The concert will be an incredible sonic experience since McCartney’s canon is vast. have backed McCartney since 2001, and guitarist-bassist Brian Ray, along with keyboardist Wix Wickens, who has been on the road with McCartney since 1989, is terrific. Guitarist Rusty Anderson and playful drummer Abe Laboriel Jr. McCartney’s band, which has been playing with him since just after the turn of the century, is a tight unit. Prepare for a three-hour show and a nearly 40-song set from McCartney, who has incredible stamina for a bloke who is just over a month from becoming an octogenarian. In 2002, McCartney surprised fans by delivering “She’s Leaving Home.” Occasionally, he’ll add a John Lennon-crafted Beatles song such as “Being for the Benefit of Mr. “Back in the USSR” is the fifth-most-played song on McCartney tours, but those betting the under as in less than zero will win that wager. “Jet,” “Band on the Run” and “Live and Let Die” are no doubt abouters from the Wings canon. “Hey Jude,” “Let It Be” and “Yesterday” are locks from the Beatles catalog. Odds are that McCartney will dust off a popular Beatles song that hasn’t been played often live as the initial track. “Hello Goodbye” was also a concert opener. Prior to that, it was another Beatles hit, “Eight Days a Week. “A Hard Day’s Night” has been the leadoff song since 2015. McCartney, 79, typically kicks off his shows with a Beatles classic. There is only one tour opener, and Spokane will be the first to experience what the former Fab Four member delivers on his spring tour. Time has moved as quickly as tickets for the sold-out show, which will be McCartney’s local debut. It seemed like just yesterday when tickets for Paul McCartney’s Got Back tour opener, which is slated for Thursday at Spokane Arena, went on sale.
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