THE UNSEEN BATTLE — and the moment it finally broke. For more than 35 years, Paul McCartney quietly refused to perform Help! live. To many fans, it was a mystery. The song was iconic, beloved — yet absent. Few realized that for McCartney, Help! wasn’t just a hit; it was a raw confession, written at a time when fame was overwhelming and the pressure nearly unbearable. So when he chose Help! as the opening shot of his tour, it wasn’t nostalgia — it was confrontation. A reckoning with a younger self, and a signal that this tour would be different. Then came the moment no one was prepared for. As archival footage from Get Back filled the screen, McCartney turned toward the image of John Lennon — and began what felt like a duet across time. No spectacle. No tricks. Just two voices, reunited in spirit. The audience fell silent… then broke, many openly in tears. It wasn’t about technology. It was about memory, grief, and love — and a song that had waited decades for its moment to return. 👇👇👇 WATCH BELOW — the performance fans are calling one of the most powerful of McCartney’s career.

paul

The rocker kicked off his performance with a lively version of the Beatles’ early hit “Help!” marking the first time he’d played the song live since 1990

Paul McCartney performs
Paul McCartney performing in London.

Before launching his more spectacle-driven 21-city North American Got Back Tour, Paul McCartney delivered a more intimate one-off performance at the Santa Barbara Bowl on Friday, Sept. 26, one which showed that the former Beatle still had his bandmates on his mind 65 years after he first got together with John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.

Perhaps most poignantly. McCartney performed a moving rendition of “I’ve Got a Feeling” mid-show that featured archival footage of his late co-songwriter Lennon singing the songs closing refrain on the large screen behind McCartney and he and his band played live – there was a collective sense of goosebumps in the audience during that moment. “I want to get to sing with John again,” Paul said. Lennon died in 1980 at age 40 after he was shot and killed by a disturbed fan.

Taking the stage at the 4,500-seat venue in front of an audience that included Neil Young, Bernie Taupin, Mark Hamill, Don Johnson, Rita Wilson and Olivia Harrison, McCartney, 83, kicked off his two-hour performance with a lively version of the Beatles’ early hit “Help!” marking the first time he’d played the song live since 1990. And that was just the first of 18 Beatles classics that McCartney revisited during the show, along with a selection of additional hits from his time with Wings as well as recent solo works.

Looking fit and energetic playing an ever-changing selection guitars, bass and mandolins as well sitting at the piano, McCartney later amused the crowd when he slipped off his black suitcoat and the lining was a blue sky filled with fluffy white clouds. “That was the only wardrobe change of the whole evening,” he cracked.

There were several very warm nods to his bandmates. “So now we’re going to take you back in time, a long time ago,” he said. “We’re going to take you back to a little town – a city, actually – in the north of England called Liverpool. And in that city there were four young men who formed a group and did rather well.”

Sir Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney in London in November 2021.

He also paid tribute to the late legendary music producer George Martin, who helped shape the Beatles’ sound. “Eventually, anyway, long story short we got a record contract and went down to London, and we met and worked with the great George Martin. He was one of those men in your life you were really privileged to have met – he was a beautiful guy, smart, funny.”

 

McCartney then launched into the band’s first hit with Martin, “Love Me Do.”

“That takes me back to our early days,” he said after the song. “And when we first came over here, we couldn’t hear our music for the girls screaming. Girls, can we hear you scream?” The women in the audience gave him frenzied screams. “Imagine trying to play through that!”

After performing “Blackbird” McCartney shared a story of a past performance gone awry.

“When you’re doing that, you’re thinking ‘I’m gonna get it wrong.’ There are a lot of changes!” he said. “And I did one time: we were doing it live for a show, and I messed it up. I was in the middle of the audience, actually, and I messed it up. I said, ‘Oh, it’s okay – I know this. I’ll get it.’ I wrote it! So I did it again, and I messed it up again. And in the audience is Meryl Streep. She’s standing right in front of me, looking up. And I go, ‘Perfect.’ Anyway, I got it right tonight.”

“Now and Then” featured extensive footage of the Beatles – primarily goofing around and acting silly at the height of their fame – on the big screen. “Thank you, John, for writing that beautiful song,” he said at the conclusion.

For “Sgt. Pepper,” the big screen filled with the band’s famous album cover and, via AI, many of the famous faces in the lineup came alive on screen and interacted with each other.

McCartney also gave a special shout out to his wife Nancy Shevell as he led into the song he’d written for her, “My Valentine.” “This next song I wrote for my wife Nancy, he she’s here in the audience with us tonight, right, Nanc?” he said. “This one’s for you, babe.”

As he performed that song, the screen featured a black and white video of Natalie Portman and Johnny Depp performing the lyrics in American Sign Language. Portman mouthed the words throughout, while Depp remained stone-faced with a guitar in his lap, finally playing the song’s closing chords.

After tacking Jimi Hendrix’s “Foxy Lady” onto the end of the Wings song “Let Me Roll It,” McCartney reminisced about his first encounter with the late guitarist.

“I saw him when he first came to London,” he recalled. “It was in a little club, it was late at night, and everyone had gone home. And in the corner these three little guys come up on the stage, and you heard the [makes crackle noise] of an amp plugging in. And there was nobody in the club except us, and Jimi did his whole thing. And we’d never seen him – it was like magic. ‘What is this?!’ Lucky to be there. Lucky to be there.”

After performing “Let It Be,” McCartney recounted the personal story that inspired the song.

“In the ‘60s I was going through a bit of a bad patch. I was drinking too much, smoking too much, going crazy. Yeah, I know – it was fun. But I was overdoing it, like whoa, wasted,” he said.

“So I went to bed and went to sleep and I had a dream where I saw my mother. And she had died 10 years previously, but she came into the dream and it was so beautiful. Wow, seeing her again after all that time. And she seemed to know that I was going through a trouble. So she said, ‘Don’t worry, it’ll be all right. Just let it be.” He looked upward as he added, “Thanks, Mom.”

Paul McCartney speaks onstage
Paul McCartney in Cleveland in October 2021.

The dizzying array of Beatles songs played during the nightincluded “Got to Get You Into My Life,” “Getting Better,” “I’ve Just Seen a Face,” “Lady Madonna,” “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da” “Get Back,” “Hey Jude,” “Golden Slumbers,” “Carry That Weight,” “The End” and a particularly blistering performance of “Helter Skelter.”

Additionally, all of the audience members’ cell phones had to be secured in Yonder pouches during the show, with no photos or videos allowed. “We’ve tried that a couple of times, and it’s better,” McCartney explained to the crowd. After some cheering he added, “We’re glad you agree – because you’re not getting them back!”

The musician officially began his Got Back Tour on Monday, Sept. 29 in Palm Springs, Calif.

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