Paul McCartney rocks the Bowery. Inside his surprise NYC concert
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[February 12, 2025]
By JAKE COYLE
NEW YORK (AP) — Paul McCartney’s previous New York-area performance took
place three years ago at MetLife Stadium, capacity 82,500. His surprise
show Tuesday night at the Bowery Ballroom fit, at most, 575.
It was probably less than that since McCartney’s sound board and gear —
too much to fit backstage — occupied a portion of the floor space at the
venerable downtown theater. The whole thing felt like, and was, a lark.
McCartney announced the show just hours before taking the stage.
Like an echo of Beatlemania, the news swept through Manhattan and beyond
earlier in the day, sending New Yorkers sprinting down Delancey Street
for a chance to snag one of the few tickets at the Bowery. Most in
attendance, including McCartney, himself, could hardly believe it was
happening.
“So, here we are,” McCartney said, grinning. “Some little gig. New York.
Why not?”
Later, he added before launching into “Let Me Roll It”: “I can’t quite
believe we’re here, doing this. But we are here, doing this.”
It was not McCartney’s first impromptu concert. The Beatles, of course,
famously performed atop the roof of their Apple Corps headquarters at 3
Savile Row in London in 1969. Since then he’s made something of a habit
of it on trips to New York.
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In 2009, McCartney returned to the Ed Sullivan Theater, site of the
Beatles’ famous U.S. debut, and performed above the marquee. In 2018, he
popped up in Grand Central Terminal to promote the release of his
“Egyptian Station.”
With temperatures in the low 30s on Tuesday, McCartney, 82, this time
opted for an intimate, indoor show. Tickets were sold only physically at
the venue, one per person. All were snapped up within about 30 minutes.
For those quick enough, it was like hitting the lottery.
Amy Jaffe, 69, was at home about 30 blocks north when she saw the
announcement on Instagram. “I thought: I can do this,” Jaffe said before
the show. “I put on jeans, grabbed a coat, called a Lyft.”
Jaffe has seen McCartney many times before, including with the Beatles
in 1964 in Forrest Hills, Queens. But she was still incredulous, smiling
and shaking her head: “I don’t actually believe it.”
Phil Sokoloff, 31, was on his way to work nearby when he saw the news.
He ran in and told his co-worker, Mat Fuller, and they rushed over to
the Bowery Ballroom.
“We just got lucky,” Sokoloff said. “I’m always learning about these
things the day after.”
McCartney took the stage roughly on time at 6:30 p.m. with his regular
band, along with a three-member horn section. They had only rehearsed
once, the day before, McCartney said. Someone shouted: “You don’t need
to rehearse!”
If the location was stripped down, the former Beatle didn’t come with a
minimized show, packing in a blistering tour through his entire catalog,
from Beatles classics to Wings hits. He began with “A Hard Day’s Night”
and also performed “Got To Get You Into My Life,” “Maybe I’m Amazed,”
“Lady Madonna,” “Jet,” “Get Back,” “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da,” “Let it Be” and
“Hey Jude.”
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People gather outside the Bowery Ballroom where Paul McCartney’s
surprise show was held in New York, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025. (AP
Photo/Jake Coyle)
 “Blackbird” was a solo number on
acoustic guitar, and afterward McCartney reflected on how he wrote
it for the Civil Rights Movement, a memory that brought back his
first trips to the United States.
“We were just kids,” McCartney said. “I’ve got grandchildren older
than that now.”
In the early days, he said, he and John Lennon were always writing
for the audience, and the songs were all about reaching out: “I Want
to Hold Your Hand,” “From Me to You.”
“It had everything to do with the fans, really,” McCartney said.
Before playing the Wings song “Mrs. Vanderbilt,” McCartney spoke of
playing it in front of 350,000 people in Kyiv, when Ukraine was
exuberant with a newfound freedom. “Let’s hope it gets back to that
soon,” he said.
Conversation, mixed with shouts from the audience, peppered the set.
After one particularly shrill scream, McCartney responded. “That was
a Beatles scream.” Then he asked for more, saying, “OK, let’s get it
out of the way. Girls, give me a Beatles scream.” All in attendance
obliged.
McCartney also performed the so-called last Beatles song, “ Now and
Then,” a ballad penned by Lennon in the late ’70s but only released
in 2023 with the help of the some of the technology used in Peter
Jackson’s 2021 documentary, “ The Beatles: Get Back.” The song made
McCartney wistful for his songwriting partner, whom he noted loved
New York.
“Let’s hear it for John,” he said.
McCartney, who was spotted Sunday at the Super Bowl in New Orleans
chatting with Adam Sandler, was in New York for the upcoming
“Saturday Night Live” 50th anniversary festivities. He’s to be a
guest on the star-studded television special Sunday.
It was unclear if McCartney was playing a single show or preparing
for something more. He wrapped the Got Back Tour in December and has
said he’s hoping to finish a new album this year.
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For now, though, it was a one-night-only event. One crowd member
asked McCartney if it could go all night. “Some of us need to get
some sleep, you know,” he replied.
McCartney still came back, bouncing on the stage for an encore. He
closed with the rousing “Abbey Road” send off of “Carry That Weight”
and “The End,” concluded with its immortalized final lines: “And in
the end/ The love you take/ Is equal to the love you make.”
The crowd, still in disbelief, spilled out into the street. Snow had
begun to fall.
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