- Band Name: Paul McCartney
- Record Label: Hear Music / Virgin EMI
- Release Date: Oct 15, 2013
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Oct 10, 2013100This album proves his talent is timeless.
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Oct 9, 201391New is as apt an album title as you'll find: Not only does it announce McCartney's first batch of original songs in six years, it also celebrates the idea that pop music can still invigorate, inspire, and surprise--even if you had a hand in inventing it.
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Oct 14, 201390New is one of the best of McCartney's latter-day records: it is aware of his legacy but not beholden to it even as it builds upon it.
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Oct 15, 201385Now 71, Paul has delivered his tightest album in years, confirming that the streak of goodness that began with Chaos and Creation in the Backyard wasn’t a fluke.
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Oct 16, 201380Over 13 tracks, McCartney proves he’s a better Paul than 2007′s Memory Almost Full, a more romantic Paul than 2005′s Chaos and Creation in the Backyard, a more inventive Paul than 2001′s Driving Rain, and a more nostalgic Paul than 1997′s Flaming Pie.
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Oct 15, 201380More than a sentimental journey, it's an album that wants to be part of the 21st-century pop dialogue.
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Oct 14, 201380The songs are full of contrasts. It’s easy to imagine Mr. McCartney gathering his favorite phrases from assorted works in progress and challenging himself to pull the miscellanies together.
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Oct 14, 201380While there are a few silly love songs in the batch, some of us still haven’t had enough.
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Oct 11, 201380New proves that inspiration is not a problem for Paul McCartney, who shows both his contemporaries and the youngsters alike how to make rich music while swinging for the cheap seats.
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Oct 16, 201378While the songs on New don’t have the historical import or epic ambition of his best-known work, they also don’t have the same kind of flaws.
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Oct 15, 201375Sure, the lyrics are sometimes a little silly, and the musical hooks are sometimes a trifle too easy. But even at its worst, this is fun stuff.
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Oct 14, 201375Tinged with nostalgia, the songwriter has made a record that sounds contemporary but not desperately so, one that suggests his work with the Beatles but not reductively so.
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Oct 15, 201370New is no Abbey Road, but it is a remarkable album from the 71-year-old version of the man who has brought us decades of great rock ‘n’ roll songs.
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Oct 14, 201370New is the sound of an old dog having fun with some old tricks.
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Oct 9, 201370[Working with four young producers] isn't necessarily an ideal recipe for coherence, but [Giles] Martin--the producer of the music for Love, Circue du Soleil's Beatles show, and for the Rock Band video game--keeps it under control.... with each song treated as an individual entity and allocated its own musical resources. [Nov 2013, p.64]
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Oct 9, 201370This range of styles on New could have been distracting if not for the material’s solid foundations, spontaneous energy, and frequent naked emotions.
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Oct 15, 201367New isn’t McCartney’s best record ever, but that’s a given. He made The White Album, for crying out loud. And Rubber Soul. And Ram. And McCartney. New isn’t bad, though; it’s actually pretty good.
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Oct 15, 201363For the most part it works, though McCartney never quite digs as deep as he did on the sturdy "Memory Almost Full" (2007), his last studio album of completely original material (or his adventurous 2008 side project as the Fireman, "Electric Arguments").
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Oct 15, 201360For a record sold on its modernity, New spends most of the time in the past.
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Oct 14, 201360There's an uneven texture to the project. It's okay, but only just.
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Oct 14, 201360Like that of some of his illustrious contemporaries from the 1960s, Paul McCartney's new music needs to perform a move of such complexity that it would be more at home in yoga: looking forward, while looking back, while remaining relevant. It's decidedly difficult to pull off, this move, and New, McCartney's 16th studio album, almost does it.
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Oct 10, 201360At its worst, on Everybody Out There, this desire [for contemporaneity] manifests itself in thumpy post-Mumford faux-folk and Coldplay-style massed "woah-oh" vocals.... At the other extreme, there are moments when McCartney has clearly allowed his younger producers to push him into areas that are intriguing rather than infuriating.
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Oct 16, 201350While the brave-faced, sunny music that defines the album's back half may be as contrived as his jolly public persona, it's the touches of humanizing anxiety that make New significant, revealing active signs of creative life.
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