Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Bookmark and Share
Browse Line: Home / P / PA / Paul McCartney Language: Espaņol - English

List of Paul McCartney albums

Paul McCartney Album - Wings Greatest

Paul McCartney Album - Wings Greatest (Front side)
Album Information :
Customers rating: (45 ratings)
Release Date:1990-10-25
Type:Audio CD
Genre:AM Pop, Album Rock, Pop, Pop/Rock, Pop/Rock Music, Popular Music, Rock, Soft Rock
Label:Capitol
UPC:077774605625
Approx. Price:$11.98 (USD)
Track Listing :
1 . Another Day - Paul McCartney, Wings
2 . Silly Love Songs
3 . Live And Let Die
4 . Junior's Farm - Paul McCartney & Wings, Wings
5 . With a Little Luck
6 . Band on the Run - Paul McCartney & Wings, Wings
7 . Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey - Paul & Linda McCartney, Wings
8 . Hi, Hi, Hi
9 . Let 'Em In
10 . My Love - Paul McCartney & Wings, Wings
11 . Jet
12 . Mull of Kintyre
Description :
International edition of this collection originally released in 1978 (domestic version is long out-of-print) after London Town gave McCartney another huge hit, Wings Greatest rounds up McCartney's greatest hits from 1971 to 1978 which means it skips 'Maybe I'm Amazed' but touches on Ram. The main strength of this collection is that it contains many hits that never appeared on any album, and these are among McCartney's very best solo singles, the eccentric domesticity of 'Another Day', 'Junior's Farm', the Bond anthem 'Live and Let Die', the pile driving 'Hi Hi Hi', and 'Mull of Kintyre', a Scottish-styled folk ballad that was his biggest hit in England. And yes, it's fair to peg these as McCartney successes, since some of them were billed as McCartney, not Wings, and as such, this record is a great overview of McCartney's first decade of solo recording, containing many of his very best solo tunes. EMI.
Review - Amazon.com :
Paul McCartney might not have been the coolest or most cosmic ex-Beatle, but none of his former bandmates could touch his knack for creating perfect pop singles. Say what you will about their "lack of depth," but the 12 songs on Wings Greatest considerably brightened AM radio playlists during the 1970s, and most of them have actually improved with age. Wings' pure rock power is ably represented by "Band on the Run," "Hi Hi Hi," "Jet," "Live and Let Die" and the underrated non-LP single "Junior's Farm," all of which positively explode from the speakers. Paul's gooey streak shows up on "My Love," "Silly Love Songs," and the bagpipe-infused "Mull of Kintyre," but only "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey" still contains a high cringe quotient. Some key tracks are missing--most notably "Maybe I'm Amazed" and "Venus and Mars/Rock Show"--but Wings Greatest is still a thrilling document of Macca at the peak of his pop abilities. --Dan Epstein
Customer review - 2004-08-24
- Some People Never Know...
I have read the reviews of this album here and find them nauseating, I mean LITERALLY nauseating - don't read these on a full stomach, to paraphrase one of them. I am convinced that a person who is unable to see the inherent good qualities of these songs is so blinded by the rock press' jaded concepts of "art" and "music" that they shouldn't have ears. Rather, they should allow the critics to tell them what to think of this music without having to listen to it - it would certainly save their closed minds wear and tear. As for the rest of us, this collection (though unavailable from Amazon.com itself) represents the best of Paul McCartney's 70s career - not a bad thing.

Silly Love Songs seems to receive a lot of flack, a lot of totally undeserved flack. It is as though its critics cannot sense the irony of Paul writing an effortlessly melodic, polished, multi-layered song that in essence silences their complaints in spite of their determination. Often persistence is a good thing; but in cases like this it is defiance in the face of overwhelming evidence. The song's message, like the Beatles' best, is not only uplifting but completely true, set to an instantly memorable tune. An example:

Love doesn't come in a minute
Sometimes it doesn't come at all
I only know that when I'm in it
It isn't silly
Love isn't silly
Love isn't silly at all!

Quite right, Paul. Only one verse there, along with all the rest expressed in one glorious pop opus. Just listen to the splendid three-part polyphonies, string flourishes, and tremendous bass-line of this great song - mindless indeed. One of McCartney's better goes, I'd say, in the Beatles or out.

That sums up Wings work in a nutshell. With pieces like the afore-mentioned Silly Love Songs, Band on the Run, Jet, and others McCartney approaches the grandeur of the Beatles at their very best. Rockers like Hi, Hi, Hi and Junior's Farm demonstrate that he hadn't lost his ability to belt out a pumping rock song now and again, and while My Love, With a Little Luck, and their ilk are admittedly syrupy, there's nothing wrong with a little romantic emotion in music now and again. Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey is a great, tuneful mini-suite of a song, Mull of Kintyre a folksy delight for fans of Celtic music that became one of the biggest singles of all time in the U.K., Another Day a splendid McCartney character-sketch piece ala She's Leaving Home, Live and Let Die a great pop-rocker combined with a quasi-sinister James Bond instrumental. Even Let 'Em In defies in part its criticisms as it builds around a single chord (E major) subtly manipulated throughout as only a master like Paul can.

Admittedly, the lyrics were sometimes lightweight, but words are not the only thing that make a song - there exist too the melody (always Macca's strongest point), the arrangement (Paul is a notoriously meticulous songsmith), and the overall mood or "feel" which can sometimes exist wholly independently of the lyric or tune. And Paul has, for the most part, always been able to craft a catchy, melodic, polished pop song that all-too-often contains messages and insights that completely escape the mundane minds of critics professional and amateur alike. I don't necessarily recommend this collection - the double-disc set Wingspan is both more comprehensive and affordable - but just to set the record straight, Paul McCartney was and remains an immensely talented musician, for the most part undeserving of the criticisms heaped upon him. In this review I often compare Paul's solo work to his work with the Beatles. Do not get me wrong - I feel that the Beatles were the most brilliant musicians in the history of popular music and that brilliance is not easily replicated by one element of a four-part whole. However, Paul's post-Beatles stuff is still very worthy of recognition and not just mindless pop-fluff. If you disagree, you are entitled to your opinion - your loss!
Customer review - 2001-05-07
- Not complete, get Wingspan!
This is the original greatest hits album of Wings released in 1978. These are all great songs and the best Wings collection up until the recent double disc set, Wingspan: Hits & History. The biggest complaint I have about Wings Greatest is that it is far too incomplete. For example, some songs that are missing are "Listen to what the man said", "Coming Up", "No more lonely nights", "Maybe I'm amazed", "Let me roll it", I could go on but you get the point. I highly recommend Wingspan for a few reasons. First, its a 41 track set for about the same price as Greatest. Secondly, it has all 12 tracks from Greatest and 29 more. Unless you have every Wings album then Wingspan is for you!
Customer review - 2000-02-21
- The best collection!
"Wings Greatest" highilghts some of the greatest music from Paul MCcartney's post-beatles career. The only song missing is "Listen to what the Man Said." The critics througout Paul Mccartney's post-beatles career lambasted him for producing "silly pop songs". Well, the songs featured on this are not "silly pop songs". They are simply Paul being Paul. If you look at the bulk of the Beatles' number one singles starting with "Penny Lane" through "The Long and Winding Road" you will see that they are in a sense the same as his post beatles 70's material. The only difference is, that The Beatles broke new ground with these recordings. Paul MCcartney simply kept writing the same style quality songs, like he did in the beatles, only they were nothing that new, so the crtics pounced. This album is the essential mccartney. The period represented here is his most prolfic and qaulity. There are songs on this album that are not on other albums, for instance "live and let die". The very first solo single is included also, and find it like much of his songs on the "White Album". There is even a song he wrote that broke a beatles' record "Mull of Kintyre" it is interesting yet a little out of place however. The album "all the best" is for those who want all the huge hits from the 80's also. but this collection is a good overview and just as good as "all the best" in fact better.
Customer review - 2000-07-13
- The Flight Of Wings
There are many people who dismiss the solo work of Paul McCartney as commercial garbage;as if he was never guilty of that charge when he was a Beatle. On every McCartney/Wings album there is at least two worthy songs that grab you by the throat and never let go.WINGS GREATEST is collection of those songs.Apart from BAND ON THE RUN,Paul has never been able to deliver a klinker free album;but when you write beauties such as MULL OF KINTYRE or MY LOVE,does it really matter?I love the fact that McCartney can borrow a musical style and make it his own,be it a James Bond Theme(LIVE AND LET DIE),Beach Boy harmonies(UNCLE ALBERT/ADMIRAL HALSEY),or straight ahead guitar rock(JET,HI HI HI,JUNIOR'S FARM);he's been a master style copier since his Beatle days.Unfortunately,classic tracks like LET 'EM IN,MAYBE I'M AMAZED,and HELEN WHEELS are not included on WINGS GREATEST;but that's not enough to dampen this great compilation.If you want to get started on Paul McCartney and Wings, this is the perfect introduction.Just think how many radio stations are playing one of these tracks right now.
Customer review - 2000-11-01
- "Mull of Kintyre" Makes This a Required Purchase
Is there a more influential artist than Paul McCartney whose catalog
is in such disarray when it comes to collecting all of his singles,
b-sides, and non-album tracks onto a single disc?

When this album
was first released on vinyl in 1978 it was the only way to get
"Another Day" (his first solo single), "Hi Hi Hi"
and "Mull of Kintyre" on anything other than the original 45
r.p.m. singles. "Mull of Kintyre WAS available in the
U.S. However, unlike in England where it went to No. 1 (and stayed
there for nine weeks!), the song's b-side "Girls' School"
was pushed as the single in the U.S. where it peaked at No. 33. Even
today, this is the only disc to contain these three songs short of
buying the (more expensive) import versions of Ram, Red Rose Speedway,
and London Town.

Also, when this was initially released in 1978,
"With a Little Luck" was McCartney's twentieth Top 40 hit;
only eleven of them are included here, so it's not even close to
definitive. Even 1987's All the Best didn't rectify the problem.
That album duplicates Wings Greatest (minus "Hi Hi Hi" and
"Mull of Kintyre") and adds seven other hits through 1980's
live "Coming Up," plus the b-side "C Moon."

So
you buy both albums for a total of nineteen songs and you're still
missing a half dozen hits (including "Give Ireland Back to the
Irish," "Helen Wheels" and "Venus and Mars Rock
Show") and numerous non-album b-sides (like "Oh Woman, Oh
Why," "The Mess" and "I Lie Around"). This
may sound like nitpicking to the casual fan. But to the serious fan
(like me, who has bought all the singles just to get the otherwise
unavailable b-sides), it would be a real treat to have a 2- or 3-CD
box set with all of McCartney's singles and b-sides. C'mon Capitol,
what d'ya say? McCartney's fans aren't getting any younger and we've
got the bucks. [Didn't the sales of the Beatles' Antholgy series teach
you anything?!!!]

All griping aside, this is a must-have addition to
your collection even if it is not as complete as it could be.
"Mull of Kintyre" is worth the price of admission alone.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

Discographies - Pictures - Lyrics - Midis - Wallpapers - Screensavers - News - Concert Tickets - DVDs - Music Videos
Contact Us - Tweet Us - Advertise - Webmasters - Privacy Policy