Electric Arguments The Fireman, Paul McCartney

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CD - Digi-Pak

  • Release Date: 11/25/2008
  • Sales Rank: 3,576
  • Label: ATO RECORDS / RED
  • UPC: 880882164027

Listener Rating: (12 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Stimulating" See All

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Vinyl LP$29.99

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
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Track List
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Electric Arguments

1LISTENNothing Too Much Just out of Sight 4:55
2LISTENTwo Magpies 2:12
3LISTENSing the Changes 3:43
4LISTENTravelling Light 5:05
5LISTENHighway 4:16
6LISTENLight from Your Lighthouse 2:31
7LISTENSun Is Shining 5:11
8LISTENDance 'Til We're High 3:37
9LISTENLifelong Passion 4:48
10LISTENIs This Love? 5:51
11LISTENLovers in a Dream 5:21
12LISTENUniversal Here, Everlasting Now 5:05
13LISTENDon't Stop Running 10:30

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 Hear a Free Stream of "Sing the Changes"

About The Fireman

About Paul McCartney

About Youth

    Editorial Reviews

    Ever since the early days of the Beatles, Paul McCartney has known the value of a pseudonym, famously registering into hotels under the surname Ramone and pushing the Fab Four to act like another band for Sgt. Pepper. This carried through to his solo career, where he released a couple odd singles while flitting back and forth with Wings, but he never again embraced the freedom of disguise like he did with Sgt. Pepper until 2008, when he put out the Fireman's Electric Arguments. McCartney created the Fireman alias with Youth back in the mid-'90s when electronica was all the rage and Macca hesitated dipping his toe in the water on his own LPs. A decade after Rushes, he revived the Fireman moniker not to cut another electronic record but to put out what in effect was McCartney III: a weird clearinghouse of experiments, jokes, detours, and rough-hewn pop. McCartney and Youth recorded Electric Arguments quickly -- not so much in a brief, weeklong blast of activity, but spending one day on each of the 13 tracks, writing and recording within a 24-hour period. This speed is the opposite of his ambitious 2000s projects Chaos and Creation in the Backyard and Memory Almost Full, both accomplished, carefully considered albums constructed with a broad audience in mind, if not necessarily the charts. As its release under McCartney's pseudonym makes plain, Electric Arguments wasn't intended for a large audience; he did this for himself, just like he did the two McCartney albums and even Ram, three records that had loose ends and odd detours, just like this does.

    This revival is announced boldly by the thumping, full-throated blues-rocker "Nothing Too Much Just Out of Sight," but it's not just that McCartney has gotten loud again -- things that McCartney has shied away from over the past two decades suddenly reappear, like the simple, sweet intimacy of "Two Magpies," the grinding rocker "Highway," which finds its loose-legged laid-back cousin in "Light from Your Lighthouse," and a fondness for lazy jazz. He's telling jokes and making noise -- and if you dig underneath the surface it's possible to hear references to his bitter divorce from Heather Mills, a situation he cheerfully ignored on Memory Almost Full -- but this is not merely a McCartney pop album under another name; it is indeed a collaboration with Youth, so this veers off into rather experimental territory, especially toward the end of the album, as it floats away on the circular "Lovers in a Dream" and gets claustrophobic on "Universal Here, Everlasting Now." McCartney and Youth often strike a delicate balance between these two inclinations, and they're some of the best moments on the album: the delicate waltz of "Travelling Light," the surging "Sing the Changes" (which matches U2 for melodrama), the wall of sound on "Dance 'Til We're High," and the beautiful, meditative "Lifelong Passion (Sail Away)." There are more twists and turns, more textures, than on any other McCartney album in the last 20 years, and if it's a little messy, so be it: it's better to have Paul letting it all hang out instead of hanging back. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide



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    Customer Reviews

    Modernistby Nepomuk

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    February 03, 2009: Paul McCartney, assuming his Fireman identity, has created an expressive album with the collaboration of Youth.
    The packaging works with the sound. If the splashes of color on the cover click with you, you'll probably like this CD. It is a collage, and yet the tracks are, indeed, complete songs. Paul McCartney's voice is faded back, but this is done in such a way that an effect of an entire world as background meets your ears. In the last decade or so, McCartney has opted for a gritty sound, but I think with ELECTRIC ARGUMENTS, he has finally become comfortable with it. The difference between this and his last two or three cd's is that this one, somehow is 3-D. There are some beautiful passages, such as the pensive piano at the beginning and end of track 12, and the very Celtic Traveling Light.

    Funby baroque

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    December 26, 2008: This album is just fun to listen to, Paul has lightened up and let loose.
    I appreciated his vocal performance on all of the songs.
    Great Musicianship.


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