“See you down the road, Bob…” Paul McCartney just paid tribute to Bob Weir the only way a Beatle can — like a performance without a stage. No spotlight, no band… just Paul’s words hitting like a slow encore. He remembers the Sphere night, the backstage invite, and Bob still recording on the road like the music never sleeps. Paul even offered to play bass on Bob’s track — a collaboration that now lives only in the “what could’ve been.” And you can almost hear it: one last chord held in the air, for a friend who inspired generations. Rest easy, Bob.

paul-mccartney

REVEALED: Sir Paul McCartney’s HEARTBREAKING final meeting with Grateful Dead legend Bob Weir — the Sphere backstage invite, the ‘I’ll play bass’ promise that never happened… and the farewell message that’s left fans in tears: ‘SEE YOU DOWN THE ROAD’

Paul McCartney joined by Grateful Dead's Bob Weir at Fenway Park — Marshall Arts Ltd

  •  Sir Paul McCartney shared an emotional tribute after the death of Grateful Dead co-founder Bob Weir, calling him “a great musician” who inspired generations.
  • McCartney revealed his last encounter with Weir was at Dead & Company’s Sphere show in Las Vegas — where Weir invited him into his trailer and showed him a mobile recording set-up on the tour bus.
  • Bob Weir died on January 10, 2026, aged 78, with reports citing cancer and underlying lung complications.
  • A huge public memorial followed in San Francisco, with John Mayer performing ‘Ripple’ and thousands of fans gathering to honour Weir’s legacy.

Sir Paul McCartney has delivered a gut-punch goodbye to Bob Weir — and the details of their final meeting are the kind that make music fans stop scrolling.

Paul McCartney Recalls Last Meeting With Bob Weir in Emotional Tribute, and Now I'm Crying - American Songwriter

In a tribute that reads like a private letter made public, the Beatles legend recalled the last time he saw the Grateful Dead co-founder: at the Sphere in Las Vegas, watching Dead & Company under the venue’s dazzling, futuristic visuals.

McCartney said Weir was “very welcoming” — and during the interval, he invited Paul into his trailer, where the night turned from star-studded spectacle to something quietly intimate.

The backstage moment that hit fans hardest

According to McCartney, Weir proudly showed him a recording set-up kept at the back of the tour bus, so he could still write and record even while living out of a suitcase on the road.

Then came the line that stings: McCartney offered to play bass on one of Weir’s tracks — “but unfortunately that never came to pass.”

It’s the kind of almost-collaboration that fans will now mourn forever.

‘God bless you Bob… See you down the road’

McCartney ended his message with a soft, road-worn benediction — “God bless you Bob. See you down the road.” — while sending love to Weir’s family “at this time of loss.”

The post included photographs credited to Linda McCartney and MJ Kim — connecting past and present through the people who captured Paul’s world best.

A death that shook a community

Happy Birthday to Paul McCartney: Undercover Deadhead

Weir — rhythm guitarist, singer, and a founding force in the Grateful Dead’s countercultural orbit — died on January 10, 2026, aged 78, with major outlets reporting cancer and serious lung complications.

Days later, San Francisco staged a massive public memorial, as thousands gathered to say goodbye — with John Mayer (Weir’s Dead & Company bandmate) delivering an emotional tribute and performing ‘Ripple’.

Dead & Company’s Sphere run became one of the most talked-about live experiences in modern rock — a high-tech cathedral for a band built on improvisation and community.

And McCartney’s own Las Vegas night has extra poetry: reports note the band played a Beatles cover, ‘Dear Prudence,’ at the Sphere show he attended.

So, in a strange twist of music history, Weir’s final chapter with Paul includes not just a backstage embrace — but the Dead tipping the hat back to The Beatles.

What do you think? Is this one of the most moving rock tributes in years — and did you ever get to see Bob Weir live? Let us know in the comments.

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