LONDON: From looking for inspiration on the bus to finding titles in dreams, Paul McCartney looks back on his life in a new book recounting how he wrote some of the worldâs most famous songs.
Described as âa self-portrait in 154 songsâ, âThe Lyrics: 1956 to the Presentâ spans McCartneyâs eight decades of songwriting – as a teenager, a member of the Beatles, his time with rock band Wings and as a successful solo artist.
Released this week, the two-tome set is arranged alphabetically, with lyrics to songs like âHey Judeâ, âA Hard Dayâs Nightâ and âPenny Laneâ accompanied by their inspiration.
âOnce Iâve finished a song, then you release it to the world so I donât worry what happens to it,â McCartney said on Friday at an event to discuss the book.
âIâve come to terms with the fact that not everyone is going to get it like the meaning I had, theyâre going to put their own meanings on it and I think you have to accept that.â
Both late Beatle John Lennon, with whom MCartney wrote songs, and his first wife Linda McCartney, who died in 1998, feature heavily in the book.
âIt was always great to work with John from the very first time … We just developed a way of working with each other and trusting each other that grew and grew,â he said.
âWe grew up together. It was like walking up a staircase and we both went side by side … It is great to just realise how much I loved this man.â
Considered one of the greatest songwriters of all time, McCartney penned his first composition, âI Lost My Little Girlâ, as a 14-year-old after his mother died in 1956.
Years later, it was dream of her comforting him that inspired the title for âLet It Beâ.
âShe was just sort of saintly … just saying to me âitâs going to be ok, just let it beâ,â he said.
âIt was very warming to have that dream, I felt great when I woke from it and then thought thatâs a great title.â
The book recalls his hometown Liverpool and inspiring family members. Edited by poet Paul Muldoon, it is also filled with pictures, handwritten drafts and letters.
McCartney recently said it was Lennon who had instigated the worldâs most famous group to split in 1970, not him.
âThe biggest misconception at the end of the Beatles was that Iâd broken the Beatles up and I lived with that for quite a while,â he said.
Asked about the price of fame, McCartney, 79, said; âYour privacy … I had to cope with what (fame) brought. Thatâs still what Iâm still doing, coping.â â Reuters









