Paul ’s “Out There” tour stopped at Tulsa’s BOK Center tonight for the first of a two-night stint celebrating the arena’s
fifth birthday.
He gave his fans what they came for, with a set including nearly three dozen hits over 2½ hours.
Fans shot to their feet, clapping and cheering, twisting and singing, as McCartney blasted into “Eight Days a Week.”
Grown women cried. Their husbands held them tight as Macca let loose the soundtrack of rock ’n’ roll history.
“Hey, Tulsa, Oklahoma! I have a feeling we’re going to have a little bit
of fun here tonight!” yelled.
Video of the Fab Four — Paul himself, John, George
and Ringo — looped behind him on huge screens as he bopped through
“All My Loving.”
An elaborate, high-definition, synchronized light show and
high-definition live video amplified Paul to fit his
larger-than-life stature. He hit Wings, the funky “Listen to What the
Man Said,” and rock-riffy “Let Me Roll It,” his four-piece supporting
band in harmony with the mood of the night.
His voice strong, his stature strait-backed, the affable British
Invasion pioneer thanked the crowd for the warm welcome, then thanked
them for “having me back.”
He told of his love for historic Route 66 and his travels through
Oklahoma in an old ’80s Bronco with his late-wife, Linda,
hitting the dives and the “posh spots” along the way.
Paul also noted the wide span of ages in the audiences, from
“people my age to their children and their children’s children.”
New and old melded, time forgotten, with songs including “My Valentine,”
“The Long and Winding Road,” “Maybe I’m Amazed,” “We Can Work it Out,”
“Blackbird” and several songs at his grand piano: “Nineteen Hundred and
Eighty-Five,” “The Long and Winding Road,” “Maybe I’m Amazed,” “We Can
Work It Out” and “Another Day.”
“Paperback Writer” was rowdier, louder, tighter than any version I’ve
ever heard — Paul in his element, beaming, his guitarists swinging
their instruments in front of oversized amps for distortion, the crowd
ecstatic. “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da” pinwheeled with happiness, the crowd
bouncing back and forth, pogo-dancing, singing the chorus without any
lead from Paul.
Much of this production is unlike his previous tours. It has bigger,
deeper tracks and brilliant, often psychedelic video imagery that spans
his career.
The set grew and grew, including “Lady Madonna,” “All Together Now,”
“Lovely Rita” (the first time he’s allayed the song in Oklahoma, he
said), “Mrs. Vanderbilt,” “Eleanor Rigby,” “Back in the U.S.S.R.,” “Live
and Let Die,” “Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!” “Band on the Run”
and “And I Love Her.” On it went.
He played his soul-etching lament of American civil rights struggles in
the 1960s, “Blackbird,” just him and a guitar. A woman handed a packet
of tissues down an aisle, eyes moist. Down the aisle it went until it
was nearly empty.
There were tributes to Beatles who have passed, John and George, with
“Here Today,” written about his love for the band’s famed co-writer John, and “Something,” written by George and often named by
Paul as one of the best songs George ever wrote.
And with another concert — one to raise funds for tornado relief in
central Oklahoma — happening at the same time down the turnpike in
Oklahoma City, Paul gave a nod to those who were affected.
“We would like to dedicate this song to those here who have suffered
through the recent tragedy in Oklahoma,” he said as he took to his piano
for the emotive “Let it Be” in the midst of a standing ovation.
The fans: Fans from near and far, young and old, filled the BOK Center for the show. Too Live and Let Die and Hey Jude.
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