LAS VEGAS HERE WE COME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



We're on the way to Las Vegas where the daytime temps are a balmy 109F............sheesh I hope Dr. Robert brought the sun screen and the portable fans!  I'll try and keep everyone updated once The Fest begins and also announce our special guests and event highlights as they happen.  

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Posted by: MrMoonlight
Posted on: 6/27/2008 at 11:42 PM
Categories: The Beatles | The News
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Christina Trillo The Young Girl With The Big Voice

We've been playing Christina's Beatles covers since last year - she's amazing!  Hopefully we'll get her to perform at BeatlesRadio.com's Listener Party in October...In the meantime have a listen to her cover of Queen's "You Take My Breath Away" - It's brilliant!

boomp3.com

 

Christina Trillo

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Posted by: MrMoonlight
Posted on: 6/17/2008 at 11:42 PM
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Categories: Beatles Cover Songs
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McCartney back in the former USSR

Paul McCartney last night played what was arguably the wettest concert in the history of rock, a historic gig in Ukraine designed to promote unity in the bitterly divided post-Soviet country.

The former Beatle took to the stage before tens of thousands of sodden fans in Kiev's independence square despite torrential rain, lightning and thunder. Flash floods sent water cascading past the set, where fans gathered under a sea of umbrellas.

 Paul McCartney plays in Independence Square, in the Ukrainian capital, Kiev. Photograph: Sergei Supinsky/AFP/Getty

The free concert was McCartney's first in Ukraine. Organised by the Ukrainian billionaire Viktor Pinchuk, it was shown on giant screens in five cities across the country in an attempt to promote reconciliation between the orthodox pro-Russian east and the Catholic pro-European west.

There are deep divisions in Ukraine over the country's application to join Nato, and a political crisis following the defection last week of two MP's from the coalition led by Yulia Tymoshenko, Ukraine's pro-western prime minister.

Last night's concert was the biggest ever in the post-Soviet republic. After half an hour's delay because of the abysmal weather, McCartney – who turns 66 next week – emerged on stage.

He belted out the Beatles hit Drive My Car, following up with series of Beatles songs including – inevitably – Back in the USSR. "I've been waiting a long time to say that," he told the roaring crowd. McCartney even managed a few words in Ukrainian and Russian. "Spasiba," he said.

"The Beatles and Paul McCartney destroyed the Soviet Union," Bogdan Oniskov, a middle-aged fan wearing a Union flag T-shirt told the Guardian as rain pounded down. "We hope that he can now solve our problems in Ukraine. Everybody loves his music."

Oniskov, a 48-year-old old businessman, said he and his friend Alexey had sent a letter to McCartney back in 1977. "We asked him to get back with John Lennon. We didn't have his address but stuck it in an envelope with the words 'Paul McCartney, London'.

"We never heard back from him. But I guess the letter never arrived. It was the Soviet Union after all," Oniskov said, adding: "For our generation the Beatles meant freedom."

Younger fans agreed. "Our political problems in Ukraine have been exaggerated," said Kiril Philopovsky, 18. "Politics and music are different things. The politicians are fools. But everyone loves McCartney."

The independence square where McCartney played last night was the scene of the 2004 Orange Revolution. Peaceful mass protests overturned a fraudulent election and brought pro-western pres
ident Viktor Yushchenko to power.

Since then, however, his coalition with Yulia Tymoshenko has descended into bickering. Tymoschenko – who won December's elections with a wafer-thin majority – no longer has a majority in parliament, raising the prospect of early elections.

from the guardian by Luke Harding 

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Posted by: MrMoonlight
Posted on: 6/15/2008 at 7:17 AM
Categories: Paul | The News
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Sir Paul Remembers John and George In Liverpool from Spinner.com

Sir Paul Remembers John and George In Liverpool

Paul McCartney paid tribute to John Lennon and George Harrison when he rocked Liverpool this past Sunday as part of the city's 2008 European Capital of Culture celebrations. The performance -- which also marked to the date the 41st anniversary of the release of the Beatles' landmark 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band' -- was held before 36,000 attendees at Anfield Stadium.

Saluting Lennon, his former songwriting partner, McCartney sang 'A Day in the Life' for the first time ever live as Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono looked on. During the performance, McCartney reportedly blew a line, chuckled at his mistake and eventually segued into the Lennon's eternal anti-war missive, 'Give Peace a Chance.'

Sir Paul also paid homage to the late Harrison by performing 'Something' on ukulele, one of Harrison 's favorite instruments. Harrison 's widow, Olivia, also attended the concert.

"Thank you for coming here in the City Of Culture , at the center of the universe," McCartney told the cheering crowd. "I was born just down the road and I lived not far from here. Every time I come back to Liverpool all the memories come flooding back."

McCartney was joined by Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl, who played guitar on 'Band on the Run,' and drums on 'Back in the USSR" and 'I Saw Her Standing There.'

See the full set list after the jump.

Paul McCartney Full Set List:

'Hippy, Hippy Shake'
'Jet'
'Drive My Car'
'Flaming Pie'
'Got To Get You Into My Life'
'Let Me Roll It'
'My Love'
'C Moon'
'The Long And Winding Road'
'Dance Tonight'
'Blackbird'
'Calico Skies'
'In Liverpool'
'I'll Follow The Sun'
'Eleanor Rigby'
'Something'
'Penny Lane'
'Band On The Run'
'Back In The USSR'
'Live And Let Die'
'Let It Be'
'Hey Jude'
'Yesterday'
'A Day In The Life'/'Give Peace A Chance'
'Lady Madonna'
'I Saw Her Standing There'

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Posted by: MrMoonlight
Posted on: 6/4/2008 at 1:25 AM
Categories: George | John | Paul | The News
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Sir Paul McCartney loves bringing his family together over food

from The Times/Pictures by Steven Fisher

  “Oh most wonderful father,” intones Sir Paul McCartney, his hands clasped in front of him like a Victorian patriarch delivering grace

  “Almost wonderful father,” his daughter Mary sings back.

“Who we really revere?”

“Who we really fear?”

“Who really makes us tick?”

“Who really makes us sick?”

Thirty years on, it’s a rare glimpse into the private world of Paul McCartney, a playful two-hander that he and his late wife Linda shared with the children before meals at their Peasmarsh estate in Sussex, or on the family farm in Scotland.

“Can you believe it, Dad,” says Mary, “I’ve got my kids saying this now.”

So a family ritual passes down from one generation to another. But it also shows how Paul’s legendary insistence on shielding his young family from his fame was a two-way street. He had capped his success with the Beatles and was performing with Wings, but he got no favours at home. “It was just our way of making Dad not feel too special,” Mary remembers. “You can always rely on kids to bring you back down to reality.”

At 38, professional photographer Mary is still doing a good job of keeping her father in check, setting him to work prepping vegetables for the first barbecue of the summer, and telling him where to stand as she clicks away with her camera. “I’m used to the kids directing me,” smiles Sir Paul, as the most famous left hand in rock’n’roll

picks up a paring knife, “and hopefully I do it with good grace.”

 

They like to get together as much as they can. “It’s not as often as it used to be, when all the kids were living together,” says Paul, who at 66 looks a decade younger, “but Mary will cook for me if I’m in London.” “At weekends we kind of hang out,” adds Mary, who is expecting her third child at the end of July. “Like a lot of families we are kitchen-orientated. It’s the room we hang out in a lot. And we try to get together for Christmas.”

 

“This year, we were 17 around the table. I counted,” says Paul, who by now has sliced his courgettes and chopped the ends off his asparagus, and turned his attention to the barbecue.

He’s a charcoal man, through and through. “I married an American, you see. In England at that time we didn’t barbecue – it was an American or Aussie thing. And I thought I should try it.

I said to Linda, ‘Would you like that?’ So I got quite good.”

He says fire-making is in his blood. “I was a Boy Scout. I was kind of not inner city, but Liverpool council estate, so it was nice to get away, experience nature. I’ve got a deep love for it. I do a lot of work in the woods, so over the years I’ve learnt to make a good fire. My dad was a fireman and sometimes I do music underground and use the pseudonym of The Fireman, so there’s a lot of fire in my history.

“After I’d burnt a few things and realised how long it didn’t take – things don’t take as long as you think – yeah, I got to be quite a dab hand at it all. You’ve got to just keep turning and turning.”

Being the first family of vegetarianism, today’s feast is of course a meat-free affair. Mary has brought some veggie burgers and sausages from the Linda McCartney range of frozen foods, which she has marinated in her mother’s home-made BBQ sauce. There’s also cornbread and fresh salsa, chargrilled mushrooms with rosemary and garlic, and salads, all from Linda’s Home Cooking, published in 1989 and still the fastest selling vegetarian cookbook of all time.

At the barbecue, Paul beats out a tune with the tongs and sings snatches from the Monkees theme tune as he turns burger flipper. “People say ‘Why have substitutes, why not just eat vegetables or just eat meat?’ Well, it’s so you can take part in the social traditions of a barbecue. You can have your mates round and by the time you’ve got the bun toasted, bit of mayo, lettuce, onion, tomatoes, pickles and burger, hardly anyone will even remotely know the difference.

“One pivotal moment was when had we Steve Martin, the American comedian, round, and I opened up the barbecue, which I’d closed to smoke the burgers a bit, and he said, ‘I’m sorry, I can’t have any of that. I’m a vegetarian.’ And I said, ‘Well, I’ve got good news for you, mate. Everything on here is veggie.’ He had about three.”

Paul can’t remember who first suggested they give up meat in the early Seventies. “I always assumed it was Linda, and she thought it was me. We were sitting down eating a leg of lamb on a Sunday in Scotland and newborn lambs were gambolling outside the window, and we went, ‘Whoah, we’re eating one of their legs.’”

 

It is ten years since Linda died of cancer, and Paul and Mary agree it was an unwritten promise they would keep her food brand going. “It’s really personal to us because it is carrying on Mum’s message,” says Mary. “We know what she would and wouldn’t have wanted.” They go to all the tastings, just as they did when Linda was alive. “Nothing goes through without the McCartney say-so,” explains Paul. “It has to, because it’s our name on the packet.”

Necessity has made Paul more interested in food these days. “When I first met Linda, I was living in St John’s Wood, a real bachelor existence – a musician, even worse – and she used to joke she’d looked in my fridge and there was just a half bottle of sour milk and some crusty stale Cheddar, and she said, ‘Not very encouraging. Right, we’ll be changing that.’

“But when I was with Linda I didn’t cook much, because she was so good. She and the kids would do all the meals. So I took a secondary role. But more recently I’ve been having to cook for myself and I love it. Just the other day I made a lasagne for the first time in my life and used Linda’s book. The only panic was when my lasagne sheets got stuck together. I thought, ‘Oh my God, this is a housewife moment.’ It said to put them in boiling water and I should have done it one by one, but I put them in all at once. I must say it came out brilliant, though. I was very proud of myself.”

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Posted by: MrMoonlight
Posted on: 6/1/2008 at 10:48 AM
Categories: Paul
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