Paul McCartney Plays Beatles Hit for the First Time in 35 Years: Set List, Video

paul

On September 26, 2025, Paul McCartney stunned fans by quietly beginning the U.S. run of his Got Back tour with an intimate concert at the Santa Barbara Bowl in California.

The night opened with a jaw-dropping surprise: McCartney launched straight into “Help!” — a Beatles classic he hadn’t played live in its entirety since 1990. The choice instantly set the mood, turning the show into more than just a tour stop — it became a historic return to a song long absent from his setlists.

Throughout the evening, McCartney wove together a rich tapestry of music, blending beloved Beatles hits, Wings favorites, and solo gems. A highlight was the inclusion of “Now and Then,” the long-awaited Beatles track pieced together from archival recordings of John Lennon and George Harrison, giving the crowd a bittersweet taste of the past brought into the present.

Joining him on stage were his trusted bandmates: Paul “Wix” Wickens on keyboards, Brian Ray handling bass and guitar, Rusty Anderson on guitar, and Abe Laboriel Jr. on drums. Together, they created the powerful, polished sound that has become the backbone of McCartney’s live shows.

The Santa Barbara performance also acted as a preview of what’s ahead. The official North American launch takes place September 29 in Palm Desert, followed by major stops in Denver, Chicago, Atlanta, Montreal, and many more cities.

Santa Barbara Bowl, Sept. 26, 2025 – Setlist Highlights:

Help! (first full performance since 1990)

  1. Coming Up
  2. Got to Get You Into My Life
  3. Now and Then
  4. Lady Madonna
  5. Hey Jude

Encore:

  1. I’ve Got a Feeling (featuring a virtual Lennon duet)
  2. Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)
  3. Helter Skelter
  4. Golden Slumbers
  5. Carry That Weight
  6. The End

Adding to the uniqueness of the night, the concert was a phone-free event — all attendees stored their devices in Yondr pouches, creating an atmosphere fully immersed in the music rather than screens.

Closing with his decision to revive Help! after 35 years, McCartney delivered not just a performance but a deeply emotional reminder of why his tours continue to feel like personal journeys through the soundtrack of modern music history.

0 Shares:
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like
John Lennon
Read More

“More popular than Jesus.” Five words — and suddenly the world caught fire. In 1966, John Lennon’s offhand remark exploded into a full-blown storm: records burned in public, radio bans rolled out, protests flared, and death threats piled up as The Beatles headed into tour. A tense, globally televised apology followed — and not long after, the biggest band on the planet quietly made a decision that changed music history: they stopped touring for good. This wasn’t just a scandal. It was the moment fame, faith and pop culture collided — and rock’s future shifted overnight.

THE NIGHT AMERICA TURNED ON THE BEATLES: Inside John Lennon’s ‘BIGGER THAN JESUS’ Bombshell That Sparked Record Burnings,…
Beatles
Read More

January 1969 at Twickenham Studios — during a tense Let It Be rehearsal captured on film, George Harrison quietly tells Paul McCartney he’ll play whatever is asked or not play at all, a moment that unfolds mid-song, mid-day, and mid-breakdown as cameras roll and The Beatles keep working — leaving anyone who missed it wondering what led to that sentence, how the room reacted next, and why this short exchange has sent viewers back to the video decades later to catch what the film almost lets slip through the cracks

On this day in 1969, a single, quietly devastating sentence slipped into the history of The Beatles—not shouted, not…