Having me review a Paul McCartney concert is a bit pointless, isn't it? Here I am a person who spent most of her free time documenting what this man and his three friends did every day of their lives by analyzing photos and story of other people from around the world. I listen to his music constantly and some people say that I am obsessed. I actually have been know to say that if Paul McCartney was selling tickets to come up on stage and fart into a microphone, I would pay for the ticket to see it and would most likely think it was awesome. So yeah....what can someone like me really say about the Paul McCartney concert?
So let me just say what I overheard two guys (who were in their mid 20's) saying after the show last night:
Guy 1: "Hey! I didn't know you were going to be at this show. That was awesome!"
Guy 2: "Wow...nice to see you. That was an amazing show! I had no idea that Paul McCartney was going to do a show like THAT! That concert just might be the best show I have ever been to!"
Guy 1: "Hands down. Best show ever. No comparison."
I wanted to interrupt these two guys' conversation and say, "Duh! This is Paul McCartney. What else would you expect? Of course is he awesome. Of course his concert is beyond amazing! That is what he does."
So what made the Paul McCartney show so amazing? Well first of all, it is the mere fact that you are in the in midst of the greatness that is Paul McCartney. There is the guy who was in the Beatles....and was John Lennon's song writing partner. Same guy. That totally blew me away. It wasn't some Paul look alike singing his songs, but the real deal. The second amazing this was that he is 70 years old and didn't take a break for 3 straight hours. He didn't stop to get a drink of water. He didn't stop to catch his breath or change clothes or use the bathroom. He just kept going with more energy than anyone (except for maybe Ringo. He might be tied with Ringo in that department). His voice was so strong and he even hit the high notes! I have no idea what changed from the weak voice that I heard over the summer during some performances (such as the Queen's Jubilee concert) and November, but wow...he sounded like HIM! The third thing is the songs. Oh the songs! One hit song after another. They just kept coming. Sure there were songs that I wish he had performed. But overall.....amazing set list! My favorites were: Let me Roll it, Paperback Writer, 1985, Maybe I'm amazed, Blackbird, Dance tonight, Mrs. Vanderbuilt, Lady Madonna and Birthday.
Here is what I didn't like. The first thing was the ticket prices. I spent $168 on my ticket. It wasn't a "bad" seat, but it wasn't close enough for Paul to see me. To get in one of the front rows, I would have had to have paid $2,000!!! That is insane! There is no reason why the tickets need to go so high except for the mere fact that there are crazy people that are willing to pay thousands of dollars on tickets.
The second thing was that I did not like the performance of the song, "A Day in the Life / Give Peace a Chance." Well...I mean I liked it, but it was my least favorite performance. "A Day in the Life" is one of my favorite Beatle songs, and I like how you hear John first and then Paul and then it goes back to John. Hearing Paul's voice the whole time just didn't seem right. I have no problems with Paul performing a song that he typically didn't have the lead vocal on (heck John sang "Saw her Standing there" in 1974 on stage), but somehow Paul singing "A Day in the Life" just didn't work for me because the first part is such a John song. And then Paul didn't sing the last verse. There were zero holes in the Albert Hall because he jumped into a very long chorus of "Give Peace a Chance." For some reason this just seemed strange to me. Maybe if there was a photo tribute to John going on? I am not sure. *shrug*
I am still floating on a Macca high and my thought are all jumbled up. But here are some photos I took at the concert. The happy part is that I took them, so I own the copyright and I have the rights to post these photos without anyone complaining about it.
Showing posts with label St. Louis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Louis. Show all posts
Monday, November 12, 2012
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Meet Paul in St. Louis
Well Beatle friends the next time you hear from me, I will have seen Paul McCartney in concert for the 2nd time in my life. Can I even try to tell you all how excited I am? I know there are some people out there that have the ability to travel to wherever Paul is performing. I am not one of those people. Paul McCartney tickets aren't easy to get and they are very expensive. I am more than lucky that I am seeing him for a 2nd time in my life.
The first time I saw Paul was on October 9, 2002. It was at the same place where I will be seeing him on Sunday night. Before the concert, on my drive to the arena, I was listening to an interview with Paul going out live on Y98 FM. Here are some photos of Paul during that interview! It always baffled me that Y98 interviewed Paul because I listen to that station all of the time, and they play current hits. Mostly stuff that is upbeat and dance music. They never play Paul McCartney music. So why they interviewed him is beyond me. I wonder if I need to be tuning into the radio on Sunday?
Being the geek that I am, I am planning on bringing a Cd cover and marker in my purse....you know...just in case I see Paul and can get his autograph. Now I know my chances of seeing Paul are slim to none, however they are greater than they are on a normal day since I know that I am going to be in the same town as him. I wonder where he will be going in St. Louis?
Paul if you are reading this blog (and my boyfriend swears that you do), I can't wait to see you! Is there anyway I can meet you so that I can have my own photo to post of me with a former Beatle on my blog? Sigh....always worth a change, right?
Talk to you all on Monday!!! I will tell Paul hi from all of you. :)
The first time I saw Paul was on October 9, 2002. It was at the same place where I will be seeing him on Sunday night. Before the concert, on my drive to the arena, I was listening to an interview with Paul going out live on Y98 FM. Here are some photos of Paul during that interview! It always baffled me that Y98 interviewed Paul because I listen to that station all of the time, and they play current hits. Mostly stuff that is upbeat and dance music. They never play Paul McCartney music. So why they interviewed him is beyond me. I wonder if I need to be tuning into the radio on Sunday?
Being the geek that I am, I am planning on bringing a Cd cover and marker in my purse....you know...just in case I see Paul and can get his autograph. Now I know my chances of seeing Paul are slim to none, however they are greater than they are on a normal day since I know that I am going to be in the same town as him. I wonder where he will be going in St. Louis?
Paul if you are reading this blog (and my boyfriend swears that you do), I can't wait to see you! Is there anyway I can meet you so that I can have my own photo to post of me with a former Beatle on my blog? Sigh....always worth a change, right?
Talk to you all on Monday!!! I will tell Paul hi from all of you. :)
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
This will be me in 2 months!
Happy news to report! I have my ticket to see Paul McCartney in concert at my "home" town of St. Louis, Missouri on November 11, 2012!! Now I know that many of you readers see Paul all of the time. You have the luxury of Paul coming to your town or you have the ability to travel to wherever he is performing.
Paul does not play St. Louis very often. This will be his 4th time ever playing here. (Once with the Beatles in 1966, once in 1993, once in 2002 and now in 2012). Being a teacher, it is difficult for me to just travel anytime outside of summertime to go to a concert. So I have been waiting for what feels like a really long time to see him once again (saw him in 2002). I had the sad reality that this most likely will be my last time ever to see Paul in person. He only comes around every 10 years. Most likely he won't be performing when he is 80 (although Paul can prove me wrong on that statement!). And while I cannot afford the $2,000 to see the soundcheck and be up near the stage, I did splurge a bit ($170 seats) in seeing him. It saddens me that most likely I will never be a person that will have my own "Meet the Beatles for Real" story and it just makes me appreciate the stories I share on here even more.
Is anyone else going to be at the St. Louis concert? Do you think it would be alright if I handed out my business cards at the show advertising this blog? Or would that be a little pushy?
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
Back in St. Louis again
My aunt sent me a recent article from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch newspaper that was commemorating the Beatles only trip to the Gateway City in 1966. I love these photos! We know that the Beatles themselves were kept semi-dry from the pouring rain that night from the overhead covering. Ringo was wearing a hat because rain was dripping on his head. But the fans did not have a covering and from what we can see in some of these photos, they got soaking wet! Look at the top photo. That girl's 1966 program is ruined! (well semi-ruined from the rain at least). And they didn't mind one bit. While the Beatles were miserable (and it has been documented that it was after this very concert that Paul agreed to end the touring), the fans were thrilled!
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
46 years since the Beatles played in St. Louis
Everyone always assumes that since I live in Illinois, that I am from Chicago. No no no. I live no where near Chicago. It takes me 5-6 hours worth of driving to get to Chicago. Illinois is a big state and Chicago is towards the top. I live in Alton, Illinois. Alton is more towards the bottom of the state. Alton is located on the Mississippi River. I live extremely close to the state of Missouri, specifically the city of St. Louis. In my car, I can get to the arch in St. Louis in about 20 minutes from my house. So whenever there is a major touring event, I see it in St. Louis. And so the people I know in my area who were fortunate enough to see the Beatles in concert, saw them in the pouring rain in 1966 in St. Louis. That is why that show has always interested me. It took place 46 years ago....yesterday (oops...I didn't get to update the blog due to unforeseen circumstances). Here are two newspaper articles that were published on August 22, 1966 about the concert as well as the newspaper photos that were published with the articles. (all of this was found in the July 1996 issue of What Goes On)
The Beatles sing in the rain for wet, enthusiastic Audience
23,000 pay to hear them – first aid stations busy
By Robert K. Sanford (of the Post-dispatch Staff)
The Beatles played and sang 11 tunes last night before
23,143 paid spectators at Busch Memorial Stadium in a light rainstorm. Thousands of fans screamed for the music,
thousands got wet from the rain, hundreds were terribly upset by it all and a
few dozen fainted.
The 11 tunes took about 30 minutes and the rain was substantial
at times. The fans sat in the rain and
yelled. The Beatles were protected by a
plastic canopy but they also got damp.
Their mop hairdos got damp and so did the mop hairdos of their
followers.
The members of the quartet told their press officer, Tony
Barrow, that they did not mind playing in the rain but were a bit apprehensive
about the possibility of getting shocked by the wet electric amplifying
equipment. But once on stage they
grabbed the electric guitars and microphones fearlessly and attacked the music.
The Beatles were pleasant and self-effacing as they chatted
with reporters before the show. One
interviewer told Ringo Starr, the drummer Beatle, that he was interested in the
musical make-up of their songs, “Well, I really don’t quite know what to say,”
Ringo replied. “Musically, they’re
nothing extraordinary.”
One reporter asked Paul McCartney whether he preferred to
write songs or to perform. He liked
writing, Paul said, and he did not think he and the other Beatles were very
good as performers.
John Lennon, the literary Beatle, remarked that everybody
had been “doubly kind” to them in the controversy about his statement that the
Beatles were more popular now than Jesus Christ.
Before the show began, 85 young people from First Baptist
church of Ferguson and the Broadway Baptist Church handed out more than 20,000
pamphlets concerning the Lennon statement.
But the Rev. Bob Wright, a minister at the Ferguson church,
pointed out that the pamphlets were not really in opposition to The Beatles.
“We have tried to take a positive approach,” the Rev. Mr.
Wright said. The pamphlets said there
was a strong element of truth in what Lennon said. They called popularity fickle and pointed out
that people who at one time praised Christ were the ones who demanded his
crucifixion.
Some Beatle fans did not accept the pamphlets gracefully or
try to understand them, the Rev. Mr. Wright said. An older boy pushed Steve Crowder, 11 years old
in the face, the Rev. Mr. Wright said and some other youths spit on a group of
the pamphlet-passers. “It has been an
experience for our youngsters tonight.”
The Rev. Mr. Wright said.
Barrow, the Beatles press officer, said the alleged decline
of the Beatles in popularity was mythical.
“Beatle-knocking has become a new fad,” he said.
Barrow said more American fans had gone to see The Beatles
in the first half of their tour this year than had attended in the first half
of last year’s tour.
The fans at Busch Stadium got plenty of volume for their
money but the song lyrics were difficult to understand. The rain did not damp the echo qualities of
the stadium.
Jack Goggin, public address system operator, said the music
was piped through more than 200 speakers in the structure. The system works well when performers speak
distinctly, he said, but distinct enunciation is not a notable ingredient in
rock n roll music.
Because it was thought that the rain might get worse the
Beatles performance was moved forward in the program to the third position in
five acts. The group that followed them,
the Ronettes, was made up of girl singers.
When the girl singers appeared on the stage most of the girl spectators
deserted their seats in the rain.
Some fans had come a long way for the show. A group of 85 had won an air trip from Denver
in a radio station contest. Two girls
from Memphis who were dressed in boutique clothes (one wore a tailored glen
plaid short-skirt suit and hat, the other a dress of broad vertical stripes o
green, orange and purple) said they had seen The Beatles in Memphis and were going
to follow them to New York and try to get to talk to them, “Daddy’s rich,” one
explained.
At the first aid station, two nurses treated 35 girls for
minor injuries and ailments, and most common ones being acute Beatlemania.
“It’s mild hysteria,” said Nurse Virginia Berger. “The symptoms are weeping, wailing, and
uncontrollable shaking. I tell them to
sit down and cool off.”
After The Beatles appeared, the nurses had about a half a
dozen young girls at a time int eh station cooling off in shifts in the next
hour.
The Beatles arrived in a chartered jet plane and were taken
to the stadium in limousines. One
limousine driver forgot to lock the back doors of the car after the Beatles had
got out and someone stole the rear floor mats.
After the show The Beatles left in two police cars. About 50 young fans tried to get past police
to touch the British singers. Some girls
tried to scramble onto the police cars.
A 17 year old girl from Creve Coeur managed to get hold of
Ringo for a moment. Afterwards she kept
shouting, “I held him. I held him.” She grabbed a reporter around the waist and
said, “I help him like this!”
She jumped up and down, flailed her arms, and then turned
limp. Two policemen assisted her,
holding her up by the arms, but the soon lost enthusiasm and let her down on
the sidewalk. “She’ll be all right,” one
said dryly.
20,000 Cheer Beatles
By King McElroy (Globe-Democrat Staff Writer)
The Beatles were at second base at Busch Memorial Stadium
Sunday night just slightly longer than Julian Javier in the act of turning over
a bang-bang double play. But the
results appeared to be equally rewarding to those present.
The long-awaited rock n roll spectacle played to a less than
half full house of some 20,000, who more than made up for their sparseness with
enthusiasm.
Although the first twang of the show as sounded at 8 pm, a
whole lot of shakin’ went on before the shaggy shouters took their place on the
bandstand facing home plate.
When the British quartet was announced at 8:55, following
20-minute sets of two other folk-rock groups, it brought the crowd of
youngsters joyously to their feet - on the seats.
The piercing screams of the fans echoed across the
riverfront as the mop-topped singers emerged from a dugout.
A steady rainfall throughout the foursome’s half-hour set
failed to dampen the spirits of either performers or admirers, as The Beatles
batted out seven numbers to the delight of thousands of teenagers and a
smattering of adults.
St. Louis displayed little indignation over a remark by John
Lennon, the literary Beatle, to the effect that his group has become more
popular than Christ.
One old car circled the stadium bearing a sign, “Ban the
Beatles.” Fans on the sidewalk and
occupants of the car periodically exchanged hoots.
A dozen dissenters picketed the new downtown sports
facility, occasionally heckling boys inside the gates sporting Beatle haircuts.
One of the cardboard picket signs declared, “God forever,
The Beatles Never.” Other simply “Boo.”
But inside everything was harmony. The appreciative audience squealed, whistled
and applauded before, during and after each song.
A cloth draped out of a box seat near first base seemed to
express the prevailing sentiment of the crowd.
It read, “Happiness is The Beatles.”
However, one of the Andy Frain ushers, commented that “some
of these people don’t act as funny as they look.”
Preceding the main attraction were two groups called the “Remains”
and the “Cyrkles.” After Lennon, Ringo
Starr, George Harrison and Paul McCartney bade everyone a good night at 9:25,
the “Happenings” and the “Ronettes” wrapped things up.
The Beatles arrived at Lambert-St. Louis Municipal Airport
at 4:49pm on a little-known patch of runway near the control tower.
Diversionary tactics of police marked the arrival and
departure of the visitors.
While hundreds of uninformed fans roamed the terminal, the
singers were escorted off the field in two 1966 black limousines by Berkeley
police.
Once on Brown Road, the quartet and their entourage drove at
65 mph in a 40 mph zone, leaving newsmen and fans in the dust.
Highway patrolmen brought the Beatles cars onto Interstate
70 for a swift ride to the city limits, where St. Louis patrolmen continued the
escort to the stadium.
The procedure was followed in reverse for the return to the
airport.
County police stationed a decoy force of uniformed police at
a terminal gate. Clue-grasping teenagers
immediately assumed battle stations around the waiting officers. But the Beatles never appeared.
Other youths raced around the terminal seeking helicopters,
jealously clutching a carefully planted news tip that the group would make the
trip to the stadium by air.
Meanwhile St. Louis police dispatched all mobile reserves,
canine and radar units to the stadium at 5pm to restrain scores of youths who
were waiting for even a glimpse of their long-maned heroes.
Wild-eyed girls, screaming long before the caravan
approached, greeted the foursome.
The entourage was led into the stadium through a basement
entrance off Spruce Street, where they rested in the football Cardinals
dressing room.
Fifty police were charged with keeping overzealous fans off
the field while The Beatles performed in the darkened stadium with a spotlight
playing on them.
A cordon of patrolmen set up a line to restrain fans at the entrance
used for the arrival, drawing the expectant crowds to them like bees to honey
while the Beatles slipped out onto 7th Street at 10:15 and sped to
the airport.
To throw news photographers off the track, four long black
cars backed up to the dressing rooms inside the stadium, but were never meant
to be used.
The Beatles re-entered their chartered 71-seat American
Airlines Electra, which had been moved to a remote section of the airfield, at
10:40, where they waited for the rest of their party.
Their next scheduled appearance is in New York at Shea
Stadium on Tuesday.
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Happiness is....
I LOVE this banner and the fans in St. Louis in 1966. Photo taken by Jack Fahland copyright 2005 St. Louis Mercantile Library at the University of Missouri St. Louis.
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Still answering fan mail in 1966
Here is a photo of Ringo and George answering fan mail backstage in St. Louis (woot! woot!) in 1966. These guys had already performed a concert that day in Cincinnati and then flew on a plane and took a bus to Busch Stadium in St. Louis. I doubt fan mail was on the top of their list of ways to spend their time before doing another concert in the pouring rain. However, as Bob Bonis so wonderfully photographed, they are doing it.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Meet me in St. Louie
So there was an auction recently that sold a load of Beatles in St. Louis 1966 photos. I live in St. Louis (okay...I live 17 miles northeast of the city) and many people that I know were at the St. Louis Beatles concert. It is the concert I would have attended if I were alive. So anyway, it hold a soft spot for me and this particular photo is my favorite. What I like about it is this: you can see all four Beatles, Ringo's funny hat that he wore during that show to keep the rain water off his head is shown, you can see the water on the stage (how dangerous!) and you can totally tell it is Busch Stadium.
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