by MartcasterJunior » 10 Aug 2016, 09:40
Almost impossible to compare them I would have thought, beyond personal preference.
The composition of Free As A Bird was at least 50% there already, with very little that could be done to alter the structure of the sections they had to work with. All they could do was write some additional bits to glue it all together and make it whole. Then you throw in the addition of Jeff Lynne as producer (brought in, on McCartney's own admission, to make sure the 3 remaining Beatles played nicely and kept their egos in check). No criticism of Jeff Lynne - he an amazing songwriter and producer - but it sounds just like a Jeff Lynne record; it's not "The Beatles". To me it's not an oustanding Beatles record but it's a nice bookend to a career and probably about as good as they would have done under any other circumstances, making music all together 25 years after they last did.
Cliff & The Shadows? Well...not quite the same. They were in a different position because they had the ability to write new material but instead chose to cover a 50-year-old song. That's not really a criticism - just showing how the 2 "reunion" songs we're looking at were conceived in different circumstances. With Hank being in Australia then obviously they're limited in terms of collaboration, so maybe that was the easiest solution. I think it's alright. It sounds OK. It doesn't give me the same feeling of nostalgia that Free As A Bird does but, arguably, there isn't as defined a "Cliff & The Shads sound" to try and recapture as there is with The Beatles. (Incidentally, does anyone fancy a go at defining "That Sound" for The Beatles? Actually, no, let's not open that Pandora's box...)
So, my personal feeling? They're both "alright". Perfectly acceptable ways to close the final chapters of their recording careers for fans of both groups but neither of them quite dazzle in the way that I'd like them to, although I'd argue that that's probably an unattainable target. To use an Only Fools & Horses analogy (and apologies to any readers who aren't familiar with that programme), neither of them are that episode where Del & Rodney find the million-pound watch in the garage, but neither are they any of the episodes which came after and ruined a perfectly satisfactory ending.
Matt