Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Paul McCartney's best album... and you have never even heard of it, let alone heard it


Paul McCartney's best album... and you have never even heard of it, let alone heard it..,


partly because it was recorded under the name of his alias/alter ego The Fireman.

The album? "Electric Arguments".

It even includes a worship song...hear it, and the rest of the album here


P:S I bet you have never even heard of The Monkees' best song either. Late to the party? It's  here.

Their second best that you have also never heard of includes Neil Young on guitar It's here, and I hear it as a prayer.

Both  cowritten by Carole King, and both from the same album.


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On to reviews of  Electric Arguments by Paul McCartney AKA The Fireman:


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"a staggering collection of timeless adventures that touch on the best aspects of today's more left-field sounds". Clash, link


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Electric Arguments is the best Paul Album he's released in the last twenty years, and no one has listened to it:

Electric Arguments by The Fireman (Paul McCartney and Youth working together) is a top tier album for me. I think The Fireman have a bad wrap because of their first two albums which were not Paul's standard kind of thing.

The songs near the end are a little more abstract (it is still "the fireman") but the first ten songs are as good as his seventies material for me!

Paul played all the instruments and vocals, similarly to how he did on Chaos and Creation. It's basically what I thought of as "McCartney III" before MIII actually came out. link

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Electric Arguments will go down as one of the most eclectic and exhilarating albums in Macca’s whole extraordinary canon. link

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 The proof is in the listening: this is Paul McCartney finally “getting back,” serving notice that he’s back, with all of the adventurousness he had with those other Liverpool lads – and reminding us that “Lonely Hearts Club Band” stuff was his idea, after all. link


Though he may never acquire the same ‘cool’ credentials of John, the existence of The Fireman indicates that he may have conceded there is nothing left for him to prove. link


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I'll be brief in this, my first Debaserian time, by saying right away that McCartney has rarely recorded and released such a "modern", immediate work, rich with the most diverse sounds and musical cues.

If it has always been said, and partly rightly so, that McCartney's music needs careful production to give its best (which often, unfortunately, had to make up for a lack of ideas), this time we can enjoy the former Beatle without frills and in the midst of a very happy, instinctive, creative moment, finally far from market demands, which Paul too, too often, has let himself be influenced by.

The album consists of 13 tracks which almost perfectly, in my very personal opinion, fulfill the main task of music, which is to live better, forgetting reality as much as possible during those minutes.

The sounds, instruments, and atmospheres you hear are numerous (violins, flutes, mandolins, synthesizers, and percussion of all kinds, etc.) but well-blended in this work, truly "multiethnic" without ever becoming an incoherent jumble. Rather, it is the coherence of the whole that leaves an impression of "slow-release" compactness at the end, truly rare for McCartney. link

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 Creative gem..certainly a true gem and perhaps will be remembered as one of Paul’s best works, at his most creative and instinctive. link

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