| "Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single byPaul McCartney and Wings | ||||
| from the albumBand on the Run | ||||
| A-side | "Band on the Run" | |||
| Released | 28 June 1974 | |||
| Recorded | October 1973[1] | |||
| Studio | AIR, London[1] | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 5:29 | |||
| Label | Apple | |||
| Songwriters | ||||
| Producer | Paul McCartney | |||
| Wings singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Official audio | ||||
| "Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five" onYouTube | ||||
| Band on the Run track listing | ||||
9 tracks
| ||||
"Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five" (sometimes written as "1985") is a song by the British–Americanrock bandPaul McCartney and Wings, released as the final track on their 1973 albumBand on the Run.[2] It has been featured on the 2001 documentary DVDWingspan andPaul McCartney and Wings' 1974 TV specialOne Hand Clapping. A 2016 remix of the song was nominated for aGrammy Award.[3] The song was referenced inBret Easton Ellis’s novelGlamorama, driving a group of fictional supermodels to extreme terrorist acts.
Paul McCartney has said that the song originated with just the first line.
With a lot of songs I do, the first line is it. It's all in the first line, and then you have to go on and write the second line. With 'Eleanor Rigby' I had 'picks up the rice in the church where the wedding has been.' That was the one big line that started me off on it. With this one it was 'No one ever left alive in nineteen hundred and eighty-five.' That's all I had of that song for months. 'No one ever left alive in nineteen hundred and eighty... six?' It wouldn't have worked!
— Paul McCartney,Paul McCartney In His Own Words[4]
The tune is the climactic track from the albumBand on the Run. It continues the album's theme of escape by describing the singer achieving artistic freedom through love.[5] Author Andrew Grant Jackson calls the lyrics "gibberish" and mere placeholders for the excitement and "cinematic purpose" of the music.[6]
The song has a grandiose ending with a full orchestra and the band. Other instrumentation includesmellotron,organ and horns.[6] The album version ends with an excerpt of theopening song's chorus.[2][6] This song is featured on several episodes ofTrigger Happy TV. In its early life, it was simply titled "Piano Thing".
Ultimate Classic Rock critic Dave Swanson rated the song as McCartney's 8th most underrated song, saying that "A funky groove holds the song together as Paul delivers a gritty bluesy vocal."[7]
Personnel perThe Beatles Bible.[2]
"Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five" was never performed live by Wings.[2] McCartney performed the song live for the first time ever during his 2010–2011Up and Coming Tour. He played the song live again during his 2011–2012On the Run Tour, his 2013–2015Out There Tour, his 2016–2017One on One Tour, his performance on 26 July 2018 in the LiverpoolCavern Club, his 2018–2019Freshen Up tour, at12-12-12: The Concert for Sandy Relief and on his 2022–2024Got Back tour.[8] On 25 June 2022, a week after his 80th birthday, he performed the song as part of his Saturday night headline act, on the Pyramid stage, at theGlastonbury Festival.[9][10]
The Golden Dogs included a cover version on their 2006 albumBig Eye Little Eye.
In 2016, German producerTimo Maas and Canadian DJ James Teej released a remix of the track with McCartney's approval. Their version received aGrammy nomination forBest Remixed Recording, Non-Classical at the59th Annual Grammy Awards.[3][11]
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