“Paul, What a Mess You’ve Made of It!”Contemporary Reactions to Ram.

This review of Ram from the 22 May 1971 is for McCartney’s second studio album, which is actually credited to “Paul and Linda McCartney”.

The review is from the New Musical Express and is by the critic Alan Smith. Alan Smith was promoted to be the editor of the musical journal from 1972. The New Musical Express was at the forefront of music journalism in the 1970s and 1980s. The Beatles author and music critic Ian MacDonald observed:

I think all the other papers knew by 1974 that NME had become the best music paper in Britain. We had most of the best writers and photographers, the best layouts, that sense of style of humour and a feeling of real adventure. We also set out to beat Melody Maker on its strong suit: being the serious, responsible journal of record.

Detail

What exactly did Alan Smith Despise in Ram?

Well, according to Smith’s opening remarks, the album is “an excursion into almost unrelieved tedium”. “The melodies are weak, the ideas are stale, the arrangements are messy”.

Analysis of Songs

Smith goes on to summarise each song in a few sentences. As can be seen below, Heart of the Country “inconsequential”; Monkberry Moon delight drags on for too long, “an endless, endless, endless fade”. Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey is dismissed as a “Noel Coward impression”. In actual fact, the single of Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey was certified Gold in the USA after selling more than a million copies.

Smith ends with the accurate observation, “Sorry Paul, I don’t suppose I’ll get a Christmas card this year”.

What is interesting is that Smith was not alone in his damnation of the album.  In his review July 1971 for Rolling Stone, John Landau called Ram “incredibly inconsequential” and “monumentally irrelevant”.

Rehabilitation

Over the years, Ram, perhaps more than any other McCartney album, has undergone a critical re-assessment. It now tends to be regarded as one of his strongest post-Beatles albums, alongside Band on the Run.

It is hard to fathom just how and why views have changed to such a dramatic extent. For example. the website Metacritc gives the album a percentage score of 88, based on thirty three user reviews:

Changing Perceptions

The reasons for such a change in Ram’s critical standing are not immediately obvious in 2020. An obvious point is that in the early 1970s, McCartney was still being compared to The Beatles, which were still a very recent memory. Ram has a wandering and almost “chaotic” aura, which stood in sharp relief to the polished perfection of albums such as Abbey Road.

In addition, John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band was released only five months prior to Ram, and seemed present a more serious and coherent artistic statement. In contrast, Ram was brimming with the McCartney tendency to whimsy in songs such as The Back Seat of My Car; a paean to teenage romance.

My Views of Ram

In my books I have approached a handful of the songs from Ram from the viewpoint of musical analysis; picking apart the musical traits the define each song. Here are two of my concluding assessments from Volume Two. The first is about the song Long Haired Lady, the second deals with Eat at Home.

Long Haired Lady

Eat at Home

Conclusion

All that remains to be asked is; who do you agree with, me or Alan Smith?

Please think about leaving a comment below:

Many thanks to Roy Matthews for providing the newspaper clipping for the Alan Smith NME review.

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