Love in Song
"Love in Song" is a song credited to Paul and Linda McCartney that was released on Wings' 1975 album Venus and Mars. It was also released as the B-side of Wings' number 1 single "Listen to What [the Man Said]." It has been covered by artists such as Helen Merrill and the Judybats.
Writing and recording
"Love in Song" was initially written on Paul McCartney's 12 string guitar, and McCartney has claimed the song "just came to him." It was one of the early songs recorded for Venus and Mars, at Abbey Road Studios in London in November 1974. String overdubs were added at Wally Heider Studios in Los Angeles on March 10, 1975. In addition to playing 12 string guitar and singing lead vocals, Paul McCartney plays upright bass, using the same bass that Bill Black played on Elvis Presley hits such as "Heartbreak Hotel." Denny Laine and Jimmy McCulloch also play guitar, and Linda McCartney sings backing vocals. "Love in Song" is one of the few Venus and Mars songs on which Geoff Britton plays drums, as the song was recorded before he was replaced as Wings' drummer by Joe English.Personnel
- Paul McCartney - vocals, bass, piano, hand bells, string arrangements
- Linda McCartney - hand bells, moog synthesizer, backing vocals
- Denny Laine - electric guitar, piano, backing vocals
- Jimmy McCulloch - 12 string guitar
- Geoff Britton - drums, milk bottles
- Sid Sharp Strings - bass, celli, viola, violins
- Gayle Levant - harp
- Tony Dorsey - string arrangements
Lyrics and music
Author Robert Rodriguez describes the song as a "delicate ballad." Beaver County Times critic Bob Bonn described the melody as "mysterious sounding." Music professor Vincent Benitez describes the song's key as G Aeolian, a melancholy key. Author John Blaney describes the arrangement as "measured," claiming that contributes the singer distancing himself from the subject, although he believes that McCartney's warm vocal "more than compensates for the song's guarded tone."