Behind The Song

Remember When Wings Responded to Getting Banned From the Radio With a Nursery Rhyme?

In 1972, Paul McCartney and his band Wings had an unlikely hit with a tune the former Beatles star wrote, set to the nursery rhyme โ€œMary Had A Little Lambโ€. Released as a non-album single in May 1972, the song reached No. 9 on the U.K. chart and peaked at No. 28 on the Billboard Hot 100.

During a segment of the latest episode of the Audible audio series Words + Music, โ€œThe Man On The Runโ€, McCartney explained how Wings came to record โ€œMary Had A Little Lambโ€.

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[RELATED: Paul McCartney Reflects on How a Shared Passion With John Lennon Led to the Creation of The Beatles]

โ€œ[When] my daughter Mary was a little baby โ€ฆ at home, I would sing my version of โ€˜Mary Had A Little Lambโ€™,โ€ he recalled. โ€œAnd so it kind of developed into a song through just singing it to her. I thought it was catchy. Had a little catchy chorus. You know, we recorded it. I thought thatโ€™s quite nice.โ€

Wings recorded the song during the sessions for their 1973 studio album, Red Rose Speedway. The track featured the groupโ€™s early lineup of Paul and his wife, Linda; multi-instrumentalist Denny Laine; drummer Denny Seiwell; and guitarist Henry McCullough. It also included backing vocals by young Mary and Lindaโ€™s older daughter, Heather.

McCartney and Wings mimed the song during the James Paul McCartney BBC TV special, which first aired in April 1973. The band also released four separate promotional music videos for the tune, each with a different setting. They included clips of Wings performing โ€œMary Had A Little Lambโ€ in a barn, in the countryside, in the desert under a circus tent, and with a psychedelic background.

About the Controversy with Wingsโ€™ Previous Single

โ€œMary Had A Little Lambโ€ was a follow-up to Wingsโ€™ debut single, the politically controversial protest song โ€œGive Ireland Back To The Irish.โ€ McCartney, with wife Linda, wrote โ€œGive Ireland Back To The Irishโ€ in response to the event known as Bloody Sunday, an incident on January 30, 1972, when British troops stationed in Northern Ireland shot and killed 13 civilian protestors.

The BBC and several other radio stations banned the song.

When Wings released โ€œMary Had A Little Lambโ€, many people assumed that the band had put it out with the intent to be as uncontroversial as possible.

During the Words + Music interview, McCartney maintained, โ€œ[It] certainly [wasnโ€™t] going to get banned, but I donโ€™t think that was the motive. We just thought, โ€˜Yeah, itโ€™s nice. Itโ€™s catchy and โ€ฆ it might work well on the radio.โ€™ Well, of course, people read into it, and it was seen as the opposite side of โ€˜Give Ireland Back To The Irish.โ€™โ€

At least one Wings member had mixed feelings about releasing โ€œMary Had A Little Lambโ€ as a single. In a 1972 interview with Melody Maker, Laine commented, โ€œAs a song, I was happy with โ€˜Mary Had A Little Lambโ€™, but as a single, I donโ€™t know. Personally, I would have preferred to have started off with something a bit more rocking.โ€

More About the โ€˜Words + Musicโ€™ Episode โ€œThe Man On The Runโ€

As previously reported, the Words + Music โ€œThe Man On The Runโ€ episode is a three-hour presentation that examines McCartneyโ€™s life and musical career following the 1970 breakup of The Beatles.

The feature includes interview clips of McCartney recorded during the making of the documentary Man On The Run, which got its TV premiere in February on Amazonโ€™s Prime Video streaming service.

The audio presentation includes interview segments that didnโ€™t appear in the movie.

You can check out the Words + Music episode โ€œThe Man On The Runโ€ now at Audible.com.

Photo by Dick Barnatt/Redferns