Paul McCartney’s Egypt Station Traveller’s Edition, a strictly limited edition, one-time-only pressing of his acclaimed, chart-topping 2018 album, will be released by Capitol Records on 10 May. Alongside the original album, the set will be a veritable treasure trove for McCartney admirers, limited to 3000 numbered editions and containing a wealth of extras.
Teaming with Greg Kurstin – a producer best-known for helming Adele's Grammy-winning 25, but also a musician in his own right, collaborating with Inara George in the savvy retro duo the Bird and the Bee – is a signal from Paul McCartney that he intends Egypt Station, his 18th solo album, to be a thoroughly modern affair. It is, but not in the way that the glitzy 2013 album New, with its fair share of Mark Ronson productions, was. Kurstin doesn't specialize in gaudiness, he coaxes his collaborators to act like a bright, colorful version of their best selves, which is what he achieves with McCartney here. Apart from "Fuh You" – a vulgar throwaway novelty recorded with Ryan Tedder – Egypt Station is a handsome and clever collection where McCartney hits many familiar marks but the difference is, he gets there in a different fashion than before.