| Title |
Track Time |
|
I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter
|
-- |
|
Home (When Shadows Fall)
|
-- |
|
It's Only a Paper Moon
|
-- |
|
More I Cannot Wish You
|
-- |
|
Glory of Love
|
-- |
|
We Three (My Echo, My Shadow and Me)
|
-- |
|
Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive
|
-- |
|
My Valentine
|
-- |
|
Always
|
-- |
|
My Very Good Friend the Milkman
|
-- |
|
Bye Bye Blackbird
|
-- |
|
Get Yourself Another Fool
|
-- |
|
Inch Worm
|
-- |
|
Only Our Hearts
|
-- |
Editorial Notes
Way back in 1963, Paul McCartney sang "A Taste of Honey" on the
Beatles' debut album, and "Til There Was You" on their second LP,
establishing that his tastes ran far beyond the world of rock &
roll and R&B. Over the years, he touched upon pre-rock &
roll pop -- writing pastiches like "Honey Pie" with the Beatles
and, crucially, snatching up the publishing rights to many of these
tunes, thereby building his MPL empire -- but he never devoted a
full record to the style until 2012's Kisses on the Bottom, a
cheekily titled (pun not only intentional but solicited) collection
of songs you know by heart. He's not the first Beatle to sing songs
his mother should know: Ringo's first step outside the Fab Four was
1970's Sentimental Journey, a record of standards produced by
George Martin. Sentimental Journey may share a tune with Kisses on
the Bottom -- Ray Henderson and Mort Dixon's "Bye Bye Blackbird" --
but its splashy, show biz sensibility differs greatly from
McCartney's intimate stroll through the past. Macca hired Diana
Krall's band as his support, enlisted veteran vocal producer Tommy
LiPuma, and then set up shop at Los Angeles' famed Capitol Studios,
along with spots in N.Y.C. and London, to cut faithful, loving
versions of songs he's always sung. Overachiever that he is, Macca
throws in two new originals -- the quite good "My Valentine" and
"Only Our Hearts," the former featuring guitar by Eric Clapton, the
latter harmonica by Stevie Wonder -- that fit right into the
soft-shoe shuffle of the rest of the record, enhancing its casual
charm. And since McCartney is no longer quite the vocal powerhouse
he used to be -- something the spare setting makes all too clear --
the chief appeal is its leisurely vibe, how McCartney settles into
his surroundings, savoring each melody and every witty turn of
phrase. As a vocalist, this may not be his natural forte, but he
takes great care with the songs, and that palpable love is enough
to make Kisses on the Bottom worth a spin or two. ~ Stephen Thomas
Erlewine
Format: Compact Disc
Released Date: February 7, 2012
Genre: General
Style: Vocal
Number of Discs: 1
Studio/Mixed/Live: Studio
Label Name: Hear Music
UPC: 888072333697