A new Lennon-McCartney collab has dropped — but this time, it's by the Beatles' sons
When two musicians with famous fathers co-create a song, it's bound to attract attention. That goes double when the names attached to the song are Lennon and McCartney.
"Primrose Hill" is a gently nostalgic ditty by James McCartney, with cowriting credit to Sean Ono Lennon. They are the youngest offspring of one of the most famous songwriting duos in history.
In a picture McCartney posted on Instagram, the two musicians strikingly resemble their famous Beatles fathers. Lennon was born in 1975, five years before his dad's murder, and has carved out a respectable, if uneven, career as a musician since the 1990s, performing with his mother, Yoko Ono, as well as bands such as Cibo Matto. (Earlier this year,
Rolling Stone described his new album,
Asterisms, as "a genreless wash of instrumental music.")
James McCartney, whose mother was the late Linda McCartney
, is two years younger. He began his recording career by making contributions to music by his parents in the late 1990s, but didn't begin releasing his own recordings until a decade later
. On Instagram, he said the song was inspired by an idyllic boyhood memory.
"I had a vision as a child in Scotland, on what was a lovely summers day," he enthused. "Letting go, I saw my true love and saviour in my mind's eye. Primrose Hill is about getting the ball rolling with me & finding this person."
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