


| Off the Grid (2009 Album by Chicago Afrobeat Project) | |
| Off the Ground (2000 Album by The Max Perkoff Jazz Ensemble) |
|
|
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2011) |
| Off the Ground | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Paul McCartney | ||||
| Released | 1 February 1993 | |||
| Recorded | November 1991 - July 1992 | |||
| Genre | Rock | |||
| Length | 50:25 | |||
| Label | Parlophone/EMI | |||
| Producer | Paul McCartney, Julian Mendelsohn | |||
| Paul McCartney chronology | ||||
|
||||
| Singles from Off the Ground | ||||
|
||||
| Professional ratings | |
|---|---|
| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| Allmusic | |
| Chicago Tribune | (Favourable)[2] |
| Entertainment Weekly | |
| Houston Chronicle | |
| Los Angeles Times | |
| The New York Times | (Favourable)[6] |
| Rolling Stone | |
Off the Ground is the ninth solo studio album by Paul McCartney, released in 1993. As his first studio album of the 1990s, it is also the follow-up to the acclaimed Flowers in the Dirt (1989).
|
Contents
|
|
|
This section reads like a review rather than an encyclopedic description of the subject. Please help improve this article to make it neutral in tone and meet Wikipedia's quality standards. (March 2009) |
Buoyed by the critical success of his 1989 album Flowers in the Dirt and the subsequent Paul McCartney World Tour in 1989 and 1990, it seemed a natural extension to record his next album with his existing touring band. Only one change was made to the line-up, with Blair Cunningham joining on drums to replace Chris Whitten. To add to the band's success in the live arena, McCartney decided to record the album "live in the studio", meaning that the band would rehearse the entire song together and then record the song together in one take, instead of recording each vocal track and instrumental track separately. This approach gave a new, raw and direct feel to the work, but was not overly liked by critics. The compositions also seemed less complex than on Flowers in the Dirt, with some of them having been out-takes from the earlier album. "Mistress and Maid" and "The Lovers That Never Were", which emerged from McCartney's songwriting collaboration with Elvis Costello, made their appearance on this album. Unlike Flowers in the Dirt, however, Costello did not appear on Off the Ground.
McCartney's increased interest in social issues came to prominence on this album, be it the scathing anti-animal cruelty rocker "Looking for Changes" (McCartney and his wife Linda long-time vegetarians by this time) or paeans for a better world ("Hope of Deliverance" and "C'Mon People"). The B-side Big Boys Bickering lambasted politicians, with the phrase "Big boys bickering, f***ing it up for everyone" showing a more aggressive side to McCartney.
The lead single, "Hope of Deliverance", was released in the last week of December 1992 and the album followed in February 1993. While Off the Ground hit #5 in the UK and reached #17 in the US, where it eventually went gold, it was the first Paul McCartney album to not contain a sizeable US hit single since Wings' Wild Life in 1971. While "Hope of Deliverance" floundered there, it managed to reach #18 in the UK, where "C'Mon People" became a minor hit as well. The album spent only six weeks inside the Top 100 in the UK, eventually reaching #5 there. In Germany, the album was particularly successful and certified platinum with "Hope of Deliverance" reaching #3 on the singles chart and the album spending four weeks at #2.
Some weeks after its release, McCartney launched "The New World Tour", taking in many successful shows across the globe during the summer months. These gigs were documented on the album Paul Is Live, which followed at the end of 1993.
Although generally considered a slightly weaker successor to Flowers in the Dirt and now somewhat overlooked, Off the Ground is prized by many McCartney followers.
The feet on the album cover are actually of McCartney, his wife Linda and his touring band.
All songs composed and written by Paul McCartney, except "Mistress and Maid" and "The Lovers That Never Were" co-written by Declan MacManus.
Off the Ground: The Complete Works is a two-disc set released in Japan and the Netherlands. This edition included McCartney's rare use of swear words in the song "Big Boys Bickering", a protest song. Other notable songs on this edition are "Long Leather Coat" and "I Can't Imagine".
Even though the album is called the "complete works", it is missing two B-sides and three promo remixes. Those tracks are "Deliverance" and "Deliverance (Dub Mix)", dance-oriented reworkings of the song "Hope of Deliverance", released as B-sides of the "C'mon People" CD single #1, and the three promo remixes of "Off the Ground" released to American radio, namely the Bob Clearmountain remix, the Keith Cohen remix, and the Keith Cohen AC remix.
Also, when the iTunes store added his catalog of music in 2007, they included "I Can't Imagine" as an exclusive bonus track on the album.
Chart positions
|
Year-end charts
|
| Region | Certification | Sales/shipments |
|---|---|---|
| Austria (IFPI Austria)[27] | Gold | 25,000x |
| Canada (Music Canada)[28] | Gold | 50,000^ |
| France (SNEP)[29] | Gold | 167,400[30] |
| Germany (BVMI)[31] | Platinum | 500,000^ |
| Japan (Oricon Charts) | 92,000[26][32] | |
| Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[33] | Gold | 25,000x |
| United Kingdom (BPI)[34] | Silver | 60,000^ |
| United States (RIAA)[35] | Gold | 500,000^ |
|
^shipments figures based on certification alone |
||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)