James Paul McCartney was born on June 18, 1942, in Liverpool, England, the son of Jim McCartney, a jazz musician and cotton salesman, and Mary Patricia Mohin, a midwife. His mother died of cancer when Paul was fourteen — a loss that would echo through his songwriting for decades, most explicitly in 'Let It Be,' which he described as emerging from a dream in which his mother came to him in a difficult period and offered comfort. He met John Lennon at a church fete in Woolton when he was fifteen and Lennon was sixteen, joining Lennon's skiffle group the Quarrymen in a meeting that would produce one of the most consequential artistic partnerships in 20th-century culture.
The Beatles' trajectory from Liverpool to global phenomenon between 1960 and 1970 has been told so many times that the extraordinary achievement risks becoming invisible through familiarity. McCartney's specific contribution — beyond the partnership with Lennon that produced songs of unprecedented melodic sophistication — was a musical versatility that allowed the group to move through stylistic territories that would have defeated less talented musicians: the orchestral pop of 'Yesterday,' the avant-garde noise of 'Revolution 9,' the hard rock of 'Helter Skelter,' the country pastiche of 'Act Naturally.' He plays multiple instruments with professional fluency and writes at the rate of genius.
The dissolution of the Beatles in 1970 left McCartney to construct a solo career in the shadow of the most successful group in popular music history — a position of both extraordinary advantage and impossible expectation. Wings, the group he formed with his wife Linda and various collaborators, achieved genuine commercial success throughout the 1970s, and 'Band on the Run' (1973) is widely regarded as one of the finest rock albums of the decade. His subsequent solo career has been commercially successful while rarely receiving the critical praise that his work with Lennon attracted, a disparity that says as much about the mythology surrounding the Beatles as it does about the quality of his later music.
Paul McCartney at eighty-two is one of the most remarkable cases of sustained creative productivity in popular music. His recent albums — Egypt Station (2018), McCartney III (2020), and its remixed companion McCartney III Imagined (2021) — have received genuinely enthusiastic critical reviews from audiences who are not making allowances for age. His live performances continue to fill the largest venues on earth, drawing audiences who experienced the Beatles firsthand alongside those born decades after the band's dissolution. His personal commitments — to vegetarianism and animal rights since Linda's death from breast cancer in 1998, to environmental causes, to the memory and legacy of his former partner John Lennon — have been consistent and principled.