Like 1970's
McCartney, 1980's
McCartney II functioned as a way for
Paul McCartney to clear the decks: to experiment and recalibrate in the aftermath of his band falling apart. This means 1982's Tug of War is, in many ways, the very first
Paul McCartney solo album, a record recorded not at home but in a studio, a record made without
Wings and not co-credited to
Linda, who nevertheless is present as a backing vocalist.
McCartney recognized this album as something of a major opportunity, so he revived his relationship with
Beatles producer
George Martin and brought in several heavy-hitters as guests, including his hero
Carl Perkins, his Motown counterpart
Stevie Wonder, fusion star
Stanley Clarke, prog rock refugees
Eric Stewart and
Andy Mackay, and his old bandmate
Ringo Starr, whose presence was overshadowed by "Here Today," an elegy written for the murdered
John Lennon. Tucked away at the end of the first side, "Here Today" is bittersweet and small when compared to all the show pieces elbowing each other for attention throughout Tug of War: the grave march of the title track, the vaudevillian "Ballroom Dancing," the stately drama of "Wanderlust," and sincere schmaltz of "Ebony and Ivory," the
Wonder duet that helped turn this album into the blockbuster it was intended to be. As good as some of these numbers are -- and they are, bearing an ambition and execution that outstrips latter-day
Wings -- much of the charm of Tug of War lies in the excess around the edges, whether it's the rockabilly lark of the
Perkins duet "Get It," the later-period
Beatles whimsy of '"The Pound Is Sinking," the electro-throwaway "Dress Me Up as a Robber," or the long, electro-funk workout of "What's That You're Doing?," a track that's a fuller collaboration between
Paul and
Stevie than "Ebony and Ivory." Such crowd-pleasing genre-hopping finds its apotheosis on "Take It Away," a salute to eager performers and the crowds who love them, which means it summarizes not only the appeal of Tug of War in general -- it is, by design, a record that gives the people old
Beatle Paul -- but
McCartney in general. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine