The Seven Most Important Beatles Songs by Paul McCartney
McCartney Just as Important to the Beatles Music as Lennon
Too many people these days think of the Beatles as John Lennon and some other guys. The Beatles were very much a band with important contributions from all the members. Certainly the most important members were John Lennon and Paul McCartney as they wrote the lion's share of the Beatles amazing songs.
I feel that Paul McCartney is unfairly marginalized by many modern rock critics and other uninformed dolts. McCartney was every bit as important to the Beatles success as Lennon was. Yet Lennon's martyr status and his reputation from things like his "Bed In For Peace" with Yoko Ono seems to have caused a bit of revisionist history.
That's why in this piece I'm going to be focusing in on Paul McCartney's songwriting contributions to the Beatles and thus to the very fabric of popular music which is based so much on The Beatles work it's impossible to calculate.
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The Seven Most Important Beatles Songs Written By Paul McCartney:
1. Yesterday:
The most covered song in history. Yesterday really ushered in a new era in popular music. Today it may seem like a very safe song but at the time The Beatles felt they were taking a risk with this recording as it was rather unusual for a rock and roll band to use strings on a recording. This song featured no other Beatles except for Paul McCartney. McCartney's voice and acoustic guitar were backed by strings arranged by McCartney and Beatles producer George Martin. This was one of the first uses of strings in a popular song in this way and it was the beginnings of The Beatles use of classical instrumentation in their music which is one of the most influential things about their music.
2. Helter Skelter:
Helter Skelter was the heaviest song The Beatles ever recorded and was also one of their very most influential songs. It influenced everyone from many heavy metal rockers to Charles Manson. Many musical historians feel that Helter Skelter was a key point in the development of the Heavy Metal genre. Helter Skelter has been covered by everyone from Pet Benatar to Scumbo.
3. Hey Jude:
At over seven minutes long Hey Jude helped end the rule that radio singles had to be about three minutes. Hey Jude was one of the Beatles biggest selling singles in their history. Hey Jude was released as a single as the A side while John Lennon's "Revolution" was the B side. Because of the U.S. practice of counting sales and airplay for the A- and B-sides of a single separately, at one point Record World listed "Hey Jude" at number one, followed by its B-side partner, "Revolution."
4. Yellow Submarine:
While definitly not one of my very favorite McCartney songs I do think it ranks among the most important. This McCartney song was written for Ringo Starr to sing and it fits him perfectly. I have a hard time imagining McCartney singing this one himself. Yellow Submarine is a very childlike and silly song and I think it helped open up field so to speak as to what kind of songs a popular musical group could write and record. The Beatles were constantly pushing the envelope in this area and Paul McCartney was a huge part of that. The variety in the songs heard on 1966's Revolver is just amazing. A childlike song like "Yellow Submarine" sharing the same album space with a rocker like "Taxman" an indian flavored track like "Love You To" and the otherworldly "Tomorrow Never Knows.
5. Here, There, and Everywhere:
Another song from Revolver and another example of the variety the Beatles were showcasing. This is an extremely beautiful song that McCartney has said is his favorite song that he has written.
6. And I Love Her:
This pre-Yesterday ballad was really the first example of the sort of balladry that The Beatles and Paul McCartney in particular could pull off. A beautiful and simple song that is still one of my favorites to this day. To me this track holds up better than possibly any of the other early Beatles work from 1963 to 1964.
7. Blackbird:
This song has been extremely influential on acoustic guitar players everywhere. The classical type playing on this song was something different. McCartney says that the style was inspired by Bach's Bouree. The same album that features the thrashing madness of "Helter Skelter" and the insanity of "Revolution #9" also features this extremely
beautiful ballad. The Beatles were always showcasing amazing variety and Paul McCartney was a huge part of that.
This list is probably a bit heavy on the ballads. Get Back, I've Got A Feeling, and Back In The USSR are great example's of McCartney's more rock n roll side (along with Helter Skelter of course.) Also tracks like When I'm 64 and Your Mother Should Know are very important as far as their influence on the "twee" set. I didn't even mention song suite Side 2 of Abbey Road which is almost all McCartney and George Martin's doing. Possibly the most perfect half an album ever made. McCartney was also an incredible bassist. Listen to the bass on the Lennon penned "Dear Prudence" to get an idea of what I'm talking about.
McCartney (and George Harrison and Ringo for that matter) deserve their due credit. The Beatles were not just John Lennon and some other guys, they were truly a band. Much more so than most.
Published by Johnny Moon
Full time online marketer working from home since spring 2005. Writer? Novel. View profile
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36 Comments
Post a CommentI have to rewrite what i just wrote before, i do like Lennon as much as the other members of the band, i think McCartney is a genius as a solo too, it is just that i believe more in what Lennon had to say but of course there wouldn't be Beatles without Paul!
And what about Harrison as a solo artists, awesome!!...And the other night i saw Ringo on tv with Ben Harper and others, he was amazing! i love them all!
I think all the members of The Beatles were great in the band.
I just think John Lennon went further, further with his music, it seems that he just came to this world to give a message and left. His influence will stay forever. I say this because i enjoy Lennon more as a solo artists than with The Beatles even though i love The Beatles. John's work as a solo is so inspiring, his music creates this beautiful mental imprints in your mind, planting seeds that will eventually wake you up from delusion. So Lennon can be compared to such persons like Jesus, Buddha, Krishna etc...i just hope Lennon does not become a self inspired religion!!
If you ask me... Lennon is bigger than The Beatles... I love McCartney but only with The Beatles...And you can actually measure yourself in politics matter, if you like McCarney better than Lennon you might be right winged and if you like Lennon better than McCartney you might be left winged... If you like Harrison you are close to an Anarchist...If you enjoy Ringo you don't care about politics at all...
WHO THINKS THAT ITS JOHN LENNON AND SOME OTHERE GUYS.EITHER ONE OF THEM ON THEIR OWN WOULD STILL BE THE BEST ARTISTS OF ALL TIME.WHO WOULD BE FIRST .I ALWAYS WENT WITH MAC.BUT LENNON WAS A CLOSE SECOND
All I know is Paul McCartney was brilliant. I give John credit for being good but Paul made him look good too. Paul and Ringo are my favorite Beatles. They were both hot and I love them both. Some of these people need to look up some Beatles history and get the facts straight. Paul was the best singer but Ringo i'll tell u one thing, I sure wish I could've lived that time period and had a chance at bn one of their girls. Also kudos to John and George for bn there. Paul was the main Beatle and was the driving force and if it weren't for Paul there would be no Beatles. I love Paul and Ringo! Beatles will live on forever!
>Helter Skelter was the heaviest song >The Beatles ever recorded and was >also one of their very most >influential songs. It influenced >everyone from many heavy metal >rockers to Charles Manson. Many >musical historians feel that Helter >Skelter was a key point in the >development of the Heavy Metal genre.
Those critics are deluded! It was nothing of the sort. It was a Hendrix rip off and the Beatles had nothing to do with the formation of heavy metal, whatsoever - Thank God!! Don't blame them for that!
Please do the readers a favor: rename this site the Paul McCartney appreciation and revisionism site. Just so they'll know what to expect. Thanks!
McCartney was also the reason why The Beatles became the greatest band on the planet. He was the one who conceived Sgt Pepper's Lonely Heart Club Band Album and Abbey Road. Without these two masterpieces, The Beatles might not be as great as it is.
Paul was also the reason why The Beatles have roof-top performance.
And don't forget if not for Paul, The Beatles have disappeared right after White Album or even before.
And without Paul, songs like A Day in the Life and Strawberry Fields Forever (the intro was made by Paul) would be just a little bit better than ordinary.
And yeah, Paul was also the drummer in "Dear Prudence"
Talking about bassline, listen to Rain, Come Together, Something, Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, Michelle, I Want You/She's So Heavy etc etc.
And who could forget the piano in Sexy Sadie ?
They agreed early on that whatever they wrote would be credited as Lennon/McCartney. There were quite a few songs that John wrote on his own, (The Ballad of John and Yoko comes to mind as a start)that was attributed to both of them.
let it be?
Any song that has "Lennon/McCartney" was composed entirely by Paul. I love the band as a whole but it the truth that Paul was indeed the strongest SONGwriter in the band. It shows in the "Post-Beatles" era to follow where both were successful in their own work, but Paul had more Chart toppers.