There are songs that belong to the world — and then there are songs that never really leave the person who wrote them. “Here Today” has always felt like the latter.
Written by Paul McCartney in 1982, the song was his way of speaking to John Lennon after it was too late to say the things that mattered most. Framed as an imagined conversation, it carried regret, affection, and the quiet honesty that often only comes with loss.
Decades later, in a small, private Beatles tribute event in London, that same song found its way back to him — this time, not as something he performed, but as something he had to hear.
McCartney, now 83, wasn’t there as the evening’s centerpiece. There was no announcement, no spotlight waiting for him. He simply took a seat in the second row, blending into the room as much as someone of his legacy possibly can. It was, by all accounts, a night meant for reflection rather than recognition.
Then Dave Grohl walked onto the stage.
Alone, with nothing but an acoustic guitar, Grohl began to play “Here Today.” No introduction, no dramatic pause — just the opening chords, familiar and unmistakable.

What followed wasn’t a performance in the usual sense. Grohl didn’t lean into his signature intensity or push the song toward a big emotional peak. Instead, he held it steady. The delivery was plain, almost careful, as if the goal wasn’t to reinterpret the song, but to return it intact.
About thirty seconds in, something shifted in the audience — though not outwardly. McCartney lifted his hand and covered his eyes. He didn’t move it again.
Beside him, Nancy Shevell leaned her head gently against his shoulder. It was a small gesture, easy to miss unless you were looking closely. But in a moment like that, it said enough.
There’s a particular weight to hearing your own words come back to you after so many years — especially when those words were written in grief. “Here Today” was never just a song; it was something unresolved, something deeply personal that had been shared with the world but never fully left behind.
As Grohl continued, the room stayed still. Not silent in a dramatic way, but in a respectful one — the kind of quiet that forms when people understand they’re witnessing something that doesn’t need interruption.
When the final notes faded, there was no immediate rush of applause. Just a pause.
Grohl looked toward McCartney and, without ceremony, said, “Thank you for that one, sir.”
McCartney nodded. But he didn’t look up.
It wasn’t a grand moment. There was no standing ovation built into its meaning, no spectacle designed to amplify it. What made it powerful was its restraint — the simplicity of one musician honoring another, and the quiet recognition of everything that song still carries.
Because even after all these years, some conversations never really end