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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars We Will Fly Away, Going "Wing"ing
It was 1971, only the year after the Beatles' breakup. And yet Paul McCartney had already released two albums when Wild Life, the first by his new band Wings, came out to lukewarm sales and critical disdain in December. Ram received the same critical bashing and has aged very well, remaining a fan favourite - even the critics have begun to recognize its genius. But what...
Published on August 16, 2004 by Tom Emanuel

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars My Personal Wild Memories
This is the first Paul McCartney album with his new band Wings after the split of the Beatles.
Most of the material was written by Paul and Linda McCartney; A lightweight album, yet very interesting and full of good memories, especially for the hardcore PM. Fans;

As far as I am concerned (growing up listening to this album), my personal rating is 5...
Published on December 19, 2006 by W. Noshie


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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars We Will Fly Away, Going "Wing"ing, August 16, 2004
By 
Tom Emanuel (Deadwood, SD USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wild Life (Audio CD)
It was 1971, only the year after the Beatles' breakup. And yet Paul McCartney had already released two albums when Wild Life, the first by his new band Wings, came out to lukewarm sales and critical disdain in December. Ram received the same critical bashing and has aged very well, remaining a fan favourite - even the critics have begun to recognize its genius. But what of Wild Life?

Well, the bulk of Wild Life was recorded in the space of three days, with a band of musicians that (apart from Linda, obviously) Paul had really just run into whilst making Ram. They just headed to the studio, laid the tracks down without a thought, and had the album mixed and ready to go in two weeks. So the production is minimal to say the least - a cobbled-together, one-take-as-it-stands-mistakes-and-all rush job. It sounds as if Wings were just rehearsing rather than making an album. This gives it kinship with the original McCartney; but it also comes with all the problems that plagued that album. Namely: sloppy musicianship, unfinished ideas, and ultimately a lack of effort.

Another problem is a lack of material. There are only ten songs here, and of those two are forty-second instrumentals. Two more are the "proper" songs upon which these clips are based, the wordless rocker Mumbo and the dismally inane Bip Bop. And then there's a cover (albeit not a bad one) Love Is Strange. That gives Paul only five tracks to really show off his talents. Good thing he does too, or Wild Life would have been a total failure. The plodding title track is nothing special, but the rest are real McCartney gold. The lachrymose Dear Friend, which finds Paul bemoaning his friendship with none other than John Lennon, is very much a standout, not least because it's uncharacteristically sombre for the usually upbeat Mr. McCartney.

In the end the critics weren't entirely askew on Wild Life - it's unpolished, amateurish, and lacking in most things that make a great album. It's certainly not a good place to start, if you're new to Paul, and should best be left toward the tail end of your collection even if you're a fan. But there's plenty of fun and enough good stuff to make it worth it, so why not?

NOTES FOR REMASTERED PAUL MCCARTNEY COLLECTION:

More than any other disc in the Paul McCartney Collection I've yet purchased the bonus tracks truly help Wild Life out. The best of the lot is Mama's Little Girl, a gorgeous acoustic ode to Paul's daughter, but the other's ain't half-bad either.
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35 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars McCartney's Primal Scream Album, October 24, 2005
This review is from: Wild Life (Audio CD)
This is what I hate most about history: So much of it is based on misconceptions, biases and utter bull. I just experienced the wonder that is Wings' first album, WILD LIFE. Recorded in a one-week period in 1971 (shortly after McCartney's ambitious RAM album), WILD LIFE is even more makeshift and loose than McCartney's first solo release McCARTNEY. In fact, like John Lennon's first solo album (PLASTIC ONO BAND), WILD LIFE could easily be viewed as a precursor to punk-rock. Heck, these idiosyncratic ditties could pass for contemporary indi-rock. The first 2 tracks, "Mumbo" and "Bip Bop" are built on simple, raw and very funky guitar riffs. But it's the vocals/lyrics that really distinguish them. In "Mumbo", McCartney screams out some brilliant nonsense, breaking down all lyrical pretense-the very pretense the Beatles indulged in the mid-1960s-and creating the most pure rock singing I've ever heard. This is what every "hoochie-coochie", "be bop" and "ooo ooo ooo" has been suggesting from 1950s R&B. "Bip Bop" continues with this scat/jive approach. Every critic and so-called musical expert has always savaged the "lyrics" of "Mumbo" and especially "Bip Bop" for being absurd. Every one of these clueless squares should never be able to evoke the name of Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker or any major artist from 1950s blues and rock&roll. They clearly don't GET IT. Nor should they ever be allowed to cite "The "White Album" as brilliant, because they obviously don't get the brilliance of minimalist rockers like "Why Don't We Do It In The Road?" If you like that song, there's no justifiable reason to dislike "Mumbo" and "Bip Bop". What? Does everything need the brand-name stamp of The Beatles? It's only clever or edgy if it's on a late-period Beatles album? Perhaps not. Many critics have praised PLASTIC ONO BAND for its rawness and minimalism. Oh, but John was singing about important things: His resentment towards his parents, to religion, to everything that wasn't himself or Yoko. All fine and good, but why is having a sense of humor and lack of pretension such a bad counterpoint? Not to say WILD LIFE is all silly fun. It's not just similar to PLASTIC ONO BAND because of its minimalist, off-the-cuff approach. The title-track is a cathartic, melancholic outpour of dark, DARK blues; McCartney screaming his head off even more than he did on "Mumbo" (think The Beatles "Oh Darling!"). This is a man who has been criticized for being too shallow and detached from his material. Well, I hear a man in a fevered madness of pain on "Wild Life". And that's just the warm-up for the real stab of pathos. The last full-track, "Dear Friend", is without a doubt, the single most somber and heart-wrenching piece of music Paul McCartney has ever recorded. This is the midnight of McCartney's soul. Lennon lamented "the dream" being over; McCartney lamented the friendship being over. "Dear Friend" can only be taken as a heart-broken-yes, heart-broken-message from Paul to John. The mood and nuance of the playing, singing...everything is perfect on this track. It doesn't sound like a song that was written; it's too organic, too subtle. It's as if Paul broke some piece of a lonely night and caused it to materialize in sudden song. WILD LIFE ends with a tiny snippet of funky bass jamming to the "Mumbo" groove. Then it cuts off just like that. The album even begins in mid-jam and there are all sorts of little eccentric touches throughout. There's a great Afro-techno percussion coda in "Some People Never Know" and the modern-sounding oddity of "I Am Your Singer" will cause you to think McCartney created Stereolab among other things. To sum up, WILD LIFE is cooler than history.

He was the Walrus. But now he's Paul.
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14 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Some People Never (Will) Know..., August 6, 2005
This review is from: Wild Life (Audio CD)
Here is an album many people seem unsure about liking; it's been that way since it was released in the early 70's. I think it's well worth checking out because, unlike Macca's later work, every song on this disc has something going for it. Usually, I don't like to go song by song through an album because it makes the review too long, but this album has few songs, and they are so different from each other it really seemed the best way, so:

MUMBO: Mumbo Jumbo, Paul mixes up some magic with his first Wings lineup on this opening garage-rocker. I think he was very pleased to be playing with a band again, and he cuts loose with a paint-peeling vocal and some great grunge guitar. People who had criticized Paul for being 'soft' might have been comforted by this one.

BIP BOP: Yeah, it's got a childish lyric, he wrote it for his kids! I personally love Paul's acoustic bluesy numbers, this one is very reminiscent of '2 Legs' on 'Ram', the album before this. Surreal and cool.

LOVE IS STRANGE: The great story behind this number can be read in another review below. This is a great reggae-style cover of the old Mickey And Sylvia number, with some crazed slide guitar from Sir Paul. Fun and charming.

WILD LIFE: Another rocker with the Wings lineup. This is probably my least favorite song on the album, but I still enjoy the strange backing vocals and the lyrics (an early foray into animal rights) especially where McCartney sings 'Aminals' instead of 'Animals'!

SOME PEOPLE NEVER KNOW: My favorite track. Triunphant, lyrical, melodic, this song is what we expect from Macca, and what he delivers here. Very much like the better cuts from 'Ram', Paul has it all working here. And to those who complain about the out-of-tune guitars, remember, they didn't have electronic tuning in those days. And Paul may have had one or two low-alcohol lagers while recording 'Wild Life'...

I AM YOUR SINGER: Extra-charming ballad from Paul And Linda. We've all heard the complaints about Linda, but I honestly think the contrast between her 'hard' American voice, and Paul's 'soft' English voice, can work really well, as it does here. Paul also does some great guitar here, love that vibrato twang!

TOMORROW: A nice piano popper with vocals so high-pitched, I'd swear Paul sped up his voice. Try singing along and you'll see what I mean. This song is like a somewhat more rockin' 'Another Day' with a great bluesy 'Oh Darling!' end bit...lovely!

DEAR FRIEND: Woo-hoo...creepy, haunted, jazzy, spectral, shadowy...this is Paul at his most creepy and melancholic (who thought he had it in him?) . A sad letter of loss and confusion to John Lennon, Paul mournfully noodles on piano while horns, drums, and other things come in and out. The song seems to end and restart and is very hypnotic. One of a kind stuff and very very good.

But what about those extra tracks eh? 'IRISH" was banned by the BBC and is tremendous rocked-out fun, nice to see Paul be political for once. 'Mama's Little Girl' is a neat little acoustic number, reminiscent of 'Mother Nature's Son'. 'Little Woman Love' is some sexy, New Orleans-style pianobilly (a personal fave)...and then there's 'Mary Had A Little Lamb'. What can I say, the guy had children to amuse AND a sheep farm, OK? Give him a Wee Break!
So, don't be afraid, get 'Wild Life' and live it up with Paul, Linda, & all the gang...
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars My Personal Wild Memories, December 19, 2006
By 
W. Noshie (Beirut, Lebanon) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Wild Life (Audio CD)
This is the first Paul McCartney album with his new band Wings after the split of the Beatles.
Most of the material was written by Paul and Linda McCartney; A lightweight album, yet very interesting and full of good memories, especially for the hardcore PM. Fans;

As far as I am concerned (growing up listening to this album), my personal rating is 5 Stars; however a 3 star for the average PM fan should be more appropriate.
Should you buy this album or not?
Difficult to answer.





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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Great product, interesting music., August 1, 2006
By 
Angrydan "Angrydan" (Council Bluffs, Iowa USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wild Life (Audio CD)
I always wanted to have "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" on album. Having it remastered on CD is a real treat. I owned the 45 back in 5th grade and loved the song then.

The Wild Life album was not a priority of mine when I was young. At the present time I am rediscovering McCartney's solo career, having preferred the work of George Harrison (All Things Must Past is the Greatest of all the Beatles solo work) and Lennon (Plastic Ono Band, Imagine, great albums), when I was young and when they were fab. (Gear!).

As for McCartney, I enjoyed Venus and Mars and Band on the Run,but played them to death. I like hearing material that is new to me. I recently discovered "Ram" and I think it's his best.

"Wild Life" is very uncommercial, Paul going junky accoustic and pushing the envelope. It doesn't come accross as a work of a hit machine. "Wild Life" is an acquired taste with not alot of instrumentation or overproduction. It doesn't sound like anything produced by George Martin or Phil Spector. It's bare bones Paul McCartney. I like it. Not his best. The bonus tracks, "Irish" as I mentioned before and "Mary Had a Little Lamb" definitely put icing on the cake.

I know I have it as 2 stars above, but it should be 4.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Live in your home - Sir Paul!, August 11, 2005
By 
This review is from: Wild Life (Audio CD)
This is as close as you can get to Sir Paul performing in your own home. It's also a great driving album - particularly "Love is Strange".
Many folks nowadays would give their eye teeth to sound this relaxed in the studio, not to mention this lively. This was recorded at a time when live concert recordings were almost all awful, so give Macca his due - it sounds like he and his pals are right there with you, and they're welcome company.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Completely different from anything else he's made., November 6, 2003
By 
The Man On The Flaming Pie (The Foothills of the Headlands) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wild Life (Audio CD)
I really don't get why people talk so much smack about this album. Sure, it lacks the experimental quality of Ram, but it truely sounds like a band's first album. In that respect, a seasoned professional like Paul McCartney really succeeds. Wings Wild Life is intimate, unpolished, and maybe even a little crude.
On "Mumbo," Paul manages to put together a throat-shredding yet lyricless piece which is shocking (I can't imagine what his fans must have thought upon hearing this for the first time back in 1971!) yet rather interesting. Yeah, "Bip Bop" IS pretty queer lyrically, but the vocal effect and guitar riff are nevertheless entrancing. The over 6 1/2-minute "Wild Life" is a song that Paul wrote after (as the lyrics clearly describe) walking through an African park and seeing a sign which read, "Remember: the animals have the right of way." I find it to be an incredible piece of music. Paul screams his lungs out, "WILD LIFE," as the band harmonizes beautifully, "whatever happened to?"--a nice clash of sound. The lyrical and instrumental buildup on this song is amazing. On "Some People Never Know," a sweet love song and another long one, Paul & Linda do a near-duet. The result is actually very nice. Linda handles most of the lead vocals on "I Am Your Singer" competently. A lot of people made fun of her vocal capabilities, but no one ever seemed to realize that her voice matched Paul's perfectly...despite the fact that he obviously overshadowed her skill-wise. The piano-based "Dear Friend" has the eeriest sound of any record Paul has ever made. Desolate & beautiful.
Bonus Tracks: Of all the bonus tracks to be included on the CD reissues of Paul's albums, the collection of these four is the best. You've got to admire a guy who has the stones to release a song such as "Mary Had A Little Lamb" as a single just to thumb his nose at the people who banned "Give Ireland Back To The Irish." "Little Woman Love" is a fast-paced one that could sound right at home musically on the Beatles' Rubber Soul album. Then, of course, there's the melodically beautiful "Mama's Little Girl," a soft number which went unissued officially until 1990!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars It's musically not that bad (a musician's review), January 11, 2010
By 
bobtec (United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Wings Wild Life (MP3 Download)
First, let's get the downside out of the way. With the exception of Dear Friend (still the most haunting song of any ex-Beatle), the lyrics are very substandard (even for McCartney).

On the positive side, the music isn't half bad. It's raw by today's standards, but the playing has some fairly good riffs (with the exception of the remake of Love is Strange which could have been left out altogether). This has an equivalent sound akin to the First McCartney album without the hooks of "Every Night", and "Maybe I'm Amazed" (none of the songs are in any known greatest hits collection, although I may be wrong).

The bottom line, if you go into the album hoping to find good (at times unique) riffs, this is a good album to have. As a musician, I love jam session type albums (even better on DVD) so that I can listen to riffs, and listen to the players accentuate each other, and sometime challenge each other. Lyrically, Bip Bop is a stupid song, but musically, it is sheer genius. Listen to the guitar playing in that song, and Mambo is a really good jam. Sir Paul is very versatile on stringed instruments (some of his bass riffs are some of the most complicated that I've ever heard. Right up there with Geddy Lee, Jack Bruce, and Stanley Clarke). He's also good on piano. So even though (overall) this album is lyrically lame, the music's not that bad.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars (3.5 stars) The Wings' debut is more or less respectable, November 26, 2007
By 
finulanu ""the mysterious"" (Here, there, and everywhere) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wild Life (Audio CD)
Who sings on "Bip Bop"? Can I strangle them? Okay, I won't REALLY strangle them - I'm not into violence - but I don't like their voice. I guess it's a good thing you can barely hear their overly harsh vocals. I hope that isn't Paul singing! Because if it is... *hides*. And I will continue hiding from that stupid "Mumbo" song. And then they reprise both of them. Good one, Paul. Ha, ha. Funny. So in spite of having those two frankly insulting songs, this really isn't too bad. Buddy Holly's "Love Is Strange" is a highlight, and a reggae cover of an early rock standard. How cool is that? "Wild Life" itself is a fine lengthy blues jam; and "Some People Never Know" is a brilliant, folksy duet with Linda; "I Am Your Singer" has a pleasant electric-piano pop groove. The best song, though, is "Dear Friend", a piano-driven song for John Lennon. By the way, the strings sound like those on John's Paul-savager, "How do You Sleep?" Only "Dear Friend" ranks among Paul's best work, but I really have to give this one credit. Very underrated album! In fact, the most of Paul's career. Honestly, this is not his worst album with the Wings. Now, Wings at the Speed of Sound? That is. The single-only bonus track "Give Ireland Back to the Irish", a politically inflamed Southern rocker (no, really!) is great as well, and would've made an excellent inclusion on the whole album. There are a lot of those on McCartney albums.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Wild Begainning for Wings, October 17, 2003
By 
Paul Beaulieu (Montreal, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wild Life (Audio CD)
This album introduces Paul McCartney's band Wings, which would go on to be a multiplatinum selling, stadium filling act by 1976. Their begainnings were considerably more modest- they started out by taking a pickup truck, literally 'going on the road', and finding a place to play at every town.

This, their debut album, is likewise a modest undertaking in comparison with later Wings albums, and also in comparison with "Imagine", a John Lennon album released around
the same time. It was also a modest seller, and is considered by many to be one of McCartney's worst albums.

It does sound rather hastily put together, and they perhaps went into the studio too quickly. It seems as though McCartney had a shortage of good songs at the time- on the original album there are only six, plus one quasi-reggae cover and one, "Bip Bop", that is very dull indeed- one of the worst McCartney songs I've ever heard. (However, the short instrumental interlude that's said to be based on 'Bip Bop' is fine.)

That said, what you get here that you don't get in better known, better loved McCartney and Wings albums is the sound of a band just getting together and playing. The playing and singing isn't perfect, but it's mostly great to listen to nonetheless. The raving opener "Mumbo Jumbo" features some vintage McCartney screams, while "Wild Life" is an enigmatic slow jam melancholy blues of a waltz. "Some People Never Know", "Tommorrow" and "Dear Friend" are just lovely.

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Wild Life by Paul McCartney (Audio CD - 1993)
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