
The crowd offered a spontaneous "Happy Birthday" serenade, even before Jersey guy Jon Bon Jovi brought out a fistful of balloons during the encore to lead them in another verse. "Yeah, yeah, right, I've got a birthday coming up," McCartney said, scanning signs in the audience that reminded him. The skill of a sympathetic band, along with the imagination and voices in the audience, patches over the rough spots. He struggled for the high notes in "Here Today," his love letter to John Lennon, who was robbed of a long life by an assassin's bullet. The fragility in his voice was evident while singing "Blackbird" on Thursday night at MetLife Stadium, the final night of a brief U.S. It would be a cliche - and wrong - to suggest time hasn't taken a toll. "There's still some of that 21-year-old boy that shines through in all of his performances." "He has a youthful exuberance that is ageless," said Bob Spitz, a Beatles biographer. Another 1960s icon, Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys, is scheduled to play at the Starlight Theatre in Kansas City on his 80th birthday Monday. Like several other members of the "hope I die before I get old" generation, including Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones and former Beatles mate Ringo Starr, McCartney keeps working, keeps sharing his music from the stage. It's one of those cultural milestones that bring a sharp intake of breath - has it been THAT long? - along with an appreciation of what he still has to offer.įor it has been more than a half-century now since the Beatles broke up, a realization that hits you like that 1970s-era joke about young people saying, "Paul McCartney was in a band before Wings?" That's right, the "cute Beatle" turns 80 on Saturday.

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Hard to think of a better way for Paul McCartney to celebrate his 80th birthday than by singing "Glory Days" onstage with Bruce Springsteen or being serenaded by some 60,000 well-wishers.
