FEDEXFORUM, MEMPHIS, TN, USA
Paul’s weekend in Memphis began
with a trip to Elvis’ home at Graceland, and ended with a visit to
FedExForum, as the Beatles legend left a capacity crowd buzzing with his
first performance in the Bluff City in 20 years on Sunday night.
Sandwiched in between a pair of Grizzlies playoff games, McCartney’s
concert at the arena reaffirmed his place as the popular champion among
his ‘60s rock survivors. While he may lack Bob Dylan’s inscrutable air
of mystery, or the visceral outlaw excitement of the Rolling Stones,
Paul is an unapologetic people pleaser. He delivered a nearly
40-song, three-hour set of Beatles classics, rarities, tributes and
favorites from his Wings and solo catalog, a truly epic and
awe-inspiring performance from a man just a few weeks shy of his 71st
birthday.
Paul arrived on stage gripping his signature Hofner bass,
wearing a black Nehru-style jacket, Cuban heels, and looking, well,
downright Beatle-ish. Kicking off with “Eight Days a Week,” he proceeded
to move seamlessly between songs from across his six-decade career.
Backed by a nimble four piece band – featuring guitarists Rusty
Anderson and Brian Ray, keyboardist Paul Wickens, and drummer Abe
Laboriel Jr. –Paul’ nearly flawless musicianship was on display
throughout the night. Still playing the songs in their original keys,
and managing to hit nearly every high note, he showed his range on early
workouts of “Junior's Farm” and “Listen to What the Man Said.”
Strapping on a guitar, McCartney offered a rousing take on “Let Me Roll
It," before adding an extended coda of Jimi Hendrix’s “Foxy Lady” that
found him showing off his fretwork.
“Hey Memphis, hey Tennessee!” greeted McCartney in his familiar Liverpudlian accent. “There’s a party brewing here tonight.”
Winking, pointing, dancing and giving his familiar “thumbs up,"Paul engaged in a running dialogue with the audience, cracking
corny jokes and telling nostalgic stories. He came off like an amiable
goofball, someone utterly at ease with his iconic status and
unfathomable cultural importance.
Much of the music responsible for McCartney’s reputation was included
in the set list: “All My Loving,” “Paperback Writer," “I’ve Just Seen a
Face," “We Can Work it Out," “Blackbird” and “Eleanor Rigby” were among
the 20-plus Beatles classics he pulled out during the course of the
evening. Even rare or previously never performed numbers like “Lovely
Rita” and “Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite” were given an airing, much
to the delight of hardcore fans.
Though he didn’t pull out any Memphis music chestnuts during the show
-- after apparently playing a few Sun Records numbers during soundcheck
-Paul was still mindful of his surroundings, and paid homage to
the Bluff City. “The memories from when we kids, hearing the music
coming out of here… it was so influential,” he said. “Don't think we
would've done it without Memphis -- that’s the truth.”
The set included a couple tributes to his fallen Beatles comrades.
McCartney delivered a heartfelt ode to the late John Lennon with “Here
Today” (“This is a song, in the form of a conversation, that we didn’t
get to have,” he said). He also recalled George Harrison with a ukulele-
led version of the timeless love song “Something.”
Seated at the piano, Paul played the opening notes of “Live and
Let Die” which soon turned into a feverish burst of pyrotechnics – the
stage suddenly exploding in flames and fireworks -- before he brought
things to close with a communal sing-a-long version of “Hey Jude.”
But he was far from done. McCartney emerged for an encore waving a
giant Tennessee state flag, and proceeded to peel off three galvanizing
rockers in “Day Tripper”, “Hi Hi Hi” and “Get Back.” A second encore
found him armed with an acoustic, strumming a plaintive “Yesterday”
before switching gears for a magnificently bombastic and edgy “Helter
Skelter.” A fitting finale came with the last track off the Beatles
swansong, Abbey Road, as McCartney, Anderson and Ray, traded off solos on a medley of “Golden Slumbers/Carry that Weight/The End.”
While the audience may have been exhausted, both emotionally and
physically, from McCartney’s tour de force effort, aside from a sweat
soaked dress shirt, he seemed completely unruffled – still waving,
grinning, and giving a beatific thumbs up to the last.
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