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sbenois
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Username: Sbenois

Post Number: 15149
Registered: 10-2001


Posted on Friday, June 16, 2006 - 6:32 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Not sure if I'm going to be near the internet for the next week so I just wanted to get a thread started to honor McCartney's 64th birthday.

Through nearly thirty five years of rather intense Beatles education, I've wondered what the heck Macca's 64th birthday would be like. Would there be universal celebrations? Would it be quiet? Would he be forgotten by 2006, a year which always seemed so far away? Would he still be alive?

As far as I can tell, Sunday is going to be a quiet day for him personally with all of his recent marital problems. But I do hope that the press makes an extremely big deal out of it and his music is played on stations all over the world. I think that most people who have enjoyed his music over the last 40+ years ought to take a moment on Sunday to just reflect on all of the joy and happiness that Paul McCartney has given to us. Very few individuals in the last hundred years ever reached the heights of universal acclaim and reverence that he and his mates attained. I do hope that when he reflects on his first 64 years while doing his garden and digging his weeds that he knows just how beloved he is. And immensely talented.


Although McCartney II really sucked.
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tom
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Username: Tom

Post Number: 5118
Registered: 5-2001
Posted on Friday, June 16, 2006 - 6:37 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Well I always though Beethoven's 6th was lame too; but everyone's entitled to the occasional dud.

Happy birthday to the walrus....
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The Soullful Mr T
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Username: Howardt

Post Number: 2077
Registered: 11-2004


Posted on Friday, June 16, 2006 - 7:27 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Goo-goo ga-chew...
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Duncan
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Username: Duncanrogers

Post Number: 6550
Registered: 12-2001


Posted on Friday, June 16, 2006 - 8:39 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Well put S.
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kap
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Username: Kap

Post Number: 255
Registered: 5-2001
Posted on Friday, June 16, 2006 - 9:51 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

S, Actually Paul and I are getting together for our annual jam session to celebrate our respective, shared "coming out" (don't go there!!). The cd will be released around the holidays.

kap
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tabby
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Username: Tabby

Post Number: 321
Registered: 8-2001
Posted on Saturday, June 17, 2006 - 9:06 am:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

To quote the man who inducted Sir Paul into the R&R Hall of Fame: Keep on Rocking in the Free World....
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Nancy - LibraryLady
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Username: Librarylady

Post Number: 3581
Registered: 5-2001


Posted on Saturday, June 17, 2006 - 9:08 am:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

The NYTimes has an article today (Macca bday is tomorrow) on page B7.





--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

June 17, 2006
So Paul McCartney Is 64. Now What?
By SAM ROBERTS
In 1942, when James Paul McCartney was born in Liverpool, the average life expectancy of a British infant boy was 63 years. Notwithstanding those expectations and the greatly exaggerated rumors of his death decades ago, Mr. McCartney turns 64 on Sunday, Father's Day.

He was a teenager when he wrote the tune for "When I'm Sixty-Four," and only 24 when the Beatles recorded it in 1967 for "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band." But just as George Orwell's "1984" proved to be an abiding prophecy of a dystopic future for so many impressionable readers, Mr. McCartney's lyrics delivered to a self-consciously youthful generation an enduring if satirical definition of what their golden age might be like "many years from now."

Today, many of those who embraced that quaint vision of enduring love, caring, knitting and puttering in retirement — "Will you still need me, will you still feed me, when I'm 64?" — couldn't have been more wrong.

And judging by his personal life, Mr. McCartney missed the mark, too. The song's promise of retirement with a longtime partner has proved, at best, bittersweet for him. Last month, he announced his separation from his second wife, Heather Mills, who is 38. "Will you still need me?" indeed. Since 1967, American divorce rates per capita have more than doubled (three-quarters of men married in the late 1950's celebrated their 20th wedding anniversaries with their first wife, compared with about half who married in the early 1970's).

A smaller proportion of Americans older than 65 are poor today, but more delay retirement because they want to, or have to. More of the better-off own their vacation homes outright (never mind renting "a cottage in the Isle of Wight, if it's not too dear"), while the less well-off who own homes have the newly popular option of reverse mortgages.

Americans live longer today (technically, no one has died of old age since 1951, when the government dropped that official cause). They also age more slowly, or so they say. Half the over-65 population define themselves as middle-aged or even young, though a greater proportion today are likely to be perilously overweight.

Yet the song still resonates. Julian Lennon, John's son, sang it in an Allstate Insurance commercial in 2002. When Paul Simon turned 64 last year, Mr. McCartney called and serenaded him with it.

According to most accounts, Mr. McCartney wrote the lyrics for his father (his mother had died of breast cancer when he was 13) and the song was recorded not long after the elder McCartney turned 64.

"While it may have been done tongue in cheek," said Bruce Spizer, a Beatles biographer, "life began to imitate art."

Mr. McCartney's first wife, Linda, died in 1998 at 56, of breast cancer; they had been married 29 years. "The bliss of being with a lifelong partner, as expressed in 'When I'm Sixty-Four,' was shattered by Linda's tragic death," Mr. Spizer said. "The little things expressed in the song, such as working the garden and going for a Sunday morning drive, were part of his life with Linda."

The writer Gail Sheehy, who, at 68, is still guiding readers through life's passages, said today's 64-year-olds have a "360-degree view of life." They may believe in yesterday, but they also can't stop thinking about tomorrow. Thanks to seasoning (and Viagra), males are not necessarily half the men they used to be.

Mr. McCartney, who recently appeared on the cover of AARP magazine, does not appear to be losing his hair yet, despite the song's augury. He has three grandchildren (not the song's "Vera, Chuck and Dave"). He is also the father of a 2-year-old daughter. And while he may not be living his own lyrical vision, Mr. McCartney seems closer to fulfilling Bob Dylan's "Forever Young" than Pete Townshend's "Hope I die before I get old."

Now a billionaire, he has said he has no plans to retire, either as a rock star or as an animal-rights advocate (although, at 65, he will be entitled to a basic pension from the British government, at least $156 a week, and a free transit pass).

This year, the first baby boomers turned 60. About 2.7 million other Americans observe their 64th birthdays in 2006, including Muhammad Ali, Erica Jong, Larry Flynt, Garrison Keillor, Michael Bloomberg, Harrison Ford, Ted Kaczynski and Barbra Streisand. (Ringo Starr, the only other surviving member of the Fab Four, will be 66 next month; John Lennon was murdered at 40 in 1980; George Harrison died of cancer at 58 in 2001.)

"The slogan back then was 'Never trust anyone over 30,' " recalled Jeff Greenfield, the CNN commentator, who is 63. "We thought people would be dead or in a home by their 60's."

Today, on average, 64-year-olds can expect to live more than 16 years, about 4 years longer than 64-year-olds could expect in 1967, according to government statisticians (and, hey, an editor of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Jude Rutledge, was named for another of Mr. McCartney's songs).

"The new 64," Ms. Sheehy said, "is more like 84."


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Lucy
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Username: Lucy

Post Number: 4177
Registered: 5-2005


Posted on Saturday, June 17, 2006 - 9:40 am:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I Love Paul
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The Soullful Mr T
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Username: Howardt

Post Number: 2079
Registered: 11-2004


Posted on Saturday, June 17, 2006 - 9:50 am:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I buried Paul...
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Jersey girl
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Username: Critterlover

Post Number: 52
Registered: 2-2004
Posted on Sunday, June 18, 2006 - 7:52 am:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I feel sorry for Paul, going through this public debacle of a divorce. His birthday cannot be as happy for him as we all would want it to be.

Losing Linda had to cast a long shadow over his life.
I wish I could hug him and assure him his life will improve and remind him this apparent gold digger isn't worth the stress she is causing him. I was never one for pre-nups, but she is proving me wrong to take such a naive position.

Thanks for the article. Brought tears to my eyes. That song is a heart-wrencher.
I hope Sir Paul does keep on rocking in the free world!

Jersey girl
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ken (the other one)
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Username: Ken

Post Number: 410
Registered: 5-2001


Posted on Sunday, June 18, 2006 - 8:43 am:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

pmc
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The Soullful Mr T
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Username: Howardt

Post Number: 2084
Registered: 11-2004


Posted on Sunday, June 18, 2006 - 9:36 am:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Just how much plastic surgery you think the ol' walrus has had?
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patty
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Username: Patty

Post Number: 480
Registered: 5-2001


Posted on Monday, June 19, 2006 - 10:10 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Nice pix. OK, maybe hair dye. Might not truly have gone under the knife. Looks appropriately aging, but still able to bounce, well.... Vera, Chuck and Dave.... Someday perhaps.

All this from a George girl. Happy birthday, Paul, you long-underrated genius. Kudos to ye. As Stella's T-shirt proudly says, "It's about f_____ing time!"
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ken (the other one)
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Username: Ken

Post Number: 412
Registered: 5-2001


Posted on Monday, June 19, 2006 - 10:27 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

ahhhh, Stella's t-shirt

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ken (the other one)
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Username: Ken

Post Number: 413
Registered: 5-2001


Posted on Monday, June 19, 2006 - 10:39 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

t
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emmie
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Username: Emmie

Post Number: 762
Registered: 3-2002


Posted on Monday, June 19, 2006 - 10:50 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

He is going to get screwed, glued and tatooed by his little trophy wife, of 30 somthing. A good guy, who got sucked in, now he is going to pay the piper. Had to have that very much younger woman.
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patty
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Username: Patty

Post Number: 481
Registered: 5-2001


Posted on Monday, June 19, 2006 - 11:06 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Um, I was also referring to the sentiments on the shirt.

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