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Released in 1983

The Other Me

Written by Paul McCartney

Last updated on February 9, 2024


Album This song officially appears on the Pipes Of Peace Official album.

Timeline This song was officially released in 1983

Timeline This song was written, or began to be written, in 1982, when Paul McCartney was 40 years old)

Master album

Related sessions

This song was recorded during the following studio sessions:

Related interview

The Other Me” is a track from 1983 album “Pipes Of Peace“.

“The Other Me” is Paul McCartney alone, playing synthesiser, piano and guitar, and lyrically, could be interpreted as his comment on the critics image of him. Something he was swift to deny: “Oh no, it’s never that. They always say that. I released ‘Mary Had A Little Lamb,’ and they said that was my answer to the BBC banning me. It’s a nice way to think of it, but I didn’t do it for the critics, it was for my daughter, who’s name is Mary, and who had a little lamb! All this reading into stuff, I never do stuff like that. It had never occurred to me that ‘Walk On By’ — for those older listeners and readers — ‘Walk On By’ was a naughty song, until a vicar mentioned it on the radio, and said it’s all about adultery! So, anyway, this one is actually just a song about the other man in me, the new man in me, the other side of me that’s lurking and waiting to get out… There’s a kind of latent possibility in everyone and when they’re teriffic and have had a valium they’re all lovely people, and love people… When they haven’t had their pill, they’re not so nice, and it’s the other side of me is what I am conscious of trying to reach in myself… For me, there’s a side of me I don’t like so much, there’s a side of me that I prefer. I suppose the thing is to try and get a little more in contact with the side of myself that I prefer, and control myself, instead of just flying off the handle.

Paul McCartney, from Club Sandwich N° 31, 1983

I listened to Pipes Of Peace today. I’ve always liked The Other Me. But I’ve heard some people criticize Paul’s lyrics because of the line “And I acted like a dustbin lid”

I’ve always wondered about that, so I did a quick web search and found out that it is real Cockney slang. According to “The ultimate guide to Cockney rhyming slang” in The Guardian, “dustbin lid” is used to refer to a child who’s made a big mess.

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Lyrics

I know I was a crazy fool

For treating you the way I did

But something took hold of me

And I acted like a dustbin lid


I didn't give a second thought

To what the consequences might be

I really wouldn't be surprised

If you were trying to find another me


CHORUS

The other me would rather be the glad one

The other me would rather play the fool

I want to be the kind of me

That doesn't let you down as a rule


I know it doesn't take a lot

To have a little self-control

But every time that I forgot

Well I landed in another hole


But every time you pull me out

I find it harder not to see

That we can build a better life

If I can try to find the other me


- CHORUS -


But if I ever hurt you

Well you know that it's not real

It's not easy living by yourself

So imagine how I feel


I wish I could take it back

I'd like to make a different mood

And if you let me try again

I'll have a better attitude


Well I know that one and one makes two

And that's what I want us to be

I really would appreciate it

If you'd help me find another me


- CHORUS -

Officially appears on

Bootlegs

Live performances

Paul McCartney has never played this song in concert.


Going further

The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present

"The Other Me" is one of the songs featured in the book "The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present," published in 2021. The book explores Paul McCartney's early Liverpool days, his time with the Beatles, Wings, and his solo career. It pairs the lyrics of 154 of his songs with his first-person commentary on the circumstances of their creation, the inspirations behind them, and his current thoughts on them.

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Paul McCartney: Music Is Ideas. The Stories Behind the Songs (Vol. 1) 1970-1989

With 25 albums of pop music, 5 of classical – a total of around 500 songs – released over the course of more than half a century, Paul McCartney's career, on his own and with Wings, boasts an incredible catalogue that's always striving to free itself from the shadow of The Beatles. The stories behind the songs, demos and studio recordings, unreleased tracks, recording dates, musicians, live performances and tours, covers, events: Music Is Ideas Volume 1 traces McCartney's post-Beatles output from 1970 to 1989 in the form of 346 song sheets, filled with details of the recordings and stories behind the sessions. Accompanied by photos, and drawing on interviews and contemporary reviews, this reference book draws the portrait of a musical craftsman who has elevated popular song to an art-form.

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Paul McCartney writing

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