Tinley Park • Tuesday, July 25, 2017

ConcertBy Paul McCartney • Part of the 3rd North American leg of the One On One Tour

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Country:
USA
City:
Tinley Park
Location:
Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
Attendance:
46,040 / 46,040 (for the 2 dates at Tinley Park)
Revenue:
$3,977,821 (for the 2 dates at Tinley Park)

About

This was the first of two nights at Tinley Park.

From Chicago Tribune, July 26, 2017:

Paul McCartney arrived in a Beatles mood Tuesday at Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre. Performing the first of a two-night stand, the 75-year-old legend devoted a majority of his wide-ranging 165-minute concert to music he created with the Fab Four — a decision that sat well with the sold-out crowd. Yet he catered to more than nostalgic interests by taking on the role of informed historian.

Seemingly acting as his own archivist, McCartney went all the way back to his early days (“In Spite of All the Danger,” the first song he recorded in a studio, with the Quarrymen) and caught up with the present (a respectable stab at imitating the vocal approaches of Rihanna and Kanye West on the trio’s collaborative “FourFiveSeconds”). In between, he mined his solo catalog and that of Wings and the Beatles. Straightforward versions of hits (“Let Me Roll It”) shared space with revamped favorites (a harder, extra-bombastic “Live and Let Die”) and unexpected deep cuts (the krautrock-flavored “Temporary Secretary”).

Cheerful and humorous, McCartney seized multiple opportunities to get personal and put familiar fare in meaningful context with homespun stories. Preceded by narratives, tributes to George Martin (“Love Me Do”), John Lennon (“Here Today”) and George Harrison (a ukulele-anchored “Something”) registered with heartfelt sincerity. A solo “Blackbird” transcended its Civil Rights-era origins and resonated as a still-hopeful response to modern injustice. “Maybe I’m Amazed” honored McCartney’s first wife, Linda, and functioned as a humble reminder of his own vulnerability.

McCartney also addressed another key arc of his career: The Beatles’ supposed rivalry with the Rolling Stones. In typically reserved British wit, he dismissed such lore as “fake news” before launching into an insistent, distortion-kissed “I Wanna Be Your Man” — the Stones’ first hit single, which he and Lennon penned. Another former contemporary, Jimi Hendrix, received due via an anecdote and “Foxey Lady” jam. […]

Paul McCartney performs at Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre in Tinley Park on Tuesday, July 25, 2017. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

Last updated on March 21, 2021

Setlist for the soundcheck


1.

Jam


2.



4.


5.





9.




12.

Ram On

Written by Paul McCartney



14.

Massage Jam


15.

Setlist for the concert







6.

Medley



2.

Foxy Lady

Written by Jimi Hendrix








13.


14.

Love Me Do

Written by Lennon - McCartney


15.


16.

Blackbird

Written by Lennon - McCartney


17.



19.

New

Written by Paul McCartney



21.



23.




26.





30.

Let It Be

Written by Lennon - McCartney



32.

Hey Jude

Written by Lennon - McCartney


33.

Encore


1.

Yesterday

Written by Lennon - McCartney




4.

Birthday

Written by Lennon - McCartney


5.



7.

The End

Written by Lennon - McCartney


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