well. He
plans to take Beatrice with him for some of the shows, which Heather has
agreed to."
McCartney was due to perform a one off show in Melbourne, Australia in
2002, but cancelled thanks to the Bali bombings.
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Paul McCartney offers 'US' his heart
Paul McCartney may be a baby-boomer icon, but these days, his concert audiences also can include babies. Literally.
"Sometimes I want to tell the mother, 'Get that child home and to bed,' " he quips.
The 64-year-old rocker's multi-generational appeal is documented in Paul McCartney: The Space Within US, a concert DVD due Nov. 14, featuring live performances and previously unreleased footage from his sold-out 2005 tour. Cable network A&E airs an hour-long special Saturday (10 p.m. ET/PT).
The special arrives at a time of personal strife for McCartney, who is enduring an increasingly nasty divorce from Heather Mills. Tawdry tabloid reports surface with regularity.
In a statement issued last week, McCartney's lawyers said, "Our client is saddened by the breakdown of his marriage and requests that his family is allowed to conduct their personal affairs out of the media spotlight for the sake of everybody involved."
Asked directly about his separation, McCartney allows, "It's a very difficult time for me. But with the support of my friends and family, I'm managing to get through."
One gets the sense from Space that work also has been a source of comfort. The DVD features interviews with celebrities expressing admiration for McCartney, while clips recount events such as his wake-up call to the International Space Station last year. McCartney's crewmembers and less-famous fans also get camera time.
"There was a warm, intense feeling, almost like one of family," McCartney says of his interaction with audience members. He had decided to call last year's U.S. trek The US Tour "as a bit of a play on words. But it became even more significant as we got this fantastic feedback."
McCartney has hardly been idle since the tour wrapped. He released his fourth classical CD earlier this month, Ecce Cor Meum (in Latin, "Behold my heart"), an oratorio in four movements composed for choir and orchestra.
"It's my first choral work, strictly speaking," he says of the piece, commissioned more than eight years ago by Anthony Smith, then-president of Oxford's Magdalen College. "It was a huge learning experience, and a great challenge. I'm just a fool; I accept something before I even think about what I've taken on. Then I think, 'How am I going to do this?' "
Ecce, which premieres at London's Royal Albert Hall on Nov. 3 and makes its U.S. premiere Nov. 14 at New York's Carnegie Hall, was recorded by soprano Kate Royal, the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields and boys' choirs from Magdalen College and King's College in Cambridge.
"It was funny, because Magdalen and King's Colleges are kind of rivals," says McCartney, who once sang in a children's choir. "I quite liked the idea of bringing them together in the interest of peace. I said that, when they were all standing there, that it was great bringing the colleges together. And one of the kids said, 'Yeah, it's great — it's war!' I'm not quite sure he got the idea. But these guys were all great singers. We had a lot of fun."
Writing Ecce was more sobering, interrupted in 1998 when McCartney's first wife, Linda, lost her battle with breast cancer.
"When Linda died, the piece stopped," he says. "After a few months of grieving, I managed to get back in. and pick it up. I remember sitting at the keyboards, crying — more like weeping, actually. It was kind of therapeutic. I still find it a very sad piece of music, but in an uplifting way."
McCartney doesn't say whether his current works in progress, which include both a pop album and "a new project in the classical field," are providing relief from his situation with Mills.
"I'm just hoping for a happy resolution," he says, "particularly for the sake of our beautiful daughter, Beatrice, and my other children, who are all beautiful. Fingers crossed."
McCartney to tour to pay for millions in alimony
Even with the best divorce lawyers in the land, Heather Mills is never going to leave Paul McCartney on his uppers.
But it seems Sir Paul - who is worth some £800 million - clearly doesn't feel his financial future is all that secure.
The former Beatle has revealed to friends that he plans to spend half of next year on an extended world tour which could gross as much as £60 million.
Estimates of the share of McCartney's fortune Heather may come away with have ranged from £30 million to as much as £200 million.
"Paul is going on a five-month world tour at the end of next year to get over Heather. But it is also rather a convenient way of recouping the losses he will accrue in the divorce courts", said a friend last night.
As part of the divorce arrangement McCartney is also hoping to take the couple's baby Beatrice on tour with him.
Heather is said to be angered by his decision to tour, not least because the tour will ostensibly be used to promote his new album of chamber music Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart), which he has dedicated to his late wife Linda.
The tour will set off during the last five months of 2007. Sir Paul and his band will head to the States, Japan and Australia and will also do some dates in Europe.
McCartney is understood to have made plans for the new tour only in recent weeks when it became more evident that the split was heading further into acrimony. McCartney only finished his last major tour in October of last year in the US.
A friend of Sir Paul's said: "Paul is going on a five-month world tour at the end of next year to get over Heather. But it is also rather a convenient way of recouping the losses he will make in the divorce courts.
"He'll take in the USA, Australia, Japan and some of Europe as well. He plans to take Beatrice with him for some of the shows, which Heather has agreed to.
"The one thing Paul uses that helps him through the bad times is his music. His tour will put a line under Heather and signify his new start in life."
Speaking publicly of how he felt for the first time since the split in recent weeks, Sir Paul said: "I'm doing fine. I am enjoying music. It’s something I love to do. It's something that sustains me."
He has spoken of how the new album was dedicated to the memory of his beloved wife Linda, who died of breast cancer in 1998.
He said he poured his pain into the new album and used it as a way to overcome his sadness. "It started when Linda was alive. It has a lot of my feelings for her in it," he said.
Since his break-up with Heather in May of this year, Sir Paul has found time to complete the project which proved too painful to complete after Linda's death.
In recent months, Sir Paul has also, say friends, rediscovered his love of live music Asked about the prospect of a new world tour, McCartney's spokesman said: "No comment".
But it seems Sir Paul - who is worth some £800 million - clearly doesn't feel his financial future is all that secure.
The former Beatle has revealed to friends that he plans to spend half of next year on an extended world tour which could gross as much as £60 million.
Estimates of the share of McCartney's fortune Heather may come away with have ranged from £30 million to as much as £200 million.
"Paul is going on a five-month world tour at the end of next year to get over Heather. But it is also rather a convenient way of recouping the losses he will accrue in the divorce courts", said a friend last night.
As part of the divorce arrangement McCartney is also hoping to take the couple's baby Beatrice on tour with him.
Heather is said to be angered by his decision to tour, not least because the tour will ostensibly be used to promote his new album of chamber music Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart), which he has dedicated to his late wife Linda.
The tour will set off during the last five months of 2007. Sir Paul and his band will head to the States, Japan and Australia and will also do some dates in Europe.
McCartney is understood to have made plans for the new tour only in recent weeks when it became more evident that the split was heading further into acrimony. McCartney only finished his last major tour in October of last year in the US.
A friend of Sir Paul's said: "Paul is going on a five-month world tour at the end of next year to get over Heather. But it is also rather a convenient way of recouping the losses he will make in the divorce courts.
"He'll take in the USA, Australia, Japan and some of Europe as well. He plans to take Beatrice with him for some of the shows, which Heather has agreed to.
"The one thing Paul uses that helps him through the bad times is his music. His tour will put a line under Heather and signify his new start in life."
Speaking publicly of how he felt for the first time since the split in recent weeks, Sir Paul said: "I'm doing fine. I am enjoying music. It’s something I love to do. It's something that sustains me."
He has spoken of how the new album was dedicated to the memory of his beloved wife Linda, who died of breast cancer in 1998.
He said he poured his pain into the new album and used it as a way to overcome his sadness. "It started when Linda was alive. It has a lot of my feelings for her in it," he said.
Since his break-up with Heather in May of this year, Sir Paul has found time to complete the project which proved too painful to complete after Linda's death.
In recent months, Sir Paul has also, say friends, rediscovered his love of live music Asked about the prospect of a new world tour, McCartney's spokesman said: "No comment".
Monday, October 23, 2006
McCARTNEY TO PREMIERE LINDA CONCERTO
SIR PAUL McCARTNEY's London premiere of a concerto written for his late wife LINDA will go ahead next month (NOV06), despite his bitter divorce battle with HEATHER MILLS.
ECCE COR MEUM has taken McCartney eight years to write, as he stopped working on the concerto after marrying ex-model Mills in 2002.
The piece is dedicated to wife Linda who died of breast cancer in 1998, and will premiere at the Royal Albert Hall on 3 November (06).
McCartney says, "It'd be nice if everyone did everything you want them to do but it's never going to be like that. You've just got to understand: these are the rules, so let's deal with the reality of it. Life goes on.
"I'm very proud of it and I want people to hear it. So I have to get out and talk about it but I was thinking to myself, 'Why do I do this? Is this just an ego trip?' Then I realised that I do it because I get phoned up by people asking me to do it.
Asked why he abandoned the concerto in 2002, he says, "I wanted to (continue), but I was married to someone else, it wasn't appropriate.
"Linda runs through this piece, it was written with her in mind."
ECCE COR MEUM has taken McCartney eight years to write, as he stopped working on the concerto after marrying ex-model Mills in 2002.
The piece is dedicated to wife Linda who died of breast cancer in 1998, and will premiere at the Royal Albert Hall on 3 November (06).
McCartney says, "It'd be nice if everyone did everything you want them to do but it's never going to be like that. You've just got to understand: these are the rules, so let's deal with the reality of it. Life goes on.
"I'm very proud of it and I want people to hear it. So I have to get out and talk about it but I was thinking to myself, 'Why do I do this? Is this just an ego trip?' Then I realised that I do it because I get phoned up by people asking me to do it.
Asked why he abandoned the concerto in 2002, he says, "I wanted to (continue), but I was married to someone else, it wasn't appropriate.
"Linda runs through this piece, it was written with her in mind."
McCartneys both want to battle it out in open court
Sir Paul McCartney is prepared to face his wife in open court so he can defend himself against the claims in her divorce petition.
He has told friends the gloves are off and he is determined to fight to save his reputation.
Heather Mills's lawyers are said to be taking the unusual step of asking for the £825million divorce battle to be heard in open court.
If they succeed, explicit details of one of the most high-profile and bitter marriage break-ups will be aired in public.
A source close to Sir Paul said the former Beatle, who has a two-year-old daughter with Miss Mills, would not be afraid to face a public hearing.
"He will go all the way with this if need be. He will go to open court.
"He has nothing to be afraid of. But he will maintain a dignified silence for the moment.
"At the end of the day there is a little girl caught in the middle of this."
Miss Mills's lawyers are said to be applying for the case to be heard in open court next month.
A legal source told the Mail on Sunday: "She wants to lay bare everything that happened in the marriage and make sure everyone hears her side of the story."
Last week the Daily Mail exclusively revealed the bombshell allegations in Miss Mills's divorce papers.
She accuses her estranged husband of assaulting her on a number of occasions during their four-year marriage.
Miss Mills, 38, claims Sir Paul stabbed her in the arm with a broken wine glass, pushed her into a bath, grabbed her by the neck and pushed her over a coffee table.
She also says he drank to excess and took drugs.
Aides to Sir Paul, 64, claimed it was in fact Miss Mills who had been violent during their relationship.
An insider told The News of the World that staff at Sir Paul's 160-acre Peasmarsh estate had witnessed clashes between the couple.
One incident became known as the 'ketchup battle' after they found evidence that a bottle of tomato sauce had been flung at the place Sir Paul normally sits in September 2003.
He has told friends the gloves are off and he is determined to fight to save his reputation.
Heather Mills's lawyers are said to be taking the unusual step of asking for the £825million divorce battle to be heard in open court.
If they succeed, explicit details of one of the most high-profile and bitter marriage break-ups will be aired in public.
A source close to Sir Paul said the former Beatle, who has a two-year-old daughter with Miss Mills, would not be afraid to face a public hearing.
"He will go all the way with this if need be. He will go to open court.
"He has nothing to be afraid of. But he will maintain a dignified silence for the moment.
"At the end of the day there is a little girl caught in the middle of this."
Miss Mills's lawyers are said to be applying for the case to be heard in open court next month.
A legal source told the Mail on Sunday: "She wants to lay bare everything that happened in the marriage and make sure everyone hears her side of the story."
Last week the Daily Mail exclusively revealed the bombshell allegations in Miss Mills's divorce papers.
She accuses her estranged husband of assaulting her on a number of occasions during their four-year marriage.
Miss Mills, 38, claims Sir Paul stabbed her in the arm with a broken wine glass, pushed her into a bath, grabbed her by the neck and pushed her over a coffee table.
She also says he drank to excess and took drugs.
Aides to Sir Paul, 64, claimed it was in fact Miss Mills who had been violent during their relationship.
An insider told The News of the World that staff at Sir Paul's 160-acre Peasmarsh estate had witnessed clashes between the couple.
One incident became known as the 'ketchup battle' after they found evidence that a bottle of tomato sauce had been flung at the place Sir Paul normally sits in September 2003.
Sunday, October 22, 2006
P.S. I Don't Love You
LONDON -- The estranged wife of pop legend Paul McCartney has "tangible evidence" that he was physically aggressive toward her, a newspaper reported yesterday, as the British press continued its near-blanket coverage of the couple's increasingly bitter split.
The claim comes three days after newspapers published leaked divorce papers detailing Heather Mills McCartney's charges that the former Beatle beat her.
In the saga's latest twist, the Daily Mail quoted an unnamed source close to Mrs. Mills McCartney saying that the evidence she had was "dynamite."
"She reckons to have tangible evidence showing that Paul not only verbally attacked her, but also was physically aggressive.
"As well as charting much of the marriage breakdown on her digital camcorder and having witnesses who will testify to her claims, Heather has another killer piece of evidence in the form of an audio recording," the source said.
Mrs. Mills McCartney, 38, also may have "some kind of video recording of the pair [fighting]," the source added.
Documents that emerged last week stated that in 2002 while Mr. McCartney was in Los Angeles, he "grabbed her by the neck and pushed her over a coffee table."
The documents claimed that Mr. McCartney lunged at his wife with the broken stem of a wine glass, which cut her arm and made it bleed.
Mr. McCartney, 64, said in a statement through his attorneys that the only place for him to respond to the charges is in the divorce courts.
Observers of British society said that in an age when divorces are intended to be more "civilized," the McCartneys are proof that when the stakes get high, everything -- from matrimonial advice in the missus's own "life-skills" book to a mutual agreement not to use the press -- is abandoned.
When the McCartneys announced their separation in May, they blamed the pressures of "intolerable" press intrusion for the end of their four-year marriage. Mr. McCartney was married for 29 years to the former Linda Eastman, an American and a photographer who became part of his post-Beatles band, Wings. She died of cancer in April 1998.
The plans of the anonymous leaker of the McCartney court documents briefly stalled when Britain's Press Association and Bloomberg News received the fax but decided the confidential papers were too hot to handle because of divorce law, defamation and privacy.
By early evening on Tuesday, though, the court papers had found their way to the Daily Mail. After frantic late-night phone calls to contacts and even later checks with in-house lawyers, the paper spread the charges over the first four pages of its final edition.
"Heather: Macca 'beat me up'?," screamed the front-page headline, which began a four-day frenzy from rival newspapers for stories on the feuding couple.
Both sides last week denied all knowledge of who sent the fax.
The original document was 13 pages long, yet five pages apparently detailing some of Mrs. Mills McCartney's reputedly unsavory behavior were missing from the dossier sent to the press.
As the once loving and affectionate McCartneys slug it out, both employed formidable teams of lawyers and press consultants, the London Sunday Telegraph reported.
Mrs. Mills McCartney's publicist is Phil Hall, 51, who, during his days as editor of the News of the World, learned every trick in the book. But he insisted that neither his client nor her team was responsible for last week's leak.
Her aides are equally adamant that they had nothing to do with an incident in August when a photographer was apparently tipped off that Mrs. Mills McCartney, who lost a leg after a motorbike accident in 1993, was stranded outside the couple's North London home with her 2-year-old daughter after Mr. McCartney changed the locks.
At 27, Stuart Bell, Mr. McCartney's publicist, does not have Mr. Hall's experience. McCartney aides only said the leaked accusations against the former Beatle are false, but he will not participate in tit-for-tat claims aimed at harming his wife. She already has a reputation as a fantasist, the papers remind readers, for claiming to have been kidnapped and abused by a pedophile during her childhood.
Mr. McCartney's aides also denied being behind the stories that his estranged wife used to be a soft-porn star, or that she worked as an escort girl. She vehemently denies the claims, and they supposedly came as a shock to her husband.
Mrs. Mills McCartney's solicitor is Anthony Julius, 50, nicknamed "Anthony Genius." He won Princess Diana a $32 million settlement from Prince Charles when their marriage ended a decade ago.
Mr. McCartney's attorney is Fiona Shackleton, 50, who was Prince Charles's divorce lawyer and whose combination of toughness and charm earned her the nickname of "the Steel Magnolia."
The Mail and most other British newspapers devoted numerous column inches and photographs to the latest claims.
The Times reported that Mrs. Mills McCartney's accusation in the leaked divorce papers that Mr. McCartney forced her to stay in bed in the morning was contradicted by a self-help book she wrote while the couple was still together.
In the book "Life Balance: The Essential Keys to a Lifetime of Well Being," she wrote that "setting the alarm 30 minutes earlier each morning ... allows me a little bit of personal space before the day begins," the paper reported.
The book, published just months before the announcement of the breakup, reads: "Most of the disagreements in the world are due to misunderstandings or failing to see the other person's point of view."
Legal analysts warned that the apparent leak could leave the former model with a smaller slice of the beloved musician's estimated $1.6 billion fortune.
The claim comes three days after newspapers published leaked divorce papers detailing Heather Mills McCartney's charges that the former Beatle beat her.
In the saga's latest twist, the Daily Mail quoted an unnamed source close to Mrs. Mills McCartney saying that the evidence she had was "dynamite."
"She reckons to have tangible evidence showing that Paul not only verbally attacked her, but also was physically aggressive.
"As well as charting much of the marriage breakdown on her digital camcorder and having witnesses who will testify to her claims, Heather has another killer piece of evidence in the form of an audio recording," the source said.
Mrs. Mills McCartney, 38, also may have "some kind of video recording of the pair [fighting]," the source added.
Documents that emerged last week stated that in 2002 while Mr. McCartney was in Los Angeles, he "grabbed her by the neck and pushed her over a coffee table."
The documents claimed that Mr. McCartney lunged at his wife with the broken stem of a wine glass, which cut her arm and made it bleed.
Mr. McCartney, 64, said in a statement through his attorneys that the only place for him to respond to the charges is in the divorce courts.
Observers of British society said that in an age when divorces are intended to be more "civilized," the McCartneys are proof that when the stakes get high, everything -- from matrimonial advice in the missus's own "life-skills" book to a mutual agreement not to use the press -- is abandoned.
When the McCartneys announced their separation in May, they blamed the pressures of "intolerable" press intrusion for the end of their four-year marriage. Mr. McCartney was married for 29 years to the former Linda Eastman, an American and a photographer who became part of his post-Beatles band, Wings. She died of cancer in April 1998.
The plans of the anonymous leaker of the McCartney court documents briefly stalled when Britain's Press Association and Bloomberg News received the fax but decided the confidential papers were too hot to handle because of divorce law, defamation and privacy.
By early evening on Tuesday, though, the court papers had found their way to the Daily Mail. After frantic late-night phone calls to contacts and even later checks with in-house lawyers, the paper spread the charges over the first four pages of its final edition.
"Heather: Macca 'beat me up'?," screamed the front-page headline, which began a four-day frenzy from rival newspapers for stories on the feuding couple.
Both sides last week denied all knowledge of who sent the fax.
The original document was 13 pages long, yet five pages apparently detailing some of Mrs. Mills McCartney's reputedly unsavory behavior were missing from the dossier sent to the press.
As the once loving and affectionate McCartneys slug it out, both employed formidable teams of lawyers and press consultants, the London Sunday Telegraph reported.
Mrs. Mills McCartney's publicist is Phil Hall, 51, who, during his days as editor of the News of the World, learned every trick in the book. But he insisted that neither his client nor her team was responsible for last week's leak.
Her aides are equally adamant that they had nothing to do with an incident in August when a photographer was apparently tipped off that Mrs. Mills McCartney, who lost a leg after a motorbike accident in 1993, was stranded outside the couple's North London home with her 2-year-old daughter after Mr. McCartney changed the locks.
At 27, Stuart Bell, Mr. McCartney's publicist, does not have Mr. Hall's experience. McCartney aides only said the leaked accusations against the former Beatle are false, but he will not participate in tit-for-tat claims aimed at harming his wife. She already has a reputation as a fantasist, the papers remind readers, for claiming to have been kidnapped and abused by a pedophile during her childhood.
Mr. McCartney's aides also denied being behind the stories that his estranged wife used to be a soft-porn star, or that she worked as an escort girl. She vehemently denies the claims, and they supposedly came as a shock to her husband.
Mrs. Mills McCartney's solicitor is Anthony Julius, 50, nicknamed "Anthony Genius." He won Princess Diana a $32 million settlement from Prince Charles when their marriage ended a decade ago.
Mr. McCartney's attorney is Fiona Shackleton, 50, who was Prince Charles's divorce lawyer and whose combination of toughness and charm earned her the nickname of "the Steel Magnolia."
The Mail and most other British newspapers devoted numerous column inches and photographs to the latest claims.
The Times reported that Mrs. Mills McCartney's accusation in the leaked divorce papers that Mr. McCartney forced her to stay in bed in the morning was contradicted by a self-help book she wrote while the couple was still together.
In the book "Life Balance: The Essential Keys to a Lifetime of Well Being," she wrote that "setting the alarm 30 minutes earlier each morning ... allows me a little bit of personal space before the day begins," the paper reported.
The book, published just months before the announcement of the breakup, reads: "Most of the disagreements in the world are due to misunderstandings or failing to see the other person's point of view."
Legal analysts warned that the apparent leak could leave the former model with a smaller slice of the beloved musician's estimated $1.6 billion fortune.
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