Friday, July 25, 2008

New Maccaspan Podcast and TV Episode!

Check out the new podcast; CLICK HERE!

Check out the new Maccaspan TV Episode; http://www.maccaspan.com/TV

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Paul McCartney rocks huge crowd for Quebec's birthday party


QUEBEC — With fans screaming for more and morning-after newspaper headlines trumpeting a conquest, Paul McCartney's concert left a mark on the Plains of Abraham.

Quebec City was still spinning with excitement Monday, hours after the former Beatle dazzled the provincial capital for its 400th birthday bash. The legendary rock star lured an estimated 200,000 people to the party Sunday evening.

"Merci beaucoup toute le gang," McCartney told the enthused masses in Quebecois French shortly before kicking off the final songs of the show.

"Merci toute le gang, man."

A youthful, energized McCartney performed 36 solo, Wings and Beatles tunes for two-and-a-half hours for the adoring crowd.

His only breather came before the five-song encore.

Quebec City singer Pascale Picard and Montreal band The Stills opened the show.

After the concert, the father of The Stills' frontman Tim Fletcher, said it was amazing to see his son up there.

"It was a mind-blower for them - for us, we're just thunderstruck," David Fletcher said.

"Playing for McCartney, a legend . . . is just extraordinary. We're so thrilled for him."

Fletcher had VIP tickets and found a spot right in front of the stage.

"I guess I can die happy now, I've seen McCartney live in front of a crowd like that," he said.

"The reception that he got, it was great to be part of that whole feeling.

"He's 66 years old and he was out there performing like a 20-year-old."

The colossal birthday party attracted fans of all ages, many of whom travelled to the city from abroad.

"He was an idol from my youth, like so many people," Renald Letourneau said of Sir Paul.

"He's an extraordinary man. We had to see him once in our life. We weren't going to wait for him to come back, we weren't going to take a chance."

Quebec City native Deborah Lambert said she's been listening to McCartney since 1963, when he was one of the Fab Four.

"I remember the sisters at the convent telling me, 'You know, if you knew your homework like you knew the songs of the Beatles, you'd be doing very well'," Lambert said.

"I was learning Beatles songs before homework."

Organizers and security officials anticipated the huge numbers for the free outdoor concert.

But fears of unrest in the crowds never materialized, local police said.

Police reported only six arrests, each for minor infractions.

"Everything went smoothly, people were disciplined, people were cool, people were very 'peace and love'," said Daniel Gelinas, lead organizer for Quebec City's year-long anniversary festivities.

"McCartney's team was taken with the event and thrilled with how everything went."

Gelinas said people will probably remember the concert for years to come.

"We wanted to make sure people have memories that would be engraved in their minds forever," he said.

Last week, several Quebec nationalists were questioning the British knight's participation in the celebrations.

They claimed his presence evokes painful memories of Britain's conquest of New France in 1760.

The Plains of Abraham was the site of the key 1759 battle between British Gen. James Wolfe and France's Marquis Louis-Joseph de Montcalm.

But McCartney brushed off his critics by telling them to "smoke the pipes of peace."

On Sunday, he displayed his affection for La Belle Province by waving a fleur-de-lis flag and sporting a souvenir Quebec sweatshirt on stage.

"C'est ma premiere visite a Quebec," he shouted to the crowd during the show.

"And it's a great place."

Billy Joel gets a little help from Paul McCartney at Shea concert

Billy Joel gets a little help from Paul McCartney at Shea concert
by The Associated Press Saturday July 19, 2008, 6:33 AM

NEW YORK - Billy Joel bade a stirring farewell to Shea Stadium on Friday during an electrifying, sold-out final show at the ballpark where the Beatles famously ushered in a new era in rock 'n' roll four decades ago.

He was joined by an all-star lineup of friends, including Paul McCartney, who told Joel, "Came here a long time ago. We had a blast that night and we're having another one tonight."

McCartney came on at the end. He sang "I Saw Her Standing There" while on guitar and "Let It Be" on piano -- the last song of the night. Joel sat on top of piano and sang backup.

Shea Stadium will be razed after the baseball season to make way for a new stadium across the street.

The show came 43 years after the Beatles' legendary show at Shea - the first concert at the ballpark. The concert came at the height of Beatlemania and demonstrated the sheer power of rock 'n' roll and the Beatles: 55,000 screaming fans at a U.S. ballpark was virtually unheard-of at the time, and the show gave the Fab Four even more cachet among the Beatle-crazed American public.

And as if the "Piano Man" playing the last concert at Shea wasn't thrilling enough, high-wattage guests turned up the excitement level.

Tony Bennett sang "New York State of Mind" with Joel on Friday, Aerosmith's Steven Tyler performed "Walk This Way," and Roger Daltrey of the Who did "My Generation. At the end of "My Generation," Joel smashed a guitar against the stage, breaking it in two.

Garth Brooks appeared on stage earlier wearing a Mets jersey, and in the audience, one of Joel's famous fans -- ex-wife Christie Brinkley -- sang along, word for word, to the chorus of "She's Always a Woman."

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Paul McCartney to help mark Quebec's 400th

QUEBEC -- This is one British invasion Quebec City will welcome. Organizers of Quebec City's 400th anniversary bash announced Monday that ex-Beatle Sir Paul McCartney would appear at a July 20 concert on the Plains of Abraham to mark the celebrations.

"I am doing a big gig in Quebec City," McCartney said in a video message taped in London to announce the event. "That is to help Quebec celebrate their 400th anniversary -- that's a long time!"

The show will be the ex-Beatle's only North American performance this year and is his first concert in Canada since 2005.

McCartney's presence brings the type of headliner the organizers of the festivities were hoping for.

"Paul McCartney, is more than a celebrity, he's a legend, a reference, a musical and cultural icon," said organizer Daniel Gelinas. "His presence here will draw the attention of the entire world."

"Music is a good way to celebrate an anniversary like this. It's a universal language which unites everyone," McCartney went on in his video message. "Our two countries have historic links which remain important today. We're eager to celebrate this 400th anniversary with Quebec."