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selenak: (JohnPaul by Jennymacca)
[profile] ponygirl2000 kindly pointed this out to me: Chuck Berry's song Brown-eyed Handsome Man as covered by John Lennon on a tape in the late 70s. It's a good cover anyway, but, as Ponygirl says, the thing that pushes it into squee territory is that John randomly mashes it with Get Back, of all the songs. (Thus outranking the tape where he sings Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey on his 31st birthday, but not the clip for Sean sings With a little help from my friends for him, calls it his favourite song and John is glowing in nostalgia about how he and Paul sang back-up for Ringo on that one while simultanously giving interviews denying Sean ever heard a single Beatle tune.)

Speaking of rarities, YouTube has Soily, which was the hard rock number with which Wings used to end their concerts and which was strictly a "live" song, meaning it's not on the regular records except the live "Wings over America" album from 1976. It's a screamer in the tradition of "Long Tall Sally" or "I'm Down" and very handy if someone comes up with the old "Paul only wrote silly love songs in the 70s" cliché.



One thing that I find striking (in a positive way) about the 60s generation of musicians - especially the survivors - is that yes, flawed as hell as people, but how really generous and supportive they were/are of each other, in addition to the more expected competition with each other.

Stories and quotes from and regarding The Who, Brian Wilson, Marianne Faithfull, Bob Dylan and David Bowie )
selenak: (Time Lords by Crazy Celebrian)
Because the Whoverse & Beatles are still a happy making combination: have to share this clip from 2007 in which David Tennant and John Simm first banter with each other and then fanboy Paul McCartney. Now I've got DT going fanboy before (his being a firm Classic Who and West Wing fan is one of his most endearing attributes), but John Simm going giddy with fannishness is new and terribly cute. Also he has good taste, clearly. (And, the moderator cracks me up. "No touching.")



Tangentially related, mixing various stars for charity performance can backfire and feel incredibly awkward, or it can be awesome, as in this 1979 concert for Kambuchea. In which Paul and the last Wings formation play with Pete Townshend from The Who and various other late 70s rock luminaries. Lucille is yet another demonstration that nobody sings Little Richard songs like Paul M. Pete Townshend seems to think so, too (*cough* expression at 1.41 *cough*):

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