If yous go by commercial appeal, Paul McCartney is easily the virtually successful songwriter in history. Between his fourth dimension in The Beatles and his post-1970 piece of work, McCartney has racked 32 No. one hits on the Billboard pop charts. John Lennon (26 No. ane hits) falls in closest backside him.

The Lennon-McCartney brotherhood might not concord those marks forever. Max Martin, the 49-year-erstwhile author-producer who'due south worked with the likes of Katy Perry, Britney Spears, and Taylor Swift, has posted 23 No. 1 hits. (His scored his latest with The Weeknd in 2020.)

But of all the 21st-century pop stars Martin has worked with, he withal has one performer on his wishlist: Rihanna. After winning his ninth songwriter-of-the-yr award in 2016, Martin said he'd like to work with Rihanna more anyone else on the scene.

McCartney, who's always been up to interact with hot popular stars of the day, already did that. In 2015, a song he co-wrote with Kanye West shot upward the Billboard charts on the strength of a killer hook and Rihanna's atomic number 82 song. That came equally a surprise to McCartney, who didn't recognize his contribution to the rail.

Paul McCartney and Kanye West had a productive songwriting session in 2014

Rihanna and Kanye West with Paul McCartney
Rihanna, Paul McCartney, and Kanye West nourish the GRAMMY Awards on February viii, 2015. | Mark Davis/WireImage

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You could telephone call the road to McCartney's collaboration with Rihanna long and winding, if you lot liked. It began with a songwriting session McCartney had with Kanye in 2014. The two actually met in secret, thinking they'd but forget about it if it didn't produce annihilation.

Simply it produced enough. McCartney got a co-writing credit (along with Kanye and 3 others) and "featuring" billing on the 2014 Kanye rail "Only Ane." That song began with with McCartney telling Kanye how he wrote "Allow It Be" after his belatedly mother came to him in a dream.

Even so, at the session with Kanye, McCartney wasn't sure if they'd gotten anywhere with the "Only One" track. "I sabbatum down at this picayune Wurlitzer keyboard and started playing some chords, and he started singing," McCartney told Billboard in 2019.

McCartney wondered where the two might take it from there. "I idea, 'Oh, are we going to finish this?' only that was that," McCartney recalled. "And information technology became 'Only 1.'" Something similar happened with "FourFiveSeconds," a No. 3 hit the pair had with Rihanna in 2015.

McCartney didn't recognize himself because of a key change on the Rihanna collaboration 'FourFiveSeconds'

Rihanna and musician Paul McCartney perform onstage during The 57th Almanac GRAMMY Awards. | Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

Though "Only One" is "featuring Paul McCartney," many listeners might non know information technology if they simply heard it. McCartney knows that feeling well. In fact, he said he didn't recognize himself on the song that eventually became "FourFiveSeconds."

"I was sitting around, just strumming a footling groove," he told Billboard. "Nobody said, 'Allow'due south make a vocal of that.' Just months later I got a vocal with Rihanna on it and I said, 'Where am I?'" Afterwards producers changed the key of his guitar function, he couldn't recognize his own contribution.

McCartney didn't listen a flake. "It'southward this mod procedure that I was happy to open myself upwardly to," he told Billboard. "Y'all've got loads of stuff, and the skill is to distill it." As for "FourFiveSeconds," he agreed with the listeners who made the track a hit. "I thought that tape was neat," McCartney said.

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