Which of these two songs do you like best ? I think both illustrate Paul could still write a very catchy pop song well into his middle age , and although neither were big hits both of them reached # 18 on the UK charts . They should rank in my opinion with some of his big Wings hits ?
Funnily enough, he's not been that high in the UK chart since either of these two. I vote for Hope Of Deliverence mainly because I always thought I hated it until I saw the vid on VH1 a few months back. Nice surprise.
I just want you to reassure him - talk to him, make him see the error of his ways. Then I'll hit him.
Funnily enough, he's not been that high in the UK chart since either of these two. I vote for Hope Of Deliverence mainly because I always thought I hated it until I saw the vid on VH1 a few months back. Nice surprise.
These two songs signal the end of Paul's hit making days BlueMeanie , both failed on the Billboard chart , Hope of Deliverance got to # 83 and This One # 94 , but at home they were still decent sized hits . I think the video's for both songs are very good ? I know Paul as continued to release singles , but for me they all lack Paul's pop sensibility , i see these two songs as a bit of a watershed, the end of an hit making era ?
'Hope of Deliverance' was always very special to me. I remember when I was a 5 year old kid eating my Happy Meal at McDonald's and listening to this song. Curiously it happened two or three times. I was eating my sandwich and the radio played that song in more than one ocassion. At that time, I didn't knew it was Paul McCartney. Ten years after that I began to listening Beatles music, and then once the radio introduced Hope of a Deliverance as a 'Paul McCartney classic track'. And then they played it. I was so happy! That song get stucked in my mind all those years, and then reappeared just when I was discovering the Beatles music. Then, I bought 'Off the Ground'. It was great.
I don't smoke, I don't drink, I don't eat trash... I work out hard everyday and have a healthy life. And I'm proud of it.
Yes, This One reached #18 in the UK charts as Hope did. But there was a huge difference. This One was a much bigger hit if you consider that it was the SECOND single from Flowers in the Dirt. It was released several weeks after the album was released. So a lot of people had already the song. In the other hand, Hope of Deliverance - with a CD edition that included 3 non-album B-sides!! , was released the week after Christmas, a time when no one is releasing anything and it's easier to manage reaching a higher position.
So there were #18 both of them, but in really different circumstances.
I don't smoke, I don't drink, I don't eat trash... I work out hard everyday and have a healthy life. And I'm proud of it.
How can it be a bigger hit ? wingsman if they both got to # 18 and both had a six week chart run , yes This One was a second single it equalled My Brave Face which also got to # 18 , that was the first single from Flowers in the Dirt . My point is it's not what people were buying and at what time of year , it is that by 1989 / 1993 people were not buying Paul's singles in any great numbers to push them higher than # 18 , all three are medium size hits but he's not gone higher than # 18 on the UK chart since 1993 , so in effect his hit making days end then . Love Me Do reached # 17 in the uk charts in 1962 so i think hitting # 18 in 1993 ends a nice 30 year run of hit making
Still, I think his performance in the charts was remarkable after 1993. Of course, his singles never went higher than #18, but... for not too much. The problem is that, at a certain point, musicians with a long career became more album artists rather than single artists.
'Flaming Pie' was a huge hit as an album project, reaching #2, but still produced 3 UK Top 25 singles. 'Young Boy' reached #19, which is almost #18. When an artist gets older, is more difficult to reach highest places. But 'Fine Line' still showed a remarkable Paul's staying power at the charts, reaching #20. Even 'Jenny Wren' peaking at #22 I think it's a big hit.
I really don't think his hit making days end in the early nineties, because there's no much difference between a #18 and a #20. If you consider what I said, 'Fine Line' was even a bigger hit than 'Hope' or 'My Brave Face' or 'This One', because it's really hard to make a good chart placing when you are a 62 year-old. Even 'Dance Tonight' was #26 only with downloads, as far as I know.
I hope you get my point, DaveRam, my english sucks.
I don't smoke, I don't drink, I don't eat trash... I work out hard everyday and have a healthy life. And I'm proud of it.