Paul Mccartney Greatest Hits Vol 1 ⭐

By Jason Heller

Consider the 1980s. Just when critics wrote him off as a soft-rock grandpa, he dropped Tug of War (1982), featuring “Here Today,” a devastating tribute to John Lennon that remains one of the most vulnerable moments ever captured on tape. Immediately following that with the synth-pop bounce of “Coming Up” (recorded live in a closet, sounding like a mad scientist’s party) would cause emotional whiplash—the good kind. Here is where Vol. 1 collapses under its own weight. What do you do with the Christmas novelty “Wonderful Christmastime”? It is simultaneously beloved and reviled. It is pure McCartney: uncynical, melodic, and completely unconcerned with coolness. A greatest hits album that ignores it feels incomplete. An album that includes it feels bizarre. paul mccartney greatest hits vol 1

If you were to ask the average person to name Paul McCartney’s greatest song, prepare for a three-hour argument. Is it the baroque melancholy of “Yesterday”? The symphonic defiance of “Live and Let Die”? The lo-fi intimacy of “Maybe I’m Amazed”? Or the sheer, silly joy of “Band on the Run”? By Jason Heller Consider the 1980s