Paul McCartney (Rolling Stone photo) |
"This beats going to class," Paul McCartney said
with a big smile after taking the stage for a surprise performance at a
performing arts high school in Astoria , Queens Wednesday. The 400 students packing the Frank Sinatra
School for the Arts'
auditorium seemed very much to agree, according to Rolling Stone.
McCartney and his band played a full set of 13 songs,
including three selections from his upcoming album New (due out next week) and
plenty of Beatles and Wings classics – performing each one with all the
boundless enthusiasm he brought to arenas and stadiums on his Out There world
tour this year. Astoria
native Tony Bennett, who founded the school in 2001, was in attendance, as was
McCartney's wife, Nancy Shevell, celebrating their second anniversary. (It was
a day of many milestones: Wednesday would also have been John Lennon's 73rd
birthday.) The show was filmed by iHeartRadio, and will be streamed on
ClearChannel radio stations and online on Yahoo! on Monday, October 14th.
McCartney took the stage shortly after 2:00 P.M., launching
directly into "Eight Days A Week" to rapturous applause – never mind
that most of the crowd was born 30 years or more after the song's release. He
went on for 90 spirited minutes, with short breaks for questions from his
student audience and longtime New
York radio DJ Jim Kerr. As always, McCartney seemed
genuinely thrilled to be onstage, buoyed by the crowd's cheers. "I could
be home watching the TV now," he said at one point. "I'd rather be
here."
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