Paul McCartney Citi Field DVD Comes Out November 17th

PAUL McCARTNEY 
“GOOD EVENING NEW YORK CITY”

Multi-Disc CD/DVD Special Package Features Dazzling Performances of Beatles, Wings and Solo Classics From Citi Field, Formerly Shea Stadium, Historic Site of The Beatles’ Landmark 1965 Concert

US Release – 17th November
FROM HEAR MUSIC/CONCORD MUSIC GROUP

UK Release – 23rd November
Mercury Records 

“It was three great nights for the band and for me personally it was very exciting to be back opening a new stadium on the site of the old Shea Stadium where we had played 44 years previously. Even more exciting because this time round you could hear us!”

Paul McCartney’s historic three-night musical christening of New York’s Citi Field, witnessed by 120,000-plus attendees and universally hailed as a concert experience for the ages, will be immortalized November 17 when Hear Music/Concord Music Group releases “Good Evening New York City”. This momentous musical experience will be available in two formats: a 3-disc (2 CD + 1 DVD) standard edition and a 4-disc (2 CD + 2 DVD) deluxe version featuring expanded packaging and a bonus DVD including McCartney’s traffic-stopping, headline-making July 15 performance on the Ed Sullivan Theater marquee (including bonus numbers not aired on the Late Show with David Letterman broadcast). The set will also be made available in high quality vinyl. In any configuration, the 30+ songs and nearly 3 hours of music comprising “Good Evening New York City” are a must-have for attendees wishing to relive the July 17, 18 & 21 shows, those who couldn’t get tickets and/or anyone interested in an audiovisual document of a living legend. “Good Evening New York City” marks McCartney’s 2nd release for Hear Music. The first was 2007’s highly acclaimed Memory Almost Full. The standard version of “Good Evening New York City” will be available at participating Starbucks company-operated locations in the U.S. and Canada and wherever music is sold.

As the inaugural musical event at Citi Field, the site of the former Shea Stadium, the July 2009 shows held special significance not only for McCartney but for generations of his fans. The shows were performed on the same hallowed ground that The Beatles, in 1965, played the 34-minute show that would set the precedent for the modern day stadium rock show–and where in 2008 McCartney joined Billy Joel for the final rock show before the original stadium’s demolition. As documented on “Good Evening New York City”, “I’m Down” from the 1965 set list was revived for the Citi Field shows, albeit this time played through a PA that was not overpowered by screaming fans (though there were still several thousand who tried). Other highlights of “Good Evening New York City” include faithful takes on Beatles classics “Drive My Car,” “Got To Get You Into My Life,” “The Long And Winding Road,” “Blackbird,” “Eleanor Rigby,” “Back In The USSR,” “Paperback Writer,” “Let It Be,” “Hey Jude,” “Helter Skelter” and more, plus “Something” rendered on ukulele gifted to Paul by George Harrison, and a tribute to John Lennon in the form of a medley of “A Day In The Life” and “Give Peace A Chance.” Wings era chestnuts include “Band On The Run,” “My Love,” “Let Me Roll It” and the pyrotechnic tour de force of “Live And Let Die,” while timeless McCartney solo material ranges from “Here Today” to the upbeat “Flaming Pie” and “Dance Tonight” to a pair of numbers from Electric Arguments, the 2008 album released under the alias of The Fireman.

The concert footage featured on “Good Evening New York City” standard edition features concert footage directed by Paul Becher, who has overseen live visuals for McCartney for some 200 performances and counting. The 33-song 2 hour 40 minute performances were shot in High Definition using 15 cameras and digital footage incorporated from 75 Flipcams handed out to fans over the course of the three night stand. The audio mix, in both stereo and 5.1, was handled by longtime McCartney engineer Paul Hicks, whose credits include the recent Beatles remasters, The Beatles Anthology, Let It Be… Naked, and two Grammy awards for his mixing work on the Beatles’ Love album.

The deluxe edition bonus DVD will feature footage of McCartney’s July 15 performance on the outdoor marquee of the Ed Sullivan Theater, previously available only as a webcast on the Late Show with David Letterman website. The marquee set, which marked McCartney’s return to the site of The Beatles U.S. television debut, generated front page headlines and literally stopped traffic as word of mouth generated a crowd that packed Broadway from Columbus Circle to Times Square. 

Paul McCartney’s July 17-21 Citi Field stand has already been unanimously hailed by critics and audiences alike as the concert experience of a lifetime. On November 17, “Good Evening New York City” will document it for the ages.

New York Mets Attendance Down 826,000+

USA Today has an article about 2009 attendance.


The New York Mets, whose new ballpark has 14,000 fewer seats than Shea Stadium, have drawn 826,241 fewer fans.

I’m bad at math, but in a world of 78 sellouts at Shea and 78 sellouts at Citi (three home games left, correct) you would expect to have 1,092,000 fewer fans so far. (14,000 times 78).

So therefore I guess being down “only” 826k is “good?”

Help me out math majors…

Does anyone know where we can find turnstile counts?  I’d love to see that data.

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Name Your All ’00’s Mets Team (Ledger)

I hate when real life interferes with my blogging.  I was planning to do the all-00’s Mets team sometime next week, but now the Ledger has gone out and thrown out the topic.   I’m glad I jumped the gun and did my grades a week early.  I guess I’ll do my 2010 picks in January.

Who is your list?  I started to throw one together for the sake of having one but I want to look at it a bit and not just autopilot Piazza/Delgado/Someone/Reyes/Wright/Beltran/Whoever.

What’s interesting is you have to put Steve Trachsel on such a list, and Joe McEwing is 5th in games played for the ’00s.

Check out the stat leaders here and we can talk next week, and I’m sure there will be tons of such lists around.

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Silky Blue New York Mets Jersey


Since the talk of the week seems to be about uniforms…

DyHrdMET is one of the regulars around here…and following the suggestion from Metsblog that everyone where blue to games for now on…he sent over this pic and this note:

I’m not even sure how to describe it (I don’t know those technical terms), but it’s long button down and has holes to breath, and I can’t recall the Mets ever wearing this for BP or Spring Training or games.  No piping of any type.  Real solid (Mets) blue with the Orange/white script Mets logo and a sleeve patch with the Mets circular logo (no black anywhere except the tag).  It looks better than any new ideas I’ve seen for new/alternate/different jerseys.

What does everyone think?  What if Charlie Samuels dressed the Mets in these as opposed to the horrible black uniforms?

Got anything off-beat and Mets related in your closet?  Send a pic to [email protected]

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