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Author Topic: Memory Almost Full  (Read 27094 times)

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Andy Smith

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #520 on: November 12, 2007, 03:50:53 PM »

Quote from: 63

Why isn't the dvd released seperately? Does he really expect his fans to buy the same album, now including an extra, again?

That's just what i thought!, do i have to spend all that money, when i just want the dvd, or
maybe it's because he needs the money! :P
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Bobber

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #521 on: November 12, 2007, 06:40:43 PM »

I can only think of one reason. It's not his fans he's interested in.
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BlueMeanie

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #522 on: November 12, 2007, 11:11:07 PM »

Quote from: 63
I can only think of one reason. It's not his fans he's interested in.

Exactly. Why pretend he's different from anyone else? Just because he's Paul? Please!!
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wingsman

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #523 on: November 12, 2007, 11:30:12 PM »

Quote from: 483

Exactly. Why pretend he's different from anyone else? Just because he's Paul? Please!!

Of course. You're both right. That re-release strategy became a classic in the latest years. Usher's Confessions, 50 Cent's The Massacre, Mariah Carey's The Emancipation of Mimi were huge big sellers that saw their re-released 6 or 8 months after their original releases.
But, clearly there's a big difference with MAF. Those albums sold 10 or 15 million copies, and Memory Almost Full just 1.5 million (of course, a hugh success for a 65-year old, by the way.  ;) )
But the point is, how much the re-release will sell? Maybe 100,000 copies, 200,000 copies. Not more than that. So there's not really a reason to release this.

Surely, a Memory Almost Full DVD (with the making-of the album, the making-of the Dance Tonight video, the videos, live performances) would be far better. It's a shame.  >:(
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BlueMeanie

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #524 on: November 12, 2007, 11:41:59 PM »

Quote from: 713

Of course. You're both right. That re-release strategy became a classic in the latest years. Usher's Confessions, 50 Cent's The Massacre, Mariah Carey's The Emancipation of Mimi were huge big sellers that saw their re-released 6 or 8 months after their original releases.
But, clearly there's a big difference with MAF. Those albums sold 10 or 15 million copies, and Memory Almost Full just 1.5 million (of course, a hugh success for a 65-year old, by the way.  ;) )
But the point is, how much the re-release will sell? Maybe 100,000 copies, 200,000 copies. Not more than that. So there's not really a reason to release this.

Surely, a Memory Almost Full DVD (with the making-of the album, the making-of the Dance Tonight video, the videos, live performances) would be far better. It's a shame.  >:(

It's the way things are now. Get used to it. It's marketing. Welcome to the 21st century.
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Andy Smith

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #525 on: November 17, 2007, 02:43:56 PM »

Is the new Memory Almost Full deluxe edition released yet? i'm confused! ::)
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wingsman

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #526 on: November 20, 2007, 12:07:54 AM »

Quote from: 614
Is the new Memory Almost Full deluxe edition released yet? i'm confused! ::)

Of course it is, Andy! The deluxe edition was released on November 5, five months and one day after the original edition.  ;)
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wingsman

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #527 on: November 20, 2007, 12:12:02 AM »

Good news - I guess. Because of the re-release, MAF managed to re-chart in the big US at #166. Almost 550,000 copies sold in America at this point!  :)

Great, isn't it!?  ;D
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Andy Smith

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #528 on: November 21, 2007, 10:58:49 PM »

Quote from: 713

Of course it is, Andy! The deluxe edition was released on November 5, five months and one day after the original edition.  ;)

great, thanks! :)

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wingsman

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #529 on: November 27, 2007, 12:27:17 AM »

Read this new interview with Paul from Billboard!

What accounts for the creative spurt you seem to be on the past few years?

It's simple: I really enjoy what I do. And every so often I just get sort of inspired. I never know why or how, but I think one of the great things is that music is a great healer and it's a great sort of therapy. Often if you're going through something difficult -- as you can imagine without me laying too much of a point on it, this last year's been pretty difficult -- to get into your music is a great thing. So I think the last couple years I've been very glad to have my music and I've been putting stuff into it that seems to have added up to something.

 
Do you feel like you're getting inspiration as well as healing from these hard times?


I think that's true. You look at the lives of the great composers and they were not a lot of fun, some of them. Great painters, too; I was looking at a fantastic painting by Rembrandt the other day in a museum, and I was reminded by the blurb next to it that he died penniless and had a terribly bloody time, but he was one hell of a painter.

So that's why I say therapy; you're feeling bad, you skulk off to a corner with your guitar and you write something, and somehow you seem to take yourself through it and you work through it with your music. I thank heaven for that. I feel very, very blessed. People always used to call it a gift, the gift of music, and I think that's very much, more and more, how I see it.

That being said, "Memory Almost Full" isn't exactly "Blood on the Tracks," is it?
That's funny, isn't it? I still seem to come out positive and optimistic. I think that's my character. But [the divorce from Heather Mills] is something I don't want to talk about, and really for one reason. I have a baby daughter ... a four-year-old, and I do not want to excite the envelope in any direction whatsoever. I'm just sort of keeping the dignified silence.

So, how did "The McCartney Years" come about?
For a long time people have been saying to me, "When can we get ahold of that video?" or "Is that video available? Is that released?" And I just sort of thought, "No..." I was always a little bit like, "One day, yeah, I'll do it. Don't worry." But then a couple of guys got in touch with me and said "Look, we think it's time. We want to work on it. Let us put forward a proposal of what we would do for you to look at."

It took a long time to put together. They started cleaning it all up, and then they cleaned the sound mixes up and then they started showing me and that was like, "Jeez, I've never heard it like this. I've never seen it like this." So I started to get excited and I fell for the whole idea. I just said, "Go to it boys, let's do it."

How involved did you stay while it was going on?
I mostly sort of approved and smiled and admired what they were doing. I kind of went in every month and did an overview of what they were doing, and I just got fascinated with everything. Then they wanted me to do some commentaries, which is another option on the DVDs where you get my memories. So I was only too happy to do that. They just played them for me and I had headphones and a mic in front of me and I just said, "I remember this. Wow, this is amazing" and whatever memory it brought back to me. I enjoyed that.

And I didn't like the artwork originally, so we got a guy called Andie Airfix, who I've done quite a bit of work with. I asked him to try and come up with a concept, and he took this mad idea of using one of my eyes. I'm sort of amazed with the way people could tell it was me.

What did you encounter in doing the project that really blew you away?

I think the short answer is, "everything." Obviously, everything with Linda in it was particularly heartwarming, realizing her major contribution to everything once you see it all en masse. I hadn't seen "Tug of War" in awhile, which was lovely. It was good to see things like "Say Say Say" with Michael Jackson, and of course Linda and our daughter Heather make an appearance in that, so that was really cool.

One of the menus is just this little thing I did in the back yard of Abbey Road ... me singing old rock'n'roll favorites of mine, a Buddy Holly number and things like that. I'm sure I could remember about 20 to 50 other moments, but I think I'll leave that to whoever gets it to check out.

You used Ringo pretty liberally as a guest star in your videos.

Yeah, that was very good. "Take It Away" and "Beautiful Night," he kindly agreed to be the drummer in those, especially as he'd [played on] "Take It Away." It was just fabulous. [Beatles producer] George Martin even appears in one of them.

Are there any of the songs you felt were underexposed that may have a revived life from being in the package?

I think "Take It Away" kind of stands out. There's one called "Come On People," which is not very well known, looks sort of reborn here. It's nice to just see them in today's light, they seem to stand up quite well. In truth, that's what I was dreading about the project and one of the reasons I put it off; "Oh no, God, there's not enough good stuff yet."

But looking at it, I think some of the stuff I was a bit scared of I didn't need to be scared of. I remember being particularly scared of "My Love," which was a sort of zany thing, but it's alright now. There were a couple where I thought, "Oh my God, they've over-made me up. I wanted to look natural and I look like someone out of vaudeville." But even that stuff looks alright. It's got a sort of vintage quality to it that seems to work. It's like an old snapshot album; you're looking at yourself from many years ago. I think it has quite a warm quality in the end. A lot of the stuff stands up.

You must have had an interesting perspective on videos in the '80s and beyond because it was no stranger to you. You did videos -- you even did movies -- with the Beatles, so it wasn't quite as revolutionary of a concept as it was in the U.S.

The difference was you suddenly had to be a short filmmaker as well and not all of us liked it. The process was quite wearing. You'd sort of farm it out to three or four directors who you thought were hot and [one] would come back with -- it was a bit like a comedy sketch -- "I see you on a mountain top in Tibet wearing nothing but a loincloth. The Sun God shines down..." and you're going "Oh no..." Then the next one was, "I see you in a scene from the Keystone Cops. You're hanging off the back of a wagon, it's all shot in fast-motion black-and-white." Or it was, "I see you as a scene from 'Casablanca' ... I see you as The Terminator."

You're just desperate to get something where you can go, "This looks alright." Occasionally there would be a good idea... and the rest of the time there was an element of embarrassment 'cause you thought of yourself as a singer, not a film star.

Was it different when you were doing it in the '60s?

Yeah, it wasn't quite so important, so we would say, "Oh, look, just get a camera and we'll get girls with grass skirts and we'll just stand there in our Sgt. Pepper's costumes and sing 'Hello Goodbye.'" There wasn't that much thought that went into it, which made it a little bit more innocent and less precious.

Of the live material on "The McCartney Years," it's kind of brave to include your Live Aid performance in the set.

McCartney: Oh my God, the Live Aid was just one of those things I'd sooner forget. I came in from the country and sort of drove in and every window in Britain was open with televisions on and Live Aid blaring out. It was a national event and I knew I was gonna be on it, but I didn't take anyone with me. I didn't have a roadie. I didn't even have anyone to make sure my mic or speakers were working. And Bob Geldof just said, "Well, your piano's behind that curtain. You're on." There I was in front of the world ... and I heard in my monitor very ominous sounds of roadies talking, "Is this the plug?" I figured, "I'll just keep plugging on" but I couldn't hear myself. I couldn't hear anything. And then it suddenly became clear my mic wasn't on, but the dear old audience helped me out, God bless 'em. They all sang it. So I escaped by the skin of my teeth. It was sort of a nightmare. If you asked me for three nervous moments, I think that'd be top.

On top of "The McCartney Years" you also have the deluxe edition of "Memory Almost Full." How did that come about?
That's really cool. A lot of people have heard and liked the album, which is very pleasing for me. But there's a lot of people who don't have it, so the idea was "Let's just sort of put together a deluxe package," seeing how the holiday season's coming up, and we put on some live stuff that I've been doing recently as a sort of bonus, and the two videos and some extra tracks, so it is a completely new album. And, for people who don't have the other one they get the regular album as well. I like the videos (for the singles "Dance Tonight" and "Ever Present Past") so they'll get a little more attention.

How did "Ever Present Past," your new single, come about?
It was really me just sort of writing a pop song. I was just trying to keep it real simple and do something very basic, and when I got to the sort of "Every Present Past" idea it kind of took on a little more significance than I intended because I guess I do have an ever-present past. So it started to be about that and things I did when I was a kid and stuff. Then I got into a video, which I enjoyed doing very much; me dancing around with these girls who learned all my movies. It was very fun, actually.

Is there any news about the Beatles' catalog going online?
I think it's all happening soon. There are contractual things, and you'll find that someone in the loop maybe doesn't want to give what they should give, so it's negotiating. But I think we're kinda set. I think that Apple is set to do their bit. The whole thing is primed, ready to go. There's just maybe sort of one little sticking point left, and I think that's being cleared up as we speak, so it shouldn't be too long. But, you know, you've got to get these things right. You don't want to do something that's as cool as that and in three years time you think, "Oh God, why did we do that?" So it's down to the fine-tuning, but I'm pretty sure it'll be happening next year, 2008.

What's next for you, musically?
I'm actually doing some recording with my son [James]. We're just looking at the idea of him making an album. He's doing it all. He's writing it all, laying it all. It's sensational. But there's nothing set yet. We don't know if it'll work. The plan is for me to just do some recording with him, and it's really exciting. I'm really loving it.

:)
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Andy Smith

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #530 on: November 27, 2007, 02:15:52 AM »

thanks for that great post wingsman! ;)
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nothing_is_real

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #531 on: November 30, 2007, 02:45:49 AM »

Has anyone here compared the deluxe edition to the original edition? I've heard it has received a makeover in regard to the mixing and mastering. If that's the case, I suppose I'll go out and buy the new one as well.
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Andy Smith

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #532 on: November 30, 2007, 09:49:12 PM »

i've looked at the new deluxe edition in shops & don't see the point of it.. ok, it's
got an extra disc of live stuff from the Electric Prom (i think) & a the promo's, why
should i buy it again just for that?? ::) maybe Macca must be desperate for money. :P
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nothing_is_real

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #533 on: November 30, 2007, 10:45:41 PM »

It definitely is just a way of ripping us off. Keep releasing a new edition with one or two new tweaks and the hardcore fans will just keep buying over and over. I'll be guilty of that if it's true that the new edition is remixed and remastered. But it's frustrating that it couldn't have been as good as it could be in the first place.
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Bobber

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #534 on: December 01, 2007, 11:43:51 AM »

Paul said in an interview it was basically meant to be the dvd and that the cd comes extra with it. Still, you're paying for it.
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wingsman

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #535 on: December 01, 2007, 05:36:50 PM »

Quote from: 800
I'll be guilty of that if it's true that the new edition is remixed and remastered.

It doesn't make any sense to re-release an album 5 MONTHS after with a remaster job. I can't still even understand how Flowers in the Dirt (1989) was 'remastered' for its inclusion in the Paul McCartney Collection in 1993!  :-/
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nothing_is_real

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #536 on: December 01, 2007, 09:39:36 PM »

Quote from: 713

It doesn't make any sense to re-release an album 5 MONTHS after with a remaster job. I can't still even understand how Flowers in the Dirt (1989) was 'remastered' for its inclusion in the Paul McCartney Collection in 1993!  :-/

Well the sound quality isn't really all that great on MAF, so maybe word got around to Paul that people were unhappy with that aspect and some changes needed to be made.

Now I am a little doubtful that it's any different, though, due to the fact that I haven't heard anything officially, and you'd think they would want people to know.. Oh well.
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BlueMeanie

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #537 on: December 02, 2007, 07:57:16 AM »

Quote from: 713

It doesn't make any sense to re-release an album 5 MONTHS after with a remaster job. I can't still even understand how Flowers in the Dirt (1989) was 'remastered' for its inclusion in the Paul McCartney Collection in 1993!  :-/

I don't know where this rumour about MAF being remastered came from. I haven't actually read it anywhere other than here? As far as I'm aware it's just being reissued with a DVD.

Re: Flowers In The Dirt. In 1989 CD's were still being mastered from 5th or 6th generation master tapes. You can get away with this on vinyl, as most people don't have a good enough system to tell the difference. So it could be that they used a better source for the CD. Also, 24 bit remastering came in around 1993, which would have improved the quality no end.
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nothing_is_real

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #538 on: December 02, 2007, 08:20:36 AM »

Quote from: 483

I don't know where this rumour about MAF being remastered came from. I haven't actually read it anywhere other than here? As far as I'm aware it's just being reissued with a DVD.

Re: Flowers In The Dirt. In 1989 CD's were still being mastered from 5th or 6th generation master tapes. You can get away with this on vinyl, as most people don't have a good enough system to tell the difference. So it could be that they used a better source for the CD. Also, 24 bit remastering came in around 1993, which would have improved the quality no end.

The official Paul McCartney forum is where I first heard about it. Some people are swearing there is a world of a difference with the sound quality.
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BlueMeanie

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Re: Memory Almost Full
« Reply #539 on: December 02, 2007, 09:06:01 AM »

Quote from: 800

The official Paul McCartney forum is where I first heard about it. Some people are swearing there is a world of a difference with the sound quality.

It does indeed seem that it's been remastered. Apparently the original mastering wasn't very good (according to a lot of people on the Macca forum), and it's been re-done (NOT remixed).
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