Paul McCartney - Live in Red Square

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YTH627434
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73396171104
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Product Description Go backstage with the Emmy Award-winning, landmark concert film and documentary PAUL McCARTNEY IN RED SQUARE, and experience the hit songs, rare performance footage and exclusive interviews that marked this watershed moment in rock and roll history. Though the Beatles were banned from Russia in the 1960s, their music offered hope and inspiration to an entire nation for years. Finally, on May 24, 2003, Paul McCartney satisfied decades of anticipation with his first-ever concert in Russia--wowing a crowd of over 100,000 people in Moscow s Red Square. PAUL McCARTNEY IN RED SQUARE--plus Bonus Concert Paul McCartney: Live in St. Petersburg features live performances of more than 30 songs, including: Yesterday / We Can Work it Out / Fool on the Hill / I've Just Seen a Face / Two of Us / Maybe I'm Amazed / She's Leaving Home / Can't Buy Me Love / Birthday / Live & Let Die / Get Back / Getting Better / Hey Jude / Got To Get You Into My Life / Sgt. Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band / I Saw Her Standing There / Flaming Pie / Drive My Car / Penny Lane / Jet / Let It Be / The End / Band on the Run / Back in the U.S.S.R. / I ve Got A Feeling / Helter Skelter ... and more DVD Features: Bonus Concert: Paul McCartney: Live in St. Petersburg; Behind The Curtain: Memories from Red Square; Featurette from THE HISTORY CHANNEL: Russia and the Beatles: A Brief Journey; Song Selection; Engilsh Subtitles for the Hearing Impaired... and more! Amazon.com The Beatles Anthology may be the motherlode for fans of the Fabs, but among other Beatle-related video offerings, only The Concert for George matches Paul McCartney - Live in Red Square for sheer emotional and musical impact. It's no coincidence that the latter two chronicle not just concerts but significant events--a memorial for Harrison (he had died a year earlier), and Sir Paul's first visit to the former Soviet Union. For the Russian audience, McCartney's appearance in Moscow is little short of a miracle. The Beatles were banned for decades by the Soviet government, which regarded their music as the epitome of Western decadence and propaganda, and the fans' only access to the group was through the occasional photo or black market album. Their reaction to his 2003 visit is a mixture of frenzy and rapture; in interview after interview, what one fan calls the Beatles' "gentle intervention" is credited