Written for Glynâs Mixed Music Bag Week #30 where we
are asked to write about a song by a group or solo singer
beginning with the letter M or N. This is my contribution.

When I was a teenager, my father and I would have the same disagreement at least every other week. It all revolved around my fatherâs comments regarding Frank Sinatra. His words never changed: âIf you want to listen to Frank Sinatra, go ahead. Iâll be in another room.â
And, even though I knew what he was going to say, I asked anyway: âWhy donât you like Frank Sinatra, Dad? Heâs a great singer!â My father would reply âI know heâs a great singer and performer but heâs a lousy, no-good womanizing bum who hangs out with gangsters and is a disgrace to his Italian roots. I like Sinatra, the âartistâ but I have no use for Sinatra, the âmanâ!â
Of course, I couldnât resist fanning the flames just a bit more by saying something like âFrank Sinatra doesnât even know you exist! Itâs not his personal life but his artistic contributions that people should care about.â And weâd dance around that argument for half an hour or so until my mother finally threatened us with bodily harm.
So, isnât it ironic that I am now saying something quite similar to what my father said all those years ago?
And itâs all about my featured artist today. I never dreamed I would be featuring Paul McCartney today (or any other day). If I were to rank The Beatles in order by my personal favorite, Paul would come in 5th! All kidding aside, Iâm not a fan of Paul McCartney, the “man”, but I freely admit that he is one of the most talented musicians to have graced us with his work. Today Iâm showcasing two of his pieces from his incredibly prolific solo career.
The first song is called âDonât Let the Sun Catch You Cryingâ which is done very much in the style of a jazzy Billy Joel. This is NOT the Gerry and the Pacemakersâ hit we all know and love. Written in 1946 by Joe Greene, this number is included on the 1990 LP by McCartney called âTripping the Live Fantastic.â Letâs have a listen.
This is âDonât Let the Sun Catch You Cryingâ by Paul McCartney.
The second song is a piece entitled âUsed To Be Badâ which harkens back to the sounds of The Steve Miller Band and ZZ Top (not surprising since it was co-written by McCartney and Miller). This one is a bluesy number which keeps going from start to finish and can be found on McCartneyâs 1997 âFlaming Pieâ LP. Upon its release, the time was ripe for McCartney to deliver an album steeped in Beatles lore and thatâs exactly what he claimed âFlaming Pieâ was all about.
This is âUsed To Be Badâ by the one and only Macca.
I hope you enjoyed hearing a little McCartney today as well as my personal reflection and the videos I chose for you. I hope you Paul lovers aren’t too pissed off!

Big thanks to Glyn for hosting Mixed Music Bag every week.
Thanks for joining me today and spinning some tunes.
See you on the flip side. đ
NAR©2024
All text, graphics and videos are copyright for The Sicilian Storyteller, The Elephantâs Trunk and The Rhythm Section and are not to be used without permission. NAR©2017-present.
Had to share this with my small gang of Beatles fans! Loving this sound from my least fav Beatle…def killing the blues in the best way!
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Least fav Beatle. Join the club!
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Your intro made me smile as my daughter and I have had similar discussions about other artists. She is usually more in the know about the artist’s personal life where I tend to focus on the music. I appreciate her input, but it can ruin a perfectly good song. đ Thanks for sharing, Nancy. đ¶
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Haha! Glad I gave you a smile and a memory, Michele!
Enjoy the music! đ¶
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Yes, yes we do! đ¶ đ„° Thank you, Nancy and happy weekending to you!
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Same to you, Michele! đ„°âïžđ¶
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đđ» It finally rained last night! A proper monsoon storm! đđ»
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Excellent!
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I’m not a fan either and did a post on it years ago.
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I would like to read that, Di.
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Here you go Nancy
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Thanks, Di. I read your post this morning. It was a good write. I’m afraid to start writing my opinion; It would be so long, no one would want to read it!
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Thanks Nancy.
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I lved reading about you differing opinions on Sinatra! I’ve always thought he was not a great singer in the technical sense, but he had a wonderful sound.
As for Mr McC, having met him a a couple of times, we’ll disagree on the ‘man’ – but totally agree on his music!
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Believe me, Keith, I would love to sit down and talk to someone who would change my mind about Macca, the man. I’ve heard and read so much, including comments by George and Ringo, that are hard to discount. However, when all that controversy was going on about Paul being dead, George was the one who said “any bit of data, either true or made up, is believable when it’s done well.”
Re Sinatra, he was actually an excellent technician; is breath control and phrasing were tops, his pronunciation superb and his voice smooth and lovely. He set the bar for everyone who came after him, including Michael Bouble, Harry Connick, Frank Jr, Bobby Darin and a whole bunch of others.
Thanks for your great comments.
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Nice choice. I have a total of 16 Wings/Paul McCartney vinyl albums. I stopped when they were getting too expensive! I was more of a Wings fan than a solo fan.
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There are just a few songs by Wings or Paul & Linda or Paul solo that I liked; these two, especially Used To Be Bad, that I like.
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Both new to me, but I did pick up on that ZZ Top vibe in Used To Be Bad.
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That’s the one I like also; the first one is good but I like the vibe of the second one better.
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I love your ongoing banter with your dad.. he did have a point but Frank was amazing. đ
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You would think two people would eventually give up having the same disagreement after so many years, but we both love pushing each other’s buttons.
Thanks, Cindy! My dad would stick to his guns if it killed him!
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Your father’s comments about Sinatra are fabulous and wickedly funny.
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My father was one of those guys who had very little concept of just how funny he was, even when people laughed at his jokes and told him they were hysterical. He was also as stubborn as the day is long and loved a good argument.
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Based on what you wrote here an in previous posts, he seems like an amazing individual. You were blessed with someone like that.
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He was a great father. I was always rebellious, taking the other side because I could. I hope he knew how great I thought he was even when I was giving him a hard time!
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I really like this Don’t Let the Sun Catch you Crying. I’m afraid there probably wouldn’t be a lot of artists to follow if we didn’t separate the music from the musician!
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Of course you’re absolutely right, D. It’s the same way with actors and their movies; there are a couple of actors whose movies I won’t watch because I think they’re awful actors. The thing between me and my dad was more about the act of arguing than the topic of the argument. Thanks for your comments, D!
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Oh I get it! My dad and I loved a good argument, which drove my mother crazy! She didn’t understand it was a game with us.
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My mother was a no games type of person. Pity.
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My mom didnât understand how much dad and enjoyed our âdebates,â she them as tension, but they really werenât.
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Been there, my friend.
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Hahaha! That’s too funnny! My mother is not a fan of Sinatra either. Just doesn’t dig him. Admits he can sign but will take Dino Martini over him ever time đ
As for Paul McCartney… yeah, he can sing đ
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Haha! I love Frank and Dino for totally different reasons but it doesn’t have to be a game of choosing one over the other.
Macca can definitely sing …. and compose and write lyrics and play 872 instruments. He’s a genius and no one will deny that, especially him. đđ€Ł
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I’m with you. Though I lean more towards Dino đ
Right. And I do like some of his stuff, to be honest. Though I’ve never spent a dime on any of his music!
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đđŒđ
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There were Sinatra songs on the jukebox at Tommy’s Lunch, 49 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts in the summer of 1965. A few booths against the wall and a row of stools at the counter, it was a one-man sandwich operation. The man behind the counter hated Sinatra. When someone played a Sinatra song, the counterman would start yelling about Sinatra being a “whoremaster”, whatever that was.. It was a great place for a quick lunch, a good sandwich, and a comedy show.
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Whoremaster‘ ….. now there’s a word you don’t hear every day.
My dad never cooked a single thing in his life so it wasn’t him but the similarities are remarkable!
Thanks for a very entertaining comments, Allen.
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