Category Archives: England

You May Say I’m a Dreamer

In my last post, I said that in my next post, I would tell you how the original Paul McCartney broke his left front tooth—which is to say, who broke it for him. But now is not the time for that story.

People remember where they were when they heard John Lennon had been shot and killed—a shocking event that took place forty-four years ago today, on the evening of Monday, December 8, 1980. Many Americans found out while watching Monday Night Football. As the game was winding down, the commentators in the booth—Howard Cosell, Frank Gifford, and Don Meredith—received word of Lennon’s death.

Cosell had interviewed Lennon several times and been friendly with him. The legendary sports broadcaster questioned the appropriateness of disclosing, against the backdrop of an athletic contest, the music icon’s passing. But during a timeout, with three seconds left in regulation, and prompted by Gifford, Cosell made the following announcement:

Remember, this is just a football game, no matter who wins or loses. An unspeakable tragedy, confirmed to us by ABC News in New York City: John Lennon, outside of his apartment building on the West Side of New York City—the most famous, perhaps, of all of the Beatles—shot twice in the back, rushed to Roosevelt Hospital. Dead on arrival.

Cosell then offered a poignant segue: “Hard to go back to the game after that news flash.” The Miami Dolphins would win in overtime, beating the New England Patriots 16 to 13.

As for me, I have a precise recollection of where I was when I learned John Lennon had died—or do I?

Where Was I When I Heard?

When John Lennon was a forty-year-old former Beatle living in Manhattan, I was a twelve-year-old girl living in Encino, a suburb of Los Angeles. On the morning after Lennon’s murder, I found myself in Miss Brown’s classroom. Ellen Brown, my fifth-grade teacher, had short, wavy hair. She was in her twenties, from my best guess now. I remember her as petite, close in stature to some of her students. I admired many of my teachers growing up; Miss Brown, especially, fostered my creativity. She continues to hold a very special place in my heart.

That Tuesday morning, Miss Brown picked up a newspaper from her desk. She blurted out, “John Lennon died last night!” She was shaken. A frantic energy filled the room—where I didn’t seem quite to belong, like I was just floating through. When Miss Brown uttered John Lennon’s name, I recognized it as that of a rock musician. At the time, I was unsure about rock music. My parents listened to the Carpenters, Barry Manilow, and Johnny Mathis; I had the sense that rock was edgy, dark, and dangerous. Such were my thoughts in the moment I found out John Lennon had died.

But there’s a problem with the scenario I just described: It couldn’t possibly have occurred within the rules generally accepted as governing the material world. You see, in December 1980, I was in the seventh grade, not the fifth; and I was enrolled at a different school. I hadn’t been one of Miss Brown’s pupils since June 1979. Yet I can still register the shock and distress in her voice as she announced John Lennon had died. I know I’m recalling something that actually happened; at the same time, the memory must be false.

When I heard (again) about John Lennon’s murder, I had a sense of déjà vu: “Wasn’t he dead already?”

I wonder if Ellen Brown is still teaching. I wonder if she remembers where she was when she found out John Lennon had been slain—and if that location was a small elementary school in the San Fernando Valley, in the room where she taught fifth grade.

Paul’s Posthumous Eulogy at John’s Imaginary Funeral

With John Lennon’s passing, thirty-seven-year-old George Harrison lost his third Beatle brother: Paul McCartney had died fourteen years earlier, in 1966. Stuart Sutcliffe, the fledgling group’s original bassist, had perished four years before that, in 1962. But in the eyes of the world, John Lennon was the first Beatle to “shuffle off this mortal coil.” Had Paul McCartney been alive at the time, and delivered his bandmate’s eulogy, he undoubtedly would have quoted Shakespeare, annoyingly, just like that.

John Lennon didn’t have a funeral. Therefore, he didn’t have a traditional eulogy. Four years ago today, on the fortieth anniversary of John’s death, I felt inspired to write such a commendatory oration—as if spoken by Paul now. Or four years ago. (When you read it, try to maintain a very casual relationship with time.) I didn’t finish it. I barely started it. You might think of it as the first page of Paul McCartney’s eulogy for John Lennon—dropped as Paul left the podium, picked up by an audience member, and now mounted and framed and being auctioned by Sotheby’s with a starting bid of $90,000.

A eulogy probably shouldn’t require footnotes, but to appreciate Paul’s hilarious opening remark, you’ll need the following backstory: John and Paul knew each other before, in the 1800s, in London. They were a married couple—practitioners of the literary arts. Their union was free from neither drama nor heartache. Ringo was their only child, out of four, to survive past the age of three. George was there, too, as a poet and artist who worked with Paul’s mother. All would go on to have Wikipedia articles written about them, as figures of the Romantic Period.

The rest of this section has been taken almost verbatim from my journal entry on December 8, 2020. I have made some minor edits for clarity.

***

So, imagine twenty-four-year-old Paul McCartney (conveniently frozen in time at the age he died) in a black suit and tie with a crisp white shirt, dark hair skimming his brows. He approaches the microphone in an enormous hall: open casket…John Lennon’s beautiful hair…an embarrassment of flowers…friends and lovers, celebrities, celebrity friends and lovers. Paul brings up a guitar and leans it against something. Is he going to play “Yesterday”?

Paul’s eyes are cast down, lips pressed tight, making his cheeks seem round and full. He is clean-shaven, but a five o’clock shadow is already forming—and it’s only 10 a.m. He raises his large hazel eyes to look toward the back, not at anyone in particular. But then he takes a breath, makes eye contact with people around the room. His eyes brighten and his brows rise as he meets the gaze of an individual mourner; his mouth relaxes into a smile qualified by grief. He clears his throat and begins.

John Lennon was the love of my lives. That’s a little reincarnation humour. Nothing? Is this thing on? [tap, tap]

Yesterday, I read an article saying that although John Lennon “could be mean and nasty,” he was an idealistic pacificist because he wrote “Imagine” and “Revolution.”

“No!” I wanted to scream. “I wrote those songs! He STOLE them from me! Paul McCartney is the idealistic pacifist!” I recognize the irony in the vitriol of my response. But is that what a friend does? Claim authorship for your songs? Shortly before his death, John gave Yoko partial credit for writing “Imagine.” I think the guilt was getting to him, and he wanted to share it—to make someone else complicit with him.

The reason John Lennon is an enigma, the reason he appears so self-contradictory, the reason you still won’t understand him forty years from now, is that our legacies have become comingled, his and mine. Hopelessly and irrevocably comingled, I fear, in history and in the common perception. But even when you parse out his contributions from mine, his penchants from mine, his philosophies from mine, enigma remains.

John Lennon was a man who liked cats. Kittens, too, although everyone likes those. After I died, he purchased two kittens and gave them to my replacement, as a sort of housewarming gift. John named the baby felines Pyramus and Thisbe, after the two characters from A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM that he and I portrayed on TV. So, yes, ouch.

Did you know those glasses he made famous didn’t help him see?

I’m not worried about tarnishing John’s memory. He has loyal fans, and they won’t stop loving him. Nor should they. I haven’t.

The Word Is Love

When I found out, as a preteen in Southern California, that John Lennon had been fatally wounded, I had no idea he and I were once Beatles together, making the music of which I was now wary. When John, Paul, George, and Ringo came together in the 1950s and early 1960s, they didn’t realize they had known each other, either personally or peripherally, more than a hundred years earlier. But I’m willing to bet they felt familiar, even like family—at least on a subconscious level. As a sidenote, Paul and George had also been parent and child in Elizabethan England, and spouses in Biblical times.

So, what’s the point of all this coming and going, this leaving and returning, only to meet up again with the same souls—wearing different clothes, doing different jobs, navigating different circumstances, in different parts of the world? Love. Love is not the “official” purpose of reincarnation, which has more to do with karma and the settling of old scores. But it’s the purpose I choose, and the purpose anyone can choose. To feel, and to invite others to feel—love. Love, in its multiple expressions: peace, joy, unity. These may sound like ideals to be realized only fleetingly, if at all—but they are, in truth, the only reality.

Paul appears to have penned at least the verses to “Imagine” in New York City, possibly during the Beatles’ first visit. He would have been twenty-one at the time. When Paul was growing up in Liverpool, America must have seemed a very distant place. But here he was, and the world was suddenly close—and small, really. And filled with people just like the ones at home. Perhaps such thoughts inspired “Imagine,” in which Paul voices a wish for global unity: “Imagine all the people sharing all the world.” He hopes everyone will join him in “a brotherhood of man.” One might interpret such sentiments as idealistic. But I would argue they are perfectly realistic. Only love will save the world. Can you think of anything else that will?

In “Imagine,” Paul acknowledges his own seeming idealism: “You may say I’m a dreamer.” But in the next line (“But I’m not the only one”), he lets us know he is aware of others just like him. And you can choose, at any time, to be among them.

Paul McCartney wrote a lot of songs about love: “She Loves You,” “Love Me Do,” “P.S. I Love You,” “It’s Only Love,” “All My Loving,” “And I Love Her,” “You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away,” “Can’t Buy Me Love,” “Love You To,” “A World Without Love,” “Love,” “My Love,” “Oh My Love,” “Real Love,” “Silly Love Songs”—and these are just the ones with “love” in the title. I think we can assume love was very important to Paul, that he thought it was the answer—to probably anything. In “The Word,” Paul identifies love as his way of being, and as the way:

Spread the word and you’ll be free
Spread the word and be like me
Spread the word I’m thinking of
Have you heard the word is love?…

Give the word a chance to say
That the word is just the way
It’s the word I’m thinking of
And the only word is love

Perhaps the song that sums up Paul’s philosophy most succinctly is “All You Need Is Love.” It was performed by the Beatles at EMI Studios on June 25, 1967, for a live satellite television production seen by more than 400 million people in 25 countries. Even I am astonished by how much Paul’s replacement resembles him, at times, in this video. But don’t overlook the two “Paul is dead” clues uttered by John toward the end (“Yesterday,” at 3:12; and, “Loved you, yeah, yeah, yeah / We loved you, yeah, yeah, yeah,” at 3:22).

I daresay you’d be on solid ground to decry the cover-up of Paul McCartney’s death and the plunder of his musical archive as morally indefensible. But during the four minutes of the broadcast of “All You Need Is Love,” one in eight people on Earth heard Paul’s simple and heartfelt message. And that means a lot.

CREDIT: The photo at the top of this post shows John Lennon holding a cat backstage at Shea Stadium, in New York City, on August 5, 1965. Photo by Bob Whitaker/Getty Images. Borrowed without permission but with tremendous gratitude. The article referenced in Paul’s eulogy can be found here.

My Heart Will Lead Me Home

I’m pretty sure this blog post is haunted, because it completely disappeared yesterday while I was working on it. Poof! A little while later, it rematerialized. Spooky!

Halloween marks a time for remembering the dead and for celebrating the macabre, so it seems a fitting occasion on which to recount the rather gruesome passing of Paul McCartney, fifty-eight years ago this month.

In my last two posts, I talked about the burial of the original Paul McCartney, his replacement by a lookalike, and his contributions to the Beatles both before and after his death. In these discussions, I attempted to substantiate my assertions with compelling proof. Not so much with today’s post. In developing a theory of how Paul McCartney died, I have relied on psychic impressions, dreams, and flimsy circumstantial evidence.

The Psychic Who Spotted the Difference

My first peek into how Paul McCartney died came in 2018, during a session with my creative coach. I was working with Ziva (not her real name) to self-publish a collection of my blog posts. In addition to being an inspiring guide, Ziva was an intuitive; that is, she was able to access information beyond what is knowable through the traditional five senses. Aware of this talent, I decided to ask her about some strange things that had been happening around the house—curiosities that began shortly after I realized the original Paul McCartney had very likely been replaced.

First, I asked Ziva if she was familiar with the “Paul is dead” urban legend. She laughed. A bit daunted by her apparent skepticism, I produced a sheet of paper on which I had printed side-by-side photos of Paul and his replacement. I was prepared to point out the fine distinctions in their appearances—in face shape, eye color, and the way their hair fell. But I didn’t have to. After studying the page for a few seconds, Ziva announced, “They’re not the same person. They have completely different energies.”

I disclosed to Ziva some of the odd experiences I’d been having of late: intense crying spells; the frequent feeling that there was a being near me, either hovering or directly behind me; the irrational fear that a bloodied Paul McCartney might emerge from the darkness of the backyard when I took the dogs out at night to do their business. I told Ziva about a thought I’d had on the evening of June 3, 2018. As I reported the occasion in my journal:

I was washing the dishes and putting them on the drying rack. I felt like I needed to know what was going on. In my mind, I said, “If there is someone there, give me a sign. But don’t scare me!”

Three days later, on June 6, 2018, I received the first physical sign that something was going on:

I decided to rent Ron Howard’s documentary of the Beatles’ touring years, EIGHT DAYS A WEEK. I remember getting furious at the interview segments with Sir Paul McCartney (whom I strongly suspected was a replacement at that time). His eyes were so green in that movie… It was so obvious, on a gut level, that this guy was a poser. I said out loud, to the screen, “[Something unkind].” Then the lights in the living room, where I was watching the movie, began to flicker. These are six recessed lights. They continued to flicker, with varying degrees of intensity, for the rest of the movie and for a while after. I tried to adjust the dimmer switch to make it stop, but it didn’t. I wondered if the soul of the original Paul McCartney was causing the electrical disturbance. But I remember thinking, “This seems like a John Lennon kind of thing to do.”

Near the very end of that movie [EIGHT DAYS A WEEK], there’s a phrase that comes on the screen: “Three months later,” meaning, three months after the end of the Beatles’ American tour [in August 1966]. The film then presents the Beatles in the studio, recording “Strawberry Fields Forever,” I think. I was frozen [on the couch], and then I broke out in gut-wrenching sobs. How could Ron Howard say, “Three months later”? Didn’t he know what happened in those three months? The original Paul McCartney died and was replaced! You can’t just say, “Three months later.” I still don’t understand how biographers and documentarians miss the fact that there were two different Paul McCartneys.

(Rereading this journal entry, I am struck by how much more anger I used to have about the situation.)

After I shared the foregoing information with Ziva, she said she was going to try to “tune in” and find out how Paul McCartney died. I felt excited and a little panicked by this idea; whatever was happening, it was moving along quickly now! I interjected that the prevailing theory among those in the “Paul is dead” community was that Paul had died in a car crash. But that’s not what Ziva saw at all.

How Paul McCartney Died

My clairvoyant creative coach, in her mind’s eye, saw Paul stepping down and losing his footing because the ground was wet—an action that led to his death. Over time, a fuller picture developed around this premise. I will reveal how I arrived at some of the details in a little bit. But first, I will tell the tale of how Paul McCartney died as if it is fact, and in the spirit of a good, old-fashioned Halloween story:

On a mild October evening, Paul McCartney ran a bath. It was the Swinging Sixties, but the famous bass player was staying in. He was alone in the house—except for Knickers, the sheepdog puppy he had acquired several months earlier. Knickers could be heard howling for Paul, from another room, during a radio interview that aired shortly before the Beatles flew to America for their final tour.

Paul didn’t know it was the night he would die—that the moments leading up to his last would be spent drawing a bath. He was naked. And a little high on marijuana. Had he been able to see into the very near future, he would have wished for a temporary reprieve from gravity—such that water might not pool, or a man might fall up.

Paul lowered himself into the filled tub.

“Bugger!” he swore aloud. He had left his watch on. He considered removing it and putting it on the floor. But Knickers was there, keeping him company. She might think it was a toy—and treat it as such. Paul figured he should place the timepiece safely on the counter, next to the sink.

Paul stood up. He stepped completely over the lip of the tub, which was wide enough to sit on. Regrettably, he slipped on the patterned tiles below and fell back in the direction of the bath. Vertically lining the wall behind the tub were several shiny knobs. Paul’s head made contact with this hardware before he landed, face down, in the water.

Unconscious, he drowned peacefully.

Now outside his body, Paul comforted Knickers. She sensed his presence. On Paul’s submerged watch, the halted hands showed 9:09. As a teenager, Paul had written a ditty called “One After 909,” about a woman and a locomotive. The Beatles performed this song in the early days—at the Cavern Club, in Liverpool; and at the Star-Club, in Hamburg. But there was no train coming after 909; for Paul, 9:09 was the end of the line.

Paul had been expecting company that Sunday night, in the form of his future brother-in-law, Peter Asher, of Peter and Gordon. Paul had written the British pop duo’s debut single, “A World Without Love,” which reached the top spot in the U.K., the United States, and elsewhere.

When Peter arrived at the house, to meet with Paul about a musical matter, he knocked on the front door. Getting no answer, he let himself in; he had the key on him because his sister lived at the same address. Peter called out for Paul. Receiving no response, he began to look from room to room. There were lights on, like someone was home.

Ultimately, Peter discovered Paul in the upstairs bathroom. Knickers was still stationed by her master, where he lay in the bloody water. Peter turned Paul over. It seemed too late; but, of course, an ambulance was summoned. Peter also called his sister Jane, who was in Bristol to rehearse a play; he told her that her fiancé appeared mostly dead.

The ambulance came and took Paul to the hospital. Peter followed. Jane left right away, but London is a drive of several hours from Bristol. For privacy reasons, Peter asked for the Beatle’s identity to be kept quiet. At the hospital, it was confirmed that Paul was quite dead. When Jane arrived, she was devastated.

At this point, it was around midnight. Jane phoned the house of Paul’s father, in Heswall, near Liverpool. She had the lamentable task of waking Jim McCartney from his sleep and telling him that his elder son had died. The line was ringing. Jim’s wife, Angie, picked up. Jane said she had some terrible news and asked to speak to Jim.

In the morning, England awoke to the shocking headline: “Paul McCartney, Beatle, Dead at Twenty-Four.” It seemed like an awful dream. The queen declared a national day of mourning to allow for reflection upon the life of this young man, who had brought so much pride and joy to the nation. As word spread, Beatles fans around the globe grieved the loss of one-quarter of the world’s most famous band.

But nothing in that last paragraph actually happened. Paul’s death would go completely unnoticed by the public—as it largely remains.

A little over a week after he suffocated on his own bathwater, Paul McCartney was buried in an unmarked grave. He was wearing the watch that stopped when he did.

I didn’t want to interrupt the story with supporting links, so here they are:

  • Paul, when he acquired Knickers (in his arms) from the breeder Ann Davis
  • Knickers, howling during a BBC radio interview that aired August 6, 1966. (The howls start at 6:30 and continue for a while; they resume at 8:14, with an imitation by John and an apology from Paul.)
  • Paul’s replacement sitting with baby Mary on the wide lip of the bathtub (sheepdog at the door), in a mirror selfie by Linda McCartney
  • Hardware lining the wall behind Paul’s bathtub, as well as the patterned floor tiles, in a mirror selfie by Linda McCartney (with Paul’s replacement)
  • The Beatles rehearsing “One After 909” at the Cavern Club, in Liverpool, in 1962
  • Peter and Gordon performing “A World Without Love” (written by Paul McCartney), in 1964
  • Jane Asher as Juliet in the Bristol Old Vic Company production of Romeo and Juliet, on November 9, 1966 (exactly one month after Paul’s death)

I was able to flesh out how Paul died, in part, with the help of some dreams I’ve had over the last few years.

Dream Memories of Paul’s Death

If you’ve never heard of a dream memory, it’s probably because I coined the term for my own use, to describe an experience I was having. Here’s my thinking:

  1. The subconscious contains memories of our past lives.
  2. The subconscious fuels our dreams.
  3. Therefore, it is possible to dream about our past lives.

When I have a dream memory from my life as Paul McCartney, I might experience it from Paul’s perspective. Or I might observe it from the outside—even through the eyes of another person in the scene. Sometimes, a dream memory is “pure”; at other times, my thoughts as Karen color my perception. Psychologists are well aware of the symbolic nature of dreams; if you’ve ever dreamt you were walking around naked in public, failing an exam, or losing all your teeth, you’ve come face to face with a classic dream symbol. Similarly, dream memories aren’t always strictly literal.

Please bear these nuances in mind as you read about several dream memories I’ve had concerning the death of Paul McCartney:

DREAM MEMORY #1: At the hospital
Date: 2019 or 2020
Description: This dream memory occurred before I was regularly recording my dreams, but parts of it remain quite vivid. What I remember most was seeing Paul’s face, devastated, through a window in a closed door like they have in hospitals—the ones that swing open. It was like his face was melting or distorting with sadness; his expression was a combination of horror and despair. I wondered if Paul’s soul had followed his body to the hospital and was seeing, now, that nothing could be done to save him. In the same dream, Jane Asher walked across my field of vision; I saw her from above, from the waist up, as she passed at a bit of a downward diagonal, from right to left.

DREAM MEMORY #2: Falling in the bathroom
Date: April 5, 2023
Description (from my journal):

I fed the dogs at 6:00 a.m. When I got back in bed, I turned on SEINFELD. I fell asleep around 6:40 a.m. I dreamt that I was sitting at a computer, absorbed in doing something. Upon reflection, the room and the computer are not familiar to me. Then I remembered I was running the shower. I went into the bathroom, which was the next room. It was my real bathroom, the one here in my house. I kneeled and pulled back the curtain a little. Only a trickle of water was falling. And I couldn’t hear it. I panicked momentarily, worried I was deaf. But then I realized I could hear SEINFELD. (Perhaps I was somewhere between being asleep and being awake, since I could hear the TV in my dream.) I adjusted the faucets.

I found myself standing half outside the shower [which is a shower-tub]. I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror. I was naked and crouched over, but where I would typically see my long blonde hair, I saw a dark mass. I was aware of losing consciousness as I started to fall toward the floor, onto my left side. My left eye was already closed, and I struggled to keep my right eye open. But it closed. I thought, “I’m dying.” Then I was all the way on the floor. I was SHOCKED to wake up and find it had been a dream. It was 7:10 a.m. I wondered if Paul had given me a very strange gift—the gift of feeling what it was like to lose consciousness before drowning in the bathtub.

DREAM MEMORY #3: Crying with Jane
Date: October 12, 2023
Description (from my journal):

Later in the morning, in a dream, I felt very sentimental about Jane Asher. I had the thought that I could see in her the girl I once knew… It was a dream memory of Jane Asher—a sad one. It was at the hospital… She was sad and crying. She didn’t know I was standing right next to her, also crying.

Upon reflection, maybe JPM [James Paul McCartney] and I were supposed to take away from this memory that people were actually upset we were gone—since any such emotion would have to have been suppressed, at least publicly.

Thankfully, not all my dream memories of Paul are somber. Last year, I had quite a lighthearted one (an encounter between Paul and his brother)—which I was able to verify with a photograph! But that’s a story for another time.

Flimsy Circumstantial Evidence

In my last post, I shared a photo of what I suspected to be Paul’s grave. Posing at the site are Ringo, Yoko, John, George, and Paul’s replacement. The photo was taken by Linda McCartney, at the McCartneys’ home (formerly Paul’s home), for the sleeve of a Beatles single. On that afternoon in April 1969, Linda also photographed the group in what appears to be an upper-story window. I believe that window marks the room where Paul died.

Here’s what I think happened during that shoot: The group posed in the window of the upstairs bathroom, where Paul had been knocked unconscious and drowned two-and-a-half years earlier. Being in this space prompted John, George, and Ringo to meditate upon the death of their former bandmate, in “yon bathtub.” This emotional state inspired them to mark out Paul’s grave, where it lay in the garden below, using various collected items.

Do we know for sure that the window in the group photo is the window in Paul’s bathroom? A few similarities can be noted:

  • The window in the group photo has curtains; the window in Paul’s bathroom also has curtains.
  • The subjects in the group photo seem to be leaning or kneeling; there appears to be a ledge inside the window of Paul’s bathroom that would have provided the necessary support.

Moving on to a different detail of my story, why did I make Paul’s bathwater bloody? The suggestion came from George Harrison’s own lips. If you play the song “Blue Jay Way” backwards, starting about thirty-eight seconds in, George says, “Paul is bloody” and “Paul is very, very bloody,” over and over. I was going to count how many times, but the extremely clear pronouncement of “Paul is bloody” at 1:20 was enough for me.

Paul wrote “Blue Jay Way” in Los Angeles, in August 1966. He had been separated from his bandmates and dropped off at a borrowed house in the Bird Streets neighborhood of the Hollywood Hills—to be murdered. He was told that John, George, and Ringo would join him later. Paul had already had a very long day of traveling, performing, and cluelessly dodging attempts on his life. Now he was alone, in a remote location, with no protection against the attack of a paid killer. This individual arrived, in the guise of a newspaper reporter. Paul managed to neutralize the assassin, nonviolently, without ever suspecting her original motives.

After the assassin left, surely on her way to be fired, Paul grabbed a piece of stationery (scroll down at the link) and began to write “Blue Jay Way.” The first verse sets up the scene:

There’s a fog upon L.A.
And my friends have lost their way
“We’ll be over soon,” they said
Now they’ve lost themselves instead

Paul had lived to die another day.

[Edit, November 2, 2024: In reexamining the handwritten lyrics at the link, I realized that they appear to have been written by Paul to start, but then George (in a different pen and in a different hand) made an edit to the first line and added a fourth verse (which didn’t make it into the final song). Therefore, Paul’s original first line was, “There’s a fog on Blue Jay Way”—a fitting way to begin a song about being stuck in a house on a street of that name. Note that Paul’s next line also ends in “way” (“And my friends have lost their way”). So, I appreciate George’s edit (changing “on Blue Jay Way” to “upon L.A.”), for the sake of varying the rhyme.

However, I also like the subtlety of Paul’s original intent, to use “way” in successive lines but with somewhat different meanings. Paul triples down on “way” by writing, in the fourth line of that first verse, “they’ve lost their way.” By the time the song is recorded, however, George changes this lyric to, “they’ve lost themselves”—which I quite like. It suggests a fog so thick you can’t even find yourself.

I want to point out that George’s added fourth verse is metrically sound; that is, it matches the rhythm of the first three verses, written by Paul. I’m not sure why it wasn’t used in the final song, but I might have an idea. Paul, in his verses, refers to his friends (the ones he’s waiting for) in the third person (“they”). George, in his verse, refers to his friends in the second person (“you”). So, perhaps, in the end, it was decided that the added fourth verse didn’t flow with the others.

Finally, Paul’s name is intoned several times, as an eerie background vocal, when “Blue Jay Way” is played forwards (at 1:54, 1:59, 2:04, and 2:10).

Postscript: The Beatles started recording “Blue Jay Way” on September 6 and 7, 1967; they finished on October 6, 1967, just three days shy of the first anniversary of Paul’s death. Maybe Paul was especially on their minds during this time, so they filled the song with references to him and his passing.]

Mother Mary’s Passing

Halloween is a day for remembering Mary Patricia McCartney, formerly Mohin, who died on October 31, 1956, at the age of forty-seven. Mary was the wife of Jim McCartney, and the mother of Paul and Mike. Mary had been admitted to the hospital for a mastectomy, which never took place; when the surgeon opened her up, he saw the cancer had spread too far. Mike has been quoted as saying: “I can’t remember the details of the day we were told. All I remember is one of us, I don’t remember who, making a silly joke.” I’m pretty sure it was Paul, being a fool.

In a magazine interview, Paul was upfront regarding his feelings about his mother’s death:

Q: Do you live with your parents?
A: My mum passed away when I was 14, so I live with my dad, who is a cotton salesman now, and brother Mike, in a comfortable private home. I deeply regret that my mum did not live to see me succeed.

From what I’ve read, Paul often mentioned the fact that his mother died when he was young. I don’t think he ever got over her loss, in the ten years he survived her.

Bury Paul in Liverpool

My song “If I Roam (Bury Me in Liverpool)” began, very simply, as instructions for what to do with Paul’s body if it was ever found. Quickly, however, it became an anthem to Paul’s hometown of Liverpool, England.

I have now set the song to photographs taken by Mike McCartney—with a handful taken by his brother, Paul. Below the video, you will find the song’s lyrics, and below those, an important credit.

Next time, I’ll tell you how Paul McCartney really broke his left front tooth, based on clues from primary source materials.


Lyrics:

If I fall and need a hand
Of all the places in the land—
Carry me to Liverpool
Where folks live by the Golden Rule

If the world forgets my name
And I could use some local fame—
Ferry me to Liverpool
Where I grew up and went to school

If I roam, roam, roam
My soul will call me home
If I roam, roam, roam
My heart will lead me home
Lead me home

If I’m feeling gray and sad
Or if I’m feeling fine and glad—
Tarry me in Liverpool
To meet me mates and grab a stool

If you wonder where I’m free
To be myself and very me—
Query me in Liverpool
Where kettles warm and breezes cool

If I roam, roam, roam
My soul will call me home
If I roam, roam, roam
My heart will lead me home
Lead me home

If you like the way I look
And if I kiss not by the book—
Marry me in Liverpool
G’wed and wed in Mersey’s jewel

If I die in London Town
Don’t let them put me in the ground—
Bury me in Liverpool
St. Peter’s, welcome back your fool!

If I roam, roam, roam
My soul will call me home
If I roam, roam, roam
My heart will lead me home
Lead me home (oh-oh)

If I roam, roam, roam
(Roam, roam, roam)
My soul will call me home
If I roam, roam, roam
(Roam, roam, roam)
My heart will lead me home
Lead me home
Lead me home

CREDIT: The image at the top of this post, of the McCartneys’ restored kitchen at 20 Forthlin Road, Liverpool, is from the National Trust Photographic Library, credited to the photographer Dennis Gilbert. I have “borrowed” it without permission; if challenged, I am fully prepared to grovel and beg forgiveness.

A Lonely Man Who’s Just a Little Boy

I want to start by saying that I’m not publishing this series of posts in order to reveal myself as a former Beatle to my friends and loved ones. They are not my audience, necessarily. Rather, I would like to share what I have learned with people who care about, have a curiosity about, and can keep an open mind about what happened to James Paul McCartney.

The original Paul McCartney of the Beatles was buried fifty-eight years ago today, on Tuesday, October 18, 1966—or thereabouts.

As I mentioned in my last post, Paul might have been assassinated on multiple occasions as the Beatles toured America in August 1966. But he got lucky; he lived to return to the U.K. at the end of that month. Sadly, he passed away just thirty-nine days later. There’s a sense of relief that Paul didn’t die in the United States—that his remains weren’t weighted down to the bottom of the East River or dumped in the Mojave Desert, where every passing mile looks the same. He made it back to England, Shakespeare’s “precious stone set in the silver sea.” I think Paul loved the feeling of being at home. In this regard, his burial place was perversely apt.

As I reported last week, when I realized six years ago that Paul McCartney had been replaced, my first thought was, “Where is he?” A person can’t just disappear, right? At the time, I wasn’t sure if Paul had removed himself from society, perished, or met some other fate. Gradually, I came to accept that Paul had died, toward the end of 1966. And if he died, there had to be a body—which had to be somewhere.

Before continuing, I will reiterate a clarification I made in my last post: I am a writer. I am able to distill both flights of fancy and truths into words. Therefore, what is written here might be fiction. Or it might represent reality. Either way, it’s my story.

How I Figured Out Where Paul Is (Probably) Buried

For me, three elements came together to suggest the location of Paul’s corpse: my own reasoning, Paul’s replacement’s memoir, and a photograph from 1969.

At the time of Paul McCartney’s death, in 1966, the members of the Beatles were pursuing separate interests: John was acting in a movie in Spain; Ringo was visiting him there. George was in India, learning how to play the sitar. Paul had attended an awards luncheon in London in mid-September; wherever he was a few weeks later, on October 9 (his final day), he likely would have been focused on preparing songs for the Beatles’ return to the studio.

John’s famous “I buried Paul” message, at the end of “Strawberry Fields Forever,” told me two things: First, there had been a burial service for Paul. Second, John must have traveled from Spain (presumably with Ringo) to witness the interment—and possibly to toss, respectfully, a handful of dirt on the lowered coffin (hence, “I buried Paul”). George, returning from India four days later, would have missed the solemnities. The news was surely a terrible blow: his Beatle brother had died and been buried while he was away.

As I pondered where Paul might have been laid to rest, I asked myself a few questions:

  • Where could Paul’s intimate but star-studded burial service have taken place privately, and unobserved?
  • Where could Paul have been buried anonymously, and without the risk of being unearthed accidentally?

Paul’s replacement was hiding in plain sight, as a member of arguably the most well-known band in the world at that time. Had Paul’s corpse been stashed somewhere similarly obvious? I had a location in mind. Ultimately, my suspicion would be confirmed—with help from the man who took Paul’s place.

In 2009, Paul’s replacement published an account of his life, centering on his experiences with the Beatles, called The Memoirs of Billy Shears. This title borrows from the song “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” in which “Billy Shears” is, I assume, the original Paul’s nickname for William Shakespeare. This assumption is supported by the fact that, on the Sgt. Pepper album, after the title track introduces Billy Shears, it goes straight into “With a Little Help from My Friends”—the first verse of which quotes from Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar (“Lend me your ears.”)

In The Memoirs of Billy Shears, Paul’s replacement hints at where Paul is buried. He states:

If it is Paul you are looking for, he is buried in a field of grass pushing up rhododendrons. I am not him.

Paul’s replacement mentions these specific flowers again, in the same context, when he asserts that Paul’s “rotting corpse pushes up daisies, or, in his case, rhododendrons.” (In the first quote, “field of grass” is a reference to Paul’s unfinished song “Mother Nature’s Son,” which the Beatles recorded after his death; the specific line is, “Find me in my field of grass.”)

I must explain that, according to Paul’s replacement, The Memoirs of Billy Shears is a mixture of fact and fiction; indeed, it contains a number of reprehensible lies. The presence of rhododendrons at Paul’s grave, however, appears to be true.

In pinpointing Paul’s burial site by way of rhododendrons, my first promising discovery was of a photo taken in 1980 of Paul’s replacement settled amidst lovely pink flowers that resembled rhododendrons. Eventually, however, I would stumble upon a truly incriminating image, from eleven years earlier, that chilled me to the bone.

A photo snapped in 1969, in a shoot for a non-album Beatles single, shows what I take to be the site of Paul’s grave. In the photo, John, George, Ringo, Yoko Ono, and Paul’s replacement are posing in a garden. Behind the camera is the replacement’s new bride, Linda. Objects collected from the nearby area—stones, overturned flowerpots, a periwinkle blue umbrella, a statue of the Cheshire Cat from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland—are arranged in an oval to suggest the location of Paul’s corpse, six feet down. Because the earth there had been dug up two-and-a-half years earlier, to receive Paul’s coffin, the ground cover within the oval looks less mature than that around it. Most importantly, what appears to be a pink rhododendron bush is visible to the left of the grave. The same flowers seem to peek over John’s left shoulder, as well. As Paul’s replacement implied in his memoir: where you find Paul’s body, you will find rhododendrons.

A Few More Clues for You All

I will stop short of providing an address you can Google, but here are some additional indicators as to where Paul is (likely) buried:

  • John, George, Ringo, and Paul’s replacement recorded Abbey Road and other albums just a stone’s throw (if you have a good arm) from Paul’s grave.
  • If you had a small pet who died, you might bury it in a similar place.
  • Paul’s body might be found someday, if someone decides to put in a swimming pool.
  • Paul’s replacement knew where his predecessor was buried, even though he wouldn’t have attended the burial service.

My hope is that, eventually, enough people will figure out where Paul is (probably) buried that it becomes common knowledge. Then there might be a general call for him to be disinterred—and reburied along with his name.

How Would We Recognize Paul’s Remains?

If we were to find Paul McCartney’s body in an unmarked grave, how would we positively identify it? Presumably, skeletonization has occurred by now. Long gone are the mop of dark brown hair, thick eyelashes, and Cupid’s bow lips. Luckily for us, Paul’s corpse might have a name tag on it—in the form of Paul’s ID bracelet. This trinket, engraved with “Paul,” can be seen on Paul’s left wrist in photos from 1964, including on the sets of The Ed Sullivan Show and A Hard Day’s Night. Paul’s ID bracelet probably wouldn’t have fit his larger-boned replacement, at least not in the same way (pretty loose), so burying it with him might have seemed like a sensible idea at the time; or it could have been a sentimental choice made by Paul’s family. (My song “Silver Bracelet” addresses the possibility that Paul is still wearing his ID bracelet.)

Another distinguishing feature of Paul’s corpse would be a left front tooth that appears to have been broken and repaired. Paul chipped this tooth in an incident in December 1965 (which was not a moped accident, as officially reported). He was said to have feared the dentist, which might be why he didn’t fix the tooth. Five months later, the break is still visible, for example, in the Beatles’ videos for “Rain” (at 0:34, 2:02, and 2:41) and “Paperback Writer” (throughout, but for a lingering closeup that Paul probably didn’t appreciate, see 1:35–1:44). When Paul’s death and replacement were imminent, the tooth was hastily repaired—as his lookalike didn’t also have a chipped left front tooth. Indeed, Paul’s smile appeared intact again on September 13, 1966, at the Melody Maker Awards, in London.

Finally, the location of Paul’s corpse would be a “dead giveaway” (pardon the pun) as to his identity.

What Happened When I Visited Paul’s Grave

At the beginning of 2019, I got as close as I could to Paul’s suspected resting place. The next year, on the fifty-fourth anniversary of Paul’s burial (so, exactly four years ago), I recorded my memories of that day:

On January 18, 2019, I found myself in the part of the world where the original Paul McCartney of the Beatles is buried. (I know the date because of an Instagram post I made that day.) At the time, I was in denial that I had been Paul, though I felt emotionally connected to his story and believed in reincarnation.

While studying Paul’s death and replacement, I had deduced where he was buried. I set out from my hotel on the two-and-a-half-mile walk to the location. The navigation feature on my phone drained the battery, and I became lost. I almost turned around. But then I saw “PAUL” on the awning of a restaurant and decided to keep going in that direction.

After several more missteps, I found the street. I passed the location of the grave twice, on my way to and from a pair of nearby tourist attractions that were my “official” destination, should anyone ask. The first time I walked by, I did so on the opposite side of the street. The second time, about half an hour later, I stopped right outside the gate. Both times, I wept bitterly.

As I returned in the direction I had originally come, I kept repeating, in my mind, “It’s only a place.” Even with my current level of awareness, I’m not sure exactly what I meant by that. Perhaps I was consoling myself that although my physical expression as Paul was gone (buried in that “place”), the eternal part of me had continued.

Only later did I ponder the possibility that a surveillance camera might have caught me gently weeping. But Beatles fans have surely stood in that spot before and displayed strong emotions.

Amazed and Afraid

Spiritual teacher Wayne Dyer often counseled, “Don’t die with your music still in you.” In this maxim, I interpret “music” to be whatever’s inside that wants to be expressed. Of course, it might be actual music.

When Paul died, he had part of “Maybe I’m Amazed” still in him. Based on what he left behind, his replacement released a version of the song on his debut solo album McCartney (1970). Fifty-one years later, in March 2021, I finished writing the lyrics—hopefully capturing what Paul was trying to convey back in the 1960s. The words are approximately 80 percent new (as compared with the replacement’s familiar rendition), including an added third verse.

Below is a video of me performing the new “Maybe I’m Amazed.” This was not necessarily my best take, and there’s an errant sequin on my left shoulder, but it was definitely the dogs’ finest performance. Thanks to Sophie and Grace for distracting from my musical insufficiencies with their adorableness. As they say, “Never work with children or animals,” those unpredictable little scene-stealers. The lyrics appear below the video, and below the lyrics you’ll find some important credits.

I’ll be back here on Halloween, a fitting day to discuss a macabre subject like how the original Paul McCartney died.


Lyrics:

Maybe I’m amazed at the way you love me all the time
Maybe I’m afraid of the way I love you
Maybe I’m amazed at the way you fill my head with rhyme
Turn me on a dime
Maybe I’m afraid of the way I’m turning to you

Maybe I’m amazed at the way you need me after all
Maybe I’m afraid of the way I need you
Maybe I’m amazed at the way you raise me when I fall
Run before I crawl
Maybe I’m afraid of the way I’m running to you

Maybe I’m a man—maybe I’m a lonely man—
Who’s just a little boy asking,
“Won’t you let me hold your hand?”
Maybe I’m a man, and maybe you’re the only woman
I could ever dream of asking,
“Baby, won’t you help me understand?”

Maybe I’m amazed at the way you want me all the same
Maybe I’m afraid of the way I want you
Maybe I’m amazed at the way you seem so glad I came
Draw me like a flame
Maybe I’m afraid of the way I’m drawing to you

Maybe I’m a man—maybe I’m a lonely man—
Who’s just a little boy asking,
“Won’t you let me hold your hand?”
Maybe I’m a man, and maybe you’re the only woman
I could ever dream of asking,
“Baby, won’t you help me understand?”

CREDIT: The photo at the top of this post was taken in London, in 1966, by Jean-Marie Périer. I have borrowed this image without permission but with tremendous gratitude and sincere appreciation. In the photographer’s own words (translated from the French): “I really like this photo of Paul, so English, playing the piano in a suit and tie. I called him from Paris and said: ‘I have to do eight pages about you. What day can I come to London?’ He suggests a Thursday… What I like is that he arrives in a suit and tie; it proves that he said to himself: ‘Eight pages on my head [literally, “my apple”]? Okay, let’s play it classic.’” M. Périer: Si vous lisez ceci, merci beaucoup. J’aurais aimé pouvoir me souvenir de nos trois heures ensemble, mais c’était il y a toute une éternité, pour moi.

In Mersey’s Jewel

This song has been ready to go for a while, but I’ve been waiting for the right moment to share it with you. As they say, there’s no time like the present! “If I Roam (Bury Me in Liverpool)” is an ode in praise of home. Scroll down to have a listen! I’ve already heard it, so I’ll just ramble on here for a bit.

I started writing songs about two years ago. In all my months of marrying words to melodies, I have developed the following philosophy (a.k.a. haphazard collection of observations):

  1. Seize inspiration—or rather, let it seize you. You can accomplish more in a motivated minute than in a lackluster hour.
  2. Keep the intro brief unless you’re famous. (Notice that my intros are very short.) I’ve heard that people decide within four seconds whether they are going to listen to a song.
  3. Plant surprises throughout your song. Unexpected elements keep the listener engaged. A surprise might be a sound effect, a change in tempo, or a new instrument. (Or you could just yell, “Surprise!”)
  4. Focus on the emotion evoked. Feelings such as joy, desire, and pride connect people to your song, making it an experience.
  5. Think of your song like a guest at a party. Don’t slip out early without saying goodbye, and don’t overstay your welcome. Mingle, tell interesting stories, and leave before the guac turns brown.

Here’s a bonus tip, since you’ve been kind enough to read this far: Always have another project waiting, so you don’t belabor your current effort. You want to feel that pull toward the next song.

“If I Roam (Bury Me in Liverpool)” contains five sound effects from the British Broadcasting Corporation (bbc.co.uk – © 2023 BBC).

If I Roam (Bury Me in Liverpool)

Profile

Title:
“If I Roam (Bury Me in Liverpool)”

Number:
12

Length:
5:13

Vibe/inspiration:
Liverpool, England; traditional Irish instruments

Key:
C major

What I imagine people might say:

  • “Shouldn’t you at least visit a place before you write a song about it?”
  • “She nailed it! Full disclaimer: I’ve never been to Liverpool either.”
  • “Who does she think she is, one of the Beatles?”
  • “Soz, but this song is boss.”
  • “Nice one.”

Lyrics:

If I fall and need a hand
Of all the places in the land—
Carry me to Liverpool
Where folks live by the Golden Rule

If the world forgets my name
And I could use some local fame—
Ferry me to Liverpool
Where I grew up and went to school

If I roam, roam, roam
My soul will call me home
If I roam, roam, roam
My heart will lead me home
Lead me home

If I’m feeling gray and sad
Or if I’m feeling fine and glad—
Tarry me in Liverpool
To meet me mates and grab a stool

If you wonder where I’m free
To be myself and very me—
Query me in Liverpool
Where kettles warm and breezes cool

If I roam, roam, roam
My soul will call me home
If I roam, roam, roam
My heart will lead me home
Lead me home

If you like the way I look
And if I kiss not by the book—
Marry me in Liverpool
G’wed and wed in Mersey’s jewel

If I die in London Town
Don’t let them put me in the ground—
Bury me in Liverpool
St. Peter’s, welcome back your fool!

If I roam, roam, roam
My soul will call me home
If I roam, roam, roam
My heart will lead me home
Lead me home (oh-oh)

If I roam, roam, roam
(Roam, roam, roam)
My soul will call me home
If I roam, roam, roam
(Roam, roam, roam)
My heart will lead me home
Lead me home
Lead me home