The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Paul McCartney reveals the secret to the lyrics of the hit Yesterday

2024-02-28T17:23:41.120Z

Highlights: Paul McCartney reveals the true meaning behind the lyrics of the hit Yesterday. The song featured on the album Help! by the Beatles, released in 1965. To everyone's surprise, the nostalgia and sadness evoked in the song do not allude to a romantic breakup but to an exchange he had with his mother, Mary. The latter being “nurse, of Irish origin”. At the age of 24, almost ten years after the death of his mother from cancer, Paul McCartney decided to make a song out of this regret.


To everyone's surprise, the nostalgia and sadness evoked in the song do not allude to a romantic breakup but to an exchange he had with his mother, Mary.


A secret that is not new.

Speaking on his podcast

A Life in Lyrics

, where he tells the story of his songs alongside poet Paul Muldoon, Paul McCartney revealed the true meaning behind the lyrics of the hit

Yesterday

, featured on the album

Help!

by the Beatles, released in 1965.

To everyone's surprise, the nostalgia and sadness evoked in the song do not allude to a romantic breakup but to an exchange he had with his mother, Mary.

The latter being

“nurse, of Irish origin”.

Paul McCartney made fun of his manners, which he found too

“chic”

.

“I remember being very embarrassed because I had embarrassed my mother

,” he explains.

[...] I remember thinking later, 'God, I wish I'd never said that.'

And it stuck in my throat.”

“It is often with hindsight that we begin to understand things

,” continues the ex-member of the Beatles.

At the age of 24, almost ten years after the death of his mother from cancer, Paul McCartney decided, unconsciously, to make a song out of this regret.

Since the release of

Yesterday

, he has often been asked if the song was inspired by the death of Mary McCartney.

“I always said ‘no, I don’t think so’, but the more you think about it…”

explains Paul McCartney.

Also read “We built our legend step by step”: Paul McCartney recounts the beginnings of the Beatles

Despite this revelation,

Yesterday

nonetheless remains a song of lost love.

“But is she really talking about my dead mother?

, asks the performer of the piece.

I think it's right.

It kind of fits, if you look at the lyrics.”

Whatever it may be, a love or family story,

Yesterday

has enjoyed worldwide success.

In 1997, the song was even inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, an award that honors musical recordings that have

“lasting historical or qualitative significance and are at least 25 years old

,” as the site explains.

Two years later, it was voted the best song of the century in a BBC Radio 2 poll of music experts and listeners.

In 2004, the specialist magazine

Rolling Stone

produced a ranking of the

“500 best songs of all time”

.

Yesterday

is in thirteenth place, behind

Imagine

by John Lennon and

Hey Jude

by the Beatles.

Source: lefigaro

All life articles on 2024-02-28

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.