"Deliver Your Children" | ||||
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Cover in the Netherlands, where it charted
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Single by Wings | ||||
from the album London Town | ||||
A-side | "I've Had Enough" | |||
Released | 16 June 1978 | |||
Format | 7" | |||
Recorded | May 1977 | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Label |
Parlophone/EMI (UK) Capitol (US) |
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Songwriter(s) |
Denny Laine Paul McCartney |
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Producer(s) | Paul McCartney | |||
Wings singles chronology | ||||
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"Deliver Your Children" is a song written by Denny Laine and Paul McCartney that was first issued on Wings' 1978 album London Town. It was also released as the B-side of Wings' single "I've Had Enough." In the Netherlands, it received enough airplay to be ranked on the national charts along with its A-side, and joint single reached #13. On some charts within the Netherlands "Deliver Your Children" was ranked alone on the single charts, and it reached #9 on the Stichting Nederlandse Top 40 chart. Laine also released solo recordings of the song.
Laine wrote most of the song himself and McCartney helped him complete it. It was originally written during the Venus and Mars sessions in 1975. Laine's original title for the song was "Feel the Love," despite the fact that the song lyrics do not contain the phrase, but McCartney suggested the revised title. It was recorded on the yacht Fair Carol in the Virgin Islands in May 1977. Laine sings the lead vocal and both Laine and McCartney play acoustic guitar. Laine also plays the Spanish guitar solos. McCartney also plays bass guitar, and both he and Linda McCartney provide backing vocals.
"Deliver Your Children" is an uptempo song. Music professor Vincent Benitez and Beatles biographer Robert Rodriguez describe it as being "folksy." It is one of two songs on London Town primarily written by Laine with children as its theme. The verses describe a variety of unlucky experiences the singer has had, including getting caught in a rain storm, dealing with an unfaithful lover, and dealing with an unscrupulous repairman who can't fix his truck. Both Benitez and McCartney biographer John Blaney describe the verses as "rambling." The refrain contrasts by exhorting the listener to deliver the children to the good life and make things right for them.