Friday, November 19, 2010

Was Paul McCartney Replaced?

Did you know that Paul McCartney died in a car crash in November of 1966, was replaced by a look-alike carefully groomed in his musical style to match that of the deceased Beatle. 

Crazy you say?

 

 

Faul in Studio with George Martin

In the fall of 1969—shortly after the release of the Beatles’ Abbey Road—a rumor swept America concerning the death of Paul McCartney.  While this rumor was very popular on college campuses, the widespread acceptance of this rumor reached such proportions that stories of the phenomenon were subjects of news reports and publications no less respect than the New York Times, Time Magazine, and the cover story of Life Magazine.  It was the cover of Abbey Road that started it all. 

On Abbey Road Album, why was McCartney barefoot and out of step? Was John Lennon dressed in white to represent a religious person? Was Ringo dressed like a mortician and George dressed as a shabby gravedigger? What about the policeman on the other side of the street?  The yellow VW bug license plate that reads 28IF - Was this album cover staged? Shortly after this album was released, The paul is dead rumors started to take off.

The hysteria of this rumor started to spread like wild fire across the country, Could McCartney really be dead? Or is this just a Paul is dead hoax? This rumor was very popular, will spend the next several pages probing some of the clues and theories behind this bizarre story.  Read very carefully. You may find that sanity is not quite as easily defined as you thought.  You may begin to question your own.

 

 

 

Around this same time frame WKNR-FM DJ Russell Gibb received a phone call from students at Eastern Michigan University  who claimed that the Fab Four song Revolution 9 contained a backward message confirming the rumor. Gibb played the song backwards on his turntable, and heard "Turn me on, dead man, turn me on, dead man, and turn me on, dead man “Gibb began telling his listeners about what he called” The Great Cover-up".

To add more fuel to the fire, The Beatles never wanted to talk about the Paul is dead rumors and for years just laugh it off as crazy. Which only added to the mystery of what they were up to, had they created a bunch of Paul is dead Clues to increase record sales. 

Paul is dead hoax? The most common tale is that on Wednesday, 9  
November 1966 at 5 am, McCartney, while working on the Sgt. Pepper's  
Lonely Hearts Club Band album, stormed out of a recording session  
after an argument with the other members of the group and rode off in his  
Austin-Healey, which he subsequently crashed.

The story was largely pieced together by fans from the lyrics of  
several songs. The most common narrative includes the  
following pieces of evidence: "He didn't notice that the lights had  
changed" ("A Day in the Life") because he was busy watching the pretty  
girl on the pavement (the eponymous meter maid of "Lovely Rita") after  
narrowly missing her dressed in blue (she's said to be the blur on the  
back of Abbey Road) jaywalking ("Blue Jay Way"). He then crashed into  
a lamp-post (a car crash sound is heard in "Revolution 9" and "A Day  
in the Life"). He was pronounced dead on a "Wednesday morning at 5  
o'clock as the day begins" ("She's Leaving Home"), and nobody found  
out this because the news was withheld: "Wednesday morning papers  
didn't come" ("Lady Madonna"). A funeral procession was held days  
later (as supposedly implied in the Abbey Road album cover). Adding  
fuel to the legend is the ending of "Strawberry Fields Forever." Some  
believed John said "I buried Paul" in a slow deep voice over the final  
refrain.

According to believers, that this is not a Paul is dead hoax,  
McCartney was replaced with the winner of a Paul McCartney look-alike  
contest. The name of this look-alike has been recorded as William  
Shears Campbell, Billy Shears (the name of the fictitious leader of  
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band), William Sheppard (based on the  
inspiration for the song "The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill"), or  
some combination of the names.

Then in 1979 Beatle expert Joel Gasiler and Dave Fox produce an in depth radio show called. "Is Paul Dead? Turn me on dead man". Which brought the dead rumors back to life like no other time. The radio program was one hour long and it started with Sgt. Peppers and finished with Let it Be. The show caused a fire storm because it gave clues off each album and played the songs backwards making it very easy for everyone to hear the clues. Beatle fans went nuts with this new program. Here it was all laid out before them, step by step and explained it all in great detail. Who was Billy Shears? That The Beatles sang about? Billy Shears (the name of the fictitious leader of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band) and William Campbell, a winner in a Paul McCartney look a like contest in 1965. Is Paul McCartney Dead?

They under covered clues that pointed to his death and nobody had noticed or heard before. The whole Paul is dead clues started to make a lot of sense to a lot of people.

What do you think?

 

 

 

 

 

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