Fab: An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney (94 page)

Read Fab: An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney Online

Authors: Howard Sounes

Tags: #Rock musicians - England, #England, #McCartney, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Rock Musicians, #Music, #Rock, #Biography & Autobiography, #Paul, #Genres & Styles, #Composers & Musicians, #Biography

BOOK: Fab: An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney
10.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Startime’

Starvecrow Lane
see also
Peasmarsh

Stash, Prince

Staten Island University Hospital

‘Stella May Day’

Stephanie, Royston Ellis’s girlfriend

Stewart, Eric

Stewart, Gloria

Stewart, Malcolm

Stigwood, Robert

Stipanos, Alda Lupo

Stockhausen

Stonehenge

Stop and Smell the Roses

Stormsville

strawberries oceans ships forest

‘Strawberry Fields Forever’

Strawberry South Studios

Stuart, Hamish

Studio Three, Abbey Road

Studio Two, Abbey Road

Sue-John (Scruff)

Sullivan, Ed

Sun
, the

Sunbury Road (No. 10)

Sunday Night at the London Palladium

Sunday People
, the

Sunday Times

Sunset Boulevard (Bungalow Number Five)

Super Bowl

Super Bowl XXXV, New Orleans

Surrealistic Pillow
(Jefferson Airplane)

Sutcliffe, Millie

Sutcliffe, Pauline

Sutcliffe, Stuart

Suttner, Wolfgang ‘Wolfy’

Swan record label

Swinging Sound ’63

Sydney Morning Herald

Tagore, Rabindranath

tailoring shop, King’s Road

‘Take it Away’

Tangy Farm

Tannert, Christoph

Tanque Verde guest ranch

Tapestry
(Carole King)

Tavener, John

Tavener, Roger

Taylor, Alistair

Taylor, Derek

Taylor, James

Te Kanawa, Dame Kiri

‘Teddy Boy’

Teddy Boys

Teignmouth, Devon

‘Temporary Secretary’

Ten Card Brag, Paul playing

Tennessee

Terrill, Chris

Texas

Thames Reach

Thank U Very Much

‘Thank U Very Much’

Thank Your Lucky Stars
(TV show)

Thanksgiving Day

‘That Was Me’

‘That Would be Something’

‘That’ll Be the Day’

‘That’s All Right (Mama)’

Theatre of the Absurd

Theobald, Peter

‘There’s No Business Like Showbusiness’

‘Things We Said Today’

Thingumybob
(TV series)

‘Thingumybob’

‘Thinking of Linking’

Thomas Peacock School

Thomas, Chris

‘Those Were the Days’

Three Coins club, Manchester

‘Three Cool Cats’

The Three Musketeers

Thriller
(Michael Jackson)

Thrillington

Thunderclap Newman

‘Ticket to Ride’

‘Till There Was You’

Time
magazine

Time Out of Mind
(Bob Dylan)

The Times They Are A-Changin’
(Bob Dylan)

The Times

Tinsel (Shetland pony)

Tittenhurst Park

Toby (Cadwell’s dog)

Tokyo

Tommy
(musical)

‘Tomorrow Never Knows’

‘Tomorrow’

‘Too Many People’

Top Ten club

Top of the Pops

Toronto

Tower Ballroom, the

Town & Country
magazine

Townshend, Pete

Traffic

Transcendental Meditation (TM)

Traveling Wilburys

trick or treat, introduced to St John’s Wood

Trident studio

Trinder, Tommy

Tripping the Light Fantastic

Triumph (City investment firm)

‘Trying to Get to You’

Tucson

Tug of War

Tumbleweed, Billy

Tunick, Jonathan

Turnberry Isle Resort and Club (Miami)

Turner, Shelley

Turner, Tina

‘Tutti-Frutti’

TV Cartoons (TVC)

‘Twenty-Flight Rock’

Twickenham

Twiggy (Lawson)

‘Twist and Shout’

The Two Little Fairies

‘The Two of Us’

U2

Ubu Roi
(Alfred Jarry)

‘The Ugly Duckling’

ukulele

Ullman, Tracey

‘Unchained Melody’

‘Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey’

Undertakers, the

Unfinished Music Number 1: Two Virgins

Unfinished Paintings and Objects
(art show)

United Artists

university concerts, impromptu

Unplugged

Up Against It
(Joe Orton script)

Upton Green (No. 25)

‘Used to Be Bad’

van Dijk, Walter

Vancouver

Vanity Fair
(Thackeray)

Vartan, Sylvie

Vaughan, David

Vaughan, Ivan (‘Ivy’)

Vaughan, Janet

Vee Jay record label

vegetarianism

veggie burgers

veggie sausages

veggie steak

venereal disease, contracted in Hamburg

Ventre, Ann

Venus and Mars

‘Venus and Mars’

Vermouth, Apollo C

VH-1 television company

Vicious, Sid

Vigars, Mark

Village Voice

Vincent, Gene

Visa sponsorship deal

Viva! (vegetarian group)

Vo!ce

Vollmer, Jürgen

Voormann, Klaus

‘W’, songs shaped as

Wagner, Richard

‘Wah Wah’

Waiting for the Beatles
(Carol Bedford)

Waldheim, Kurt

Waldorf-Astoria Hotel

Walker Art Gallery

‘Walking in the Park with Eloise’

Wall, Max

Waller, Gordon

Walters, Barbara

Walton Hospital

Walton Road

Wanderlust

‘Wanderlust’

Warhol, Andy

Warren-Knott, Donald

Washington Coliseum

Washington DC

Water
(1984)

Waterfall

see also
Peasmarsh

‘Waterfall’

Watermelon Bay

Watts, Charlie

Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders

‘The Wayward Wind’

‘We All Stand Together’

‘We Can Work it Out’

‘We Got Married’

Webb, Peter

Weinstein, Harvey

Weiss, Nat

Welch, Bruce

Weller, Paul

Wembley Arena

Wembley Stadium

Wenner, Jann

West 54th Street

West Malling, Kent

Western Avenue (No. 72)

Westport Beach

The Whale
(John Tavener)

‘What’s That You’re Doing?’

Wheal, Kevin

‘When I’m Sixty-Four’

‘When We Was Fab’

‘While My Guitar Gently Weeps’

Whistle Down the Wind
(movie)

White Album

‘The White Coated Man’

White, Andy

White, Michael John

White, Willard

Whitman, Slim

Whittaker, Maria

Whitten, Chris

Who, the

Who’s Next
(the Who)

‘Why Don’t We Do it in the Road?’

Wickens, ‘Wix’, Paul

Widdecombe Fair

Wigmore Hall

Wild Life

‘Wild Life’

Wild Prairie

Wilde, Marty

Wilk, Beverly

Williams, Allan

Williams, Angie
see
McCartney, Angie

Williams, Vaughan

Willis, Bobby

Willis, Alasdhair

Willis, Miller (grandson)

Wilson, Brian

Wilson, Harold

Wilson, Louis

Wilson, Marjorie

Wilson, Tony

Wimpole Street (No. 57)

Wingfield, Pete

Wings

abortive tour of Japan

Band on the Run

forming of

recording of
London Town

Wings Fun Club

Wings Over America tour

Wings Over Europe tour

Wings at the Speed of Sound

Wings Greatest

Wings Over America

Wingspan

Winn, Godfrey

Winn, Paul

Winter, Professor Gundolf

The Winter’s Tale

Winters, Mike and Bernie

Wirral the Squirrel

Wirral, the

‘With a Little Help from My Friends’

‘With a Little Luck’

With the Beatles

Withnail and
I (1986)

Wogan
show, the

Wohlers, Bettina

Wohlers (later Hübers), Erika

‘Woman’

Wonder, Stevie

‘Wonderful Christmastime’

Wonfor, Geoff

Woodbine, Lord

Woodlands Farm

Wooler, Bob

Woolton Village fête

‘Working Class Hero’

Working Classical

‘The World is Waiting for the Sunrise’

‘The World Tonight’

Worthy Farm

Wyatt, Woodrow

Wyman, Bill

Yardbirds, the

Ye Cracke

Yellow Submarine
(film)

‘Yellow Submarine’

‘Yer Blues’

Yesterday and Today

‘Yesterday’

Yogi (sniffer dog)

‘You Are My Sunshine’

‘You Never Give Me Your Money’

‘You Tell Me’

‘You Want Her Too’

‘You Won’t See Me’

‘You’ll be Mine’

‘You’re Sixteen’

‘You’ve Gone’

‘You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away’

‘Young Boy’

Young Rascals, the

Young, Ross

‘Your Feet’s Too Big’

‘Your Loving Flame’

‘Your Mother Should Know’

Youth (Martin Glover)

see also
Fireman albums

Zappa, Frank

Zapple

PICTURE CREDITS

Page 1: (bottom right) © PA Photos

Page 2: (top) © Alpha; (bottom left) © Sam Leach; (bottom right) © Astrid Kirchherr - K & K/Redferns/Getty Images

Page 3: (top) © Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images; (bottom left) © Ruth Lallemann; (bottom right) © The Jewish Chronicle Archive/Heritage-Images/ Imagestate

Page 4: (top left) © Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images; (top right) © Bettman/ Corbis; (bottom) © Mirrorpix

Page 5: (top left) © Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy; (top right) © Daily Mail/ZUMA Press/Solo Syndication; (bottom) © Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Page 6: (top left) © John Hoppy Hopkins; (top right) © Henry Diltz/CORBIS; (bottom left) © Daily Mail/Rex Features; (bottom right) © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/ CORBIS

Page 7: (top) © Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy; (bottom left) © Trinity Mirror/ Mirrorpix/Alamy; (bottom right) © Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy

Page 8: (top) © Tom Farmer/Rex Features; (bottom left) © Evening Standard/Getty Images; (bottom right) © Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix

Page 9: (top left) © Ivor Davis/Scope Features; (top right) © Howard Sounes; (bottom) © David Montgomery/Getty Images

Page 10: (top left) © Howard Barlow/Redferns/Getty Images; (top right) © Bettmann/CORBIS; (bottom left) © Bettmann/CORBIS; (bottom right) © Richard Grange/Barcroft Media

Page 11: (top left) © NILS JORGENSEN/Rex Features; (top right) © Bettmann/ CORBIS; (bottom) © Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy

Page 12: (top left) © EMI Records; (top right) © Tom Hanley/Redferns; (bottom) © Stephane Cardinale/Sygma/Corbis

Page 13: (top left) © Sipa Press/Rex; (top right) © Nick Elgar/Une/LFI; (bottom) © Tony Kyriacou/Rex Features

Page 14: (top left) © Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy; (top right) © Trinity Mirror/ Mirrorpix/Alamy; (bottom) © The Sun/NI Syndication

Page 15: (top left) © Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy; (top right) © The Times/NI Syndication; (bottom) © Dave M. Benett/Getty Images

Page 16: (top) © Stephane Cardinale/People Avenue/Corbis; (bottom) © Mario Anzuoni/Reuters/Corbis

1

One of the largest ships in the world.

2

Unless indicated, sterling/dollar exchange values are as of the time of writing.

3

It is sometimes said that Harrison was born on 24 February 1943, but his birth and his death certificate clearly state his birthday as the 25th.

4

When James approached retirement in 2006, and his pension fund wasn’t as healthy as he’d hoped, he asked Paul to authenticate the Rex as the guitar he’d learned on, and with that endorsement he sold the instrument at auction for an astonishing £333,000 ($509,490).

5

Julia later had other children by other men.

6

Ruth Lallemann wasn’t.

7

The second part of this couplet is credited to John Lennon.

8

UK chart positions are based on the
Record Retailer
chart, used in turn for the
Guinness Book of British Hit Singles
. ‘Please Please Me’ went to number one in other UK charts in 1963, but the Beatles do not claim it as a number one, as is evident by its omission from the Beatles’
1
album.

9

The final show was a ticket-only event.

10

John soon moved out to take a flat with his wife and son in nearby Kensington.

11

In the early years of his career the guitarist went by the name Richard, later reverting to his given name of Richards, which I have used throughout.

12

Jailed in 2001 for perjury.

13

In the sense that homosexuality itself was still illegal in the UK.

14

Nonetheless,
Live at the Hollywood Bowl
was finally issued in 1977.

15

Because the British albums were released - with the notable exception of
Let it Be
- as the Beatles intended, this book deals with the band’s LPs under the British titles.

16

Harold Wilson, a Labour MP representing a Liverpool constituency, had become Prime Minister in October 1964, promising to reforge Britain in ‘the white heat [of] the scientific revolution’.

17

The current Madison Square Garden, built in 1968, holds 20,000.

18

Sweating ‘cobs’ (cobwebs) being a phrase that seems to derive from the patterns of sweat that streak the faces of pit workers, and one Paul would use in his excellent 2007 song ‘That Was Me’.

19

At the time refugees were facing starvation in the former British colony of Nigeria, which was engaged in a civil war with breakaway Biafra. Lennon evidently felt Britain should do more to help. ‘Cold Turkey’ was his current single.

20

Approached in connection with this book, Jane, now in her 60s, replied politely but firmly that she wouldn’t diverge from her ‘blanket rule’ not to discuss Paul.

21

Then worth approximately £1,893 (or $2,896).

22

Overthrown in 1986, Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos fled to the USA where they were indicted for racketeering. Mrs Marcos was later acquitted and allowed to return to the Philippines where she was found guilty of corruption. Her husband died in 1989.

23

Correctly: ‘This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle …’
Richard II
, Act II, Scene I.

24

Possibly an administrative cock-up. When he moved apartment some years later, Bernstein says he discovered a box of sold tickets which his assistant had failed to mail out.

25

‘Penny Lane’ did make number one in the USA.

26

Jones was sentenced to nine months in jail, soon released on bail in light of his fragile mental state, while Prince Stash was discharged.

27

Starr had bought a house near John Lennon on the St George’s Hill Estate.

28

The Beatles did play to a pre-recorded rhythm track, to cut down on the chance of a live mistake.

29

And indeed that’s all she got - her scene was cut.

30

Paul was not the walrus, contrary to what Lennon sings in ‘Glass Onion’.

31

Though Paul did exactly this later.

32

Martin once told NEMS employee Geoffrey Ellis: ‘Sometimes when a reporter asks me for a quote on what the Beatles are really like, I’m tempted to answer: “they’re the same stupid, arrogant bastards they always were”.’

33

Not, alas, a witty policeman’s reference to the Maharishi, but to Hanna-Barbera’s cartoon bear. A companion dog was named Boo Boo.

34

The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) lists the
White Album
officially as the band’s best-selling US album with 19 million sales, but the RIAA counts each disc as a sale, meaning this double album has actually sold 9.5 million units in the USA.
Abbey Road
and
Sgt. Pepper
have both sold more.

35

There was still a normal Christmas record for Beatles fans.

36

Paraphrasing Luke 9:58.

37

In the British and US markets, 1962-70.

38

In 2003 Spector was charged with murdering his girlfriend, Lana Clarkson. He was convicted in 2009.

39

Queen’s Counsel, a senior barrister.

40

Translates as ‘What’s happening in the little town?’ - the ‘wee toon’ being Campbeltown.

41

Eight tracks were listed on the original LP, plus two instrumental interludes listed as additional tracks when the album was re-released on CD.

42

Tony Clark, one of the engineers.

43

‘Happy Xmas (War is Over)’ never charted in the US. It reached number 4 in the UK in 1972.

44

At least it didn’t happen to Seiwell. Laine was put on such a deal later, as we shall see.

45

When McCartney told his father he’d recorded a song he wrote, Dad replied that he’d never written any music. ‘When I sang “Walking in the Park with Eloise” to him,’ said Paul, ‘he said, “Oh, that one. Oh I made it up, but I didn’t write it.”’

46

Never used.

47

In April 1976, Paul changed his company’s name to MPL Communications.

48

Denny and Jo Jo married in November 1978.

49

Ringo divorced Maureen Starkey in 1975, and took up with the American actress Barbara Bach, who later became his second wife.

50

If Paul were to be knighted, which he eventually was, Linda would properly be addressed as Lady McCartney.

51

While making music on such a day might seem strange, it is worth remembering that George Harrison did exactly the same, working on a new album in his home studio at Friar Park.

52

Closed in 1984, to make way for the Broadgate office development.

53

Jo Jo Laine claimed Linda used cocaine on tour with Wings in the 1970s, and later in his career Paul admitted to having experimented with cocaine and heroin before his marriage.

54

As Paul travelled between his office and Elstree, it is interesting to think he may well have passed his future wife, Heather Mills, then a 16-year-old waitress in a Soho wine bar.

55

Webb believes Paul may have talked to Lester about the film, but the director declined to get involved.

56

Eric Clapton was eventually inducted three times: as a member of the Yardbirds, Cream and as a solo artist.

57

Martin turned 68 in 1994.

58

Paul’s knighthood was one of the first given to a pop star, predated only by Sir Cliff Richard (1995). These rock ’n’ roll KBEs proved so popular with the public that HM’s Government started handing them out almost like toffees. Elton John was knighted in 1998, then came Sir Mick Jagger (2003), even Sir Tom Jones (2005), but never Sir George Harrison or Sir Ringo Starr, which further set Paul apart from the boys.

59

The film-maker was knighted in 1995, elevated to the peerage as Lord Puttnam in 1997.

60

The friend disputed Heather’s published account of these events in
Out on a Limb
, and took legal action against Heather for identifying her in the book and falsifying events. She won compensation.

61

Surely fun fur. Paul and Heather were both fiercely anti-fur.

62

Knighted in 2000.

63

The Queen’s Coronation was held in 1953, but she actually became Queen the previous year when her father George VI died, making 2002 the Golden Jubilee.

64

There are three main residences on the Sussex estate, plus other houses that stand empty or are used by staff, in addition to nearby properties at Hog Hill, Rye and Hove; with other homes in London, Merseyside, Scotland, New York City, Long Island, Arizona and Los Angeles.

65

Ley lines, tarot, astrology and transcendental meditation have all held his interest.

66

As the official inquiry into her death found, Princess Diana was killed in a car accident at the hands of a speeding chauffeur who had exceeded the legal drink-drive limit.

Other books

Blazing Hot Bad Boys Boxed Set - A MC Romance Bundle by Glass, Evelyn, Day, Laura, Thomas, Kathryn, Love, Amy, Summers, A. L., Faye, Carmen, Knowles, Tamara, Owen, Candice
Seeing Stars by Vanessa Grant
Spindrift by Allen Steele
Claire Delacroix by The Moonstone
19 Purchase Street by Gerald A. Browne
How to Romance a Rake by Manda Collins
Shadowy Horses by Susanna Kearsley