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.'

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.

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".

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."

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.

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.

Saturday, October 21, 2006

Friends take sides in McCartney divorce battle



Friends of Paul McCartney and his estranged wife Heather Mills have become publicly embroiled in the warring pair's divorce battle.Last night the ex-Beatle said he would "vigorously" defend Heather's allegations in court but that he would maintain his silence until then.Today friends and former acquaintances of McCartney were defending him.Publicist Max Clifford said: "If this was an attempt by anybody to damage the reputation of Paul McCartney, I believe that it will fail."Heather was unpopular to start with and my belief is that she is even more unpopular now."Mr Clifford said Sir Paul was a "very private" man, adding: "He would hate to have his private life splashed all over the national press."He's been a superstar for 40-plus years and we've hardly known anything about his private life. The fact that this is personal, and on top of that it's so critical, that would make it even more traumatic for him."I've heard that he's been absolutely beside himself in the last 24 hours."Potentially it's very damaging ... fortunately for him, very few people seem to be believing it."He said refuting the allegations in court was the "most effective" way of maintaining Sir Paul's reputation.Heather's claims, apparently prepared by her lawyers as an answer to Sir Paul's divorce petition, were leaked to the media.Mr Clifford said: "I'm told that there are pages of the legal document which haven't been seen, that haven't been revealed. Who knows what might be coming out?"DJ and comic Peter Price, a friend of the McCartney family, told Sky News: "Paul was a very private man and will stay a private man, that's how he is. That causes a lot of problems for him."Heather's defenders include Lisa Norris, who met the pair while she was working as a TV producer on an awards show.She wrote in today's Daily Mail newspaper: "It seems to me that Heather's only crime is to be a strong, attractive woman who has made the most of what life has thrown at her."She has raised millions for amputees throughout the world, yet her name is mud. Which other disabled celebrity would attract such bile?"Time and again Heather has plucked triumph from the jaws of disaster. I'm sure she'll do it again and win a huge divorce settlement."I do hope so. God knows he can afford it and I reckon, if the truth were known, she's earned it."

Paul McCartney to Fight Allegations

Lawyers for Paul McCartney said Wednesday that the former Beatle will 'vigorously' defend himself against allegations made by his estranged wife, Heather Mills McCartney.
Britain's Daily Mail newspaper on Wednesday reported details of an alleged court document filed by Mills McCartney containing accounts of acrimony and mistreatment the couple's four-year marriage.
'Our client will be defending these allegations vigorously and appropriately,' law firm Payne Hicks Beach said in a statement.
The 64-year-old rocker and 38-year-old anti-land mine campaigner announced their separation in May after four years of marriage and have begun divorce proceedings in an increasingly acrimonious split. They have a 3-year-old daughter, Beatrice.
The Daily Mail published extracts from what it said was a court document filed by Mills McCartney in response to the former Beatle's divorce petition, lodged in July.
The alleged document contains a litany of allegations against the musician.
Mills McCartney's spokesman, Phil Hall, described the divorce proceedings as 'highly confidential' and said he could not confirm whether the document was genuine. He said Mills McCartney had been 'shocked' by the story in the Daily Mail.
Mishcon de Reya, the law firm representing Mills MCcartney in the divorce, said it would not comment on 'leaked or allegedly leaked documents.'
Paul McCartney's law firm said the musician 'would very much like to respond in public and in detail to the allegations made recently against him by his wife and published in the press but he recognizes, on advice, that the only correct forum for his response to the allegations made against him is in the current divorce proceedings.'
'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,' the statement added.

Throttled, stabbed in the arm and denied a bedpan

Paul McCartney and Heather Mills married on 11 June, 2002, in a lavish ceremony in a 17th-century castle in Ireland. But according to legal documents filed by Heather for the upcoming divorce hearing, their marriage had serious problems within four months. Here are extracts of the deposition filed by Heather.

October 2002: The petitioner loudly pointed out that the respondent was in a bad mood, in front of other people. When they returned home the petitioner and respondent began to argue about the petitioner's behaviour. The petitioner grabbed the respondent by the neck and pushed her over a coffee table. He then went outside and, in his drunken state, fell down a hill, cutting his arm.

12 May 2003: The couple were in a hotel in Rome when the petitioner behaved coldly towards the respondent, who was pregnant and who was distressed by a derogatory newspaper article about her. An argument ensued in which the petitioner became angry and pushed the respondent into the bath. The respondent suffered distress but was made to go to the petitioner's evening concert.

May 2003: Following the concert, in a fit of pique because the respondent refused to go to the aftershow party, the petitioner directed a female bodyguard to abandon the respondent, leaving her exposed to hordes of fans. The respondent was forced to take a 30 minute walk back to the hotel because no taxi was available.

August 2003: In Long Island the respondent asked the petitioner if he had been smoking marijuana. He became angry, grabbed her neck and started choking her.

October 2003: The petitioner often told the respondent when she was pregnant that he did not want her to breast-feed their child, making the comment "they are my breasts" and "I don't want a mouthful of breast milk".

19 November 2003: The petitioner required the respondent to defer an essential operation on her leg because it would have interfered with holiday plans.

19 December 2003: The respondent had a broken pelvic plate but petitioner insisted that she cook for him while she was on crutches, could barely move and was in agony.

Mid-November 2004: The petitioner failed to protect Ms Mills from adverse press reports despite being in a position to do so. The respondent was warned that a forthcoming article about her was about to come out in The Sunday Times magazine and included the line: "The best thing that ever happened to Heather Mills McCartney was losing her leg" which was distressing.
As the petitioner had been asked to participate in the half-time entertainment for the Superbowl on Fox TV owned by Rupert Murdoch (who also owns The Sunday Times), the respondent asked the petitioner to tell Mr Murdoch that he would not confirm his participation in the Superbowl unless he agreed not to run the story. The petitioner refused to assist in this way.

September/October 2005: The petitioner called Ms Mills an "ungrateful bitch" in front of their driver when she explained why an office he had provided was not right for her. Having refused to allow the respondent to use his spare office on the floor beneath their apartment, which would have allowed for a creche in one part of the office, the petitioner had insisted she use an office that was far too small and was 20 minutes walk away. When the respondent went to view it, she was chased by paparazzi and was so demoralised by the experience she never used the office.

22 April 2006: Shortly after the respondent's revision amputation surgery she was forced to crawl on her hands and knees up aeroplane steps because they were not wide enough to take her wheelchair. The petitioner had assured the respondent he had taken care of her disability needs in connection with the trip.

April 2006: An argument occurred during which the petitioner poured a bottle of red wine over the respondent's head and then threw what remained in his wine glass at her.

The petitioner then reached to grab the respondent's wine glass, and broke the bowl of the glass from the stem. He then lunged at the respondent with the sharp stem of the glass, which cut and pierced the respondent's arm just below the elbow causing her to bleed profusely. He proceeded to manhandle the respondent, flinging her into her wheelchair and wheeling it outside, screaming at her to apologise for "winding him up".

April 2006: The respondent asked the petitioner not to leave her alone with their daughter Beatrice at the Cabin (because it is isolated in a forest). She had just had surgery on her leg, was in a wheelchair, and was anxious about her ability to cope by herself. Notwithstanding this, he walked off. The respondent then telephoned the petitioner, and asked him to return. The petitioner mocked her pleas, mimicking the voice of a nagging spouse, and refused to return.

April 2006: It is alleged that Ms Mills found the petitioner, staggering, undressed him and ran the bath and helped him into it. She then phoned the petitioner's psychiatrist for advice and was told not to attempt to move him, to get a duvet and two pillows, to empty the bath of water, cover him, and leave him there.
The respondent thereupon dragged herself upstairs, on her hands and knees (she was unable to wear her prosthetic leg as the wound from surgery had not yet healed) and brought back down the pillows. She found that the petitioner had vomited on himself.
She rinsed him off, and got him out the bath. At that time the respondent had a broken plate in her pelvis and she was in agony.

27 and 28 April 2006: On 27 April the respondent knew the petitioner would be too hungover to help her with Beatrice and due to her own incapacity as a result of an operation, she had to call the babysitter to help get Beatrice to nursery.
The following day the petitioner went to London but said he would be back in time to help the put Beatrice to bed. He did not arrive back at her bedtime even though he knew the respondent
could not cope on her own.
The petitioner arrived home drunk and demanded dinner and called the respondent a nag.
That evening the respondent realised the marriage had irretrievably broken down and left, crawling on her hands and knees while dragging her wheelchair, crutches and basic personal possessions to the car.

No date given: The respondent asked the petitioner if she could buy an antique bedpan to keep under the bed at night so she wouldn't have to crawl to the bathroom when her prosthetic leg was not fitted.
The petitioner objected, saying it would be like being in "an old woman's home".

Thursday, October 19, 2006

PAUL McCARTNEY STATEMENT FROM PAYNE HICKS BEACH SOLICITORS


Source: PaulMcCartney.com

18th October 2006Since the breakdown of his marriage Sir Paul McCartney has maintained his silence in not commenting on the media stories believing that it was best for all concerned, particularly his children, for there to be some dignity in what is a private matter.Our client would very much like to respond in public and in detail to the allegations made recently against him by his wife and published in the press but he recognises, on advice, that the only correct forum for his response to the allegations made against him is in the current divorce proceedings. Our client will be defending these allegations vigorously and appropriately.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.

Love - The Beatles - Details

Love - The NEW Beatles CD

78 minutes

Details of The Beatles' new album 'LOVE' have been confirmed.The album, which is out on November 20, will be released in a CD/DVD format and will contain 78 minutes of 'new' Beatles material. As previously reported by NME.COM, the album was created by Sir George Martin and his son Giles Martin.The pair used master tapes of original Beatles recordings for a collaboration with Cirque Du Soleil.In a statement, Paul McCartney said: "This album puts The Beatles back together again, because suddenly there's John and George with me and Ringo."Ringo Starr added: "George and Giles did such a great job combining these tracks. It's really powerful for me and I even heard things I'd forgotten we'd recorded."The tracklisting for the album is:'Because''Get Back''Glass Onion''Eleanor Rigby'/'Julia' (Transistion)'I Am The Walrus''I Want To Hold Your Hand''Drive My Car'/' The Word'/'What You're Doing''Gnik Nus''Something'/'Blue Jay Way' (Transition)'Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite!'/'I Want You (She's So Heavy)'/ 'Helter Skelter''Help!''Blackbird'/'Yesterday''Strawberry Fields Forever''Within You Without You'/'Tomorrow Never Knows''Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds''Octopus's Garden''Lady Madonna''Here Comes The Sun'/'The Inner Light' (Transition)'Come Together'/'Dear Prudence'/'Cry Baby Cry' (Transition)'Revolution''Back In The USSR''While My Guitar Gently Weeps''A Day In The Life''Hey Jude''Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)''All You Need Is Love'

Amazon Link: http://www.amazon.com/Love-Beatles/dp/tracks/B000JK8OYU/ref=dp_tracks_all_1/104-2399738-7562347?ie=UTF8#disc_1

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

The Space Within US on A & E


In 2005, rock legend Paul McCartney crossed America with his record-breaking, sold out US tour. 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 Mir 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 ”
Rated: TVPG
Running Time: 60 Minutes
Genre:
Closed Captions: Yes

Upcoming Airings:
Saturday, October 28 @ 10pm/9C
Sunday, October 29 @ 2am/1C

Don't have A & E? Don't forget the next day it will be featured on our very own MaccaSpan TV!

Monday, October 16, 2006

MaccaSpan TV Update!



MaccaSpan TV is now BACK to using WMV format rather then Flash!
Check out the latest MaccaSpan TV episode, The Making of Give My Regards to Broad Street!

Also, MaccaSpan TV will be broadcasting Paul McCartney The Space Within US moments after it is aired on A&E!

Friday, October 13, 2006

The Space Within Us - A&E Press Release

Paul McCartney: The Space Within Us to Present Record-Breaking, Critically Hailed 2005 'US' Tour in Concert Special Made for DVD and Television

Never Before Released Concert and Behind the Scenes Footage Featured in October 28th A&E Television Special and on A&E Home Video DVD Release to Hit Stores November 14th


On Friday, September 16th, 2005, Miami's American Airlines Arena played host to Paul McCartney. It marked the opening of an all-new, totally sold-out, concert tour that highlighted yet more Beatles, Wings and solo music. It didn't take long for the 11-week, 34 show 'US' Tour to became the hottest concert ticket in America. As a matter of fact, by the time the tour hit the road there wasn't a seat available to the public. Those who were lucky enough to get a ticket heard Wings classics like "Too Many People," "Maybe I'm Amazed" and "Live And Let Die," Beatles classics "Magical Mystery Tour," "Good Day Sunshine," "Fixing A Hole," and "Helter Skelter" and music from Paul's solo career including "Fine Line," and "Jenny Wren." The 'US' Tour set list contained songs that had either never been performed on American soil before and others that hadn't been played live in nearly 15 years.
On Tuesday, November 14th Paul McCartney: The Space Within US will be released on DVD. The release, which will coincide with a one-hour A&E television special to air on Saturday, October 28th, will not only give those who missed US a better than front row seat to the concert, but will also bring those who were in the audience for the groundbreaking concert tour, behind the scenes.

Paul McCartney: The Space Between US DVD harnesses the power of more than 25 HD cameras and the thunder of 5.1 digital surround sound, for a two-hour epic concert experience of never-before released performance footage. 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, soundcheck 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.

Liner notes for the DVD were written by acclaimed film director and screenwriter, Cameron Crowe (Almost Famous, Jerry Maguire). This eagerly- anticipated DVD follows last year's acclaimed, Emmy® Award-winning and platinum-selling Paul McCartney in Red Square, which showcased the musical icon in his history-making Russian concert before an audience of 100,000.

Paul McCartney: The Space Within US will premiere on A&E® Network on October 27th. Delia Fine is the A&E executive producer and Ryan Harrington is the A&E Managing Producer. The film was directed and produced by Mark Haefeli of MHP, and produced by MPL Communications Ltd. in association with A&E Network.

A&E® Home Video, part of the Consumer Products Division of A&E Television Networks (AETN) is a video distributor of non-theatrical programming, featuring collectible VHS and DVD editions of the high quality programming from A&E® Network and The History Channel®, as well as acquired classic programming. A&E® Home Video brings the best of critically acclaimed entertainment presented in award-winning packaging to the special interest category

Paul McCartney - I'll Get You (live)

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Wednesday, October 11, 2006

McCartney Tops Autograph Charts


by Dave West

Sir Paul McCartney's signature is the most expensive of the ever-more-valuable celebrity autographs.

The former Beatle's signature, worth £125 in 1997, has since taken an incredible 900 per cent price-hike and is now valued at £1,250.

Fraser's Autograph Gallery began tracking an index of 100 personalities, including McCartney, Robbie Williams and Eighties pop star Richard Carpenter, in 1997. It has shown an overall rise of 204 per cent, with many names increasing by significantly more.

Chairman Paul Fraser said Sir Paul's secret was a steady reduction in the supply of his signature. "It's about scarcity," he explained. "McCartney used to sign a lot more than he does now, but the demand for all The Beatles is still very high, which is why his signature has risen so much.

"McCartney was always the second most popular Beatle after John Lennon and now that there are only two Beatles left, the value of his signature is at an all-time high," he continued, adding that, on the night of George Harrison's death, the value of his autograph quadrupled.

"Also it is rare to get hold of a genuine signature from Neil Armstrong, as he very quickly got fed up with autograph hounds and now hardly ever signs," Fraser added. "Pele is very rare to come by as he has never really signed and it now looks like he never will."

Monday, October 09, 2006

Break-In at MACCA'S


TWO intruders broke into Sir Paul McCartney's country estate and filmed themselves wandering up to his front door.
The trespassers calmly strolled around the grounds with a camera, videoing Macca's house and cars.
And then they posted their film on an internet site, complete with commentary. Macca, 64, is said to be furious that the two US tourists sneaked into his 933-acre estate at Peasmarsh, East Sussex, with such ease. The ex-Beatle, going through a bitter divorce from ex-model Heather Mills, has given staff at Woodlands Farm a dressing-down and ordered them to tighten-up security.

A source close to the singer said: "Macca is livid. He is supposed to have tight security to protect him and his family but this pair walked straight in. It's lucky they were harmless.
"He just didn't need something like this happening. The divorce is giving him enough stress."
The tourists managed to get on to Macca's land after walking down a public footpath that runs nearby.
It is not known whether the Sir Paul was in the house at the time.
In the shaky footage posted on the popular YouTube website, the Americans can be heard laughing nervously as the camera moves towards Macca's three-bedroom farmhouse Beanacres.
A woman's voice says: "This is it. This is his house. It's a beautiful house. It's beautiful. Oh God, we are going to be in so much trouble."
In a second clip muffled singing and music can be faintly heard. The Americans claim it is Macca himself.
The intrusion will evoke troubling memories for Sir Paul. In 1999, fellow ex-Beatle George Harrison was stabbed when schizophrenic Michael Abram broke into his Oxfordshire mansion.
And John Lennnon was shot dead by crazed fan Mark Chapman in New York in 1980. A security expert yesterday said the trespassers had demonstrated just how easy is was to get close to Sir Paul. Ex-detective Hamish Brown said: "Now he'll have to decide if he wants to make the estate like Ford Knox or not."
Macca, who is worth £750million, has previously complained that the public footpath runs too close to his house.
He built a luxurious £1million log cabin so he could have living quarters further away from the path.
A spokesman for Sir Paul last night declined to comment on the break-in.

The video clip that is currently on the internet...



The second clip

NEW FORUM IS UP!

Ok, the new forum is now up and running at http://www.maccaspan.com/forum

Forum being re-built


Ok, enough is enough! The forum is going down more then... Well, whatever!
The point is, the Forum is being re-built BACK on the MaccaSpan server.
ForumForFree has been a HUGE let down. I've emailed them and have heard
nothing back.
So once the the old forum is back up, I will start TRANSFERING messages from
the old board to the new.
As soon as the new forum is ready, I'll post a link to it.
Again, I'm SO sorry. ForumForFree should be ashamed.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Stella pays tribute to 'mum and dad'


As any Beatles fan will attest, in times of hardship, All You Need Is Love.
Paul McCartney and his fashion designer daughter Stella certainly believe that to be the case if this extraordinarily public display of affection for one another is anything to go by.

Sir Paul had been cheering on his daughter as her ready-to-wear collection made its debut at Paris Fashion Week before the pair were pictured in this tight embrace.
The former Beatle has been through a harrowing few months as his increasingly acrimonious split from Heather Mills heads towards the divorce courts.
The very public battle has evidently taken its toll on Sir Paul who has all but withdrawn from public life since the May break-up.
It quickly became apparent on this rare public outing yesterday that he was feeling rather low on hugs - and so he took the opportunity of congratulating Stella on her show to catch up on a few.
In what was clearly a swipe at her estranged stepmother, Stella publicly dedicated the show to 'Mum and dad' - a reference to Sir Paul and her beloved late mother Linda who lost her battle with breast cancer in 1998.
In a handwritten note posted backstage at the show, Stella wrote: "This show is dedicated to my husband and son... it is also for my mum and dad. It is only possible, though, because of my team that keeps getting better and better! x Stella."

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Sir Paul Wants to "GET BACK"


Rock veteran Sir Paul McCartney is hopeful he will regain the rights to The Beatles hits in 10 years, because copyright laws mean he will regain what is rightfully his.
McCartney, 64, was outbid by former friend Michael Jackson for the rights to the songs in 1985, who reportedly sold them on to Sony Records in recent years in a bid to get out of debt.
Currently, McCartney has to pay outsiders every time he wants to play Beatles tracks he wrote himself with former bandmate John Lennon.
He says, "In about the 10 years, a lot of it returns to me, just legally.
"Some of the important rights are about to return, which I didn't realise.
"You know what doesn't feel very good, is going on tour and paying to sing all my songs. Every time I sing Hey Jude, I've got to pay someone."

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Tony Bennett and Paul McCartney


Tony Bennett hits No. 1 in Canada

Tony Bennett
Legendary singer Tony Bennett crooned his way to the top spot on the Canadian album charts this week.
Bennett's "Duets: An American Classic," features Paul McCartney and others, debuted at No. 1 on sales of over 21,000, according to Nielsen SoundScan data.
The album includes a duet with Paul McCartney called, "The Very Thought Of You".


The mini (behind the scenes) video is available to watch at the MACCASPAN MINE!

Look for the video "Bennett and McCartney"

Forum down... AGAIN!

What the SMEG!!!

I am so pissed with forumforfree I can't even describe it!!

I may have to go BACK to hosting the MaccaSpan board on
the MaccaSpan main server. But I don't want to do that
because of all the email errors... Plus starting over AGAIN!?!

Hopefully, the board will return soon!

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

"LOVE" Album to be released


"LOVE" ALBUM TO BE RELEASED

Apple Corps Ltd/EMI Music proudly announces the release of LOVE, the new CD from The Beatles, due November 2006.
After being asked by the remaining Beatles, Ringo and Paul along with Yoko Ono Lennon and Olivia Harrison, to make experimental mixes from the original master tapes for a collaboration with Cirque du Soleil, Sir George Martin, The Beatles legendary producer, and his son Giles Martin have been working with the entire archive of Beatles recordings to create LOVE.
The result is an unprecedented approach to the music. Using the master tapes at EMI's Abbey Road Studios, Sir George and Giles have created a unique soundscape. The release of this album, which is also featured in the Cirque Du Soleil/Beatles collaborative production of the same name at the Mirage in Las Vegas, has been much anticipated.
"This music was designed for the LOVE show in Las Vegas but in doing so we've created a new Beatles album" said Sir George. "The Beatles always looked for other ways of expressing themselves and this is another step forward for them."
Giles continues, "We took all the Beatles' catalogue from tape, the original four tracks, eight tracks and two tracks and used this palette of sounds and music to create a sound bed. What people will be hearing on the album is a new experience, a way of re-living the whole Beatles musical lifespan in a very condensed period".
The album will be released worldwide in November 2006. Additional information, including a track listing will be available shortly.
Many thanks.
TheBeatles.com

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Chaos and Mystery in the Backyard

Chaos and Creation in The Backyard' has become the focus of fans searching frantically for clues to the reasons for the former Beatle's marital breakdown. This follows claims in the press that the scathing lyrics of 'Riding to Vanity Fair' were addressed to his wife Heather Mills McCartney.
When the album was released, one critic in The Guardian described another track 'At the Mercy' as sounding "bewildered and despairing".
The lyrics throughout 'Chaos and Creation in The Backyard' certainly provide much material for speculation.
In an interview with Line Abrahamian published last year in the Reader's Digest, McCartney was quoted as saying: "Normally, if I'm hurt, I just swallow it and get on with my life. That's the kind of person I am - I just repress it.
But what I've found myself doing more on this album is to put those feelings into the song. So that particular song ('Riding to Vanity Fair') is about all the times when I've offered friendship to someone and it's been rejected, which happens to everyone, all the time."
On the BBC Radio 4 programme Front Row, broadcast in August 2005, McCartney admitted that 'Chaos and Creation in The Backyard' was a 'very personal album', adding: "I think it's a bit like therapy writing stuff. I remember, on many occasions, you'd just be so fed up that you'd have to go off into some little dark room somewhere and take your guitar. And it would be like talking to a therapist, you know. You're just moaning at the guitar. I've done it a million times.
I just go off often because I don't want to ... I don't want to let anyone hear me in this process. It's a bit embarrassing. It's a bit personal, you know. In the first ten minutes it may be terrible so you just…
I nearly always try and find the furthest away room, the darkest room, and go sit where I know no one will hear me. And then I just get my most personal thoughts out. And it may just change…
It may just turn into Desmond and Molly in the market place or it may just suddenly become symbolic of what I'm thinking. But often, you know, you just are moaning to your guitar."
The poignant image of a heartbroken Paul McCartney moaning to a guitar in a darkened room in 2002 is cruelly at odds with our memories of the triumphant young pop god of the 1960s.

(By John Vincent)