Paul McCartney either wrote or co-wrote hundreds of songs for The Beatles during their heyday. Itโs almost impossible to pick out his very best songs; each of his songwriting credits appeals to different people for different reasons. That being said, we think these four particular Beatles tracks prove that Paul McCartney is a truly genius songwriter!
1. โBlackbirdโ
Few artists can dedicate a song to a struggling group of people with as much tact and reverence as McCartney did with the 1968 track โBlackbirdโ. McCartney said that he wrote this soothing, beautiful song for black women in the United States who were struggling amidst the Civil Rights Movement. Itโs one of McCartneyโs few solo performances recorded under The Beatlesโ name.
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2. โYesterdayโ
Paul McCartney has historically been a genius songwriter partly because he knows his way around a ballad. โYesterdayโ is one of his greatest works, and it also happens to be one of the most covered songs of all time. This songโs melody is one of the most recognizable of the 20th century. McCartneyโs expert songwriting weaves together an anthem for those who are stuck living in the past, and who just need a little push forward.
3. โHelter Skelterโ
Despite its not-so-great associations with an infamous cult leader, โHelter Skelterโ is (and was originally intended to be) a heavy, dirty song unlike anything else that had been released in the rock genre in 1968. It is widely considered to be a proto-metal song, and one canโt deny that the initial elements of the early days of metal can be heard quite clearly. Itโs wild songwriting, to say the least. McCartney was at his most creative here, without a doubt.
4. โHere, There And Everywhereโ
โHere, There And Everywhereโ is one of the best tracks on Revolver. It also boasts one of the best intros of any Beatles song to date. Paul McCartney has always been a genius songwriter who is great with lyrics, but he is also amazing at composition. The blasting introduction to this song gives way to a cyclical, repetitive song that would have been considered boring if anyone else wrote it. Itโs almost trance-inducing. And McCartney even said that it is his favorite song of his career.
Photo by Matt Cardy
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The Beatles at the press launch for their new album 'Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band', held at Brian Epstein's house at 24 Chapel Street, London, 19th May 1967. Left to right: George Harrison (1943 – 2001), Ringo Starr, John Lennon (1940 – 1980) and Paul McCartney. (Photo by John Downing/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)







