by Divemistress of the Dark on 17 Aug 2009 05:35
Sorry folks, I'm still a little inarticulate...it was kind of a long day, out in the blazing sun then 3 hour show plus rain plus lots of walking...today a kamikaze trip to Ikea, then hurrying back to Nashvegas for a family party...I'm gonna sleep tonight. In a nutshell, though, I'm gonna have a hard time encapsulating the awesomeness of the show without a boatload of exclamation points. So lemme get 'em out of my system: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!....etc.
Not sure what all of this I haven't already stuck all over my Facebook page - was doing a little liveblogging until a.) the AT&T network totally crashed under the weight of 40,000 fans and b.) the skies opened up...it really poured, an electronics-drowning deluge...but in a nutshell, you knew the gig would be awesome when he started with "Drive My Car."
Basically he's playing the same setlist every show, which would bug me under some circumstances but in this one? It was just glorious. How are you gonna sit here and complain having heard "Hey Jude," "I've Got a Feeling," and "Helter Skelter"? "Blackbird" and "USSR"? Even some of my goofy Wings favorites like "Jet" & "BOTR." (I'd've loved to hear "1985" but realized it'd be dreaming to expect that one.)
I'm still really just not sure I didn't entirely dream the whole thing. Somehow Mr. Dive & I got in the car and drove a couple hours and had a mass hallucination with 40,000 other people....I dunno. I've seen a lot of concerts in my day and even seen some ::ahem:: legendary ones, but it almost seems like Beatles songs are baked into my DNA to the degree it never really occurred to me I might get to, you know, pay a bit of money and see Paul McCartney sing some of them. It's like those songs were realized in some dreamworld by imaginary beings who were not of this earth, somehow. In many ways that's likely due to the banal fact they were released before I was born, but in others it's that Lennon has tended to capture my attentions and imagination. Despite my tender age at the time I remember 12.8.80 in vivid detail, and it's inescapable that the aspect of the Beatles' legacy personified by Lennon is forever lost. However, it should have occurred to me that half of the legendary quartet is alive & well. If I'd realized the degree seeing the genuine article would bowl me over? I'd've gone to some trouble/hocked stuff & done what I had to do to see them years ago.
At least I can now sit here and say I've done what I could, in that I've caught gigs by both remaining Beatles. Ringo came to Nashville & was reviewed here by yours truly last December, but I almost missed McCartney; had there not been a random Google prompted by reminiscences of Michael Jackson and realization that legendary artists don't live and tour forever, I'd have blown the opportunity.
Macca had the same quality I so admired in Springsteen when I saw him @ 'Roo, and which likely is common to really great artists: You'd never guess he'd played these songs literally thousands of times. Everything sounded as though he wrote it last week. In fact, it was kind of weird to hear songs from so many different eras in his career [the 'Blackbird', 'Here Today" & 'Dance" transition comes to mind] and to know he wrote them over a period of forty years, yet everything sounded fresh. He has lost not one iota of vocal range; what he sang last night was identical, in many cases, to songs recorded 40-some years ago. I'm telling you. It didn't hurt matters that his band, including his big badass Samoan drummer, was fantastic.
We really were lucky in having gotten there so early, in that we heard a few extra songs during soundcheck. "Honey Don't," "Coming Up," "I'll Follow the Sun," "All My Loving"...We couldn't see the stage during the entire soundcheck (see: long walk to VIP entrance), but we could hear it loud and clear.
It was worth every penny; I'd stand out in the broiling sun and then in the rain again in a hot second; and if I could possibly get tickets to Tulsa or Dallas I'd seriously consider it. I'd also pay silly money to get up close, which wasn't really a possibility at this gig. I'd been concerned about not being able to see once I heard the show was GA, but it wasn't intolerable. The show area was actually a bit smaller than the main stage venue @ Bonnaroo, and we were up on a small hill. Our section wasn't that close, but we brought binocs and there wasn't anyone standing directly in front of us. Also, everyone else was as happy to see him as we were, and there was a refreshing lack of drunken jackholery going on around us. It was like people knew this was likely their one chance to see this and they wanted to remember it. There were the usual logistical snafus you find at big shows (conflicting info on entrance times, etc.), but you have to expect that at one-off venues where concerts aren't held often. It was a bit of a bummer to wait an hour to buy a t-shirt, but there wasn't much else going on while folks were still filing in & taking seats.
The downside was what I'd previewed during the Ringo show: The looming Lennon-shaped hole. You know, I think about that guy a lot, the Beatles holding a singular place in my musical estimations, like everyone else on planet Earth. I know I don't need to articulate here just why it sucks so much that he was taken from us so young and so long ago, but somehow it just doesn't ever get any easier, does it? In a way, it was good cover to have had it still pouring during the intro to "Day in the Life".
A fun aside: There was footage onscreen of what we're pretty sure were scenes from the new Rock Band release. Kids, it's gonna blow your mind. I won't tell you what songs were featured or anything else about it, lest I play spoiler.
Setlist:
Drive My Car
Jet
Only Mama Knows
Flaming Pie
Got To Get You Into My Life
Let Me Roll It / Foxy Lady
(fun story about anniversary of Woodstock/Beatles Shea Stadium show; also about Hendrix learning 'Sgt Pepper' in two days and headlining a show with it. PM says Hendrix was a "humble guy.")
Highway
The Long and Winding Road
My Love
Blackbird
Here Today
Dance Tonight
Calico Skies
Mrs Vanderbilt
Eleanor Rigby
Sing the Changes
Band on the Run
Back in the U.S.S.R.
I'm Down
Something
I've Got a Feeling
Paperback Writer
A Day in the Life / Give Peace A Chance
Let It Be
Live and Let Die
Hey Jude
First Encore:
Day Tripper
Lady Madonna
I Saw Her Standing There
McCartney Encore 2:
Yesterday
Helter Skelter
Get Back
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)
The End
Gah. More later. Systems shutting down. Sincerely, I wish you all had been there.
On Google - site:stewartcopeland.net "your keyword here" - thanks DM!!