Paul McCartney has lived an extraordinary life in popular music and popular culture. His careers as a Beatle, as a solo musician and band leader in Wings, and in areas outside music have varied tremendously and are well-documented. That Was Me explores the impact of Paul McCartney as a musician outside the Beatles, identifying the continued excitement in generations of fans and listeners, and his perennial efforts to perform and record music. Richard Driver details McCartney's multi-faceted and extremely diverse solo career, breaking sharply with the style of the Beatles, experimenting in orchestral and operatic music, and finally returning to music designed to emulate and reproduce the style, success, and popularity of the Beatles. Through McCartney we can literally and symbolically view and revisit the popular music phenomenon that was the Beatles, and popular music from the 1950s to today. " That Was Me: Paul McCartney's Career and the Legacy of the Beatles by Richard D. Driver is the McCartney book that casts the widest overview of the songwriter's solo career. ... Driver contextualizes McCartney's work through a series of well-researched chapters by dialing the clock back to the years in which the songs were written. That's a winning insight into a genre of music too regularly sullied by writers positing their own truths and perceptions onto the band members - and forgetting the music, which was written for fans of the time." —Eoghan Lyng for Culture Sonar , author of George Harrison in the 1970s: Decades and U2: Every Album, Every Song "A generous admirer of McCartney's work, Driver surveys McCartney's entire career to early 2023, commenting on songs, albums, concerts, and the public and critical reception of that work. Discussion of McCartney as part of the Beatles takes up almost a third of the book; the rest is devoted to the musician's solo projects and his work with Wings and, to a lesser extent, other collaborators. Such an enduring and successful career calls for serious discussion. The legacy of the Beatles is inescapable, and Driver shows how McCartney, who initially tried to steer away from that legacy has come to embrace it and to reshape the Beatles' narrative (the Anthology project being one example). Driver speaks glowingly even about less successful work. [McCartney's] phenomenal talent as a writer and musician and his prodigious work ethic are obvious. Live performance and updated marketing are shown to be especially important in recent decades. Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; graduate students; general readers."— Choice Reviews "Richard Driver's That Was Me: Paul McCartney's Career and the Legacy of the Beatles provides readers with a comprehensive review of the life and work of popular music's most acclaimed singer-songwriter. Driver devotes special attention to McCartney's post-Beatles evolution, a period that has seen the artist make and remake himself in response to a music scene beset by near-constant change. In so doing, Driver reminds us, in powerful fashion, why McCartney's Beatles-era and solo efforts have stood the test of time." —Kenneth Womack, Professor of English and Popular Music, Monmouth University " That Was Me is an engaging and insightful journey through the prolific and awe-inspiring career of Paul McCartney. With focus on Sir Paul's post-Beatles years, Richard Driver explores the vast output of McCartney, from his homespun solo albums to his more elaborate compositions and productions, and from his videos and tours to his collaborations with his former Beatles and a multitude of other pop stars. The result is a rich history of a pop music master and a fascinating guide for music fans and a highly useful resource for scholars." —Thomas Kitts, co-editor of Popular Music and Society and Rock Music Studies Richard D. Driver is professor of history at McLennan Community College.