" August 15, 2013 -- Macca Report News (VIDEO NEWS CBC)
Regina, Canada - Mosaic Stadium - August 14, 2013
CONCERT SETLIST (unconfirmed)
1. Eight Days A Week
2. Junior's Farm
3. All My Loving
4. Listen To What The Man Said
5. Let Me Roll It/Foxy Lady coda
6. Paperback Writer
7. My Valentine
8. Nineteen Hundred And Eighty-Five
9. The Long And Winding Road
10. Maybe I'm Amazed
11. I've Just Seen A Face
12. We Can Work It Out
13. Another Day
14. And I Love Her
15. Blackbird
16. Here Today
17. Your Mother Should Know
18. Lady Madonna
19. All Together Now
20. Lovely Rita
21. Mrs. Vandebilt
22. Eleanor Rigby
23. Being For The Benefit Of Mr. Kite!
24. Something
25. Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da
26. Band On The Run
27. Back In The USSR
28. Let It Be
29. Live And Let Die
30. Hey Jude
Encore One
31. Day Tripper
32. Hi Hi Hi
33. Get Back
Encore Two
34. Yesterday
35. Mull Of Kintrye (City of Regina Pipe Band)
36. Helter Skelter
37. Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight/The End
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August 15, 2013 -- Leader Post (Regina, Canada)
Paul McCartney concert a 'once in a lifetime' experience
With a little help from a friend, Beatles superfan Patty Trent celebrated her 50th birthday at a concert she undoubtedly will never forget.
The duo travelled all the way from Boise, Idaho, this week to join a sell-out crowd of over 40,000 people at the Paul McCartney show at Mosaic Stadium on Wednesday night.
Born July 30, 1963 (the day The Beatles recorded All My Loving), Trent's passion for the iconic band runs deep.
"It just brings back the memories of my childhood, which are perfect," said Trent, whose older brother introduced her to Beatles music when she was four years old. "So it's not so deep in the sense of a movement or politically, it's more the nostalgia that it makes me feel when I hear it."
Having seen McCartney perform in Seattle last month, she was prepared the show might not start on time. As in the past, Wednesday's concert began about an hour late at 9 p.m. The crowd waited patiently, though, doing the wave before greeting McCartney with a loud roar when he took the stage and opened with the 1964 Beatles hit Eight Days A Week.
Weeks before the rock legend took Regina by storm, Haylee Hyde, 21, was in Edmonton browsing for tickets. One look at those waiting in line to take their seats Wednesday proves the 71-year-old McCartney has multi-generational appeal.
Holding a poster in line Wednesday that read "Today Is My 21 Birthday Please Sign Me," and sporting a black The Beatles tattoo on her right foot, Hyde drove the 6-hours from Edmonton to see McCartney for the second time in less than a year. She and her boyfriend, Katlen, showed up before 5 p.m. to be near the front of the line.
Hyde said music today does not come close to the poetry former Beatles McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr wrote.
"Throughout high school, that's all I did. I didn't hang out with friends - I stayed home and listened to The Beatles," explained Hyde, who dropped her vacation plans when she learned McCartney would be completing his North American tour in Regina. "They were kind of my rock. They have a song for every mood."
Rob Robertson, also from Edmonton, has seen McCartney before, too. He flew in to the Queen City anyway, eager to listen to one of his favourite singers again.
Robertson is something of a travelling concert-goer, having visited Vancouver, Toronto, Lloydminster and now Regina, on top of countless other cities. He said he has seen Led Zeppelin and David Bowie each four times, and Bob Dylan and The Rolling Stones each five times.
"I see all of the shows wherever I can," he explained. "Love my music, love rock and roll. I've seen over 300 shows. I'm 58 years old. I've seen them all. You only live once."
Gearing up for the anticipated three-hour performance, Tom Pastuch and his sister Gerri Mills joined the queue that stretched down 9th Avenue more than two hours before the concert began. Many streets around Mosaic Stadium were closed as far as Dewdney Avenue to accommodate the tens of thousands of concert-goers waiting to get into the stadium.
Missing McCartney was not an option for Pastuch, who attended AC/DC, Bon Jovi and The Rolling Stones here as well. Scoring second-row tickets was a small price to pay to experience a night with a living legend, he added.
"It's phenomenal to get these bands coming to the city, and it helps acknowledge us in Canada," the Reginan said while waiting in line. "I'm really looking forward to this. He'll never come here again. This is once in a lifetime."
http://themaccareport.com/news/report.htm