Why Paul McCartney's 'Ebony and Ivory' Got Banned in South Africa
“Ebony and Ivory” is each one in all Paul McCartney’s most well-known songs and one in all Stevie Wonder’s. Its message of racial concord stays as related as ever. The music has acquired loads of criticism from Paul and Wonder’s followers over time for supposedly being kitschy, however these followers don’t decry its message.
However, the music was really banned in South Africa within the 1980s. The music itself wasn’t the explanation the South African authorities banned the monitor. The authorities was upset at Wonder for taking a noble stand.
“Ebony and Ivory” was included on Paul’s album Tug of War — an album which options three duets with different artists. Paul instructed NME the album was “cast like [a film], except using musicians instead of actors.” Wonder was actually extra well-known than most of the film stars of the day!
Paul has fond reminiscences of the monitor’s creation. “I wanted Stevie… I was just reaching. It was just, you know, if you could have anyone. We had a good time. We were all out on Montserrat, and we had a good time.”
Source: Jeremy Spirogis/sahiwal.tv