Paul McCartney – Despite Repeated Warnings artworkWritten by: McCartney
Producers: Paul McCartney, Greg Kurstin

Released: 7 September 2018

Paul McCartney: vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, bass guitar, piano, harmonium, Moog synthesiser, drums, percussion
Greg Kurstin: harpsichord, Moog synthesiser, piano, drums and percussion programming
Rusty Anderson, Brian Ray: electric guitar, acoustic guitar, vocals
Paul 'Wix' Wickens: Hammond organ, orchestral synths, Rhodes
Abe Laboriel Jr: drums, vocals
Doug Moffet: Tenor saxophone
Jim Hoke: baritone saxophone
Steve Herrman, Tom ‘Bones’ Malone: trumpet
Charles Rose: trombone
Everton Nelson, Caroline Campbell, Mario De Leon, Peter Kent, Songa Lee, Natalie Leggett, Robin Olson, Katia Popov, Michele Richards, Kathleen Sloan, Tereza Stanislav, Marcy Vaj, Josefina Vergara, Amy Wickman, John Wittenberg: violin
John Metcalfe, Bruce White, Matt Funes, Darrin McCann, Andrew Duckles, Kate Reddish, Rob Brophy: viola
Ian Burdge, Vanessa Freebairn-Smith, Jodi Burnett, Richard Dodd, Rudy Stein: cello
Gayle Levant Richards, Marcia Dickstein: Harp
Dan Higgins, Stuart Clark, Joshua Ranz, Philip O’Connor: clarinet
Ralph Williams: contrabass clarinet
James Hovorka, Kye Palmer, Miguel Guerrero: trumpet
Doug Tornquist: tuba

Available on:
Egypt Station

Despite Repeated Warnings is the fourteenth track on Egypt Station, Paul McCartney's 17th solo studio album.

I was in Japan and I was reading a newspaper – I think it was like the Tokyo Times, Japan Times or something – and there was something about climate change and it's typical, you know, the way people are kind of not doing anything about it. 'It's all gonna be fine, don't worry. Oh yeah, sure there's icebergs melting but it doesn't matter – it's not melting in London, so don't worry about it' you know.

And the phrase was in this article, it started off: 'Despite repeated warnings they're not listening,' you know. It's the idea. I like that phrase, 'Despite repeated warnings.' I thought, yeah, that sums up a lot of people's feelings.

And then thought, well, what I'll do is I'll do a kind of song where I use symbolism, and so the person will be symbolic of certain politicians, and people who argue that climate change is a hoax, and we know a few. So I'll do it about that and I'll get somebody to symbolise one of those people.

So I thought, OK, it's a sea captain, and he's steering a boat, and he's gonna to go towards the icebergs, but he's been warned, and he's going because he thinks he's right, and he thinks they're all making too much of it. The usual arguments, you know.

So that's what it's about. It's a sort of story like the Titanic. If they'd have been warned, hey, you're going to sink from icebergs, and if the captain says, 'It's doesn't matter, it'll be fine.' So it's that, using that kind of idea, so that it's a sort of mad, daft captain, and then there's all the people on the boat who know he's got it wrong.

So it's very symbolic for what's going on in some areas of politics, in my mind.

So it's one of those songs like Band On the Run or Live And Let Die that's kind of episodic, and it's kind of an epic production. That is it. And it's hopefully trying to remind people that climate change is not a hoax, and that we should avoid having a mad captain steering us towards the icebergs.

Paul McCartney