Paul McCartney and his life through their homes

Paul McCartney never ceases to surprise his faithful followers. With 81 years of age, English has created a whole concept around his music and life, because he has not only given us great songs since he was part of The Beatles, but also his lifestyle is a kind of secret secret. We all know that his daughter is the great designer Stella McCartney and that he is a vegetarian animal defender.

However, not everything is glamor And music, is one of the people who feel better in the solitude of their home, or rather, their houses. McCartney has managed to maintain its properties in private, despite the media noise, but not to declare that his personal and professional life has revolved around them.

Paul McCartney's childhood house.

Christopher Furlong / Gettyimages.

The childhood house

We have to talk first about that dwelling in which he grew up. We cannot leave out the fact that the four Beatles came from families of the working class, so their music was a kind of protest that, although it was changing the course over the years, the feeling was the same.

20 Forthlin Road is the name of the house in Liverpool in which Paul McCartney lived in his childhood. This was occupied by the bassist's family in 1955 and when the Liverpool quartet was formed as a rehearsal and even recording room. The space is a very wide two -level house, with a small garden and a picturesque entrance, very English style. After years of leaving her, the beneficial association The National Trust acquired it and is now a space dedicated to the same goal, but for young promises of art and music in England.

It should be noted that Sir Paul and his family had one of the most modest houses in the county, but was also full of art, because not only Paul was the talented, his brother Mike is an excellent and recognized photographer. So the home is a seedbed – symbolic – of culture and art.

Paul McCartney lived in Campbeltown, a farm away from bustle.Evening Standard / Getty Images.

A home in Campbeltown

When The Beatles was at the top of success, little by little the members bought their own houses, including the Campbeltown farm. In Scotland Sir Paul McCartney acquired a 74 -hectare farm and with a cost of 35 thousand euros. This was from a local farmer, but being away from everything, he decided to buy it and use it as a refuge. However, in 1969, after marrying Linda Eastman he renovations to the farm in its entirety. He kept the animals and never ceased to be productive. It is believed that it marked a very important moment in the life of the bassist, because it was where he took away after the breakdown of The Beatles, so here he dealt with a depression and a resurgence in his personal and professional career.