Capitol Records tried to drop hints that was, in fact, a record by Paul McCartney. Press information shipped with the advance CDs had a pull-out reproduction of a tabloid, apparently circa 1964: “‘Beatlemania,'” the headline screamed, “sweeps U.S.” But the enclosed news release goes on and on about “an anonymous duo” known as the Fireman.
No other details given on the stark-red 1994 release, titled Strawberries Oceans Ships Forest, but it turned out to be one of the wackiest Beatles solo releases ever. Nothing, of course, tops John Lennon’s Two Virgins — not with THAT cover. Still, if you like some of Brian Eno’s more uptempo stuff — or if you get Moby at all, this is one you’ll enjoy. At the very least, it goes into the Top Five Very Un-Fab Solo Albums.
Paul McCartney is joined by producer Youth, who is best known as a member of Killing Joke and the Orb. Sure, there were great reasons to keep it anonymous. Youth (real name: Martin Glover) got to preserve his street cred — and, yeah, McCartney might move some product among the funny-haircut kids. But, still, it was a wow-inducer. Since the joys of Eno’s first ambient noodlings, many are the eggheads who’ve taken it upon themselves to fire up the synthesizer and get after it. None, it would seem, more surprising than one Sir Paul.
Yet, a brush with his catalog clearly predicts the crisp, dancy stuff on Strawberries Oceans Ships Forest: Specifically, there’s McCartney II, the 1980 release that marked the official breakup of Wings. It was the second album (that’s what they used to call them, kids) that he’d done all alone.
Where 1970’s McCartney — which followed his split with some British supergroup — was strictly down-home acoustic, II was a burst of electrified home-studio messing around. Sometimes it worked (“Summer’s Day Song,” the hit “Coming Up”) and sometimes it didn’t (virtually the rest of II).
Same here. There is the same fitful brilliance, matched with swoons into rote techno-razzle with no dazzle. This could have to do with the editing process — or the lack there of. Only one tune is under eight minutes long — and it’s still more than seven and a half.
Strawberries Oceans Ships Forest was minor hit in England, but of course, fizzled here. Just as well. Paul McCartney would go on to drop his dance-floor pretensions, call up his old buddies Ringo Starr and George Harrison — and refashion two old Lennon demo tapes into the last music ever produced under the Beatles’ monicker.
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I thought the 2nd Fireman album, Rushes, was better.