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Chaos And Creation In The Backyard
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Album: Chaos And Creation In The Backyard
# Song Title   Time
1)    Fine Line More Info... 0:03
2)    How Kind of You More Info... 0:04
3)    Jenny Wren More Info... 0:03
4)    At the Mercy More Info... 0:02
5)    Friends to Go More Info... 0:02
6)    English Tea More Info... 0:02
7)    Too Much Rain More Info... 0:03
8)    A Certain Softness More Info... 0:02
9)    Riding to Vanity Fair More Info... 0:05
10)    Follow Me More Info... 0:02
11)    Promise to You Girl More Info... 0:03
12)    This Never Happened Before More Info... 0:03
13)    Anyway More Info... 0:07
 
Album: Chaos And Creation In The Backyard
# Song Title   Time
1)    Fine Line More Info... 0:03
2)    How Kind of You More Info... 0:04
3)    Jenny Wren More Info... 0:03
4)    At the Mercy More Info... 0:02
5)    Friends to Go More Info... 0:02
6)    English Tea More Info... 0:02
7)    Too Much Rain More Info... 0:03
8)    A Certain Softness More Info... 0:02
9)    Riding to Vanity Fair More Info... 0:05
10)    Follow Me More Info... 0:02
11)    Promise to You Girl More Info... 0:03
12)    This Never Happened Before More Info... 0:03
13)    Anyway More Info... 0:07
 
Product Description
Product Details
Performer Notes
  • Recording information: Air Studios, London; Ocean Way Recording, LA; RAK Studios, London.
  • That 2005's CHAOS & CREATION IN THE BACKYARD arrived as a dramatic return to form for Paul McCartney is something of an oversimplification. The fact is, dodgy orchestral and electronic side projects aside, solo Macca's only true fallow period was the mid-'80s, and the three albums prior to CHAOS were all solid, not un-Beatlesque affairs. That said, it's impossible to deny that this is one of Paul's finest post-Wings releases. He mines Fabs-friendly melodies and arrangements unabashedly (occasionally with tongue firmly in cheek), and who better to do so?
  • Part of the reason for the album's resonance is the presence of Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich, the first man since George Martin with the gall to make McCartney work for his money. (Paul's basically a one-man band throughout, for the first time since McCARTNEY II.) A deeper reason lies in the obvious emotional depths McCartney plumbs, leaving his trademark happy-face/Silly Love Songs persona far behind and betraying an unprecedented level of melancholy and introspection. Revisionists who claim the spirit of the Beatles died with Mark David Chapman's bullet in 1980 should only wish that, had John Lennon lived, he'd still be making music as aesthetically relevant as this 25 years down the line.
Professional Reviews
Rolling Stone (No. 983, p.101) - 4 out of 5 stars - "...[T]he freshest-sounding McCartney album in years...."

Entertainment Weekly (No. 840, p.84) - "...[W]hat we're hearing is an artist honestly following his muse..." - Grade: B

Uncut (p.94) - 4 stars out of 5 - "[With] richly layered song patterns that meander with deceptively aimless purpose from beginning to end, often sounding as though they're coalescing on the spot..."

Mojo (Publisher) (p.98) - 3 stars out of 5 - "'How Kind Of You' and 'Vanity Fair' cleverly pit Macca's perma-optimistic lilt against mournful, downbeat tapestries."
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