Off the Ground Paul McCartney

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CD

  • Release Date: 02/09/1993
  • Sales Rank: 18,534
  • Label: EMI EUROPE GENERIC
  • UPC: 077778036227
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Off the Ground

1LISTENOff The Ground 3:40
2LISTENLooking For Changes 2:48
3LISTENHope of Deliverance 3:22
4LISTENMistress and Maid 3:00
5LISTENI Owe It All To You 4:51
6LISTENBiker Like An Icon 3:26
7LISTENPeace In The Neighborhood 5:06
8LISTENGolden Earth Girl 3:44
9LISTENThe Lovers That Never Were 3:42
10LISTENGet Out of My Way 3:32
11LISTENWinedark Open Sea 5:26
12LISTENC'Mon People 7:42

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Flowers in the Dirt did earn good reviews but perhaps more important was its accompanying tour, McCartney's first full-fledged world tour in years. Given the tour's enthusiastic reception, McCartney could wait until 1993 to deliver the album's proper sequel, Off the Ground. Though it isn't as consciously ambitious, Off the Ground certainly picks up where Flowers left off, as McCartney feels no shame in making an album that doesn't aim for the charts (though success would certainly be welcomed), yet is still classy, professional, and ambitious. Two key differences appear: It's a leaner production (making the mid-tempo numbers seem less cloying and giving the rockers real kick), and McCartney's social conscience dominates the record (which is easily his most politically active, as he rails against animal testing and pleads for world peace several times). He doesn't leave love or whimsy behind ("Biker Like an Icon" is easily his worst, most studied stab at whimsy), and he still has a pair of fine McCartney/McManus songs ("Mistress and Maid," "The Lovers That Never Were") to pull out. This all results in a record that has its virtues -- it's clean and direct, where many of his solo albums are diffuse and meandering, and it's serious-minded where many rely on cutesiness -- but, overall, Off the Ground feels like less than the sum of its parts, possibly because the seriousness is too studied, perhaps because the approach is a bit too stodgy. Nevertheless, this has nearly as many successful moments as Flowers in the Dirt, standing as a deliberately serious comeback record by an artist who spent too much time relying on his natural charm, and who feels no shame in overcompensating at this stage of the game. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

Great latter day albumby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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July 24, 2009: I am a 38 year old listeneer who had this on Cd about 15 years ago, I thought was an ok album, but I think it is better because I am little older now. Reccomended.

I Also Recommend: Band on the Run [Remastered/Bonus Disc], Wingspan (Hits & History), Cloud Nine [Bonus Tracks], McCartney, Ram.

A Generally Excellent Album from Paul McCartneyby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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February 22, 2001: ''Off the Ground'', Paul McCartney's 1993 effort, is a generally high-quality album, combining some lush orchestrations with consistant songwriting. The songs ''Hope of Deliverance'', ''Peace in the Neighborhood'' and the title track are exceptionally fine, ''Hope of Deliverance'' being one of McCartney's best post-Beatles songs. The album only falters in its attempts at harder rock songs, most notably the rather lame ''Biker Like an Icon''. However, these are minor faults in an otherwise fine album. Recommended.