So just what does this first volume of The McCartney Legacy give us that we don’t already have? Well, if you just so happen to be looking for an exhaustive survey of the singer’s post-Beatles career (both solo and with his band Wings), you’ve come to the right place ... A compulsively readable (for Beatlemaniacs, at any rate) blow-by-blow account of McCartney’s final days in the world’s most astonishingly creative rock ’n’ roll band and his willful determination to make a go of it out on his own ... It’s a welcome portrait of a complicated man who is too often depicted as a smiling jukebox. For a superstar who has thrived in the public eye with a no-drama mantra, there’s plenty of drama in these pages ... The photos are revelatory ... Kozinn is an astute musical analyst ... But the book’s prose, like its subject, is sometimes prone to banality ... Still, these post-Beatles years provide plenty of fodder — even, yes, a few things we didn’t already have.
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