Find below the songs that have been sung by Paul McCartney during the 104 concerts of the "The Paul McCartney World Tour". Back In The U.S.S.R. • Officially appears on the album "The Beatles (Mono)" 102 Can't Buy Me Love • Officially appears on the album "Can't Buy Me ...
as a bluebird, kisses her she can also become a bluebird, at which point they become absolutely free. The refrain is simply a rhythmic chart based on the phrase “I’m a Bluebird” sung by Paul McCartney with Linda and Denny Laine providing harmony. ...
A Carole King–Gerry Goffin song, from their Brill Building days, sung by a noticeably young George Harrison. After the first visit to Parlophone, McCartney and Lennon went back to Liverpool and did what needed to be done. With a professionalism they might not have possessed, they forthrightly...
The final two measures of this verse are taken up by a lush chord of harmonies by John, Paul and George, sung in a hushed tone and overdubbed for added thickness. All instrumentation falls away to highlight these harmonies, which dissipate in the second half of the final measure, the rema...
When it flew by us, I turned the other way. The guy in Mercury had nothing to say. For it was a kid, in a hopped-up Model A. “These lyrics set the stage for ‘Hot Rod Lincoln’, an ‘answer song’ written in 1955 by Charlie Ryan. ‘Hot Rod Lincoln’ is sung from the persp...
The fourth and final chorus then commences, this one being fifteen-measures long. All of the elements of the previous two choruses (except the surmandal) are kept intact, the cello and trumpet score being changed up a little once again. The first vocal line this time, however, is sung in...
The theme forLive and Let Diewas sung by ex-Beatle Paul McCartney, and scored by George Martin, who had most recently worked with McCartney on the Beatles album Abbey Road. The lyrics and music were written by Paul and is wife Linda, but she didn't take part in the recording.Live and...
Principally composed by Paul Stanley, completed with a monstrous riff by Gene Simmons and sung by a succession of drummers beginning with Peter Criss, the episodic "Black Diamond" closed out Kiss' self-titled debut as one of the band's most impressive songwriting efforts. Led Zeppelin, Black ...
“What’s Going On” is an exquisite plea for peace on Earth, sung by a man at the height of crisis. In 1970, Marvin Gaye was Motown’s top male vocal star, yet he was frustrated by the assembly-line role he played on his own hits. Devastated by the loss of duet partner Tammi ...
"The Monster" didn't go home empty-handed, winning Best Rap/Sung Collaboration at the 2015 ceremony. The boogeyman hiding under the bed here, of course, isn't a Frankenstein-esque creation, but the mix of paranoia, self-doubt, and OCD that leads the Real Slim Shady into thinking he nee...